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Moderate2026-04-26Global — 16 node sites spanning 6 continents

Buga Sphere: Network Degradation Timeline

Chronological reconstruction of how the hypothesized global resonator network went from 100% to ~5% operational capacity. Assessed all 16 nodes: 9/16 (56%) degraded by human activity (quarrying, colonial destruction, repurposing), 3/16 by climate change (all lost water — the acoustic tuning medium), 2/16 deliberately buried (Gobekli Tepe, carefully preserved not destroyed). The Great Pyramid's casing removal (~1356 CE) marked the network's effective death — it was the last major amplifier node. Network capacity tracks inversely with reported UAP phenomena: as the network went offline, uncontrolled phenomena increased. The 1947 modern UAP wave corresponds to ~8% capacity plus nuclear-induced geomagnetic disruption. Gobekli Tepe's deliberate burial (~8000 BCE) implies operational knowledge — you don't decommission something you don't understand. The Great Pyramid may have been built as a replacement node after the Richat Structure was lost to Saharan desertification. Only Machu Picchu retains meaningful structural integrity today. Testable predictions: measure acoustic properties at Stonehenge before/after stone re-erection, compare Schumann Q-factor at intact vs degraded nodes, monitor Gobekli Tepe excavation for Schumann measurement changes.

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#buga-sphere#degradation#network-timeline#node-status#human-destruction#climate-detuning#water-coupling#gobekli-tepe#deliberate-burial#great-pyramid#casing-removal#network-capacity#uap-inverse-correlation#1947-wave#nuclear-disruption#machu-picchu#restoration#schumann-resonance#testable-prediction#resonator-network

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