Sahara
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1:06:24
I got something you gotta see.
1:06:26
- Yeah?
- Yeah.

1:06:27
- All right, give me a minute.
- Come on!

1:06:33
That is your Texas we're looking at,
isn't it?

1:06:36
- Sure the hell looks like it.
- Yeah.

1:06:38
- Sitting in the middle of the desert.
- Yep.

1:06:41
Hey, I am not paying off the tequila
on a picture, okay?

1:06:44
Ship of the desert's a camel.
It's not an ironclad battleship.

1:06:47
I mean, there is no way that
that could get across the desert.

1:06:50
At one time, much of this desert
was lush, green farmland,

1:06:53
and there were rivers everywhere.
1:06:56
Now, the ironclad obviously
came up this river

1:06:59
and stopped at this structure,
which is a fort? A castle? I don't know.

1:07:03
So the climate changed.
1:07:04
So let's say the water level dropped,
and the boat became stranded.

1:07:07
Yeah, or sailed away.
1:07:09
Or the land dried up,
the soil turned to dust,

1:07:12
the sands blew in,
1:07:14
and the ship is still buried
to this day...

1:07:18
...right here, next to the structure.
- Okay, great.

1:07:22
So all we have to do is wait
for the river to fill up again

1:07:24
and sail the Texas home.
1:07:27
- That's how it's spreading.
- What is?

1:07:29
The toxins.
1:07:30
What, in the dried-up,
nonexistent river?

1:07:32
No, no, no. The same river that was on
the surface 150 years ago still exists.

1:07:37
It's just beneath our feet now,
sunk in the sand,

1:07:39
running along the rock strata.
1:07:41
Now, the toxins are obviously leeching
from their source

1:07:43
into the underground river system.
1:07:45
- Spreading from well to well.
- Exactly.

1:07:48
So we find your Texas,
we find the underground river.

1:07:53
We find the river,
we find the source of the toxins.


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