The Vault Lights Of Tartaria
Vault Lights, Pavement Lights, Floor Lights, or Sidewalk Prisms are flat-topped walk-on skylights, usually set into paved or concreted walkways, or flooring to allow sunlight into the basement areas below. Such kinds of Pavement Lights, Vault Lights, Floor Lights, or Sidewalk Prism, often use Anidolic Lighting Prisms to throw the light sideways under the building. Anidolic Light Prisms uses non-imaging mirrors, lenses, and luminescent guides to capture exterior sunlight and direct it deeply into rooms, while also scattering rays to avoid glare.
The First Vault Light patented by Edward Rockwell
The initial Vault Light was patented with the United States Patent Office (USPO) as the 8058X Rockwell Vault Light on the 8th March 1834 by the inventor known as Edward Rockwell, who originated from Staten Island, in New York City (NYC), within the North Eastern United States. From the presented diagram, it appears the Rockwell Vault Light was a round iron plate that surrounded a large silicon dioxide or glass lens.
Vault Lights are in cities all over the world
We know cities such as New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Philadelphia, London, Dublin, Amsterdam, Toronto, have vault lights. However, there are numerous other towns and cities on Planet Earth that have vast basements which had once been surface location when Great Tartaria had been a thriving civilisation, before the First Mud Flood reached the most destructive phase by the 8th January 1740, which the Second Mud Flood also did on the 29th October 1834 and the Third Mud Flood did the same during the 7th June 1892.
Vault lights could be laid over the silt, gravel and soil from the First Mud Flood
Because different technical versions of the Pavement Lights, Vault Lights, Floor Lights, or Sidewalk Prisms could be easily installed, this meant a roadway could be laid over the silt, gravel and soil from the First Mud Flood, the Second Mud Flood and the Third Mud Flood. and luminescence from the sunlight could still be provided to the submerged basement floor below.