Anonymous ID: d3418d March 26, 2020, 7:09 a.m. No.8571070   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1179 >>1183 >>1287

>>8570929 lb

>>8570787 lb

>>8570954 lb

 

Denver–Aurora–Lakewood, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area consisting of ten Colorado counties: the City and County of Denver, Arapahoe County, Jefferson County, Adams County, Douglas County, the City and County of Broomfield, Elbert County, Park County, Clear Creek County, and Gilpin County.[3] The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population was 2,888,227 as of July 1, 2017.

 

Hotspot in Colorado is El Paso County, which is south of Denver and includes Colorado Springs, home of the US Air Force Academy, NORAD and Cheyenne Mountain Air Station, among other things, and has a population of 622,263.

 

Population density, or location importance?

Anonymous ID: d3418d March 26, 2020, 7:51 a.m. No.8571406   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8571295

 

Interesting anon. You post prompted me look up the connection between Zebulon Pike and Albert Pike (and the Masonic Mountain):

 

Pikes Peak (originally Pike's Peak, see below) is a mountain in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains, 10 miles (16 km) west of Colorado Springs, Colorado, in El Paso County. The mountain was named after Zebulon Montgomery Pike Jr. (January 5, 1778 – April 27, 1813), an American soldier, explorer, and Freemason, whose Pike expedition, often compared to the Lewis and Clark Expedition, mapped much of the southern portion of the Louisiana Purchase.

 

http://copycateffect.blogspot.com/2011/09/pikes-peak-masonic-mountain.html