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In this investigation, I’m examining salt roads attributed to Tartaria by looking at how their routes continue to shape modern cities. Rather than focusing on trade narratives, this video traces street alignments, elevation changes, bridge placements, and road widths that predate current urban layouts. In many cases, these paths appear optimized for heavy transport and long-distance movement, yet they remain embedded beneath later development. Historical maps often show major streets following older corridors with no clear explanation for their original purpose. Some roads are overbuilt for local traffic, while others cut through terrain in ways that suggest logistical priorities rather than settlement growth. Salt, a critical resource for preservation and survival, would have required reliable, large-scale transport systems long before modern infrastructure. This isn’t an argument about intent or ownership. It’s an examination of continuity—how old routes persist, even as their original function fades from memory. If cities grew around these paths rather than creating them, it raises a quiet question about what came first.