Have you checked out the petroglyphs near Whirlwind Lake in the southern Chuska Valley. At least one panel of many moccasin pairs
@encryptdotwavАй бұрын
do it the right way and correctly next time.
@encryptdotwavАй бұрын
more selective science and Grade D cold cut B-logna from mind bending and highly unaccessible info about people. keep saying ancestors and locals hold the same reverence for weaving and sites. not even dippin the weaves or sandals in anything to keep its shape and still be in form after yall damn dug it up. for this long still goin at it half assed. is this dude getting at anything special? time bridge? you sure it aint more obvious? anthropomorphic identities of the past and giving it to the present and yall didnt bring one animal wif yall to collect info, big data aside, no dog, eagle, frog, snake, a rabbit, a mouse, how bout a salamander?
@life_so_hard_i_so_emo2 ай бұрын
is this the one near pine?
@dsharpness2 ай бұрын
A guide for web tours!...😊
@dsharpness2 ай бұрын
Mimbres...and Peru...😊
@dsharpness2 ай бұрын
On web: van Houk 2004-acadamia...Herbert Spenden-google books...maps of distribution of common motifs and such, from Patagonia to Utah...😮
@dr.maturin46483 ай бұрын
Very good speaker!
@johnsee72693 ай бұрын
Good information but one of the most annoying lecturers I've ever heard/seen; geesh... Most have gotten his PhD as he seems to be an absolute expert/authority on every aspect of the Chaco Canyon and all aspects of that areas history; no exceptions; it's all so painfully obvious that his lecture in just a wast of time; it's obvious; duh!
@Redfour53 ай бұрын
This is so cool.
@jholt033 ай бұрын
Now that it's been proven beyond any shadow of doubt that the Clovis first hypothesis, which infected the field of archeology as an entrenched dogmatic belief that stifled our understanding of the peopling of the Americas for more than half a century WAS COMPLETELY AND UTTERLY WRONG, I wonder if Mr Haynes has any feelings of guilt for his aggressive attacks on the good work of archeologists such as Jacques Cinq-Mars at the Blue Fish Caves sight and Tom Dillehay at Monte Verde? I know I would feel bad if I'd ever maliciously attacked people and ruined their carriers just to protect my own theory, only later to discover I had been wrong all along.
@raisingarizona20084 ай бұрын
I have seen other common symbols not talked about like ones that look like the letter "Z" in repeated patterns or the number "3" in repeated patters.
@yomamahohoho65134 ай бұрын
Host:" What are your thoughts on the Chacoan meridian?" Dude: "didn't I just answer that" Host: 👁️👄👁️
@HuntersNeverDie4 ай бұрын
I like the way you are looking at this wider search will briden you're perspective. I have lived here for 40 years and find more sights off of tapo maps than Google maps thank you for your education
@resford14 ай бұрын
Thank you for all the incredible lectures!
@archandhist4 ай бұрын
You're welcome. We're glad you enjoy them.
@jimcurrier39225 ай бұрын
The key doors are where you arrive at the pueblo you look at older pictures of the natives today you will see them using yokes to carry there burdens, they mite have used yokes back then. The key doors would have allowed them to pass through with out having to drop there burden out side. then they would brake down there load to the separate houses, and pay there tribute to the leader.
@yomamahohoho65135 ай бұрын
As a native American I know it's hard to be bilingual so huge congratulations Senõr Luìz a lot of Anglo Archeologists don't even put the effort or respect to pronounce Spanish Names correctly you did very well 😊
@CmacKw5 ай бұрын
One of the figurines has the setting-man pose which is common in Post-Classic period art that depicts deities.
@highdesert-boy5 ай бұрын
Have excavations recovered salt, particularly from that source near Rocky Point?
@MarilynMayer-cd5qk6 ай бұрын
What is the " "black mat"?
@archandhist5 ай бұрын
Megafaunal remains and artifacts dating to the Clovis period in this area are found in a black soil layer in the stratigraphy that is labeled "black mat".
@gg36756 ай бұрын
I would be too embarrassed to even write the words “intermediate society”
@damontso2126 ай бұрын
I am Navajo and still live where my mother bitterwater clan has lived when the ancient pueblo people where migrate through. There is one of our ancestors clan sites of hogans back in the spanish colonialism era. This is at the base of the chuska mountain buffalo springs NM. Six to five Hogan families, a stone corral and several storage structures. There also a ceremony Hogan to the east and higher up the mountain is a ceremony sweat lodge.
@markdrouin86296 ай бұрын
Umm .....ummmmm ummmmm that's the take away this guy can't talk without saying umm every other word I just couldn't after awhile. They should have edited out all the umms. Of course the video would be like 40 minutes shorter. I am very interested in the topic .this guy has no public speaking skill. This was hard to watch.
@DangerDave-e7u6 ай бұрын
Ooh I would hate it if my tail were frozen 🥶
@rogerdudra1787 ай бұрын
The knowledge of seeing a rock and being able to read it is a power I wish I had.
@TaraMae2127 ай бұрын
Great Video!
@kasandrabeckett85787 ай бұрын
Hello I am new to. Aridana, I was a member of the geology and archeology society back in West Virginia, but I am working now as a tour guide in tombstone, but I am looking for more information about the ancient past before it was Is Tombstone Any information that I can get would be very much appreciated.Thank you
@cameronsmith58688 ай бұрын
It trikes me that the T doors could be related to the legend of the witch with the meteor turtle shell to enter through symbolically.
@jerkhardly49938 ай бұрын
I believe that the “T door” phenomenon has been recorded in Bears Ears (Nine Mile Canyon) recently
@bustermot8 ай бұрын
Would Chaco chocolate have been sweet?
@maresnite8 ай бұрын
If they had a source of sugar to add to the cacao, possibly.
@victorschepers21248 ай бұрын
Great greetings from Holland🇾🇪👍
@bustermot9 ай бұрын
What I want to know is how do you decide where to stand on the solstice?
@bustermot9 ай бұрын
Great lecture thank you.
@ShadowAceAZ9 ай бұрын
Hey Jessie, just found this video. Miss you all. -Dirk Harris I.T. Manager, Anthropology, University of Arizona! We had some great years.
@westho73149 ай бұрын
phono stones are more common than you know especially in certain basalt rock jumbles, the less and smallest contact points to other stones in the pile the louder and clearer the note of ring. 50+ some years ago i used to look for these musical stones, often finding petroglyphs on or nearby There is a basalt pile west of wickeburg Az on Maverick creek if i remember, that jumble has stones with every note on the musical scale I think the chime's sound is literally baked in, depends alot on the cooling time of the lava Like the differences between basic pottery, china and fine porceline and glass..other stones with a ring can be found on desert pavement surfaces long baked in the sun for thousands of years, Death Valley and Inyo county in Ca has an abundance of volcanic phonostone as well as the chimes found on desert pavement.
@frankcreamer92709 ай бұрын
Just came across your video. I wanted to share with you a site not far from there in a wash called Davidson east of Tucson, I found a Sandia point. I found it in two pieces. The first piece I threw in a container for broken arrowheads and sat there for at least two years. I found the other half on another trip, I superglued it together and a perfect fit. Not knowing what it was at the time I sold it at my garage sale for .50 cents. This was in 1969.
@serhiitelizhenko85810 ай бұрын
great, thanks! greetings from Ukraine! (Institute of Archaeology)
@Junzar5610 ай бұрын
I took an archeology class from her about 20 years ago. She would mention an archeologist- then say something about him. It was Awesome.
@bwaynesilva10 ай бұрын
This is a fantastic source of information regarding the Murray Springs site. This is good background for our upcoming visit to the site so we can get more out of our investigation. Thanks for putting this together.
@beadingbusily10 ай бұрын
Mesa means table.
@pandamonium450610 ай бұрын
Amazing! So much we don’t know about indigenous culture!
@SolaceEasy11 ай бұрын
I will look at all sites I visit much differently now, thank you. I visited Cocoraque Butte last month with a mallet for the first time. Neat. When I return I will have more to investigate.
@BarefootBill11 ай бұрын
Institutional dogma.
@dustinhopinkah702111 ай бұрын
The relationship between Ancestral Puebloans and Paquimé can be strengthened by the significance of parrots and turkeys in both societies. Parrots especially are found only in Southern America and had to have been traded between the two sites. Pueblo oral histories explain the origin of the significance of the parrot, and the people who returned with them. Parrots still hold great symbolic value in today’s Pueblo culture.
@frankedgar6694 Жыл бұрын
Have any of these dwellings ever been built to include a spring? Wouldn’t it be nice to have water at hand? Do there communities have a spring as a water source?
@danielleolson19252 ай бұрын
Typically these were built very near to a water source.
@gwilson664 Жыл бұрын
Made up noble titles do not designate different ethnicities. Are you a different ethnic group of your shred noble communal relations just cause they say so?
@lbrowning2543 Жыл бұрын
In Anatolia the pits below houses were for cleaned ancestor bones. Bones cleaned by raptors.
@standingbear998 Жыл бұрын
rocks that do this are found in many places around the world. Petroglyphs are all over Arizona, to find them near each other doesn't necessarily mean anything.