Ancient Humans Melted Stone

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The Voyager TV

The Voyager TV

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 500
@banatibor83
@banatibor83 10 ай бұрын
Archeologists have found homo sapiens remains in France which are almost 300.000 yo, that means that the modern human have been around for at least that long. Our civilization is only 8000 yo. What humans did 290.000 years? It is totally reasonable to imagine that multiple civilizations have risen and fall before us.
@hamonryehd
@hamonryehd 6 ай бұрын
the planet is old enough for multiple races to have evolved, build things, die off have the remains turn to dust, be swallowed by oceans and magma.
@mianki100
@mianki100 6 ай бұрын
It's only logical. 🖖
@boogyboogyboogy
@boogyboogyboogy 6 ай бұрын
I'm not sure where you found that homo sapiens have existed in Europe 300,000 years ago, could you point to a source? I found only that a population of homo sapiens may have been around southern France for only a roughly 40 year period around 80,000 years ago. These remains of homo sapiens found in Europe only prove that they had *once* existed there, not that they had *continuously* existed there. Homo sapiens as a species, if I'm not mistaken, are only 300k yo themselves. I'm sure plenty that is lost to history has happened over the full breadth of human existence, but much of that existence was that of a hunter-gatherer. I'm not asserting this was your implication, but they certainly didn't waste 290,000 years of history; they had their own cultures and histories, and left us some wonderful remnants of both! Could there be crazier stuff we haven't scratched the surface of? Sure! But what was left behind as we understand it is itself incredible.
@nikkibridgewater4223
@nikkibridgewater4223 6 ай бұрын
With the right frequency you can do anything.
@DennisMook-ky6lx
@DennisMook-ky6lx 6 ай бұрын
Like you said risen n fallen
@Proto-Sapien
@Proto-Sapien 9 ай бұрын
I absolutely applaud the depth you have gone into researching these hanan pacha sites and the knowledge you have shared is incredible. For every 10 videos on these ancient sites there's 1 that puts forth truly useful and insightful information. We only build on the shoulders of giants and you are a giant whose work has brought us closer to a clear image of what capabilities these cultures were able to create. I have never heard anyone state the chupa towers could equate to industrial furnaces and from your analysis seems so obvious. Just outstanding communication of the Inca history and compelling arguments overall. 👏 👏👏👏👏👏 after seeing this, I believe the mushroom courtyard could have been a workshop for creating curved metalworks on large scale and for a variety of curvatures eg. Shields, headware, ornaments. I'm honestly blown away. Another piece of the puzzle strongly set in place. 🙏
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 9 ай бұрын
Thank you tairynngatai7095, your comment was incredibly thoughtful. This video was a collection from most of the knowledge that I've learned while traveling to these ancient places over the years. I've toured with local guides and have talked to their elders about the stories & legends they hold about these places. I've also toured with people from the History & Discovery Channel. I have also read the book The Travels of Pedro de Cieza de León who was a conquistador who traveled to Peru 500 years ago and documented any knowledge of these places & the Inca civilization as well. From all of this, these stones tell a much bigger story. I believe our ancient ancestors were much smarter than what we perceive they are today. They have also created monuments and structures that either are in ruins, are still buried, or have been destroyed throughout time.
@Proto-Sapien
@Proto-Sapien 8 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV I can't state how critical it is for people with such a strongly invested interest such as yourself to put forth this significant information so the true history of these sites are brought to light, as there is still such a small community around the world that see the importance of these sites and the knowledge they hold. You are helping change the perception of the ancient past and the inconsistencies that we have been taught in so many conventional formats. I hope to visit some of these sites and build on this knowledge as well and thank you for the book reference I will find a copy so I can be further enlightened on this subject.
@catsfive
@catsfive 10 ай бұрын
I am a super huge "Ancient High Technology" person and this video is nothing short of a revelation. AHT doesn't mean "aliens" it means "We dont' know, yet." There is SO much stuff here that stretches and challenges my mind. This is nuts. Dammit. They did this, and yet this is still only scratching the surface
@spacedaddy5517
@spacedaddy5517 10 ай бұрын
Revelation in what ?.
@spacedaddy5517
@spacedaddy5517 10 ай бұрын
Concrete would explain literally nothing, about hoisting 10's of tons in the air, how can it be a "revelation" ?. This is a joke. I couldn't even watch the whole thing, so inaccurate.
@catsfive
@catsfive 10 ай бұрын
@@spacedaddy5517 I spent 9 months living in Egypt studying the ancient sites and I didn't see ANY evidence of what you show here, over there, is what I mean, sorry
@spacedaddy5517
@spacedaddy5517 10 ай бұрын
@@catsfive What I show here ?
@tommyfred6180
@tommyfred6180 9 ай бұрын
mate the idea is bull and has been debunked repeatedly.
@polygonalmasonary
@polygonalmasonary 10 ай бұрын
Stone (Granite, Diorite, Feldspar etc.) cannot be 'melted' unless kept in a temperature controlled vacuum, why? When certain types of rocks or minerals are heated to a high temperature and then rapidly cooled, they can turn into a non-crystalline, amorphous solid known as glass. This process is called vitrification. The rapid cooling prevents the atoms in the material from arranging themselves into a crystalline structure, resulting in the formation of a non-crystalline, transparent or translucent material. This is how volcanic obsidian, for example, is formed when molten rock cools rapidly. Also because the other component minerals in the stone react with available Oxygen in the air causing Oxidation. Try making an autoclave, a Vacuum Chamber, big enough to hold a 100 ton block of granite, it would be absolutely HUGE!!
@jayroccoman
@jayroccoman 7 ай бұрын
I believe at 00:38:45 and further into the video, it's mentioned that the Sillustani towers in Peru may have been primitive autoclaves for this process.
@camojoe83
@camojoe83 6 ай бұрын
Shhh.. stop noticing.
@HotelPapa100
@HotelPapa100 6 ай бұрын
Do you really want to bring science into this?
@ensenadorjones4224
@ensenadorjones4224 6 ай бұрын
I also noticed this. There is a guy on youtube who was melting obsidian and trying to cast primative weapons. He blew out his kiln and several crucibles trying to do it. He wanted to see if ancient people might have made sand cast weapons with melted obsidian. They key is to have it cool really quickly. That is how obsidian forms from volcanos. It cools quickly and becomes like you said glasslike and Vitrified. I did fire a simple rock in my kiln from some decorative gravel for landscaping. I fired it in a ceramic box and this stone was just like obsidian after, when I opened the box. However it fused to the inside of the box. Like a glaze would do. It went into the kiln, rough, geometric, and grayish blue. It came out rounded and like black glass. Was shocking tbh. I have fired other lava rock and such, in the same temperature range but it didn't change at all.
@silaswendt1867
@silaswendt1867 6 ай бұрын
That could be the magic though, building something big enough to do it on 100 ton blocks. Whatever they had it was more advanced than anything we have now.
@curtistolman5830
@curtistolman5830 2 ай бұрын
The ancient writings tell us, the ancient people used a plane based paste form of hydro-floric acid as a mortar, that softened the surface to a stone to the softness of paste, and when the hydrogen evaporated, it left the stones as hard as they were before the procedure. With joints are so perfect that nothing can go between the stones. The knobs were electric discharge nodes to draw off the natural electric charge of the earth from places people frequent.
@sshreddderr9409
@sshreddderr9409 2 ай бұрын
they did not use it as mortar, nor was it some acid. looking at various sites, its clear that various techniques were deployed which all made use of chemical softening in sometimes, particularly in egypt, it was combined with mechanical cutting. there are site in south america that look like they liquified rock faces that were left in the ground and just reshaped into a useful form, such as stairs. for the polygonal walls, there are stone left over that are bent, which clearly tell us that they soaked the entire rock in a liquid that made it soft, and it was previously cut into a roughly fitting shape, and then after it was soft, it was placed on top of others, where it settled into its place, filling the corners perfectly under its own weight and pressure. too smooth it, they applied the liquid afterwards, and then scraped the rock flat. you can see this on the casing stones of the pyramids that have unfinished ones left, and also on rock in some wall in the Osirion, where you can clearly see rough stone and smooth stone above on the same stone, like someone went over it with something that flattened it like a paste while the rocks where already in place.
@ChristopherGiddey
@ChristopherGiddey Ай бұрын
​@@sshreddderr9409what is the name of that Site in South America with the faces seemingly softened & molded/reformed into stairs? Sounds really interesting and surprising to witness
@MichaelMcFearin
@MichaelMcFearin 10 ай бұрын
So nice to hear explanations that don’t involve Aliens, thank you.
@stevemckennon5995
@stevemckennon5995 10 ай бұрын
Some of the ancient pyramids were blocks with pieces of sea shells. A type of cement we are beginning to understand.
@SRWill64
@SRWill64 10 ай бұрын
Where do you think we got the tech from and if they had all that knowledge back then, why didn't have it a century ago and why did we 'forget' so much knowledge? These are things people don't question. If it was ancient people, what happened to the tech? It was taken from us, forgotten by later generations, and now they hide the truth from us. Yes, true evil does exist in human form. They want to keep us dumbed down and in the dark about everything they know. Don't believe in non-terrestrial beings...see only what THEY want you to see. That's just what they want. We aren't alone, never will be, and will never be. There's too much evidence to the contrary that says there are non-terrestrials and they have visited this world and taught many cultures about many things. Start the research. It WILL change your mind.
@spacedaddy5517
@spacedaddy5517 10 ай бұрын
@@stevemckennon5995 No, it's not concrete we don't understand, lol. Sea shells exist inside of rock.
@spacedaddy5517
@spacedaddy5517 10 ай бұрын
No good explanations are lacking some aliens, or some other type of technology.
@jamy8575
@jamy8575 7 ай бұрын
Project Blue Beam
@redneckhippy2020
@redneckhippy2020 11 ай бұрын
The oxalate observation I've made myself a few years ago. While reducing birch sap to make beer I noticed that when I skimmed the top with a spoon the material I banged out on a rock had a caustic reaction with the stone. Chaga, which grows only on birch trees, has the highest oxalate count of any other living organism. It was very satisfying to me to hear of this observation from others.
@will7its
@will7its 11 ай бұрын
Sweet, hows the beer?
@stevescuba1978
@stevescuba1978 11 ай бұрын
Is this similar to the chemical etchings that native tribes in the American southwest used to leave petroglyphs?
@jthepickle7
@jthepickle7 11 ай бұрын
So....how did the beer turn out?
@redneckhippy2020
@redneckhippy2020 11 ай бұрын
very earthy, lol. I reduced about 100 gallons of sap down to 5 gallons of syrup and added yeast. Birch sap has a rather violent fermentation.@@jthepickle7
@GoHomeKamala
@GoHomeKamala 11 ай бұрын
​​@@dukeofthedance8062he's got Ole Willie over I think. He's past 90 years old and looks every day lol. He made it a few years ago so it was good beer.
@joeanderson8839
@joeanderson8839 11 ай бұрын
If they did have the ability to make stone like cement, then they probably would have used a mold to pour the mixture into. In this case all the stones would be the same size.
@somewhereinhawaii3663
@somewhereinhawaii3663 11 ай бұрын
Not true. The different sizes and shapes make it stronger. Our ancestors understood the volatility of earth and built to last.
@joeanderson8839
@joeanderson8839 11 ай бұрын
@@somewhereinhawaii3663 It's 3:00.in the morning here. I guess it is afternoon in Hawaii.
@xXturbo86Xx
@xXturbo86Xx 11 ай бұрын
There was no need for uniformity. I'm sure many of their buildings were uniformly built but not of them still stand except from the BASE of the non-uniform megalithic ones. Which obviously means they did this on purpose, in order to last. It's also much easier and faster to just place random sized pieces on top of eachother. The previous pieces have already hardened and the next ones will simply sit on top of them and take their shape. Easy. No need for alignment or proper fitment.
@2degucitas
@2degucitas 11 ай бұрын
The exterior side we see could have been make of cloth or tightly woven matt used in the molds. That would account for the bulged out appearance. The flat joins part of the mold could have been made of wood or stone.
@DrewWithington
@DrewWithington 11 ай бұрын
Yes it would be common sense to repeatedly use the same mould size. It would be a lot less work.
@pabloc.282
@pabloc.282 4 ай бұрын
I think the better question is why do we find the same building megalithic methods all around the world? Peru, Italy, Egypt, Spain, Bolivia, Easter Island. I thought there was no contact between them?
@Kai...999
@Kai...999 12 күн бұрын
I don't know, maybe because they're the same species. I mean hell, why do people develop languages or build huts even though there's no contact between them. It's called natural instinct, explained by evolutionary psychology.
@ProyectoJuanC2
@ProyectoJuanC2 10 күн бұрын
Who said there was no contact? There was ancient chaman body found with different drugs around the world. It shows that they knew about each other.
@deanlipska549
@deanlipska549 11 ай бұрын
I always thought that the stones looked like cement. If they pulverized the stone, then it could be carried to the place they wanted and pored into forms. This would eliminate the need to move multi ton blocks of stone.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
Perhaps both large stones and pulverized stone were transported to the site. The large stones were shaped and chiseled into their basic shape, and then a geopolymer outside finish was placed onto the stone. This could explain why all H-shaped blocks are very similar, but the dimensions are all different as if they were handmade and not by a cast.
@frankedgar6694
@frankedgar6694 11 ай бұрын
Why would you create so many different shaped “forms?” Any society who uses or has used forms have created a universal design.
@somewhereinhawaii3663
@somewhereinhawaii3663 11 ай бұрын
​@@frankedgar6694because it's stronger.
@frankedgar6694
@frankedgar6694 11 ай бұрын
@@somewhereinhawaii3663 Yeah. Sure. You nailed it. Look at the shapes. Those shapes are obtained because of existing stone shapes. You peck away at the surface on both stones to create seamless interfacing of the stone. It is impossible to crush stone, put it on a mold and come out with solid stone afterwards. Presume you’re correct though. How do you create exact molds to fit existing stone surfaces? Think it through.
@petepeterson4540
@petepeterson4540 11 ай бұрын
they are volcanic or appear to be so andersite is a very hard rock comes from deep in the earth has a lot of gas at times in it
@philip2774
@philip2774 5 ай бұрын
Those H blocks from Bolivia absolutely look like poured & formed concrete.
@rustyshackelford1413
@rustyshackelford1413 5 ай бұрын
And they were made using the metric system. Using a laser they are 1 meter and a tiny fraction of a millimeter tall. The horizontal gap between the vertical H lines was 22 cm and a tiny fraction of a millimeter. Those millimeter fractions are attributed to weathering. Weird... If you are interested the Funny Olde World channel has a great documentary where they measure them along with other ancient sites all over the world. It is called Builders of Ancient Technology.
@razony
@razony 5 ай бұрын
Yes they do. Wonder what the molds were made from. The rabbit hole just got deeper.
@andrewpatricknelson
@andrewpatricknelson 4 ай бұрын
If they could form the stones wouldn't they have formed them more uniformly
@razony
@razony 4 ай бұрын
@@andrewpatricknelson They were artists at heart.
@FoulOwl2112
@FoulOwl2112 3 ай бұрын
Well, they're not.
@JPMerolla001
@JPMerolla001 10 ай бұрын
A very comprehensive collection of theorys. Ive been interested in ancient peruvian stonework for years now. And love hearing new ideas to how this could have been done. One phrase i always try to keep in my head. Is an awnser to a simple question: "why did they take the time and expend so much effort to create this stonework?" Well ... its only logical to assume it was not such a monumental task for them. Its a problem when we view ancient civilizations... while looking through a pinhole sized keyhole. So to speak. There is so much we can not see.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 10 ай бұрын
Very well said. Thank you for your insight.
@gregorydahl
@gregorydahl 9 ай бұрын
You said " even after trying to polish with a softer stone " . You need a harder stone to scrape , shape or polish a softer stone . Like 911 they used cutting charges behind a pyrotechnic fireball and had to add in an image of 3D grapics of a softer metal and plastic passenger airplane because aluminum and plastic cannot even scratch the huge steel pilkars made from steel as thick as the front door of a house . Steel plates that were approximately 40mm or one and a half inches thick . But the principle is the same . Butterknife cuts butter , but butter does not cut butterknife .
@jeffvw1994
@jeffvw1994 8 ай бұрын
So much of the work shows real art, which only comes from advanced civilizations and really no one knows how long ago.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 7 ай бұрын
That's not true about cutting the stone. You can 100% scrape down a stone with a softer stone, it just takes time and extra softer stones when it degrades.
@ensenadorjones4224
@ensenadorjones4224 6 ай бұрын
​@gregorydahl I have hiked along paths in Yellowstone, Arches NP, and other oft visited places with various types of stone where the stone is shiny and polished by all of the oily hands that touched the surface over the years. Millions of visitors touching those rocks along the path made them smooth. So, skin (soft) polishing stone (hard). And it is not oily residue left behind. I have sat and studied these surfaces and explored the same stone below and above to see what they were like where they were not touched. Rough and jagged. These Shiny spots on surfaces that the narrator said were obsidian looked a lot like rocks polished from constant abrasion. Has that black stone been tested to determine that it is obsidian? He seemed to state it emphatically as melted obsidian.
@oldmanjoe6808
@oldmanjoe6808 6 ай бұрын
Big assertions require big proof. I'm from Missouri, show me how it was done.
@BigGuyWhoKills
@BigGuyWhoKills 4 ай бұрын
Nothing was melted. Sand was placed on top of a stone, and another stone was placed on that sand. Then the top stone was slid back and forth until the sand carved both the top and bottom rocks into matching pieces. It required a lot of labor, which is easy if your civilization is founded on slave labor (which took on many forms in pre-Columbian South America).
@oldmanjoe6808
@oldmanjoe6808 4 ай бұрын
@@BigGuyWhoKills Not so. You're saying a rough and immense stone was ground down to fit another stone under it, which would take decades to achieve per stone, with a material hard enough to wear down the top stone but not wear down the bottom stone. It won't work.
@AdamHowellProvo
@AdamHowellProvo 4 ай бұрын
@@oldmanjoe6808 It is literally how surface plates were first made. The difference is that surface plates are made with 3 stones, repeatedly paired until a flat surface is achieved. The medium may need to be something other than sand, but quibbling about that is pedantry.
@oldmanjoe6808
@oldmanjoe6808 4 ай бұрын
@@AdamHowellProvo All wrong. Mechanical properties can not be changed by human imagination... I have no need to "pedantry" about mechanical properties, just to rather correct the unlearned.
@AdamHowellProvo
@AdamHowellProvo 4 ай бұрын
@@oldmanjoe6808 What mechanical properties do you claim I am wishing to alter? I may be wrong, but here's a guy doing exactly what I described (albeit to a MUCH greater precision): kzbin.info/www/bejne/n3q0o4mHqJ2fq7csi=sI68Fl5U6Yyca3mO&t=449 Also, you claim I said: "wear down the top stone but not wear down the bottom stone", when in reality I said pretty much the opposite: "Then the top stone was slid back and forth until the sand carved both the top and bottom rocks into matching pieces."
@command7772
@command7772 5 ай бұрын
Some people don’t like the idea ancient cultures knew more about stonework than modern humans do today, yet we have lost the knowledge how to go to the moon and return safely back to earth, a knowledge that took only 50 years to disappear.
@BigGuyWhoKills
@BigGuyWhoKills 4 ай бұрын
We did not lose the knowledge of how to go to the moon. The people who claim that are cherry-picking quotes and are usually trying to sell you something.
@lxmzhg
@lxmzhg 4 ай бұрын
Some people may not like the idea, but I think most do like the idea that ancient cultures knew more than us, which gives us incentive to forge ahead. The fact is that the governments are the ones that like us to believe that we are the epitome of all knowledge, so that we will sit back in complacency, not knowing that the government has hidden technology from us which is way ahead of what we as a society have access to.
@cannabico6621
@cannabico6621 3 ай бұрын
we know how to go to the moon, we just dont have a positive cost-benefit plan that keeps us going there for the moment, it's cheaper to use satelites to study it and rovers to collect and send sample data instead of manned modules, if we want to build on the moon first we need to be able to build everything with drones on earth, the lower gravity is another issue.
@VraelFreorhe
@VraelFreorhe 3 ай бұрын
Many more knowledge like the Roman concrete far superior to our modern concrete or the greek fire
@Shotzeethegamer
@Shotzeethegamer 3 ай бұрын
Or we never went to the moon 😂
@ancientexplorer1865
@ancientexplorer1865 11 ай бұрын
Scientists have analyzed the blocks of Sacsaywaman and they discovered they have the same chemical composition as limestone, but the structure was different from limestone. One of the scientist that took part in the test, said the blocks in Sacsaywaman came from a limestone quarry, but was crushed to fine powder, then it was made into a mixture and molded into blocks. Natural limestone consists of organic material like shells. In the blocks of Sacsaywaman they could see it was pulverized. This is not the case un the natural limestone.
@ivankaleoniefuchs333
@ivankaleoniefuchs333 11 ай бұрын
haha...They must have used a gazillion "different" molds then, because almost all ancient stone-work sites (all over Earth) used "different" sized stones. You would suffer much difficulty finding even 2 stones of das exact same proportions und size at any ancient site. Even das sites that look like they used same size stones? When you measure them every stone ist much different, so they were not made from a same mold. Auf Wiedersehen :-)
@ancientexplorer1865
@ancientexplorer1865 11 ай бұрын
@@ivankaleoniefuchs333 I am referring to what a scientific analysis in a scientific report shows regarding blocks in Sacsaywanan, not the entire world. How they moulded the blocks, was not part of the analasys. The analysis showed that the particles in the Sacsaywaman blocks were much smaller than what they measured in the limestone quarry. According to the scientist, the limestone would have had to be crushed to powder form in order for the particles to be so small.
@phillipbox7957
@phillipbox7957 11 ай бұрын
Seashells are calcium carbonate and not organic. The stones are limestone and worked by hand that’s why they are all different. If the stones were poured they would have needed moulds that were each the final shape you see today. As beautiful as they are this just exhibits a low technology level not high. This is product of immense physical effort and skill at shaping and working each stone as they built. What’s far more impressive are the flat granite stones with 90 degree corners and angles. Even there no hidden aliens are magic involved just enormous levels of skill and effort.
@phillipbox7957
@phillipbox7957 11 ай бұрын
What scientist.
@ancientexplorer1865
@ancientexplorer1865 11 ай бұрын
@@phillipbox7957 I am referring to Geophysicist Andrey Verianov. He was interviewed on the youtube channel of Giacomo Longato. I also made a video on my channel where I read threw the report out load, with all the details.
@MB-gz3zl
@MB-gz3zl 11 ай бұрын
Great job with your videos bro! Love that edit in the beginning where you are standing in the window lol. Where is the opening scene shot, Sacsayhuaman? The GLOBAL polygonal stone builders are easily one of the most fascinating mysteries of all time. I totally agree with you about your perspective on precision, Ben over at UnchartedX also focuses on the precision aspect because it is truly remarkable. Once you've worked with stone yourself, you see structures like these and finally understand the actual gravity and astonishing awe of what they accomplished. Thanks for making these and getting more great shots of these important historical sites! Rock on dude ~
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your comment and the opinion on my work, it means a lot to hear. Yes the introduction is from Sacsayhuaman in Cusco, Peru. I know it seems like I could've just filmed and created that scene but that one section was currently blocked off. Yes I completely agree that the global polygonal stone builders are incredibly fascinating. You can find all different types of polygonal stone walls and the quality of the construction method ranges. Ben at UnchartedX has done an incredible amount of research and I find his videos to be very compelling by challenging the type of technology used during the ancient past. I would love to see his research done on other ancient artifacts from around the world as his work is unique to this field of research. As always, thank you for the view and it's a passion of mine to show everyone and to talk about these ancient achievements during antiquity. 🗿🤘!
@MB-gz3zl
@MB-gz3zl 11 ай бұрын
You're doing a great job bro. Because you're going against the grain, lots of haters will come at you. Like those guys picking on your use of the digital microscope in a previous video's comments. I think that kind of thing you are doing is awesome, of course it's not some kind of lab grade thing, but at least it's something! At least you showed up, and took it! Never let them get to your head dude. Keep on keeping on and be yourself! Questions guide us closer to the truth. If no one had ever questioned the status quo, we'd still think the Earth is the center of the solar system, and the list goes on and on. Sometimes it can even cost you your life! Asking questions is never wrong, no matter if the answers end up being no. Even knowing that moves you closer to the truth. Rock on!@@TheVoyagerTV​
@jerrybuckles5481
@jerrybuckles5481 11 ай бұрын
the inca have always said the didnt build any of that the inca did stack small rough stones in some areas..
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
I've heard this claim made before and it could be true. During 00:23:20 in this video, you can see the difference between the ancient stonework and the Inca stonework off to the side. If you'd like to learn more about this mysterious cave, I created a video about it which I included right below. kzbin.info/www/bejne/hWOthpyDl86Cq6M
@CoffeeFiend1
@CoffeeFiend1 6 ай бұрын
The fact a lot of less-technologically advanced modern cultures are next to useless when it comes to archaeology without more 'western' assistance has unfortunately had the knock on effect of a lot of western cultures assuming that every modern less-technologically advanced culture is useless and that they all need help and oversight. Many of them know exactly what they're doing and we don't listen to them because we've tarred them all with inferior comprehension brush. It's annoying how bad we are at contextualizing. So many places in the world do need someone else to do it because they're too useless and bone idle, in other cases though some places know what's going on but no one will listen to them.
@nephos100
@nephos100 4 ай бұрын
The ancient Egyptians travelled to South America and made the structures we goggle at today.
@juancho_2884
@juancho_2884 4 ай бұрын
Es tan difícil creer que fue creado por nativos americanos? Tuvo que ser un hombre blanco ? Aun teniendo pruebas en las narices se rehusan a creer e inventan teorias rebuscadas
@SubUrbanSF
@SubUrbanSF 4 ай бұрын
Have heard similar stories about ancient egypt.
@TuanNguyen-bd8cw
@TuanNguyen-bd8cw Ай бұрын
Plasmoids. A mixture of electricity sound etc. They knew the earth and the magnetics make sense. They did indeed melted stone or made it soft enough to be scooped/molded. Then when the electricity is turned off, it locks the shape in place. How they lifted? Same thing, using the electricity and the holes theyd use copper rods and a plate one positive one negative to essentially levitate the rocks. The legends notes this that people would shape the rocks then float them into place.
@vperez4796
@vperez4796 10 ай бұрын
Excellent video. The enigma of the blue obsidian on the stones deserves some XRay fluoresce analysis. The blue color of the melted obsidian (a glass silicate) could arise from a copper silicate. Isn't that suggesting you they used some natural CuFeS2 ore during the thermal process? SiO2 (obsidian) is not so difficult to melt.
@victorvelasquez3719
@victorvelasquez3719 11 ай бұрын
Congratulations 👏🏼 Although there are many mysteries still to unveil it's an amazing research you have done 👍🏼
@undaware
@undaware 6 ай бұрын
For those saying a molded approach would use standard shapes, think about molding in-place. You just create a mold off of the prior pours. Much more versatile and the fitment is automatic.
@undaware
@undaware 2 ай бұрын
​@YellowLab-c4g... Right. That's an in-place mold.
@Phoenix-One0922
@Phoenix-One0922 3 ай бұрын
Ancient civilizations had more advanced technologies than we do and our civilization makes the biggest mistake when we think we’re the top of the crème… Stone would change its color to a dark charcoal if melted and it would become porous and brittle. What the Ancients did is Use Sound to change the molecular arrangement of stone and mold it to any shape they wanted like when a high frequency note is played next to a crystal wine cup and if you slow down that FPS (frames per second), you can observe the crystal structure vibrate along and bend with the sound waves and if the frequency is amped, it will break. Sound properly ‘modulated’ has the power to restructure any material, Lift its weight by reducing it “mass weight” so it can be handle and transported and Sound can cut like a laser beam although is not visible to the naked eye just like a dog whistle that only a dog can hear but is imperceptible to the human ear. That’s how the pyramids got built and many other monoliths and construction wonders around the world and yes, the Sound Catalysts Tools were of Alien Origin.
@mattdoliver1984
@mattdoliver1984 2 ай бұрын
🤣 🧢
@JohnKSedor
@JohnKSedor 2 ай бұрын
Amazing the further you go back in time, you find advanced building methods, much of today's mathematics are from thousands of years ago, and complex languages were used. We had a great start then messed it up. One can only wonder how advanced human society would be by now if we listened.
@Th1nk1n6
@Th1nk1n6 7 ай бұрын
Top notch video. Been curious about so many of these details, and here you brought science, geology, geographical exploration and more. Instant sub.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 7 ай бұрын
Thank you 4trahasis! I greatly appreciate your comment, your time watching the video, and all of the viewers of my channel. You and the viewers are the true heroes giving me motivation to create these videos.
@zirko789
@zirko789 11 ай бұрын
it is quite a step forward, but leaves mäny questions open. Would be interesting to find out how the "scoop marks" had been produced (as they can be found all over the world). This must have been done with a kind of "normed" tool (as they all look the same) and by smoothening the stone, so they could just remove it like butter. But we should be able to find some chemical traces on the surface of the stone. Until now I know nobody who came up with a plausible explication. You are the first - kind of
@johnhough7738
@johnhough7738 11 ай бұрын
To me they look like scoop marks, yes. They also look like where someone has pounded out a hollow, then moved along a bit and pounded out another; and another. But why, how, who, and when I leave to (a) educated experts (b) opinionated guessers, or (c) religious fruitcakes (any brand). Surely this chicken could be laid to roost simply enough? (Yes, I know ...economics, and the funding thereof.)
@johnhough7738
@johnhough7738 11 ай бұрын
There's a very interesting 'throwaway' mention in the book "Exploration Fawcett" you might find relevant. (If you can find a copy, a wee bit out of print now, I'd say.) Good luck ...
@georgeho5369
@georgeho5369 10 ай бұрын
I think the ancients had a special cement formula mix with volcanic Ash or soil and used wood boxes to make mould to allow it to set. The tool marks are there to finish off some imperfections. Also the large bolders that seem to have perfect melted joints are just irregular cement blocks that is placed on site with no mold required. 😅
@johnmcnulty4425
@johnmcnulty4425 4 ай бұрын
I can't wait till someone demonstrates this method of stone work..
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 4 ай бұрын
The more I see and learn about megalithic sites, the more I'm convinced of a prehistory, advanced civilization existing! To have seen these places at their height would have been quite the experience to say the least! I hope an answer is found in my lifetime, so they better hurry up because I'm 60!
@heru-deshet359
@heru-deshet359 10 ай бұрын
The answers to all ancient mysteries could have been found in the Library of Alexandria. Sad that barbarians burned it all up.
@AristotlePlato-bi9fb
@AristotlePlato-bi9fb 7 ай бұрын
Barbarians or humanitarians who knows what evil could have been. Just imagine the power to unlock the atom during an early archaic age.
@geoffhunter7704
@geoffhunter7704 7 ай бұрын
The Alexandria Library was burned by Fundamentalist Christians allegedly,A problem that is very apparant now with islam.
@christopherpardell4418
@christopherpardell4418 7 ай бұрын
Romans could hardly be considered barbarians. It was burned accidentally when Caesar burned the Egyptian fleet in the harbor. And most of the books were not entirely lost, they were copies. Most of the books were lost due to purges of pre-christian literature by Christians.
@martinwayne8245
@martinwayne8245 6 ай бұрын
Heard vatican got a lot a it. Peter Peterson had an interview where he described the vatican library with a ton of different type of tablets and book made out of fabrics while working on sumerian writing
@Joe-xj2tb
@Joe-xj2tb 6 ай бұрын
The catholics burned it.
@tobyjessup6483
@tobyjessup6483 11 ай бұрын
They used thick red clay mined from acidic hot springs applied between the stones and left for some weeks, repeatedly lifted and refitted with incremental chiseling of the softened layer each time.
@marcgg9760
@marcgg9760 4 ай бұрын
When the evidence shows a decline in technology to a point were the method is lost, there is only one explanation: The technique did not start and evolved in that population but was given by another civilisation and the details gradually lost. A clear example of this devolution is the embalming method in Egypt.
@williamblake8650
@williamblake8650 Ай бұрын
I believe religion stops us from knowing the truth about Earths history.
@kensanity178
@kensanity178 28 күн бұрын
People would rather believe in the so called miracles of the bible than the truth. Truth is just too tedious, too boring, and too hard to find and understand.
@Jv9569
@Jv9569 26 күн бұрын
You mean the same Bible that talks about the same antediluvian civilizations (including giants) that built these ancient structures? Also, other ancient texts talk about things like the vimana as well, the gods of Greek mythology are similar to the fallen angels of Enoch, etc.
@DrSpoculus
@DrSpoculus 8 күн бұрын
Figuring out history will be like the ending of the Truman Show. "Now what?..." People act as if finding out old stuff will unlock the secret to world peace. Let's say they find Atlantis and prove the pyramids are 12,000 years old. What changes in 2024? Do you not have to go to work anymore? Will war end? People put so much weight on finding out things that really don't matter, just so they can be right about something. That's all it is. People want to say "see, I told you Atlantis was real!".... and then go to bed, and go to work tomorrow, and nothing changes. It's just shit to argue about. "I'm too smart to believe what THEY tell us". Nobody who ever asserts crazy theories has to ever be responsible for them. Making predictions and claims about things that will most likely never be figured out 100% is pretty safe to do. You never have to take criticism for being wrong.
@Dk-qf8dd
@Dk-qf8dd 10 ай бұрын
Too much supposition especially in the drill holes. That vibration method doesn’t match the drill striations. Good info but too much “could it” in the layout. Next take the proposed “dates”. Dating stone is pretty difficult and using other methods assumes the stones were placed/worked at that same time instead of being discovered or re-used.
@saveriomastrianni1726
@saveriomastrianni1726 4 ай бұрын
This was a truly magnificent video. Just showed it to some homies. We all found it enlightening and almost therapeutic.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 4 ай бұрын
Thank you Saveriomastrianni1726! I tend to make my videos in that type of tone to make it easier to listen to on the ear and soul.
@JasonPruett
@JasonPruett 11 ай бұрын
why would they make a false door? because its not false. if they knew how to do this then they knew how to do other things. if anyone was found doing this irl they would vanish. Our owners dont want us using such things. Gold is very dense it is non reactive chemically so it resists corrosion its rare its pretty it conducts electricity its dielectric (moves away from magnetic fields) i agree it must have some quality we are not aware of perhaps. great video btw you sound as good as preveen mohan and he has over a million subs. you sound great and have good insights.
@coreymurphy3784
@coreymurphy3784 11 ай бұрын
Our ancient ancestors where alchemists. An art that is practically lost in modern times.
@coloredcitizen6024
@coloredcitizen6024 6 ай бұрын
u'r so stupid...
@dustinpotter8312
@dustinpotter8312 11 ай бұрын
Maybe it wasn't melted. There is a clay in England that was discovered that had insect dropping in it that had turned the clay into stone. During regular daily excavation of the clay the clay stayed soft. When the crew/s stopped for winter to return in the spring they expected to resume work but they found that the clay had hardened into stone. The discovery was the now exposed clay had been infested by some form of insect and through the insect droppings the clay was hardened. Apparently the chemicals in the insect droppings were a catalyst that caused the clay to harden just like rock. I seems to me the article was posted about 8 years ago. I wouldn't know where to find it.
@NextWorldVR
@NextWorldVR 11 ай бұрын
Like the Guano in this stone! Ammonia...
@dustinpotter8312
@dustinpotter8312 11 ай бұрын
@@NextWorldVR If people of today's age can accidentally find a way to convert clay to stone... exactly. Scientists finally found the Romans built "better concrete than we normally use.Their secret ingredient was salt. Lime (a key in some concrete) gets warm with just the right amount of water. If the lime is heated enough to become what is called "quick lime" it can become reactive meaning if held under pressure it will get hot enough to rupture/explode. I recently found out that powdered magnesium, a health supplement, which is mixed with water for consumption, will get hot if it isn't mixed with enough water. There was a warning on the bottle of the powdered magnesium. Why can't today's builders make structures like the did in the past? Probably because we haven't learned what chemistry the ancients were using. Imagine pouring a stone house on top of a stone basement one bucket at a time. Except for the windows and doors it would be practically tornado or hurricane proof.
@harrywalker968
@harrywalker968 10 ай бұрын
theres millions of tons of stone walls.. i dont think insects were resposible for this.. keep guesing..
@dustinpotter8312
@dustinpotter8312 10 ай бұрын
@@harrywalker968 There were hundreds of tons that had to be moved yet as ;you say it is a guess. there were thousands of people who built those walls and if they knew the chemistry which their shape indicates was not natural. Iron and lime were in the walls as well showing man made construction indicating engineering not chiseling. A catalyst is a reasonable approach. yes that is another poke at a guess. What are a couple of yours?
@SRWill64
@SRWill64 10 ай бұрын
@@dustinpotter8312 Engineering...that takes advanced geometric and mathematical skills. These people weren't using chisels and stone mallets to carve these things. That takes advanced knowledge. So who stole all that knowledge away and set us back into the stone age? We've been trying to crawl up the tech scale ever since and now we're at a point the military industrial complex is hiding knowledge from us yet again.
@eliyousef2178
@eliyousef2178 5 ай бұрын
you can also tell how they scooped our the rock once it was melted ...it was probably a process that needed to be done quickly , bit by bit .. when you look at the key carving you mentioned you can see the individual scoops they took from the stone ...which means they probably had to used a concentrated heat on that stone in a smaller spot bit by bit ....heat scoop , heat scoop ..I imagine the stone when heated to that point was like mud but would quickly harden as it cooled
@monkeyman123321
@monkeyman123321 4 күн бұрын
Also had this idea. To me it makes sense architects that were so talented and smart to make all these structures that last thousand of years they would be smart enough to start molding building blocks.
@randy-tzu1624
@randy-tzu1624 11 ай бұрын
They look pressed into place, meaning they were semi-soft, and then maybe vitrified after or during placement. Molds and finishing I think took place. The H blocks look pre-molded and fired or cured.
@methylene5
@methylene5 7 ай бұрын
Then surely, given their weight, the bottom of the rock would protrude out from all that pressure.
@sirtko
@sirtko 10 ай бұрын
Very beautiful, Intriguing Images and articulation of Well put hypothesis 🫡🤌💯🥳🤗🙏🏾💚💚💚✊🏾🫂🕊🐦‍⬛🎉
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 10 ай бұрын
Thank you sirtko, that means a lot! Thank you for watching and leaving a comment!
@maryannmancini30
@maryannmancini30 11 ай бұрын
Super interesting! Keep it coming!
@Tom_Emody
@Tom_Emody 11 ай бұрын
24:56 Perhaps these walls once had a beautiful obsidian coating that is mostly worn away now? Or maybe it was applied in certain areas for a certain effect, weather cosmetic, or cosmic?
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
With the amount of ancient places throughout the region that have this obsidian coating on the stones, I believe so. If it did have a purpose besides it being aesthetic, it would have been very creative and useful.
@Tom_Emody
@Tom_Emody 11 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV it’s pretty amazing that it’s there at all, and in so many places…what a strange idea! Unless it was easy to do, they probably wouldn’t have done it. It probably was a sight to see in original times.
@shaneculkin7124
@shaneculkin7124 11 ай бұрын
​@@Tom_Emody: I disagree with the part where you suggest that only if it is easy to wpuld they have done it. Because these were done out of purpose, seeming really rather important to these people. .....And time? What else did they have???? Generations of only time and caring labor. Other than that though, I completely agree with ya! And if I misread what you meant then I am sorry.
@Tom_Emody
@Tom_Emody 11 ай бұрын
@@shaneculkin7124feel free to share more idea’s whenever you want. I enjoy that you are a deep thinker.
@totobeni
@totobeni 7 ай бұрын
or maby it was a big lego monster that made a popi
@MarkA-rz8mv
@MarkA-rz8mv 2 ай бұрын
Truly an amazing video. I’ve never said this before but that’s maybe the best video I’ve seen. Everything you say makes so much sense. Thanks 🙏
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 2 ай бұрын
Thank you MarkA-rz8mv, l greatly appreciated your comment and how you felt about this video!! It took a lot of time to gather this video content and a lot of time to put it all together. Thanks again!
@danieldanton1129
@danieldanton1129 2 ай бұрын
That entrance was old school fire! Love it
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 2 ай бұрын
Thank you Danieldanton1129! That's the exact style I'm going for 😎
@IamL.I.S.A
@IamL.I.S.A 11 ай бұрын
Been saying this for years. It's how they made the blocks for the pyramids as well.
@johnathonmullis4234
@johnathonmullis4234 11 ай бұрын
Sakrete! They filled cloth sacks with their geopolymer mix and braced the outside to form the shape they wanted. The glaze on the outside is easily attained today by using smooth plastic sacks. I would think the same glazing can be achieved by oiling/greasing the sacks smooth before pouring them with the geopolymer.
@harrywalker968
@harrywalker968 10 ай бұрын
???... so,, where are the remains of the sacks,??,, this means, you fill the sack, place it, wait till it dries, remove it, take the sack off, then re place it,, fkn bs..
@maudvanderkloet8305
@maudvanderkloet8305 10 ай бұрын
Jonathon you are correct, read in the bible the making of the tower of bable, the used mudbrick and they found something in the area, this something was oil, with wich they made the bricks waterproof, it became to be this glazing layer
@jamesmoran7511
@jamesmoran7511 8 ай бұрын
Unlikely
@walterhynson2898
@walterhynson2898 11 ай бұрын
I have some friends from Mexico and from what they told me the rock that you are looking at was formed in a molten state like concrete today but very thick and heavy,it was carved like woodcarving . The stuf in between was to make it harden up fast like salt in concret during the winter.
@harrywalker968
@harrywalker968 10 ай бұрын
any plans, written records, drawings, of this.. no.. man did not build this. like the pyramids, if man built them as they say, they still wouldnt be finished..
@Ralphjons
@Ralphjons 10 ай бұрын
Kind of makes sense. This is why bronze ties were used. They would be not be needed to hold magaton stone together but would help to hold clay-like bricks together while drying. Drying clay-like composites would have shrinkage and so open up joints.
@snarkcharming
@snarkcharming 6 ай бұрын
21:20 that shot of the valley i was like… “i knew it. super 😊saiyens.”
@alcaholic9559
@alcaholic9559 Ай бұрын
Dude that is such an awesome video you blew my brain away with the music
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV Ай бұрын
I apologize. While editing the video, I had issues with some of the audio tracks. On some devices, it doesn't seem as loud.
@travismosier4936
@travismosier4936 11 ай бұрын
Love the content and length of this video you posted! So interesting and hope to see more like this! I subscribed and hope to see more videos!!!!!
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
Thank you Travismosier4936!!! I appreciate you watching this video, your comment, and I'm grateful for your subscription! Thank you for watching!
@xmo552
@xmo552 10 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV Has anyone contemporary tried to soften stone ?
@saveriomastrianni1726
@saveriomastrianni1726 11 ай бұрын
Its great to see quality work like this catch on. This video was very well made and narrated. A lot of thoughtful observations.
@chrisguess4344
@chrisguess4344 11 ай бұрын
would have been better if he didnt claim this was his footage when, in fact, none of it is
@saveriomastrianni1726
@saveriomastrianni1726 11 ай бұрын
@@chrisguess4344 a lot of it is his footage from his trips
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 11 ай бұрын
@@chrisguess4344 All of the footage (videos and photographs) of these ancient sites are taken by me during my expeditions there.
@Soul_Watcher
@Soul_Watcher 10 ай бұрын
There are definitely missing pieces to this puzzle. But what a beautiful puzzle it is!Cheers
@fireandrevivalinmyheart6365
@fireandrevivalinmyheart6365 Ай бұрын
Hi hello what kind of materials that they use to build ancient buildings and structure that really last a century,im curious and wanna know how it done.Thanks
@Skeptic-Professor
@Skeptic-Professor 2 ай бұрын
Ok this is something I have been working on. Have you guys seen the man who melts all kind of things rocks and metals using the rear screen from an old rear projector tv. He made a frame and used to focus sunlight, like all of us did with a magnifying glass when we were children. This set a light bulb moment, obviously they didn’t have rear projector tv but they did have crystals and crystals were something they had access to and used. I have been able to melt rock using crystal and the sun. I am not able to cut anything accurately but it works. If this interests anyone let me know and I can give you more information. Pls accept my English it’s not my first language.
@andyhulme2274
@andyhulme2274 Ай бұрын
Ancient humans didn't melt stone the giants did who were offspring of the nephelim(fallen angels) who were in possession of a higher knowledge.
@Tatsunami_Studios
@Tatsunami_Studios 23 күн бұрын
Evidence?
@Tom_Emody
@Tom_Emody 11 ай бұрын
If you can vibrate stone fast enough, it will melt. That’s how heat works. I’m guessing that long ago, vibration was well understood. ….Tom
@cisvaughan6937
@cisvaughan6937 11 ай бұрын
@tomemody6685 Yep. Heat & speed both = moving molecules. As when they spin steel cylinders so they can turn the tops in to make gas bottles, like spinning clay to make pots. No "heat" on the steel needed, just a fast spin...
@Tom_Emody
@Tom_Emody 11 ай бұрын
@@cisvaughan6937 it’s amazing to watch friction welding. But how to melt stones efficiently?
@cisvaughan6937
@cisvaughan6937 11 ай бұрын
@tomemody6685 Glad you find welding fascinating! I'm sometimes afraid I'm a nerdy welding bore! ...Maybe by using the same principle? Getting the molecules to momentarily separate, then let them re-fuse? You know how when you heat granite all the grains separate out, because the differently coloured ones expand at different rates, & you end up with something like a heap of demerara sugar on the floor. They won't stick back together. But other substances do ... Water after its been boiled, metal after its been forged, lava after its been heated and cooled (with or without resultant vitrification.) Supposing something was used to oscillate the molecules of this stone till they began to separate, after sprinkling the surface with monatomic gold to make it weightless, the resulting loose stone~cloud could be pushed or blown through the air to where it's wanted then the monatomic gold layer scooped off & the stone let settle back into shape, in place. This would also explain why the stones have a "poured" quality, as they'd have the opportunity to settle & sag into spaces, leaving no gaps. (Although if old enough, non-crystalline stone will sag anyway, as does other unlikely materials --- see sags in glass after a few hundred years.) There could of course be simpler metaphysical explanations, such as someone using telekinesis to move and meld the stone.
@harrywalker968
@harrywalker968 10 ай бұрын
viper tv sumerian tablets. . they hold a cone, & have a bag for it.. was this a weapon,,or tool.. seeing there the aliens that made man,, . some dick, said, '' if they were so advanced, why did they use gigantic stone for everything''.. i said. ITS STILL THERE.... .
@zandanforth1326
@zandanforth1326 11 ай бұрын
As I am an artist , I have been working with cement, /concrete lately. Then I began to wonder….. what if monolithic stones were created by melting or making a more sophisticated concrete structures. I’m not buying the Ancient alien hypothesis., on megalithic stones. , it’s an easy out for those that wish to cover up a faults historical storyline. I have wondered about many of the same details you have focused in the video. The human race has a far more technological history than those that have written history would want us to believe. I believe we are what was left of the beginning. Something catastrophic happened 13-10,000 years ago which drove us back into a “Stone Age” and much information was lost. If we were to know the truth we would question everything we in western society believe to be true. The Bible would be a book of fables, as would the Koran. Then those that have power would no longer have power over hearts and souls.
@cisvaughan6937
@cisvaughan6937 11 ай бұрын
@zandanforth1326 Yeps
@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye
@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye Ай бұрын
8:30 -ish same “scoop” marks as the unfinished obelisk in Egypt
@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye
@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye Ай бұрын
Ha!! He eventually brought up my point about the obelisk in Aswan!
@Antonio-vn5xc
@Antonio-vn5xc 24 күн бұрын
No he didn't ​@@AnthonyAnthony-tk4ye
@Militza.85
@Militza.85 Ай бұрын
so far the best documentary about those stones! imho, I think they used maybe some lava heat source? then added components?
@SamtheIrishexan
@SamtheIrishexan 11 ай бұрын
Well done, I have always given this theory a good amount of weight and this is highly compelling. No pun intended.
@jimspear3033
@jimspear3033 11 ай бұрын
Magnetic molds like in aluminum casting would work for iron rich material. Do the magnetic fields of these stone blocks align?
@jelink22
@jelink22 11 ай бұрын
AL is only weakly magnetic. Try again.
@CharlesDowson-e2t
@CharlesDowson-e2t 5 ай бұрын
I suspect that they used sound vibration. The note high C can break a crystal glass. Everything in the universe vibrates.
@Acension43
@Acension43 2 ай бұрын
Is that the original 432 hrtz or the modern 440 hrtz 🤔
@CharlesDowson-e2t
@CharlesDowson-e2t 2 ай бұрын
@@Acension43 No idea. Be careful with that note especially when you are walking on the sidewalk.
@kermitefrog64
@kermitefrog64 2 ай бұрын
Great video. Humans from early times have always demonstrated a great ability to learn, and demonstrate much prowess for engineering and creativity. We just have to discover their methods.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your comment kermitefrog64 and I completely agree with you. They were smart and used very clever but primitive methods to create their stone structures from only what was available around them.
@tablescissors
@tablescissors 3 ай бұрын
Excellent narration and editing.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 3 ай бұрын
Thank you tablescissors for watching and your comment, I appreciate it!
@Joe-xj2tb
@Joe-xj2tb 6 ай бұрын
Yeah i got beat for telling my teachers stuff like this when i was a kid - And now to see more people have finally been working on this publicly fkn love it
@ChezMclegend
@ChezMclegend 6 ай бұрын
Because school isn’t meant to educate you. It was always designed to keep people in line.
@davedoogan6650
@davedoogan6650 5 ай бұрын
You should have listened to your teachers
@shawngoldsberry747
@shawngoldsberry747 4 ай бұрын
Dick farmers
@Hesasavage
@Hesasavage Ай бұрын
​@@davedoogan6650😂
@bosautomotiveservice
@bosautomotiveservice 11 ай бұрын
You're close.
@AltonMoore
@AltonMoore 11 ай бұрын
I've always figured that the stones (world-wide) were melted into place. The consistently-found beveled edges should be a clue for us. Your idea that it was somewhat chemical in nature is not quite what I was thinking, but it's interesting at least.
@pyotrberia9741
@pyotrberia9741 11 ай бұрын
Melted rock becomes glassy, like obsidian. How would they turn this back into natural stone?
@AltonMoore
@AltonMoore 11 ай бұрын
@@pyotrberia9741 I don't believe this is necessarily true. Perhaps for very high temperatures it is, but I assume that if someone could melt large quantities of stone, they could control the temperature fairly carefully. All of this being said, I am hardly an expert on the behavior of various rocks at high temperatures.
@ShimmyD-u7g
@ShimmyD-u7g 11 ай бұрын
@@AltonMoore If you can melt and then form rock into whatever shapes you want, why bother with all these odd shapes, and dont tell me its for earth quake prevention because the shapes are random. Also if they melted the rock, why are some of the sides rough. On top of this the amount of energy to melt stone into basically lava would be incredible. A lot of these locations do not have the energy source. Unless aliens of course, but why would freaking aliens travel the vastness of space just to come build some crappy stone structures. This is all just more bullshit theories, people just need to recognize that we don't know for sure how these things were built but instead our ancestors were very ingenious people.
@renadud
@renadud 25 күн бұрын
I have been totally thinking the same "melting" concept for years...no idea how they would have done this, but when thinking about all the "hows" melting was always at the top of my list. Of course my friends all think I'm nuts.
@ClaimTheDensity
@ClaimTheDensity 6 ай бұрын
There are reports and videos bringing up the concept of resonance have being been used to cut and even soften rock material and some even report that resonance could have helped transport some of the ancient blocks. Have you come across these sources in your research and if you have, I'd be very interested to know your opinion.... Great work you're doing with this documentary!
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 6 ай бұрын
Thank you ClaimTheDensity, i greatly appreciate your comment. I have heard about these claims, and I only know of stories. Although I do believe the claims are true that they heard noises while they moved but I believe they are from a different cause or source than what most people believe as sound levitation.
@orpheuscreativeco9236
@orpheuscreativeco9236 11 ай бұрын
If you got the faces hot enough before setting the stone in place it would press into the proper shape and tolerance without needing precision cuts. 🤔 Those "H" blocks though, geopoolymer makes more sense.
@harrywalker968
@harrywalker968 10 ай бұрын
wrong.. go try it, fkng around with 50t melted crap, have fun....
@orpheuscreativeco9236
@orpheuscreativeco9236 10 ай бұрын
@@harrywalker968 Have a think about it before you naysay my friend ✌️ One simple solution would be to ignite thermite between the two surfaces before setting them. It was merely a thought experiment. 👍
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 6 ай бұрын
stone isn't butter, they don't necessarily simply soften from heat. some just get brittle. ¿and thermite in a time before metallurgy? good luck refining the bauxite into aluminum to begin with.
@bustermot
@bustermot 6 ай бұрын
I think there should be a rule: if someone is whispering, they’re full of ….
@paulmacfarlane207
@paulmacfarlane207 11 ай бұрын
Do you know how long it would take to build using these junk tools. They would still be working on them today.They had something else .
@miller2675
@miller2675 11 ай бұрын
I do. I build ponds and stone walls just like this. You do not know what you are talking about.
@paulmacfarlane207
@paulmacfarlane207 11 ай бұрын
@@miller2675 I am a contractor and i build walls with hammers and other tools .But you do not do it with 100 or 1000 ton stones you can't and you don't know what you are talking about.
@killerfromabove187
@killerfromabove187 11 ай бұрын
Clearly!💯
@darthcrybaby410
@darthcrybaby410 11 ай бұрын
For sure, they wouldn't have had time to watch TV or play playstation
@drcurioustube
@drcurioustube 6 ай бұрын
Thank you, professor
@Dave5843-d9m
@Dave5843-d9m 9 ай бұрын
I was going to say the stones were rubbed (lapped) together with an abrasive paste. But that doesn’t explain the rounded foundation at start of video. The surface obsidian suggests the stones were heated and dropped into place while hot and soft. We’re they perhaps roughly cut to fit, then placed over a fire until the surface softened. This would deliver a tight fit when lifted into place.
@PatrickcWinter
@PatrickcWinter 3 ай бұрын
Today is the first time I have listened to your contents of your show and I'm very impressed the work you've done had to be tedious putting this video together I have the subscribed to your channel and look forward to more other videos thank you
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 3 ай бұрын
Thank you PatrickcWinter! It meant a lot to me to read your comment and for you to subscribe to my channel. You're correct; it was tedious and took some time to complete this video. What took the most time was traveling to these places multiple times over the years to research them and to film them. I promise to keep creating more videos!
@xXturbo86Xx
@xXturbo86Xx 11 ай бұрын
The obsidian is a nice find. What you found is what's left of what they originally looked it. Yes we're talking about hundreds of thousands of years of normal weathering, or thousands of years of INTENSE weathering. Take your pick. Either way, all these megaliths are heavily weathered. All of them. I also strongly believe that especially those scattered and irregular pieces that make no sense, are leftovers from VERY old structures that got destroyed. And anything you see that has indentations on it, be certain that something was fitted in it. Something that's long gone. Probably machinery.
@mralowen
@mralowen 11 ай бұрын
Its a fact that they knew something we dont.
@miller2675
@miller2675 11 ай бұрын
What a vague and useless point.
@thszntatst
@thszntatst 6 ай бұрын
The premise that drystacked masonry structures were poured in molten stone is the most moronic horseshit clickbait on social media. It shows a lack of comprehension of the history of masonry, and also of the foundry processes that are proposed.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 6 ай бұрын
This was just one of many methods that these ancient builders used. What's so wrong with using one of these methods? The ancients didn't use just geopolymer. Check out my video Ancient Andean Cement for more information & evidence on this one method that was used in South America. kzbin.info/www/bejne/gpLGe2Zoa96MrdU
@Thickestdickest
@Thickestdickest 6 ай бұрын
Nice work good video buddy
@crashingtiger
@crashingtiger 4 ай бұрын
Well done! In a very crowded field, most enjoyable video, best presentation on this subject .
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 4 ай бұрын
Thank you crashingtiger. I appreciate you watching my content that I filmed and created, along with your comment!
@Akya2120
@Akya2120 10 ай бұрын
This is the most reasonable proposal for the construction method. A solvent welding mortar, or a melted obsidian layer between stacked rocks. Along with decent masonry and or geopolymers, that would make sense.
@rexyoshimoto4278
@rexyoshimoto4278 8 ай бұрын
Take forever to do but o.k.
@Akya2120
@Akya2120 8 ай бұрын
@@rexyoshimoto4278 I mean, it would take a long time, but if you could do a layer every day or five it wouldn't be absurd.
@polygonalmasonary
@polygonalmasonary 10 ай бұрын
It is more likely that the rock was some kind of Geopolymer (Clay like Mixture). See my comment below on the chemistry and physics of melting and cooling stone in the atmosphere.
@walkwithhim5258
@walkwithhim5258 8 ай бұрын
I’m glad I found your channel!
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 8 ай бұрын
Thank you very much, and I'm glad you did! Thank you for watching!!
@Ephalim
@Ephalim 3 ай бұрын
Very cool! Just what i was asking for! Now comes the difficult part. What now? I wont stop wondering.
@redwolf4611
@redwolf4611 10 ай бұрын
That weighted string is not called a scribe. It's called a plumb bob or plummet. It's used today in construction to find a vertical reference sometimes in conjunction with a spirit level to insure there aren't any bows or bend in a vertical surface. The same thing the ancient people referenced in the video used it for. That lil thing made the pyramids of Giza.
@geoffhunter7704
@geoffhunter7704 7 ай бұрын
A very good video but could you turn up your recording VU Level please as i had to strain my old years to take in all the content!!!
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 7 ай бұрын
Yes, I will. I apologize for this occurrence. I had issues while recording, and I've had comments informing me about this. It depends on which devices you're playing it from. To receive better audio quality, it depends on which devices you're using to play this video (tv, cellphone, laptop) due to certain parts recorded in mono and stereo. Thank you for your concern and suggestion. I hope you were able to finish the video 🙏
@geoffhunter7704
@geoffhunter7704 7 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV Thank you for your reply my medium is a HP Laptop with Bang and Olufsen Speakers and my statement was to advise you that your sound needed attention to get the best from your fine video.Always appreciate human voice narration you employed and i did subscribe but unsuscribed from another similar channel who now uses AI Narration and it was awful and jarring on the ear's.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 7 ай бұрын
Thank you geoffhunter7704, this comment really made my day. I share the same viewpoint as you with a.i. voices. In my opinion, they also bring less personality and legitimacy to the video. As pertaining to my video that you commented on here, I have fixed this issue with the video in my editing software, but unfortunately, I can not edit it or re-upload it here; but I greatly appreciate your subscribe and continued viewing. If you wouldn't mind and have the spare time, I did a narration on a historical book and would like your feedback on it in that video's comment section. It's about a Spanish explorer documenting about the cannibals in some South American tribes. A friend of mine did the illustrations. I included the KZbin link below. kzbin.info/www/bejne/j5bTppyre61riqM
@geoffhunter7704
@geoffhunter7704 7 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV I will review your Colleagues Opus on Tribal Cannibilism and report back,Geoff.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 7 ай бұрын
I was reading from a public domain book while my friend created individual illustrations. I then compiled the video together.
@Unit8200-rl8ev
@Unit8200-rl8ev 9 ай бұрын
Each of the building blocks is a unique size and shape. If the building blocks were made with molten stone, you would need to build a mold for each block you make. That's not practical.
@Unit8200-rl8ev
@Unit8200-rl8ev 10 ай бұрын
"Ancient humans melted stone." And then they crafted many thousands of individual forms with different dimensions to put the molten stone into for making building blocks. That's not very efficient. Why would they even do that?
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 10 ай бұрын
They would do that because these construction methods were easy for them to handle. The materials used were not scarce, and the type of labor was widely known. These ancient sites were also created from either multiple construction methods or mainly one with only some other techniques. Puma Punku was mainly a geopolymer, while Sacsayhuaman was a mixture of multiple ancient stone construction methods. The part about melting is the outside finish they included a lot of these polygonal shaped blocks, which I explain in the video, along with including photographs from a digital field microscope.
@nonotsanchez9186
@nonotsanchez9186 5 ай бұрын
Your theory is a fact... ancient people, used melted rocks and sands, and used molding patterns to form stone blocks. How they carried the stones and stock them on top of one another? It was easy for ancient people and builders. It was being performed by this man who posted in his YT channel how to move huge stone blocks..
@Alcoa122
@Alcoa122 10 ай бұрын
Great video, lots of fantastic evidence. So much we don’t know. Thanks.
@Katarzyna_S_89
@Katarzyna_S_89 10 ай бұрын
Thank You for expanding people awareness in this topic :) very important. Nice presented 👍🙂
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 10 ай бұрын
Thank you, it's my pleasure to make these videos. Thank you for watching and dropping a comment!
@Katarzyna_S_89
@Katarzyna_S_89 10 ай бұрын
@@TheVoyagerTV always watching with pleasure 🙂 great inwestigation, topic is fascinating - it adds so much new questions to our today history narrative 🙂 please keep going with Your work❤️❤️
@seelenschlucht
@seelenschlucht 10 ай бұрын
Could they have used obsidian powder, or glas powder in general, as a mold release agent to prevent the molten rock from sticking to the form? I remember that glas powder was used as a release agent in continuous casting in the metal industry.
@cozmosintellius2199
@cozmosintellius2199 Ай бұрын
The real name for geopolamer is call....extruded concrete. Extruded concret is made by powderizing sands or stones and adding a catalyst such a lime and then heating the powedered mixture to 200 degrees and then extruding the heated mixture into a form of a desired shape. Some wound just extrude the mixture onto a flat surface and as it cooled would carve or form the artificial stone into a desired shape. Some areas used clay basalt that was buried under thick layers of topsoil expose it and cut desired shapes needed for construction in the region.
@methylene5
@methylene5 7 ай бұрын
Now explain how it was done in granite in other sites, that are just as precise. If the granite was ever pulverised, it would be obvious under a microscope. If it were melted, then it would solidify into obsidian/volcanic glass. These rocks are not geopolymer, they were precisely cut. However, I don't dismiss the possibility that limestone based rocks (including marble) could have been dissolved by different means, both known and unknown. They dissolve in acid easily enough.
@Jerry-j7c8q
@Jerry-j7c8q 6 ай бұрын
A very underrated channel.
@TheVoyagerTV
@TheVoyagerTV 6 ай бұрын
Thank you Jester Green! I appreciate your comment!
@normbograham3
@normbograham3 9 күн бұрын
I took some NYS shale, and put in a glass jar, with some lime-away, and the shale turned into mud, with rocks. I wonder if vinegar, might also dissolve enough to get a tighter fit. Clearly, NYS shale is not a hard stone, but still interesting.
@djheatt
@djheatt 10 ай бұрын
those stones are cut by hitting with a hammer and chisel to shape them. it's a common practice that has dwindled away since block structures are not popular anymore. Grandfather built stone walls and the fence he built at home still stands 100 years later.
@calD57
@calD57 4 ай бұрын
How do you account for all the different shapes?
@davidconner-shover51
@davidconner-shover51 2 ай бұрын
Early in this video, you showed that almost all of the stone used had a high iron content, almost all igneous rock, later, on one piece of limestone (non igneous), a coating of obsidian that showed a high content of aluminum and magnesium, could ancient peoples have discovered the thermite reaction? it stands to reason. use of thermite in a mortar or paste, applied then ignited would produce these effects, rapid localized heating in the 1000C range followed by rapid cooling by the heat being carried away by the stone
@chrismalcomson7640
@chrismalcomson7640 6 ай бұрын
There's already been a study done on the composition of the polygonal walls. The larger stones at the base were part natural limestone but with a conglomerate coating. The smaller ones above were completely unnatural in composition. The processes involved are unknown but the ancients obviously had a system where they could shape the soft limestone concrete and put it into place. As the geology is now known it'd be facinating to see some experiments figuring out how they did it. My guess is they did it much like you would treat clay when making pots. As it dries you are able to manipulate it in different ways.. For instance, if they covered the surface of a block below with a soft mix they could put a harder one above and it would create a perfect join. Then repeat the process as they put the next layer into place. They did this study with a view to preserve the sites from erosion but if they did a further study with a view to recreating the walls I'm sure they could figure it out...
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