Exploring The Astonishing Megalithic Walls Of Cusco Peru June 2019

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Brien Foerster

Brien Foerster

5 жыл бұрын

Join us on tour in 2020: hiddenincatours.com/tours/#major

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@RostislavLapshin
@RostislavLapshin 2 жыл бұрын
Several methods of fabrication of the polygonal masonry using clay/gypsum replicas, a topography translator, reduced clay models of the stone blocks, and a 3D-pantograph are described in the article “Fabrication methods of the polygonal masonry of large tightly fitted stone blocks with curved surface interfaces in megalithic structures of Peru”. I do not provide a direct link, because KZbin does not allow a comment with this link. Search by the article title.
@user-hb2vp7rm7s
@user-hb2vp7rm7s Жыл бұрын
Show us
@suegirouard917
@suegirouard917 Жыл бұрын
@@user-hb2vp7rm7s Just search what he quoted and you will find it.
@RostislavLapshin
@RostislavLapshin Жыл бұрын
The 9th article edition (DOI: 10.20944/preprints202108.0087.v9) is posted at P r e p r i n t s. Search the article by DOI or by title.
@leoSebDelg35
@leoSebDelg35 8 ай бұрын
Your paper lacks a chemical acid pyrite mud method
@RostislavLapshin
@RostislavLapshin 8 ай бұрын
​@@leoSebDelg35 The paper lacks any methods except the classical mechanical treatment by means of a hammer and steel chisel since it is devoted to this classical mechanical treatment. I am an adherent of the old good method of stone treatment. Anyway, in the last (9th) version of the paper, in the Introduction section, there is a reference on the paper related to the method using acid pyrite mud.
@islandmonusvi
@islandmonusvi 5 жыл бұрын
Civilizations are defined by their workmanship. In times of peace , security, and abundance the craftsmanship is ‘magic’ and tightly fit. During times of stressful transition the work is generally rushed, chaotic and disorganized. The Megalithic People are speaking to us. Thank you again for giving them a clearer voice.
@avidnongetit8710
@avidnongetit8710 5 жыл бұрын
Wow, your response was clear, concise, and beautiful. Thank you.
@justinchapman2454
@justinchapman2454 5 жыл бұрын
avid Non Couldn’t agree more!
@bobgillis1137
@bobgillis1137 4 жыл бұрын
Interesting perspective, Jori. I hadn'tconsidered that.
@KentBDouglas92
@KentBDouglas92 5 жыл бұрын
I've run every scenario in my head so many times. And these walls still fascinate me and command my attention to the utmost! I imagine being there in the midst of it being constructed and I'm still baffled! It's in our bones, and we can feel it! Thank you, Brien, for fueling my thirst of our past! Your a good man!!!
@ultrafeel-tv
@ultrafeel-tv 5 жыл бұрын
Yep, same here, the fascination never ends!
@albertcheeni
@albertcheeni 5 жыл бұрын
Yes. Me too bro. Every night this 'How did they do it' thing keeps me awake for a long time. Sometimes I think they used some simple method. But then why this was not passed down generation to generation. These things CANT be repeated now. That's what is so incredible.
@dorothyradley9391
@dorothyradley9391 5 жыл бұрын
Kent Douglas - Our planet was a very different place to what it is now over 12,000 years ago. Is it possible that the solid stone quarries we see today were semi sold lakes of molten stone then and they were moulded by hand and placed on top of the stones and because they were semi solid they moulded to the stones underneath and next to them. They hardened quickly away from the semi solid lake/quarry.
@GoldenMoments100
@GoldenMoments100 5 жыл бұрын
extracted/created, molded and fit/placed in, with and through consciousness, if you ask me. Generation through consciousness and telekinesis. The same goes for all megalithic sites of this precision, including the great pyramids. No need for high-tech, although the same was present at those times, no doubt.
@KentBDouglas92
@KentBDouglas92 5 жыл бұрын
@@dorothyradley9391 They are most certainly worked like clay. All the signs are right there! Directly off of the micro tight joints is about a 3/4 inch or so scoop mark that outlines the joints just before it bellies out. Just like finish work a Concrete Finisher does with cement. Just amazes me!
@colinsweeney2366
@colinsweeney2366 5 жыл бұрын
This is exactly why I love this channel! Brien’s constantly revealing and showcasing ancient, pre-Incan, megalithic constructions and literally thrusting it all right into the face of mainstream academia and the traditional paradigm; refusing to allow them to continue to ignore these obvious indications of a lost, highly sophisticated ancient civilization and technology! Absolutely incredible work and truly breathtaking craftsmanship!
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Agreed 100%..!
@GravityBoy72
@GravityBoy72 5 жыл бұрын
This is a great mystery being studiously ignored by the academic world. Maybe they don't like the implications.
@Antique803
@Antique803 5 жыл бұрын
Poured one against the other, thus exceptionally tight joints. They quarried dust or powder, carried it on llamas and their backs, then mixed with additional concoction and pored in place. Every stone is a different shape and size when you use animal skins for forms.
@suegirouard917
@suegirouard917 Жыл бұрын
Yes, and notice the color of the stones, all uniform and none with any type of visible graining to prove they are natural stones. I agree, I think these stones were made from some kind of cement type mixture.
@danesovic7585
@danesovic7585 5 жыл бұрын
We should start building like this. You can see that every building was made for eternity.
@danzbutrfly
@danzbutrfly 5 жыл бұрын
yes...we want to see u do it....lol
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
This bates the question, was it solely for longevity or something else. At least that's what I'm wondering...
@johnwalker1553
@johnwalker1553 5 жыл бұрын
So i believe that kind of walls are much older as described. even older as alternative researcher stated.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
The truth is that everything built today is built with a short lifecycle. We have become a throwaway Society discarding our past so we lose all ties with who we really are...
@nickt1475
@nickt1475 3 жыл бұрын
Its lasts as long of the earth because it is made of earth! The steel, lumber and other building materials use will disappear eventually but the earth and stones will always remain!
@ElijahPerrin80
@ElijahPerrin80 5 жыл бұрын
I could watch these videos all day of the joints you find on your way, every time I am filled with a sense of amazement seeing a Civilization capable of achievements seemingly effortlessly eclipsing even our most prominent achievements. It is not just the craftsmanship and the continuity seemingly created by one mind and one hand but the scale of these achievements along with the love that this work exudes, this is not the work of slaves, this is pride and honour on a scale that is impossible to fathom with humanity as it resides now.
@Aff3ct000
@Aff3ct000 5 жыл бұрын
Incredible camera work on this one. Thank you.
@ruffanuff
@ruffanuff 5 жыл бұрын
One of the few who uploads to 4k :-)
@jageo48
@jageo48 5 жыл бұрын
Video camera pans a little too fast for my liking. This is a similar comment to maany of these kinds of videos. It's as if the videographers have seen these sites so often that they don't understand that first time viewers may need to get more intimate before buying a plane ticket. hahaha
@Beevreeter
@Beevreeter 4 жыл бұрын
These stones are so completely amazing - If I could go back in time to witness just one thing, it would be to go and see them actually making these walls.
@jjamleroy
@jjamleroy 5 жыл бұрын
India is one of the most amazing structured,construction ,most beautiful workmanship I’ve ever seen, I’ve been a contractor for the better part of thirty five plus years and next to the pyramids in Egypt , India’s amazing structures across the continent are underrated in it’s craftsmanship. Absolutely brilliant works and design made from a people’s thousands multiple thousands of years ago.
@williamcopeland4844
@williamcopeland4844 5 жыл бұрын
At 7:20, the Inca stone work on top has some mighty fine joinery too. Thanks for the video!
@erickwillum2979
@erickwillum2979 5 жыл бұрын
It has, and in some places although inferior, it has the same characteristics with rounded edges, bulges, close tight curved fittings, it’s almost a halfway in between stage. Which makes me think the original master art got lost only gradually.
@seona6549
@seona6549 5 жыл бұрын
This is even more amazing to me than the pyramids.... It's absolutely AMAZING!
@135iN55
@135iN55 5 жыл бұрын
The most amazing part of this, by far, is that no one has revealed these astonishing structures but you.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Great point:)
@Chuck-he1jd
@Chuck-he1jd 4 жыл бұрын
I can never get enough of these videos showing the megalithic stone work .. Great work your doing
@crabtrem8
@crabtrem8 5 жыл бұрын
Always interesting to watch Brien Foerster point out the layers of different civilizations. The one thing I would like to see more of is what's going on with the foundations of these structures? Do these walls just sit on top of the ground seen, or do they extend deep into the ground? It would seem to me that these large walls were meant to protect against some kind of great force, so I would think they would extend well below the ground layer. Or was the ground layer they were originally built at much lower than today? Thank you for all your interesting insights and observations.
@ianfrancis777
@ianfrancis777 5 жыл бұрын
Good questions, but who has the answers out there??
@dorothyradley9391
@dorothyradley9391 5 жыл бұрын
Michael Crabtree - I would like to see the other side of these walls though.
@avidnongetit8710
@avidnongetit8710 5 жыл бұрын
If you listen to Graham Hancock and trust his excellent field work, this video is of 12,000 plus year old stone work. The stones are still part of houses and businesses! We are building nothing which will still exist in 12,000 years! Thank you so much for this video Brien. I wish I could go there and see all of the places in South America you visit. I sincerely hope your tours and travels continue until. . you decide to stop.. probably never will. 😂
@jimwalcher4467
@jimwalcher4467 5 жыл бұрын
Can come
@luisaraujo8697
@luisaraujo8697 5 жыл бұрын
Mr. Foerster: one thing, puzzles me, Everytime, I see this fantastic work, it's that I see these,tiny, little stones at bottom holding all the weight from the huge ones, pretty similar, I saw at other programs that you had, in Egyptian pyramid, with base, similar, to Inka work...it's incredible the work it is..thanks
@lehcyfer
@lehcyfer 5 жыл бұрын
I'm not buying the "megalythic"/"inca" periods. The typical "sloppy" inca walls and "megalythic" ones could easily intermingle in constructions in the same time period - a question of resources - only in high-level ceremonial/ruler's buildings (like the wall of palace of Inca Roca) the walls are made entirely of the prestigious big stones with perfect joints. The normal ones have only the corner made from big stones, the rest of small ones. Look at 2:31 - It is further confirmed by the fact that the big stones are standing on small ones - they are inlaid into the wall like an adornment, a prestigious reinforcement. TLDR: Incas built both types of walls at the same time.
@brentrussell780
@brentrussell780 4 ай бұрын
​@@lehcyfer lol sure thing. Drink more flouride
@PhotoTrekr
@PhotoTrekr 4 жыл бұрын
I've been amazed by these structures since I read about them in the 70's. Kind of disappointing that we haven't figured out how they were made.
@edwardanthony7283
@edwardanthony7283 5 жыл бұрын
It is impeccable work that has stood the test of time.
@jamescady723
@jamescady723 5 жыл бұрын
Wait! Another Brien Foerster video. Stop what I'm doing and watch--instant thumbs up!
@tomchrpa4673
@tomchrpa4673 4 жыл бұрын
BRIAN - your videos are getting better and better. Thank you.
@06teenah
@06teenah 5 жыл бұрын
So love your intro and all your vids. Appreciate all your work. Much love from New Zealand
@JupiterJane1984
@JupiterJane1984 5 жыл бұрын
Great close up coverage of the wall, thanks for sharing Brien!😎😎
@dorothyradley9391
@dorothyradley9391 5 жыл бұрын
My theory is similar to what you said towards the end of this video. Whoever built the megalithic walls had the ability to soften the stone and it moulded in to the stones underneath and the stone next to it and then it hardened. There is no other viable explanation. The question now is, how did they soften the stone. What technology did they have to do that? That is my theory as to how they removed giant obelisks from the bedrock and how they smoothed them so perfectly. It is probably why no tools were found that did such work. They did not use tools as we know them. The tools they had to soften the stone were much more ethereal. Thank you Brien for taking me on your tours via the wonderful technology of the internet. I would never get the chance to visit such places because I am ill and disabled. You bring it all in to my living room. You are a ⭐️ xx
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Great work your doing the World a Great Service for all your research on this Major Discovery...
@fullspectrumdominanc
@fullspectrumdominanc 5 жыл бұрын
It looks like a doorway that's been blocked not a repair!! 4:55
@yogidemis8513
@yogidemis8513 5 жыл бұрын
Same, if so I wonder what's back there!
@JohnVanderZwet
@JohnVanderZwet 5 жыл бұрын
@DANZIG You'd end up in someone's living room. There's nothing mysterious on the other side. Actually that was likely a window, originally, based on it's shape.
@michaelangelo7511
@michaelangelo7511 9 ай бұрын
You give the best presentations on the Tube. Thank You
@VIIArtesLiberales
@VIIArtesLiberales 5 жыл бұрын
Nice detailed recording of the walls in Cusco Peru. I always enjoy your work. You opened my eyes to the true history.
@secularsunshine9036
@secularsunshine9036 Жыл бұрын
*Thank you.* *Sunshine on my shoulders makes me Happy...*
@tomwhite4085
@tomwhite4085 5 жыл бұрын
Really fascinating and interesting. Thankyou for such an informative video
@flapneus3212
@flapneus3212 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Brien, always looking forward to your video👍
@hannibalbarca4140
@hannibalbarca4140 5 жыл бұрын
The bottom level of the 3rd (small) Giza pyramid has the exact same interlocking stonework as this, complete with the knobs
@albertcheeni
@albertcheeni 5 жыл бұрын
Yes. Good observation. They are strikingly similar. But still the stone work in this South American place is far more advanced ,intricate and beautiful
@hannibalbarca4140
@hannibalbarca4140 5 жыл бұрын
@@albertcheeni seems like a pretty big coincidence imo..
@ralphshaw9758
@ralphshaw9758 5 жыл бұрын
Yup those giants were on a world tour. Blowing the minds of each culture as they went along from continent to continent.
@marshalbass7098
@marshalbass7098 5 жыл бұрын
Fantastic coverage Brien. Always appreciate it.
@Phibonacci222
@Phibonacci222 5 жыл бұрын
So amazing. So much we don't know...
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
That's the truth...
@timyates807
@timyates807 5 жыл бұрын
Love your work Brien !! Thanks for another "obvious " example of two extremely different building methods and some VERY high technology!! Man people are dense
@aliezhasa9490
@aliezhasa9490 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the videos and for making me a more informed person. I wish you good health and long life.
@drewwriterextraordinaire2456
@drewwriterextraordinaire2456 4 ай бұрын
When the excitation frequency is within the range of 0-1o kHz, the resonance frequency of granite is 6900 Hz, and that of sandstone is 8700Hz. Earth's natural harmonic frequency, The Schuman Frequency, pulsates at a rate of 7.83 hertz. My theory is that the " Knobs" or those "Depressions", were for tuning. To slice off the rock until you reach that harmonic resonance with the planet. If you're wondering what note 7.83 hertz might be ? It's a flat B. Two octaves below the lowest note on a piano. Fun fact. Tesla even used it for his power grid tunings. Love your work, brother. Peace and love to you and be safe. Also. If one heats up basaltic rock or cool it down, the resonant frequency will go up or down accordingly. Peace
@hkm_865
@hkm_865 5 жыл бұрын
Brien, your work is priceless to us truth seekers. Thank you so much.
@Mike-mp8ce
@Mike-mp8ce 5 жыл бұрын
It is amazing knowing that people are so ignorant by saying it is all from the Inca civilization. Talk about the evidence being right in front of you
@avidnongetit8710
@avidnongetit8710 5 жыл бұрын
Not ignorant. Our system only provides money for studies which "toe the line" of the government, religious beliefs, and history which is politically correct. Everything that is deemed socially unacceptable is literally banned and unpaid for.
@Steve-mg8it
@Steve-mg8it 5 жыл бұрын
Dear Brien or anyone else interested: I was watching a vid on Teotihuacan and under the main Temple of the Sun was found four small statues place around the center vertical axis of The Temple of The Sun and slightly tilted back arranged such that it would seem that their shared gaze fixed on what would be the aforementioned central vertical axis. I was immediately struck by this as A) The small statues look VERY similar to the Moai of Easter Island. B) They surrounded the central vertical axis much like the Moai all face the center of the center of Easter Island C) The small statues of Teotihuacan are also looking slightly upward, again just like the Moai of Easter Island. Thoughts?
@Mike-mp8ce
@Mike-mp8ce 5 жыл бұрын
@@Steve-mg8it Share the link to this video please
@Steve-mg8it
@Steve-mg8it 5 жыл бұрын
Mike 0891 Secrets of The Dead Season 4 Episode 3 “Teotihuacan’s Lost Kings” from 2016. I don’t know if it’s on KZbin somewhere or not it was produced by PBS. It’s awesome, there was a mini lake under Temple Of Sun that they sprinkled with glittering powder all over so it would appear to be stars and reflect in the water below that they saw as creation myth. Come to think of it, the whole lake under the pyramid thing reminds me of Grand Pyramid at Giza🤔
@ericarchuleta9531
@ericarchuleta9531 5 жыл бұрын
@@Steve-mg8it There is a book you might want to check out ! "The 8 calender's of the Maya" by Hunbatz Men, if you google it you can find this book for very cheap, Mr. Men was a Mayan Daykeeper and he tells the history of these people, you will find answers to your questions!!!
@djhi-flo
@djhi-flo 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the views of the stonework in town. Seeing it in an everyday setting is mind blowing. Sad that as time has progressed, we have gotten worse at repair work.
@garryperrin2408
@garryperrin2408 5 жыл бұрын
With exception of basalt stone atop megalithic, the various qualities of construction are easily observed.Very good video.
@ilmaru7680
@ilmaru7680 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for good quality picture and sound.
@Gramald
@Gramald 5 жыл бұрын
Welcome back! Great work! :)
@corycrandell2682
@corycrandell2682 5 жыл бұрын
I also spotted the scoop marks, very similar to the aswan quarry marks.
@dorothyradley9391
@dorothyradley9391 5 жыл бұрын
Cory Crandell - Scoop marks could add to the theory that the solid stone quarries of today were much different over 12,000 years ago. The stone then could have been semi solid (on its way to hardening years later) and the scoop marks were the marks of the tool used to scoop out the semi molten rock out.
@corycrandell2682
@corycrandell2682 5 жыл бұрын
@@dorothyradley9391 but granite is mostly quartz. Its always hard from the moment its formed. And heating it up destroys it's structure.
@corycrandell2682
@corycrandell2682 5 жыл бұрын
@@dorothyradley9391 i think the scoop marks are rough cut marks from a either a rotating head of some kind, or the shape of some kind of tool that may even had arced the rock surface away like a carbon arc does to steel.
@135iN55
@135iN55 5 жыл бұрын
The scoop marks suggest a semi-soft clay-like consistency when shaped. My guess is they are clay-adobe, maybe cut from a clay basin after drawing the pattern on the mud. After the soft blocks were cut and transported they hardened, then over time they fossilized like petrified forests consisting of now-granite tree trunks. If trees often turn into granite, so can clay or molded material. That only means they might be much older than realized. How old are petrified forests? No one really knows. Also, modern Electric Universe theory introduces the possibility that petrification might result from an event and not from a gradual evolution.
@susanjane2498
@susanjane2498 5 жыл бұрын
According to Mudfossil University Roger says sometimes petrification can happen quickly, it depends upon the circumstances.
@jorvikwhites6979
@jorvikwhites6979 5 жыл бұрын
If you had a 20 to 40 tonne clay block how would you pick it up and put it in position without the lifting device slicing through the clay? One answer leads to many more questions then your back to square one.
@blaze1148
@blaze1148 5 жыл бұрын
@@jorvikwhites6979 ....the Clay would be in powdered form - poured into hessian sacks on the wall and the sacks burnt off.
@jorvikwhites6979
@jorvikwhites6979 5 жыл бұрын
Then wouldn't we see evidence of sack fibers and even burning on blocks that have been moved. It's a theory I suppose, not arguing against it because I don't have the answers. It'll still be debated long after I've gone .
@dorothyradley9391
@dorothyradley9391 5 жыл бұрын
Sandy - I think you are on the same track as me. I think the stone was already soft when put in place and it settled in to the other rocks underneath and next to it as it hardened. The scoop marks are the shape of the tool used to dig out the soft rock. Remember, Our planet would have been far different to what it is today over 12,000 years ago. Why are we thinking the quarries were exactly as they are now? Our planet had molten rock way back then,
@madeinusa5395
@madeinusa5395 5 жыл бұрын
This is mindblowing. How is it possible that "professional" academic archaeologists have not made a detailed scientific study of this?
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Good question, or maybe they were sanctioned or punished if they did...
@JeffM---
@JeffM--- 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome, thanks Brien!
@rosman2635
@rosman2635 5 жыл бұрын
I thought here we go when I seen the Globe intro but hats off to you for presenting more evidence geologists cannot explain.
@ancientinsights5134
@ancientinsights5134 4 жыл бұрын
You make things so clear!
@dizispell
@dizispell 4 жыл бұрын
It makes sense that the stone would have to have been soft to get such smooth scoops out of it like ice cream. So interesting!!
@ancientinsights5134
@ancientinsights5134 4 жыл бұрын
Twenty years in taiwans new channel here. I thank you for all you have done. I look forward to meeting you someday. David Stig Hansen
@isupportyou9929
@isupportyou9929 5 жыл бұрын
Man made huge bricks, not natural stones. But the jointing is perfect and mysterious. It seems that the perfectly interlocking is not for earthquake resistance since there are many small stones between big stones which not good for stability.
@indiana146
@indiana146 5 жыл бұрын
My wifes stone work in the front garden is pretty good
@2turnt259
@2turnt259 4 жыл бұрын
indiana146 yeah man she’s pretty good
@paulbird795
@paulbird795 5 жыл бұрын
Brien, just picking up on something you said in this video, you said that the stone is more uniform in these walls than that found in the quarries. The more I look at these videos you've done the more I am convinced that these stones are reconstituted. Pouring a wet mix does not quite add up to me with what I see and the practicality of doing it, however dry casting the stones does make sense. A thin layer of grease, say animal fat for example between the stones would give an apparent joint. Dry cast stones could explain the weird scoop marks on their surface, as it's easily done before the mix sets. The protrusions could be created as part of the sculpture in situ. We work with dry cast products and once cured they are as tougher than the original stones the mix was ground from. IF this is how they did it, and I am still not sure of course, it just leads to more questions, i.e. how the hell did they grind the stone for the mix, what was the binder? If I was going to try this myself I would use a granite powder with cement binder-20 percent cement would do it. Did they have cement or was it some other crystalline binder? Talk is cheap, I am going to try this over the summer myself. Not sure if you'll read this comment let alone answer, but is there any evidence of stone dust mounds at the quarry where this granite comes from? Perhaps the pulverised granite was left over from mining and they thought 'right lets use this up'. Mining what? That's a whole other can of worms. Is the granite in those walls deficient in any substance that exists in the un quarried stone, i.e. I wonder if it has had anything removed such as radioactive compounds. The way the stone is flaking off at the surface in places, it doesn't seem right, I have seen granite exfoliate but I have only seen it do it in deeper layers, this exfoliation is very superficial, somethings off there. Surely the chemical composition of these stones has been analysed? Brilliant videos.
@tomheringer2047
@tomheringer2047 5 жыл бұрын
Great comment Paul. I agree wholeheartedly. Brien's "homogeneity" comment kind of gave it away. Those stones were most likely dry formed in situ. Some type of mold release was utilized between the seams, i.e. animal lard, aloe vera, etc. Roman concrete is a simple mixture of volcanic ash, lime and crushed stone. In this case, it was volcanic ash, pulverized limestone, and crushed or ground granite, and just enough water to make a dry paste like material. These "powdery" materials were carried from there respective quarries in small quantities and mixed onsite. The polygonal shapes were definitely to make the construct earthquake proof. They even placed several keystones throughout the project on various courses to act as built in wedges to force the stones tightly together as the earth shook. The Romans did not invent concrete or the keystone, they copied them. After the wall was built (or during in stages), the "dry" material was doused with water to make it permanently set. Sometimes it got too soft and required braces to prevent excessive sagging which created the "knobs" and in some cases small indentations. Excessive "puffing" was troweled (scooped) off between the braces where necessary while the material was still workable. When the braces were removed, the material was too hard to remove the knobs. Roman concrete will last an eternity and is impervious to salt water. We use Portland concrete which is a mixture of limestone and clay which degrades easily and is therefore life limited.
@tomheringer2047
@tomheringer2047 5 жыл бұрын
I just want to add that some people may ask why not just build the wall in larger sections or one piece. The answer is that they had no rebar and their project would crack like crazy. The polygonal seam work is purposeful self designed cracking that works in there favor especially during powerful earthquakes.
@paulbird795
@paulbird795 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Tom, nice to see a comment from someone who knows what they're talking about! It does hold water as a theory doesn't it. I lay a lot of stone patios and 'point up' the joints using a dry it mortar heavily compressed into the joints. Customers usually ask why I don't use water it in, there is water in it but only enough to make it set and once it's set my pointing is absolutely rock solid. I am going to try this method over the summer and do a video.... if it's successful I'll put it on youtube. My version of the mix might be a bit crap compared to theirs but should show whether it's possible or not. So you're thinking volcanic ash? These guys are using a similar method : kzbin.info/www/bejne/hIa3Z6CAirqqis0
@tomheringer2047
@tomheringer2047 5 жыл бұрын
Best of luck with your experiment Paul and thank you for the compliment. Please keep Brien informed if your results are successful.
@Adam-qd2xe
@Adam-qd2xe 5 жыл бұрын
Brian, this stuff is MIND BLOWING! Figure it out bro! For all of us! LOL :D
@scottcongdon1211
@scottcongdon1211 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Brian , great video.
@ericpilkington6298
@ericpilkington6298 5 жыл бұрын
very good camera work, hoping for more of this type of filming of the rock anomalies in south america :)
@DiscoverLifeMedia
@DiscoverLifeMedia 5 жыл бұрын
Just need to let you know I loved this upload!
@slhurtt
@slhurtt 5 жыл бұрын
It was the corners of the megalithic stonework that is of great interest to me. It looks like it was machine tooled smooth at one point but now has that natural weathering texture. Have to agree that the protrusions appear to be an injection point. If injected then it appears to be pumped into an extremely thin dissolvable membrane to create tight cold joints. The joints are necessary due to normal expansion and contraction of the material from heat and cold changes. There would be some cracking of the stones from repetitive stress otherwise. Which I don't see evidence of. It may be interesting to find out what the temperature variations throughout the year that occur there. Then compare that to the known expansion coefficient of the stone. Estimates of how much the 'stones' could tolerate would then be easily computed. Thanks Brien!
@islandmonusvi
@islandmonusvi 5 жыл бұрын
Time for a FARO 3D Scanner ...
@harpuaslutbag2997
@harpuaslutbag2997 5 жыл бұрын
B....thank you for addressing the issue I brought up a few weeks ago. I wasn't trolling you one bit. I was dead ass serious and it's made a HUGE difference! Thank you!
@thomasr3805
@thomasr3805 5 жыл бұрын
So amazing to think about the people who still occupy these seemingly normal/ everyday buildings that have been standing for millennia.
@jakemoeller7850
@jakemoeller7850 Жыл бұрын
The megalithic structures are spectacular.
@Nainogero
@Nainogero 5 жыл бұрын
I believe harmonic frequency was used in the molding and cutting process....
@corkygoss7403
@corkygoss7403 5 жыл бұрын
Crack this problem and solve it in actual practice, and you can control the Kosmos, my friend!
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Yes, but I believe more than just one process was being used...
@blaze1148
@blaze1148 5 жыл бұрын
@@corkygoss7403 ....explaining Magnets.....now that would control the Cosmos.
@ParisAmelia
@ParisAmelia Жыл бұрын
The marks at 4:14 resemble the scoop marks at of the unfinished obelisk.
@sandybreon8419
@sandybreon8419 5 жыл бұрын
Stunning!
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely..!
@debbieobryan8734
@debbieobryan8734 5 жыл бұрын
Thankyou Brien.
@jessejames2546
@jessejames2546 5 жыл бұрын
😳 as always, thanks Brien
@EclecticEssentric
@EclecticEssentric 5 жыл бұрын
Geopolymer explains the homogeneity, the border 'wooden frame' marks, the perfect fits of unusual shapes, and the drain holes (bumps) having a different, glassy texture sometimes. Snap off a glassy end and examine the chemical structure, and you may discover the secret of granite cement. Probably had frames of wood and fabric. Pulled them off when rock hardened to clay, then scraped some extra bumps and detritus off, only this is not always done. Sometimes the marshmallow look remains, sometimes it is smoothed perfectly flat.
@EEVENEEVEN-vb5qy
@EEVENEEVEN-vb5qy 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with you 100 percent!
@sgtzulu2507
@sgtzulu2507 5 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@ultrafeel-tv
@ultrafeel-tv 5 жыл бұрын
On of the biggest mistery at least for me from 7:03 on: Why the very small stones on the bottom of the huge megaliths?! This doesn't make any sense whatsoever and it destroys the general 'look of perfection' of these masterpieces!!
@jorvikwhites6979
@jorvikwhites6979 5 жыл бұрын
I thought that looked a bit odd. You'd think they'd be sat on bigger ones which are part of the foundations. Strange idea but it obviously worked cos they're still standing. I'd love to go but I'd have the same baffling questions but be a couple of grand poorer.
@rickgrear8270
@rickgrear8270 2 жыл бұрын
The basalt stones seem to be as well fitting as the granite constructions. Interesting that basalt is seen on top of the granite. Thanks for sharing
@Thekomokoro
@Thekomokoro 3 жыл бұрын
The stones look delicious. reminds me of flour dough poured sideways using a pastry bag. those little protruding bumps. makes you wonder if they were solid in the first place?
@IIVVBlues
@IIVVBlues 5 жыл бұрын
I saw a presentation years ago where it was proposed that stones were poured in places as a type of concrete slurry. That would explain the uniformity of composition and the evidence of occasional surface spalling. It could also explain the small nodules protruding from face of many of the blocks as slurry access points. Transporting powdered rock is also easier than boulders weighing several tons. Since they lacked other sophisticated building techniques such as the arch, I find the slurry/ concrete theory very plausible.
@johnlord8337
@johnlord8337 5 жыл бұрын
knobby walls, ... hey lets really confuse our descendants and foreigners by having nobs on the walls, and making them try and figure them out ....
@johnlord8337
@johnlord8337 5 жыл бұрын
inca loch ness rock monsters
@joohop
@joohop 5 жыл бұрын
Yes Earthling A Big Puzzle
@wethepeople7961
@wethepeople7961 5 жыл бұрын
They weren our ancestors
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Yes Form without knowing is a very perplexing issue...
@MrGallan50
@MrGallan50 4 жыл бұрын
wonderful !!!
@SkyLightsUXOs
@SkyLightsUXOs 5 жыл бұрын
....thank you for taking your time to let us actually see what is there....the scoop marks look like the ones in Egypt. I think the civilization in Antarctica ran the entire planet at one time....loaning out their tools for other people to use around the planet , or at least showing and telling them how to work with them, then they returned to the Antarctic...taking their tools home with them.
@queenbodicea
@queenbodicea 5 жыл бұрын
Great filming and narrating.
@HellCatt0770
@HellCatt0770 5 жыл бұрын
Just drives me nuts! HOW did they do THAT?! How do we not know yet? Just how advanced were they if we can’t recognise (mainstream) that the process they used is different from how we would do it let alone have any idea how they did it?!
@brutusbigbone2394
@brutusbigbone2394 5 жыл бұрын
What do the megalithic walls look like from inside the houses
@amateuranth2796
@amateuranth2796 5 жыл бұрын
Why would they use crappy small stones for the base of the wall?? Then use bigger ones? Doesnt make sense to me..
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Repair work...
@xXturbo86Xx
@xXturbo86Xx Жыл бұрын
If you look very closely,the imperfections on the side of each piece, match the ones of the side of the other piece. I find it unlikely that the builders would "carve" even the imperfections.Which means, obviously, that one piece was poured in place after the previous one had either cooled down or solidified. Originally, the fit would have been even more perfect than we see today. But after hundreds of thousands of years (maybe even more) of wear, earthquakes etc, the fit has gone a bit off. Still, it's almost perfect in some places. Screw those who say "no it's not a geopolymer. no it's not softened granite. no it's not fossilized unknown material". Machines can produce high precision but they don't do this. We are looking at things produced using completely unknown to us, methods and technologies.
@robstriathlontipsforbeginners
@robstriathlontipsforbeginners 5 жыл бұрын
Maybe the knobs are in indication of the outline of hidden imagery in the stones? An outline of some kind anyway.
@joohop
@joohop 5 жыл бұрын
Or simply a way for a giant to get a good grip while working on it ?
@rickramirez8664
@rickramirez8664 5 жыл бұрын
Maybe the knobs represent stars in constellations.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Or maybe the starting and stopping of a curtain pattern...
@Triple316
@Triple316 5 жыл бұрын
Just amazing
@burningsandsexploration3711
@burningsandsexploration3711 5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'll book that as soon as I hit a jackpot!
@danzbutrfly
@danzbutrfly 5 жыл бұрын
same...lol
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 5 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately my body can longer make the journey, even if I did hit. That's why I love his Videos...
@henrikrolfsen584
@henrikrolfsen584 Жыл бұрын
It becomes clear, that the Megalithic stones, were subjected to some kind of high-technology, and softened just enough, to be placed into the wall. as if they all had the consistency of marshmellows!
@jpg1748
@jpg1748 5 жыл бұрын
They had Egyptian ancient technology back then! The world was very much connected back then!💕🙏🇺🇸
@mkivy
@mkivy 4 жыл бұрын
I’ve been following u fro a short time through ur video blogs and some of your speeches....I am a historian and have studied many cultures and I too am perplexed by the “singularity” of the these magnificent megalithic stone works...I can also see the difference I. The cultures that built upon them...what is your hypothesis about these works..? Is it a culture that disappeared and left no knowledge of their life or do u think this is work of reversed engineering by an “alien” civilization that may have stayed long enough to aide mankind in survive? I too marvel at these works that were built during Bronze Age ppls reigns and how these stones were moved and placed perfectly without so much as a human hair between stones. Clearly something happened...I do know that civilizations rise and fall and with each period there are myriad discoveries and applications...but what could of been here 80k years ago is beyond me...but clearly....something or some kind of civilization reigned. I enjoy ur work and discovery...I wouldn’t mind going on tour to these ancient sites...thank u sir.
@389293912
@389293912 Жыл бұрын
How about this? The Peruvian/Incan polygonal, jigsaw walls were actually poured material, concrete, geopolymer, made partially from ground up material from nearby quarries mixed with a binder, hardener, so the chemical composition matched real rock. The liquid was poured into long horizontal beds, molds, with separators of thin, decomposable, organic, material like big leaves, or thin wood, with long wooden planks on the bottom sticking out to later be used as levers, and left the harden. The "nubs" on some of the blocks was the material starting to harden when poured from a large spigot and had to be cut off sometimes even. The puffy shape of the blocks is just a side effect of the hardening process, like cooking a Pillsbury Cinnamon Roll in the oven. After the bed hardened, the entire wall was raised 90 degrees all at once by hundreds of men using the underlying wooden planks as levers. Note, the wall would not have to have been raised all at once. They could have plucked the blocks out one by one and stacked them vertically in the same relative positions they had when lying horizontally. The corner stones however could not have been made exactly this way. There might be some trick to that, a slight modification of the above technique. The nubs, the consistency of the composition and the consistency of the texture is slam dunk proof this had to be liquid material originally. What should be researched is, what's the formula they used to make such "fake rock"? Since I'm the first one saying this, where's my Friggin' Nobel Prize? It's either that, or aliens.
@spockspock
@spockspock 3 жыл бұрын
Brien is a “curious knob” and we’re glad of it!
@FocEel
@FocEel 5 жыл бұрын
Hey, what it they did not care about the protrusions because the there would be a layer on the top of it? Maybe something to embellish the work. But after all this years, just the inside of the wall remains.
@curiousfiend1169
@curiousfiend1169 5 жыл бұрын
I've also wondered about that idea.
@davidsampson3974
@davidsampson3974 4 жыл бұрын
lol the repair work is priceless
@gruboniell4189
@gruboniell4189 5 жыл бұрын
The knobs were there to use as handles while they ground the stones in situ while singing along to music. If all the stones are moving at the same time with lubricant of water and beads then it would be easy to move. Like a fish tank full of fish they wouldn’t be able to move and u wouldn’t be able to put ur hand into there but if they all move together then u could plunge ur hand into there cause all the fish are moving. Bit like when u heat steel the partials begins to vibrate and allow u to work the material much easier
@01sidiropoulos
@01sidiropoulos 5 жыл бұрын
Inca vs preinca walls you can really tell how well are mede even today while inka walls having more "damage" if may say... Nice job with this video though keep it up 😉👏
@TheSunnickey
@TheSunnickey 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@conifergreen2
@conifergreen2 4 жыл бұрын
I think the knobs were used to keep the blocks elevated off the ground while they were laying on the ground or while being transported so that they could have spaces large enough to put ropes around them underneath. Or forks from a fork lift!
@scottcongdon1211
@scottcongdon1211 5 жыл бұрын
In another vid I've seen gashes in the stone where they are cut from as if they used a sword . Absolutely incredible. He slashes have outward gashed stone like a jagged wound in flesh . Wild
@thorawilson1466
@thorawilson1466 5 жыл бұрын
Wonderful that ancient workmanship is used by modern ppl
@urbro2
@urbro2 5 жыл бұрын
damn i find it extremely fascinating that there are people who see this kind of megalithic work on a daily basis and probably dont know/care enough to stop for a minute and take it in living in eastern europe id have to travel a significant distance to actually witness this kind of wonder with my own eyes
@tomheringer2047
@tomheringer2047 5 жыл бұрын
Check out Sylvie Iwanova's work. She is Bulgarian and is to Eastern Europe and Russia what Brien is to South America and Egypt.
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