Wow a REAL archaeological video on KZbin and sadly it had less views than crazy crap.
@mysty07 жыл бұрын
I know, I'm an admirer of archaeology and it was my first passion to be one but that will never happen. Its sad now that crazies are claiming to everything and attaching their Nephilim, Nibiru and whatever other crazy crap to it
@dadsonworldwide32387 жыл бұрын
Great job you seem very bright to be excavating in the states when everyone runs off to the Middle East . I was born in In Chickasaw county M's. And it's right on the Natchez trace . There's many mounds in the area and my grandmother said many was excavated in early mid 1900's and thought they were Choctaw Indians burial mounds. Well only as I grew older did I find out there's a much more ancient mound building society . Theirs very little information I can find about them. I also understand there was a suppression by early settlers and gov. Reasons Beijing rights to the land I guess, Anyways glad to see someone digging up there past and I look forwards to future findings .
@SULLIEDASP4 жыл бұрын
If you want to learn more or get other information about this on KZbin Nephies mounds or mormon channels. from book of mormon they hide it just in case the book of mormon is true I think.
@wakeupdog5 жыл бұрын
SO cool! Thank you for sharing the native history...I love it!
@phillipjacobson44985 жыл бұрын
In Oregon the natives used to build community dwellings called long houses by the lewis and Clark expedition. Long room for food prep sleeping ect they used to have indoor fire pits as well. Rather smokey I presume. I wonder if the mound was to cleanse the area for newer construction. Or to get peaple sleeping in the ground up out of wet boggy muddy area. And the trench is were the dirt came from to build the mound up. And to provide a place for rain water run off from said building.
@SULLIEDASP4 жыл бұрын
Might be but some believe it was for protection against there enemy's that was once there brothers if it is true most don't believe it.
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
Check out my video, SECRET OF THE OUACHITA, it will give you a good background on mound building and the purpose it may have served.
@RageCityBiscuit2 жыл бұрын
I have no bigger passion in life than archaeology specifically North American, and it feels so far fetched for me to make a career out of it, I don’t know the first steps to take but I know I’d be an extraordinary addition to the world of archaeology. Thank you for the fascinating information presented.
@Treasuremonk Жыл бұрын
First off become a far left liberal. Do not give your thoughts to the high ups you work for. They are and will be right, you shall bow to them. Be prepared to be used for the “Professor” “Doctors” journey to make them famous in journals , to be published, with all of your hard work never being recognized..
@ChasOnErie Жыл бұрын
Excellent report … thank you for your discovery …. Where these burial mounds … What was the weather like … How old are these mounds …
@toddfenley9179 Жыл бұрын
It's the walls were to cave-in that would be some kind of an ironic payback for digging up someone's grave site
@FelixBaliw11 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I worked at Moundville, AL with Chris Peebles.
@JohnDoe-sd6nx5 жыл бұрын
Tell that guy to try lidar..they have done it in Ohio to locate depressions in the dirt even if after plowed flat..js
@farnorthweaver77934 жыл бұрын
What an informative presentation! Thank You!
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
You're very welcome!
@alainapate68984 жыл бұрын
What would everyone suggest for shoring on an dig site?? Plexi glass? Come on folks they studying the strata closely not laying pipe in the right of way
@pawcrawlowens87305 жыл бұрын
Show some pots and flint
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
The things they found were bone fragments and chard wood, and some small stone pieces. What they were looking for was how and maybe why. The artifacts suggest great feasting.
@SuperDave-vj9en5 жыл бұрын
OSHA says anything deeper than 5 feet requires shoring, especially for unstable ground like you are digging in! Be safe/not dead!
@ChuckWilsonWilsonsStudio Жыл бұрын
For all the noobs screaming saftey,, the trench was hand dug, not by a machine in 30 seconds, big difference between a slowly hand dug trench over time compared to a mechanical dug trench. JS
@rockyriveroutdoors92294 жыл бұрын
Why did they even build a mound???
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
Watch my video, THE SECRET OF THE OUACHITA. Just about every archeologist who has worked in Mississippi and Louisiana for the last 3 decades is on there discussing this very topic.
@RJ-oe7by3 жыл бұрын
Has anyone wondered if the mounds provided a breeze and mosquito relief?
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
Check out my new posting, "Secret of the Ouachita". It is the most in-depth discussion on Native American Mounds you will find by numerous archeologists who have been studying the question for decades.
@fredricful3 жыл бұрын
Du vorfor vet jeg omm en dame som heter felicia og hunn leser på. Alt om stein uten att hunn har fortalt meg det selv?
@williampounds91803 жыл бұрын
This is a burial site. Ashes were burned deseased bodies.
@samiller632 жыл бұрын
These are dwelling, ceremonial or temple sites. Burial mounds do not have flat tops.
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
My understanding from a Native Shaman is that what ever was left from the sky burial was gathered up and placed in a crevasse or hole somewhere; like a river, stream or cave. Any burial in a mound was for a ceremonial purpose of some sort regarding the mound more than the person. Watch my new video, "Secret of the Ouachita" for a complete study of Native American Mounds.
@JohnDoe-sd6nx5 жыл бұрын
Fascinating..
@xeddyb11 жыл бұрын
mounds are kewl
@fredricful3 жыл бұрын
Gemology?
@sjvche76753 жыл бұрын
Tisk - tisk where's the shoring?
@keymastersrod Жыл бұрын
❤
@Treasuremonk5 жыл бұрын
OSHA would eat you alive they see this! What’s your plan to get those kids out of that trench when it collapses ??
@fouramhq9 жыл бұрын
It's extremely dangerous to have a vertical trench that deep that people will be working in. Serious risk of wall collapse. The walls of the trench should be sloped, at least on two sides.
@TheGreyGhost_of43rdАй бұрын
Smh
@fouramhqАй бұрын
What does that mean?
@phillipjacobson44985 жыл бұрын
You didn't find any human remains?
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
Mounds were not for Native American burials. As I understand it, they practiced sky burials, where they placed the body wrapped up with it's favorite items on a scaffold of sorts until everything rots. Then the remaining bone fragments are gathered up and disposed of in a crack into the earth of some sort; a river, creek, cave...
@sampavadore67093 жыл бұрын
So much for trench safety.
@jimjackle27398 жыл бұрын
These mounds weren't made by Indians hauling dirt in baskets and piling it up. It's the leftover dirt from when the ET's and their bigfoot workers or slaves bore shafts into the earth. Somewhere near this mound there will be a hidden entrance to a vertical shaft. 3 guys in Oklahoma explored a mound and found a cave that led to a vertical shaft that was lined with a spiral staircase with steps that appeared to be for a 12 foot tall giant. They went down a mile and after hearing a noise and getting scared, they hauled ass back to the top. 2 guys made it out, but a hairy giant grabbed the 3rd guy that was carrying a pistol and he shot the creature to make him let go of him. Another hairy giant then started moving a giant rock slab in an attempt to trap him in but he managed to barely make it out. I, along with a buddy, was almost killed by a hairy giant while camping in the same general area of SE Oklahoma, so I believe these guys story. People wonder why they never get a bigfoot body and rarely see them in the daytime. It's because they're hiding in these deep underground caverns near these mounds. Who knows, maybe they sealed this one off years ago and aren't using this shaft anymore. Many of these mounds also have indian bones haphazardly piled on them, which led people to believe they were indian burial mounds, but they were actually the remains of Indians that were eaten by these cannibal giants and thrown on the mounds. In the 1800's the Choctaw indian police force had what they called "The Choctaw bigfoot war". The hairy giants had been abducting indian children and the Choctaw police force went to investigate the area where the Indians claimed the bandits were hiding out. They came upon a mound with several giants on it. On the mound were decaying, partially eaten corpses of indian children. When the 15 policemen opened fire, most of the giants ran, but 3 stayed and fought. They eventually killed the giants with several shots to the head, but before this happened, their leader, Captain Leflore had his head ripped off by the giants. Anybody interested in more details can google "Choctaw bigfoot war". After having a violent encounter with these giants, I started taking this bigfoot stuff serious and started researching the history of these giants. I would be very cautious getting around these mounds, especially at night. I would definitely have an assault rifle with me.
@ljbrizo7 жыл бұрын
having fun you have a wild imagination ,keep believing crap and you will rot your brain,
@tommyjones84906 жыл бұрын
having fun mushrooms, cactus,frogs, or weed... you got your money's worth!!!
@otonilix1746 жыл бұрын
a burial mound is right outside my back door. i agree about the underground systems.
@slappy89415 жыл бұрын
I dug into a mound once and found a tunnel going into the ground. I followed it in and came out into a big room where I found Adolph Hitler riding a dinosaur.
@tomosbon7347 Жыл бұрын
Love hearing all the government brainwashed comments. OSHA would be so proud 😅
@onenewworldmonkey5 жыл бұрын
I'm so sickened by this I cannot watch. Here we have educated "city folks" who have never made a penny digging ditches send kids into a hole that could kill them at any second. He even mentions a collapse when referring to a 1000 years ago but cannot put 2 and 2 together. It reminds me of when a tree is uprooted by the wind, someone cuts off the stump, which falls back into the hole (even after a decade), and kills someone. They are afraid of things that wont hurt them (lions and tigers and bears), but not afraid of something that will kill them in seconds-dumber than a box of hammers.
@Treasuremonk5 жыл бұрын
dshreve34 it’s called “arrogance” these people know way more than “regular dumb people” like us..
@farnorthweaver77934 жыл бұрын
@dshreve34 You are only sickened by your overwhelming ignorance. This is not about grunts such as yourself, "digging ditches". An Archeological Dig, and HOW it is done safely... is a whole different ball of wax. But of course, you would NOT know that!
@onenewworldmonkey4 жыл бұрын
@@farnorthweaver7793 My IQ is in the top 2 percent along with 7 years of college starting at Penn State. Put all of my education and ignorance aside, how many people have you seen die beside you? For me it has been one death beside me( a friend with 2 kids), one death a few hundred yards from me, one lost an arm, and three missing part of their hand. I just hope you are not in a position to make decisions about other's safety. If you do it to yourself that is fine with me. But not to those college kids trying to learn that subjective art of archaeology. BTW, you obviously into classifying people, which is yet another weakness we should both work on.
@Phensley683 жыл бұрын
Looters
@darrelllogan12745 жыл бұрын
Pretty sad when the "expert" can't even say eXcavation properly. Not interested in anything he has to say after that. Bye bye.
@PhatRiver2 жыл бұрын
Vin is not a Native American. I believe he is of Chech decent. That's why his diction is not perfect. You are too narrow minded and probably would not like the content anyway.
@patobrien9043 жыл бұрын
Looters
@ChasOnErie Жыл бұрын
Discovery to prove man’s capability over the ages … proves there are others as we grow !