Indigenous Americans from Carthage? Phoenician Theory regarding the Mound Builders (& Susquehannock)

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Jarid Boosters

Jarid Boosters

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 203
@portialancaster3442
@portialancaster3442 4 күн бұрын
Jared, I'm an armchair family historian and a Lancaster Countian since 1710. I've read a lot of land deeds from the 1700's that mention mills on the Conestoga River as well as bridges. My aunt had a summer cottage on the river and there was a small pier to tie up boats. People along the river used the river.
@WildAlchemicalSpirit
@WildAlchemicalSpirit 4 күн бұрын
I was thinking mill looking at the rubble. Would make sense along the river. There appeared to be some old salt glazed material, too, possibly piping, which makes me think building, not bridge.
@portialancaster3442
@portialancaster3442 4 күн бұрын
@@WildAlchemicalSpirit Piping makes sense. I've come across more than one deed that mentions pipes and shared water rights.
@thecreweofthefancy
@thecreweofthefancy 4 күн бұрын
@@portialancaster3442 I've found pieces of quite a few of those pipes. I hate when they used red clay because I'll get all excited and then realize it was probably just an old sewer. Haha.
@daedaluscreation4869
@daedaluscreation4869 3 күн бұрын
The cinderblocks look to be early to mid 1900's...
@at_3831
@at_3831 3 күн бұрын
I suspect that it’s a lumber dam to stage a lumber raft until enough water is present to release and float to the next stop. I live next to a small crick that has three log dams to get to the west branch above lumber city.
@deadmetal8692
@deadmetal8692 4 күн бұрын
As a Suquahanna Native i thank you for the video. Cheers!
@trumpbidensameclub6668
@trumpbidensameclub6668 4 күн бұрын
As a Caucasian American native I agree. Great video! 😂
@boblydecker5951
@boblydecker5951 3 күн бұрын
WOW!!! How about that Bear vest at 3:00?!! That's absolutely FANTASTIC!!!
@tlflora
@tlflora Күн бұрын
wow yeah!!!
@LilSeason_In_Tartaria
@LilSeason_In_Tartaria 3 күн бұрын
Im a block away from the Susquehanna river. Such a beautiful place.
@afritz12345
@afritz12345 3 күн бұрын
I'll be on the river this afternoon! Overnight fishing trip
@afritz12345
@afritz12345 3 күн бұрын
We're taking a kayak trip on the Conestoga from Lancaster down to the Susquehanna and on to pequea. Will be looking for historical clues along the way. ...and small mouth bass.
@HamBones13
@HamBones13 3 күн бұрын
Down here on the gulf coast they use debris from old buildings and roads to help stop the coast from erosion, they bust it up and try to pile it up orderly, but I’ve seen some along the rivers too.
@skepticalgenious
@skepticalgenious 2 күн бұрын
I can prove some of this if y'all want. However next to D.C in Virginia is accotink Creek. It has many stones that are broken but have smooth nice cuts. One even has a square drill hole. Something cut it. And now it's a creeks rubble I've noticed many creeks have old building rubble. Contractors often illegally dump their projects trash
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb 4 күн бұрын
Lock 12! And that whole safe harbor area was very important. I rockhound out there for serpentine. The natives hunted on the grasslands found above the rock. It gives off gasses that kill most plants and tress allowing natural grass pastures to occur. Also the petroglyphs are right there in river. I heard one matches a Mayan glyph about a man with large hands..
@anitapeghini-raber6810
@anitapeghini-raber6810 4 күн бұрын
Thank you 🎉absolutely- similar findings here on Mallorca all - over the island
@shimshonbendan8730
@shimshonbendan8730 4 күн бұрын
The top line could possible be read as Joseph using the last 3 letters in the top line. The bottom last 3 letters could be read as "will flow". It would be interesting how a paleo-Hebrew scholar would read those letters. The bottom line could also be pronounced as Ha Peleg, or The Division.
@ryans2118
@ryans2118 4 күн бұрын
No doubt phonecians were every where in this world at some point. No doubt we were more advanced back in the day. No doubt the land transformed in more recent years. No doubt erased and left to our curious minds to decipher.
@ms.donaldson2533
@ms.donaldson2533 3 күн бұрын
My grandson's 6th great-grandfather was one of the first "white" people to lay eyes on the Newark Mounts. I'm currently reading a book written by his brother-in-law. People forget that when the English arrived they celebrated the New Year on March 25th with the birth of spring with the Natural Sun. It was a cult assisted by Francis Scott Key and the national science academy that the beliefs of the people who moved the new year to the dead of winter were created. I found an older book on the subject out of the Virginia territory that I will be looking up later.
@peterparker9286
@peterparker9286 14 сағат бұрын
Francis Bacon or shakespear or Mark Twain all the same Guy. Yup the Hud Son and the Mississippi through the Great Lakes.
@FEMAGUILLOTINE
@FEMAGUILLOTINE 4 күн бұрын
Top of Blue Mountain 4 square hollow road near Carlisle " THE PINNACLE" was my grandfather's 250 acre property, over the top from Gettysburg. My generation was dispossessed of inherited lands due to a fractured family structure. The Gardner Family owns it now, 3 rd cousins.
@gusto8069
@gusto8069 4 күн бұрын
Is that why that area is called Gardners?
@portialancaster3442
@portialancaster3442 3 күн бұрын
We also have a Pinnacle in Lancaster County along the Susquehanna River.
@MrDarkElement
@MrDarkElement 3 күн бұрын
Carlisle, PA is the spot where the first compulsory participation Indian Industrial School (1879-1918) was erected ( and it's Mission:"Kill the Indian to save the man", conversion to Christianity, endure harsh discipline including corporal punishment and solitary confinement, CHANGE THE INDIANS NAMES and have them cease speaking their native languages. " Many students died from disease, malnutrition and abuse Source: New York Historical Society...
@johnwilson6790
@johnwilson6790 3 күн бұрын
Appreciative of your shows Jarid....the stone shown at beginning that seems hollow .... about cube blocks that are hollow and sturdy and just start filling them in as you build....when its focused on the easiest way of building a massive structure the secrets of old structure's build will be known...( at guess)... obelisks / dome's / elevators /prefab mixing ...we are only talking earth / movement of weight ....yet its more than that considering whats underground / travel systems ect....we are only seeing so much of whats really there...Quite a cap going on structures and history its self.......when you get to a point of years of study into this subject we find its not out of reach there's another life going on else where....in mountains oceans rivers sky's ect....not a question of how really / for some its only a question of why not.....nothing impossible with the Lord concerning the old world structure city's to a air craft plasma projection hovering on the face of the deep or anywhere else....
@johnwilson6790
@johnwilson6790 2 күн бұрын
Those pictures of the British isles....Magnificent ! It re assembles the Gardens and what these structures were used for....four spires with triangle tops does have use....The pyramid / turning grapes into raisins / condensing foods / wines into fuels to hosting many other free and natural educational events ....from past to future.
@clarencejbos
@clarencejbos 4 күн бұрын
Jared, This is really good work. From Canada. Thank you.
@thecreweofthefancy
@thecreweofthefancy 4 күн бұрын
@clarencejbos see this is why these videos are a problem. I am a local historian, an actual historian, and this is completely nonsense that has been debunked numerous times. Conestoga is not the wilderness, maybe if you're from a city. Lancaster County hasn't been wilderness since the 1600s and if you recognize the Susquehannock as an established nation, then it wasn't even wilderness before that. There has been activity in the Susquehanna River Valley for thousands of years. One of my first memories of archaeology was visiting a paleo-indian site right at present day Harrisburg back in the 1990s.
@kasandrabeckett8578
@kasandrabeckett8578 Күн бұрын
❤the channel. Keep up the good work. Been subscribed for a couple years now.
@johnnyredux4019
@johnnyredux4019 18 сағат бұрын
Some of the oldest structures (or remains thereof) are along rivers in order to harness water power for various mills, especially grain mills.
@andylyttle3870
@andylyttle3870 14 сағат бұрын
This is great stuff! Keep up the good work
@bradleyjohnson8297
@bradleyjohnson8297 3 күн бұрын
Excellent find. Great channel.
@somebodyspapa5005
@somebodyspapa5005 4 күн бұрын
I have read that the Susquehannock people were exceptionally tall in stature, possibly 9 or 10 feet tall.
@itzakpoelzig330
@itzakpoelzig330 3 күн бұрын
Do you remember where you read that?
@somebodyspapa5005
@somebodyspapa5005 3 күн бұрын
@@itzakpoelzig330 I’ll see if I can get you the title. It was a book from the 1600’s that my family had handed down from our Quaker ancestors who were first purchasers in the Philadelphia area of Pennsylvania. Even then there were still tribes of people living there who we would call giants. They made note of this in their writings from the time.
@Rusyn1910
@Rusyn1910 3 күн бұрын
When in 1608 John Smith sailed up the Susquehanna River to the fall line (Deposit, Maryland) he met a body of sixty Susquehannock warriors. “Such great and well proportioned men, are seldom seene, for they seemed like Giants to the English, yea and to the neighbors: yet seemed of an honest and simple disposition” Also noted that “A man’s calf that tapes twenty-seven inches owes a thing to the imagination. George Aslop in 1666 said they were 7 feet tall. Taken from the book ‘Indians in Pennsylvania’ by Paul A. W. Wallace second edition.
@somebodyspapa5005
@somebodyspapa5005 3 күн бұрын
@@Rusyn1910 Thank you for that, indeed they were very astute regarding record keeping
@Rusyn1910
@Rusyn1910 3 күн бұрын
@@somebodyspapa5005 Penn’s Description of the Delawares. “For their Persons, they are generally tall, straight, well built, and of singular Proportion; they tread strong and clever, and mostly walk with a lofty Chin: Of Complexion, Black, but by design , as the Gypsies in England: They grease themselves with Bears-fat clarified, and using no defence against the Sun or Weather, their skins must needs be swarthy; Their Eye is little and black, not unlike a straight-look’t Jew: The thick Lip and flat Nose, so frequent with the East -Indians and Blacks, are not common to them; for I have seen as comely European-like faces among them both, as on your side the Sea; and truly an Italian Complexion hath not much more of the White, and noses of several of them have as much of the Roman.” ‘Indians in Pennsylvania’ By Paul A. W. Wallace Page 19.
@kimgillham321
@kimgillham321 4 күн бұрын
Hanock- that’s like Enoch their name sounds like “sons of hanock”. That’s amazing if it is true!!!
@calderparkzoo2410
@calderparkzoo2410 4 күн бұрын
More evidence of history being tampered with. 😊
@pharmerdavid1432
@pharmerdavid1432 2 күн бұрын
The Aztecs were apparently a Phoenician colony, because they use the Phoenician alphabet, built pyramids, and conduct human sacrifices etc. It wouldn't surprise me if other cultures in North America were Phoenician colonies too. Thanks for another fascinating and thoughtful video Jarid.......!
@tedyoung2143
@tedyoung2143 4 күн бұрын
Except that America is the first true old world.
@biga.b.1079
@biga.b.1079 4 күн бұрын
Don’t be givin’ me that Susquehanna weed dawg
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb 4 күн бұрын
Hahahaha omg. I grew up in etters(goldboro) near three mile island. My parents and uncle grew up in 80s. He said he used to take canoes out to islands on river with bags of seeds and throw them all over. Said he came back months later in dark and they smelled them but couldnt locate them.....then they lookedup.. the plants grew over their heads lol. Said they cut em filled canoes and walked them back to shore by hand in shallow parts. Threw in bed of truck and tarped it up.... your comment made me laugh.
@amor797
@amor797 4 күн бұрын
So many mysteries.. that they keep the truth about in their "secret archives"
@sarisigmund2115
@sarisigmund2115 4 күн бұрын
They hide it because they did bad things.
@boblydecker5951
@boblydecker5951 3 күн бұрын
Digging and excavation is necessary to determine if these blocks are in fact poured and SET in place as a foundation. I think the most reasonable answer to this debris is humans dumping waste. Some people TOTALLY suck and drop their shit wherever they want. That could also explain the varying types, styles and aging of the bricks and concrete blocks. As much as I want to believe my wilder speculations about the TRUTH of our past; I believe our due diligence is necessary in researching the evidence.
@elanacurl
@elanacurl 4 күн бұрын
Uno 👍🏾 ty for these videos ❤
@FRESHboosters
@FRESHboosters 4 күн бұрын
More to come, my friend. Thank you for joining me
@hampshirerose9395
@hampshirerose9395 4 күн бұрын
This is my first taste of the history of the area you are researching, from my armchair too… Am wondering if the buildings you discovered were once set back from the river’s edge at the time of construction and the river has maybe changed course over time. If not, as the area was open farmland, the structures could be quays for farmers to bring their wheat to be shipped up or down river. As another Subscriber said, there were mills on the river for crops to be ground into flour and therefore a need for the power of the water to turn the millstones. I am soo excited at your discoveries and finding your deeply researched and well presented Channel. Thank you 💪🏻😃
@thecreweofthefancy
@thecreweofthefancy 3 күн бұрын
@hampshirerose9395 as an actual local historian, this channel will mention actual history and the introduce disproven 19th century nonsense. The area is not wilderness as he claims. It hasn't been for over 200 years. And people use the creeks and rivers.
@charlesmiller7848
@charlesmiller7848 4 күн бұрын
I'm pretty sure all the rubble is purposely put there for erosion control. It's all different kinds of bricks and cinder blocks from several different buildings.
@tomh4591
@tomh4591 3 күн бұрын
i initially thought the same, but why only in one small location like that, it isn't at like a river bend or an eddy or something that would "need" that, or any other structure behind said sea wall to protect from it...idk, and it simply isn't enough to serve that purpose.
@JeniBean2U
@JeniBean2U 3 күн бұрын
Lancaster has such a fascinating history. It's got so much folklore to it, as well as many secrets. I love hiking along the Conestoga and often hike through County Park 🙂
@marenaude820
@marenaude820 3 күн бұрын
Very interesting, thank you ❤
@jlw38257
@jlw38257 3 күн бұрын
1600s John Smith, I think was the first to call the tribe member's " Susgue-waxie"
@justinmus2896
@justinmus2896 4 күн бұрын
Ive lived in the Pocono mountains and I'm amazed I've never found and arrowhead or any carving literally nothing to show there were native Americans in my area. The highly wooded areas now were clearly pasture and cleared before , I imagine this is the reason for lack of signs. There isn't one square mile that hasn't been gone over by man it seems
@campingintheforest_
@campingintheforest_ 4 күн бұрын
Back in the antiquarian days of archaeology and during the era of the "skull scientists" there were transactions with farmers and setllers for the purchase of bones and relics. much of this information is protected now by laws for historic preservation. I viewed the files of Wilbert Hinsdale during school at the Bentley at U of Michigan a few years back. What I learned was that there is not much territory that has not been picked over quite a lot. Hinsdale created an archaeological atlas of Michigan and at one time there were more mounds in lower Michigan than in the entire Ohio valley. These have been leveled by the plow and the relics sent to museums and academic institutions around the world. Used to be 25$ for a complete set of human bones 15$ for intact skulls and 20$ for partial skeletons or some such rate similar...Now thuis history is obscured for the protectionn of the current paradigm of academia. In time you will see a changing oof the guard and as young people, like the young man creating these videos, explore and publish these old ideas will vanish to the grave with their progenators. Until such time as the guard is changed we will see history obscured.
@LilSeason_In_Tartaria
@LilSeason_In_Tartaria 3 күн бұрын
I was trying to get Jon Levi to look into this area after reading John Smiths 200 something page account of his travels in 1600’s.
@josephschwerdtfeger3872
@josephschwerdtfeger3872 3 күн бұрын
Awesome content...👍
@withershin
@withershin 4 күн бұрын
10:34 - Lake Erie, Niagara ish, Canada circa 1990... out at the second sand bar there were "foundations" that looked like this 'cement' form. We'd stand on them but they had the whatever barnacle thing that was a problem in the Great Lakes back then. Our parents and grandparents just believed they were the old cottages and we just believed it too. Those cottages somehow had way-better foundations than most cottages in 2024 and there are zero maps that the old cottages ever existed. EDIT: Zebra Mussels
@drock5404
@drock5404 4 күн бұрын
Jarid, have you done a video on Native American mounds, etc. in the midwest, specifically OHIO? I'd love to see what you dig up on the subject. I've heard stories from old farmers that cleared areas for planting. They would actually level the mounds and toss the rocks, etc. off the edge of the fields. There were tens of thousands of these things at one point, just in Ohio.
@amegorica8902
@amegorica8902 Күн бұрын
Some of the grandest buildings and estates similar to castles line the Hudson River. Most are gone but many still remain and could easily be much older than they claim
@ohsusanah4013
@ohsusanah4013 4 күн бұрын
Jared: please consider looking into the Calusa Indigenous tribe of southwest Florida, (Fort Meyers), Like the Susquehannock they seemed to have disappeared off the face of the earth with MS academia seemingly hiding their true history. They left a seashell mound, but no skeletal remains. Early European explorers who saw them said they were tall, white, blonde haired "Indians."
@tomh4591
@tomh4591 3 күн бұрын
lol "shell middens" make me chuckle. wild theory, i know, but i like to think it was their attempt at pyamid building after being BRIEFLY educated on the matter. crushed shells = lime, lime = geopolymer base. the "atlanteans" aka phoenicians aka ancient finnish, whatever you want to call them, when they were "freed" from the ice after the flood, spread to the tropics and various peoples and taught them all the things. construction is similar everywhere, but with varying AGGREGATE MATERIAL. you can form geopolymers from practically any existing "rock" aggregate. in coastal places, that abundant material is lime. you really think people for generations just picked a spot for their spent shells, to then later venerate their gods and their dead and bury people IN shells? more likely, these are ERODED calcified mineralized petrified STRUCTURES with primarily only the shell aggregate remaining. and future feral "natives", survivors of cataclysms, came across these places later, recognized they were significant, and the rest is history. my 2 cents.
@jtm8374
@jtm8374 4 күн бұрын
Jared I appreciate the videos. Im from Hershey PA. Let me know if you need GIS maps to support your work. Happy to help
@shimshonbendan8730
@shimshonbendan8730 4 күн бұрын
The letters are Paleo-Hebrew/Phoenician. Top line right to left is: Dalet-D, Bet-B, Vav-B/V, Samech-S, and Fey Pey/P. Bottom line right to left is: Hey-H, Fey/Pey-P Yud-Y, Lamed-L and Gimmel-G. The Hebrew letter Vav can be pronounced as a B or V. The Hebrew letter Pey can be pronounced F or P. So, you have D, B, B/V, S, P. for the first line. The second line is H, P, Y, L, G. The Hebrew letter Vav can function as a consonant or vowel As a consonant, it is pronounced V. As a vowel, it is pronounced a number of different ways based on the diacritical marks. Since the letters shown in the pictures at the 7:07 mark are copied from the stone and placed on squares. The letter order may have been arbitrarily placed by someone mentioned in the article. As they are positioned, I can't make out which words are being said. Hebrew generally doesn't have 5 letters in a word.
@thecreweofthefancy
@thecreweofthefancy 4 күн бұрын
@@shimshonbendan8730 it's completely fabricated....
@bookofrevelation4924
@bookofrevelation4924 4 күн бұрын
Is there enough current for a water wheel mill? I guess it don't take much current if a small damn can be built perhaps?
@Boston_Shovinstuff
@Boston_Shovinstuff Күн бұрын
Awesome boots on the ground bud ! If youbwant something interesting, look up the blue hills weather observatory in Milton MA ....... I grew up in Boston , right near it . Used to hike it all the time and theres a castle up there ... SOLID STONE and the narrative reads that it was built as a weather observatory 😆 . It's the only hill around for MILES ... a s it has a legitimate castle on top of it . Incredible when you get up there
@revolutionaryliberation9250
@revolutionaryliberation9250 4 күн бұрын
The Susquehanna River Is Too Shallow To Move Freight!!
@ryans2118
@ryans2118 4 күн бұрын
Dang all those bricks in the river. So interesting
@IamALLiAm888
@IamALLiAm888 4 күн бұрын
EPIC 🏆🏆🎖🏆🏆
@SouthernOntarioSasquatch
@SouthernOntarioSasquatch 4 күн бұрын
Love your BOTG Jared! Thank you!
@ryans2118
@ryans2118 4 күн бұрын
Boots on the ground. Awesome. I live in AZ. Thinking of going to Welch Rd of the interstate 40. On the outskirts of Williams AZ. Williams named after Bill Williams.. I'd love to see ur insight on Bill Williams in AZ would be a fun story. And Welch Rd use to be a huge town in 1800s that is not existent. Up Welch Rd u come across a crater called Johnson crater. We've came across it on accident. Then after research I learned about Johnson tunnel which is an old train tunnel. And then another old bridge taken down near river dog Rd near Williams. And if u want a Vaca. Don't go there!
@lancoschino731
@lancoschino731 4 күн бұрын
In Lancaster, that's my back yard
@chickyrogue8485
@chickyrogue8485 2 күн бұрын
More legwork this was fun!!
@FEMAGUILLOTINE
@FEMAGUILLOTINE 4 күн бұрын
Yes building ANCIENT WATERWORKS would be a first step in the ancient colonial Celt- Iberian exodus and development. (they)fled Carthage during the Punic Wars .
@clutchnshift1
@clutchnshift1 2 күн бұрын
“Heyyyyy, Susquehanna! Aaaaa-Ay!”
@at_3831
@at_3831 3 күн бұрын
I suspect that it’s a lumber dam to stage a lumber raft until enough water is present to release and float to the next stop. I live next to a small crick that has three log dams to get to the west branch above lumber city.
@jmc8076
@jmc8076 2 күн бұрын
Bricks are very interesting. What we know for sure is we don’t know what we don’t know …yet. Edit: I live near a large Canadian reserve incl a small restaurant owned by an aboriginal couple. It’s always busy. Our city and others near respectfully acknowledge being on indigenous (Native) land and traditional territory covered by Williams Treaties. Orig indigenous/native lands incl (w/o borders) the Americas. Per NEH org they were known collectively as Clovis people reportedly from Asia. One theory.
@johnwilson6790
@johnwilson6790 2 күн бұрын
Heard through the grape vine on tap.
@tomh4591
@tomh4591 3 күн бұрын
@5:52 even though you're rummaging through a "pile of bricks' that piece you're holding here appears to be petrified wood. screws and all on the left side, wild. probably older than you were thinking.
@WOODnCHROME
@WOODnCHROME 4 күн бұрын
Awesome place Jarid 😎
@AndrewMoraller
@AndrewMoraller 3 күн бұрын
D and R canal is amazing
@jh7553
@jh7553 2 күн бұрын
there was a coal reclamation facility along the conestoga 60-70 years ago.
@IAmTherefore...
@IAmTherefore... 3 күн бұрын
My grand dad usta take me to the susq river looking for arrow heads and stone tools there were so many everywhere I honestly thought he would plant them for me to find the artifacts were so abundant... Never mind the walls in the middle of nowhere and dams made from runoffs long dried up.... I miss those days ... I usta ask how old all the stone tools were and he usta say if I say anything other the no one knows I would be lieing ... But I promise they are ancient best guess Bible area
@bookofrevelation4924
@bookofrevelation4924 4 күн бұрын
Seems most likely that Phoenician and Greeks sailed to Americas, they were sailing around Africa to Phillipines at that time.
@bookofrevelation4924
@bookofrevelation4924 4 күн бұрын
Many sailers were blown from Western Coast of Africa across Atlantic Ocean to Americas in natural currents.
@trumpbidensameclub6668
@trumpbidensameclub6668 4 күн бұрын
Everyone has been here lol.
@bookofrevelation4924
@bookofrevelation4924 4 күн бұрын
@@trumpbidensameclub6668 I don't see why not...lol
@jlw38257
@jlw38257 3 күн бұрын
1:24 that stone's bossage looks a lot like that of Hasmonean /2nd temple wall stones in Jerusalem.
@theScrupulousBerserker
@theScrupulousBerserker 4 күн бұрын
Taking after Barry Fell, I see. A dude I introduced to the alternative history niche, like 3+ years ago. On record. Skål
@johanna1722
@johanna1722 4 күн бұрын
❤👌🥰🔥💚
@wingchong68
@wingchong68 4 күн бұрын
Hello Mr. Jared I hope you are doing well 🙏 Can you check into videos about Leviathan or the Phoenix creature has been found between Argentina and the Antarctica in the Drake Passage. This thing is gigantic and if it wakes up it's going to be an extinction level event for the earth 🌎😮 Thank you 💗🙏😊
@keithclayton1271
@keithclayton1271 3 күн бұрын
Never heard of this before. What is it? Thanks 😊
@weslitton2567
@weslitton2567 4 күн бұрын
that's essentially what the Mormons say
@hawaiiguykailua6928
@hawaiiguykailua6928 2 күн бұрын
River Bank is the building😉
@skepticalgenious
@skepticalgenious 2 күн бұрын
This is so cool.... What's buried beneath?
@rawmilkmike
@rawmilkmike 3 күн бұрын
Yes. Yes. We arm the other side. 4:00
@arthurmonay3156
@arthurmonay3156 4 күн бұрын
Well, we got to see his thumb ! Maybe next time we'll get to see at least his shadow .
@PassionForGrammar
@PassionForGrammar 4 күн бұрын
It might've been a bridge
@danbob1650
@danbob1650 3 күн бұрын
0:52 I'm like is that a 💀 dead center? Eyes playing trick kids. Remember if you see something did you really?
@johnwilson6790
@johnwilson6790 2 күн бұрын
Sure beats whats going on the Gardens now....concussions and cougar Hurt sow Good !
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb 4 күн бұрын
Sorry, but I forgot to mention the lock 12 area and it's canal system. Tell me that whole area isn't way older than we are told. It was very advanced at one time too.
@revolutionaryliberation9250
@revolutionaryliberation9250 4 күн бұрын
Hans Herr House From 1719 Is Considered The Oldest Dwelling In Lancaster
@thecreweofthefancy
@thecreweofthefancy 3 күн бұрын
@revolutionaryliberation9250 oldest *surviving* there is evidence both written and archaeological of settlement by Europeans into the late 17th century.
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb
@AndreDonDodda-kr9lb 4 күн бұрын
We need a dr. Narco longo, jarid boosters collaboration!!
@tomh4591
@tomh4591 3 күн бұрын
minus the flat earth + maga nonsense, please. otherwise, agreed.
@noahmontague1849
@noahmontague1849 2 күн бұрын
Also I think I noticed that the farms are not farms they are the remenance of the old world all the farm houses have fasaudes they are melted buildings and so are the barns and all of the houses in the cities I believe no joke
@mikehunt8375
@mikehunt8375 4 күн бұрын
Every where I go along any coast is old foundations of buildings I can't find any info on anywhere. I implore anyone reading this, find the nearest body of water to you. Have a look around.... I've lived in several states, traveled through many other states, the past we learned in school doesn't match the environment we can see with our own eyes!
@keithclayton1271
@keithclayton1271 3 күн бұрын
I live near Lewisville Lake in north Texas. There are many locations along the water's edge that look similar to what Jared was pointing out in this video. They look like they could be at least a couple hundred years old. But the lake is engineered, and was made in the first half of the 20th century.
@tylerpelella3164
@tylerpelella3164 4 күн бұрын
I live close to the Susquehanna River. There’s all this metalwork along some banks and where it has rusted out u can see brickwork behind it. Must have looked so cool before, the metal sheeting is ugly and rusty.
@GreyerShade
@GreyerShade 3 күн бұрын
Id be interested to hear more accounts and stories you can find about the auburn haired people. Only two places I know of off hand that had DNA to produce red hair (Ireland and Afghanistan). Yet all across North America tribes have stories of the red hair tribes.
@HisMajesty-gq4gw
@HisMajesty-gq4gw 4 күн бұрын
For the algorithm Very nice
@andreaberryhill6654
@andreaberryhill6654 3 күн бұрын
Who can say if this river was in that location back when the structure was built? Nature can affect terrain... earthquakes have changed river flows before.
@ericweber4446
@ericweber4446 2 күн бұрын
I believe we all sprang from a central conscience that I call the Source. The Source is like an Infinite energy etch a sketch that can make anything like a computer simulation would think of! Monad, the Demiurge copied it and made a negative dark YIN realm, Yang/Monad/Pure Light/Chi realm.
@noahmontague1849
@noahmontague1849 2 күн бұрын
Jared Lady liberty is Lady Columbia. All the capital domes have statues of Columbia accept Washington DC which is the district of Columbia. it's one of the biggest domes and it's the only one with out a statue. Coincidence 🤞 I think not
@kickapootrackers7255
@kickapootrackers7255 4 күн бұрын
👍👍tya
@13зимородок
@13зимородок 4 күн бұрын
Россия смотрит про альтернативную историю!
@williamseifert169
@williamseifert169 3 күн бұрын
If you haven't figured out by now that it was the ancient Israelites, from the northern ten tribes of Israel spreading out all over the world, then you haven't figured anything out yet.
@nestaismail9189
@nestaismail9189 4 күн бұрын
The moment you realize they are inside the river itself
@canadiankewldude
@canadiankewldude 4 күн бұрын
*_"Moses was the first wise man, and the first that imparted grammar to the_* *_Jews,_* *_the Phoenicians received it from the Jews, and the Greeks from the Phoenicians."_* *_- Eupolemus 150 B.C. One of the earliest Jewish Historians._*
@StevoRicho
@StevoRicho 3 күн бұрын
So wrong,you can't be serious 🤯🤣🤣🤣
@jamesmiller4184
@jamesmiller4184 4 күн бұрын
[ I wonder IF we are to catch just a teeny-weeny brief glimpse of our presenter, Jarid himself, plus lots and lots of rocks? We shall see . . . or not! ]
@kaitlynchambers1921
@kaitlynchambers1921 4 күн бұрын
I get to see him every day ❤
@jamesmiller4184
@jamesmiller4184 6 сағат бұрын
@@kaitlynchambers1921 Excellent! Care to share any details? Let me guess: you are his producer or, one of his writers perhaps, Kaitlyn? Jarid is quite 'the aces' and so deserves his success.
@treeLiter
@treeLiter 3 күн бұрын
Im in philly. Ever wanna check an underground room in the woods holla at me, or ill send pics. Its not that old, but its old enough
@GeorgeA-bo8tv
@GeorgeA-bo8tv 3 күн бұрын
Pre ancient Hellenic giants.
@danieltorrens4954
@danieltorrens4954 4 күн бұрын
Are they concrete blocks or cinder blocks? There is a difference!
@scottbaker-ScottyB
@scottbaker-ScottyB 4 күн бұрын
Probably some building bridge foundation lock or dam dumped or destroyed from a previous civilization ?
@Millenia827
@Millenia827 4 күн бұрын
In the picture of the article I can see at least 4 Japanese katakana characters ..strange
@beermerican
@beermerican 4 күн бұрын
Farmers dump that on the bank so their fields wont erode from the winding river.
@tomh4591
@tomh4591 3 күн бұрын
i initially thought the same, but quickly changed my mind. its not in a place that would need that, nor is it nearly enough to serve that purpose. far too few/little to do so.
@GreyerShade
@GreyerShade 3 күн бұрын
7:07 Those Phoenician characters say: "PSWRD GLYPH" Someone had a chart of Phoenician letters but not smart enough to spell out words in Phoenician instead of English.
@ZooScott
@ZooScott 4 күн бұрын
M nICE M 🎩 …….
@ronmoore6812
@ronmoore6812 4 күн бұрын
Europeans have and will always be savage beast
@trumpbidensameclub6668
@trumpbidensameclub6668 4 күн бұрын
What the 😂 are you talking about? No one will believe that nonsense. 🎉🎉🎉
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