Why does there have to be music behind these documentaries? I would enjoy them so much more if there wasn't all that background noise.
@gerardtuxen5069Ай бұрын
Aren't the statues somewhat reminiscent of the Easter Island Moai statues?? Would acceptance of the Lemuria continent theory tie the entire Pacific region into a single civilization?
@RonCobb-co6drАй бұрын
I think you're probably right, I attended RSE for 3 years in the 90s and Ram told us he was from Mu, but 35,000 yrs ago, not all this younger dryas time period stuff. I live pretty close to Yelm WA and he said the north east tip of Mu almost would have touched this state but that area was a huge swamp. Like wise was Mexico. Stands to reason, one continent sinks and another is pushed up. This planet, of that's what it is, has gone through Soo many changes. You look at the maps from the 1400s and it's completely different. No great lakes, And all the major big cities are already there, San Francisco, Chilaga, or Chicago. DC is like New Amsterdam or something. Soo many lies.
@ScottRuenАй бұрын
as time goes on, I do question all this stuff about moving massive blocks of stone, sand, whatever, with a bunch of logs. Something just dont add up
@dorinatucker3251Ай бұрын
I immediately stopped listening and came to the comments to ask if any of you honestly believe that BS when he said the Amazon basin has “pour soil“? It’s the Amazon for crying out loud. It’s one of the most fertile regions on the planet.
@stickmanlivesАй бұрын
After deforestation , the soil quickly loses nutrients , unable to support much of anything .
@russianthotbot6997Ай бұрын
He's right. The canopy blocks most sunlight.
@GEAE_Denny_LАй бұрын
Hypothesis, theories and interpretations all mean no one really knows.
@tedecker3792Ай бұрын
I’ll trust someone who admits they don’t know everything over someone who thinks they do.
@r.daigle7815Ай бұрын
God knows.
@GEAE_Denny_LАй бұрын
@@r.daigle7815 ~ You got it !!
@shawnsanborn2057Ай бұрын
Some one knows….
@JoePal-c3nАй бұрын
It’s in the Emerald tablets the Anunnaki they talk about how they had these super structures, mountain bases, or cities overlooking the areas they tell you about the floods, and these advanced beings came here in modified us or made us who we are today and if you have no scientific understanding about induction heating method and how you confuse stones even Vada text says that they use molten rocks to pour structures. Clearly demonstrates that you need to look into this more because If you understand magnetic levitation, then you’d understand if we use these type of building for whatever we wanted, we could have awesome epic architectural building as well as levitating sidewalks and roads. It would be like the Jetsons you could make a conveyor belt That always works. That’s always in motion because of the magnetic energy as well as your plumbing water can travel whatever way the magnetic current is going as well as upward.
@63phillip8 күн бұрын
The Amazon was not always jungle and people have been living there for thousands of years no mystery here.
@rickkinsman7400Ай бұрын
The comments about the walls in sacsayhuaman are utter nonsense and are provably so. Documented records written by Spanish priests during the 16th century clearly indicate that the local people of the time insisted that they did not build the walls, but that they were present when they migrated to the area a couple of hundred years prior. Insisting that relatively primitive people built things that are clearly way beyond their capability does nothing to advance the science of archaeology and history. The Inca hadn't even invented the wheel, let alone devised the sort of metallurgy required to make the tools necessary to construct such intricate structures, let alone transport the stones up precipitously steep hills from miles away.
@johnwalker1553Ай бұрын
That's right, they didn't have steel.
@rogerfurneaux1529Ай бұрын
The continued insistence by archaeologists and documentary makers that all the stone structures in S. America are of relatively recent (i.e. within the last thousand years or so) origin does them no favours at all. As with ancient Egypt, they have their set (in stone?) theories and refuse to even contemplate other possibilities.
@darlahenri8095Ай бұрын
These peoples are no longer surface dwellers. Why & what happened is part of the mystery. Most interesting, thanks 😊
@Zonaxion-SG-12Ай бұрын
The Earth was a Pangea at that time.This accounts simular structures found at remote places.
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Explain
@Nervii_ChampionАй бұрын
Graham Hancock's voice has become more iconic and benevolent than even Morgan Freeman's is, at this point.
@andreasholmqvist7021Ай бұрын
Sometimes I think we try to find so many strange explanations for these old things. It must not be so strange. Maybe those who made these stone things just thought it was nice. It must not have meant anything.
@Glenn-m1tАй бұрын
As the Bible tells us there was giants!!!!
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
But where are they
@johnnyelectric4844Ай бұрын
Mud fossil university
@gor498813 сағат бұрын
@johnnyelectric4844 Great comment, those guys are as crazy at the creationists.
@dmo848Ай бұрын
So much stuff still hiding under all those trees
@darlahenri8095Ай бұрын
We need those tress to breathe
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Right
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
@@darlahenri8095right
@JoePal-c3nАй бұрын
Even the Emerald tablet said that a lot of these space brother type human/alien beings had their main castle or mansion/massive structure built huge like a massive hill above so they could see everything down below like a super base. So once you understand that, and then you see all other ruins and places, then you can see why some stuff was built so high up and other stuff was built lower super how the emerald tablets explain all this
@everettwalker9141Ай бұрын
All built by fallen angels and giants before the great flood of noah!!!!
@JoePal-c3nАй бұрын
And since there is a natural flood cycle of 36,000 years or polar shifting then how would your landmass be exactly the same when they say there’s at least five major flood Calamities or maybe even 10
@JakeLearns-i2nАй бұрын
We always say the ancients knew nothing until we find something. Then we still just say they only knew what we found. No more capability than that. I think there were far more physics concepts in understanding globally than we can imagine.
@jonathanhughes8679Ай бұрын
At its highest in housed as many as 4- 6 million and 2 million minimum . They had actually cut 100 yards wide and it’s always a grid pattern . They need to cate what’s under the Mesolithic stones😊
@carolcottle8157Ай бұрын
Has anyone dug down to where the workings slag is below the carvings - maybe dating could be deduced from that layer? Sorry if I sound obvious.
@s1amvwbugАй бұрын
This bowl their showing 9:13 / 25:25 looks like one of those big stone Olmic heads in Mexico. 🤔
@JoePal-c3nАй бұрын
Yes you are right. This video announcer seems to have a racist view to deny the facts of the past history. And if they were here some 450,000 years ago and there’s been three or four cataclysms or maybe even five major floods how would they be able to know what was made by humans and was natural when none of that looks natural otherwise it would be all over the place Many other volcanos and I’ve never seen that so maybe the site could’ve been a damn or or something we’ve never encountered yet. Maybe the foundation of something was destroyed and the wall is made by induction heating method fusing stone and making it molten its copper coils, or copper moulds
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
You’re right
@glenrich-uu9zrАй бұрын
May be it was New York in mega ancient time.
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Why
@glenrich-uu9zrАй бұрын
@@baconeggcheesepodcast9390 May be it had been a NY scale big civilization urban city.
@bobbyrobert397Ай бұрын
Get rid of that horrible filter , looks like o got crap on my eye , can't finish watching it
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Ayoooooooooo😅
@GiGiGoesShoppingАй бұрын
One minute the video talks about the Amazon rain forest then in the same breath starts talking about Indonesia as if they're the same thing?
@cynical_rdАй бұрын
Does this mean that the neanderthal actually did this if it wasn't human?.. At least we know for a fact that neanderthal existed.. but, the absurdity of such a notion is often laughed at by the very same people that immediately assume that only something "not from earth" could have mastered earths materials so well.
@jtreezy751Ай бұрын
It’s funny that everyone so lazy anymore from technology, that they underestimate the power humans have to learn and adapt. spend your entire life trying to do nothing but build and I promise you’ll get good at it , now imagine the build up of knowledge, people are too quick to say everything was placed somewhere and not just carved out into desired shapes
@johnwalker1553Ай бұрын
t's a question of ability. We have built machines and high-quality measuring devices to be able to do something like this. You don't believe in magic, do you? It's remarkable that such comments usually come from theorists. Do you think it is so easy to build machines with all the knowledge that we have acquired through the sweat of our brow? These primitive cultures did not have any of that. So how is such an expert supposed to deliver a level of accuracy that exceeds the measuring instruments of the time.
@jtreezy751Ай бұрын
@@johnwalker1553 you ever worked construction? There’s natural tools and natural ways to make measurements and angles, understood on can’t say how, I don’t even know how, but in that sense then to say it’s impossible is also too bold , I think there’s a lot lost through the centuries that would have had to be spread by word of mouth due to limitations in long distance communication
@johnwalker1553Ай бұрын
@@jtreezy751 You see, that's the difference between us. I talk about tolerances and you tell me about natural tools. I've been building machines for 50 years, steel construction and stone masonry machines, prefabricated concrete parts, hydroelectric power plants. We only se a fraction of the original buildings back then. Its a symphony of fitting angles. At one level you have to get to a crown where we can place the supports. A lintel, a bearing of a beam. There are enough examples of these walls all around the world. These blocks were calculated and prefabricated with tight tolerances. In the Megalithic architecture there are few stones here, where I could transport using my vehicles and excavators. Please don't tell me any stories here.
@jtreezy751Ай бұрын
@@johnwalker1553 I’m not saying we didn’t fabricate them, I’m more saying we did it in insane ways ourselves and not with aliens or anything, I think people underestimate the primitive civilizations and their abilities to come together and work. What you’re saying poses a whole other question of what did they possibly fabricate these stones with- now that’s a tough one
@johnwalker1553Ай бұрын
@@jtreezy751 There are usually no right angles on these blocks, the surfaces are usually twisted and irregular. This is called a backdrop. If, for example, you bend the underbody panel of a car with a huge press, you need a backdrop tool - an upper die and a lower die. The two tools fit together within narrow tolerances, minus the thickness of the sheet. The result is a floor assembly with lots of reinforcements and bulges. If you put a second sheet of this kind on top of the first, it fits form fitting. Now for the blocks: to work on these backdrops of a 5 ton block, you need a backdrop gauge. Here is a three-dimensional gauge. You have to check the dimensions again and again and take off material. It's about as many measuring points as possible. If you take off too much material, you can't compensate for it. Many people have theorized about wooden constructions using as gauge. but you need needles as measuring points everything else is too imprecise Now, about the carving tools, of course they have to be harder than the workpiece. Because of a possible backstage gauge . But the result is far too imprecise because you need needles to capture the backdrop. Such teaching is high tech for stone age people.
@erepsekahsАй бұрын
In they have been there for, for example, 3,000 years, why does our host say, "These documents and photographs remain a valuable resource today, as many of the megaliths have eroded...etc. etc. etc." It they have been there for a thousands of years or so (which is nothing in historical terms) why would 100 or so years make any difference to the condition of them? It's a bs comment which throws doubt all the commentary.
@rachelwren-vipond6029Ай бұрын
I find Micheal Tellinger very interesting about the strange stuff found in south Africa. Adams calendar, the torus stones. Etc. and the evidence for the use of sound and frequency. Reminiscent of Tesla, no?😮and what about the mud fossils? Needs much more research. But who will fund it?
@ZHEN-NING-x9c7zАй бұрын
Let me guess, this thing wasn't found in Europe so it's a mystery how it was built. Right? This seems to be a running theme.
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Explain
@aking032962Ай бұрын
First you are taking about findings in the Amazon with Graham Hancock and then you start showing film and start talking that these are in Asia!! YOU REALLY NEED TO EDIT THIS FILM CORRECTLY.
@duncanfeyd4056Ай бұрын
Has noone heard of "silos"?...
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Explain
@duncanfeyd4056Ай бұрын
@@baconeggcheesepodcast9390 silo: a structure used to store grain to prevent contamination and rodents.
@duncanfeyd4056Ай бұрын
"is either a remarkable feat of nature, or evidence of human involvement"....Is there some secret, third option?
@AlBirk-m1pАй бұрын
Last I checked the amozon was not in Indonesia
@darlahenri8095Ай бұрын
Both have similar ruins in similar environments
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Right
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
@@darlahenri8095ok thanks
@ILTOMBAАй бұрын
Sooperainsient stuff, I just feel it!
@zumamaya2396Ай бұрын
"Shrouded in mystery" the most overused cliche in every video of this type 😂😂
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
🗣🗣🗣🗣🤣
@grumpyg9350Ай бұрын
Amazon, It’s a living thing without an agenda.
@ZHEN-NING-x9c7zАй бұрын
It's also not in Indonesia.
@babyUFO.Ай бұрын
Your use of the prefix MEGA doesn't check out.
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Why
@edgewalker7459Ай бұрын
Is that first megalith a owl ?
@OutrjsАй бұрын
Wood or concrete. Not stone Hexagonal... ancient trees
@zedrinbingАй бұрын
lava cant create hexagonal columns like that
@ecocentrichomestead6783Ай бұрын
Actually, it can.
@zedrinbingАй бұрын
@@ecocentrichomestead6783 so in the next century lava will build castles and cities
@ecocentrichomestead6783Ай бұрын
@@zedrinbing not exactly, but castles and cities could be built WITH lava! Research "The devils woodpile"
@zedrinbingАй бұрын
@@ecocentrichomestead6783 lava cant creategeometric shapes its giant trees
@AdamMeaney-zs6zwАй бұрын
How did idolaters build all that, destroyed rubble? ...try and stop idolaters from building idols!
@bobcrossley917Ай бұрын
South America was thriving metropolis. Just look at all the finds. They don't look anything different the similar finds around the world. The problem i have is where are the tools? Where are the plans?
@darlahenri8095Ай бұрын
Where are the tools, plans, builders, etc. Is the question/mystery
@RuneDyrstad-w9gАй бұрын
Scientists...!!?
@JoePal-c3nАй бұрын
Always thinking the people are primitive eh seems like a racist mindset
@baconeggcheesepodcast9390Ай бұрын
Right
@HumeSampson-g4jАй бұрын
Jones Cynthia Martinez Jason Miller Donald
@DennisGillespie-t6uАй бұрын
Can you say Mud Fluid.
@risussardonicus8416Ай бұрын
I take these “documentaries “with half a grain of salt.Civilization didn’t start 5k or 12k years ago. Assuming that people then didn’t have the proper tools,metalurgically speaking,but still accomplished easily,what some right now,with our modern technology can’t do ,and dismiss as undoable is ignorance,pure and simple.
@l.pmoonstone5067Ай бұрын
Aliens 👽
@darlahenri8095Ай бұрын
This info is incorrect
@siyem2051Ай бұрын
@@darlahenri8095Enlighten us
@alexsie3012Ай бұрын
Maybe it’s because he’s Australian but who else could mispronounce a Maori place name like that. Correct me if I’ve got it wrong but I’m pretty sure it’s pronounced kai-mana-wa, or kai-manawa. Not kaima-nawa. 😂