Tartarian Truthers || Episode 16 || Mysterious Budj Bim

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Tartarian Truthers

Tartarian Truthers

Күн бұрын

Casey takes us on a journey through Budj Bim national park and uncovers a fascinating ancient history that will have you once again questioning Australia's mainstream historical narrative.
Check us out on Instagram:
Casey: @aussie_mudflood_tartarian_
JoJo: @_a_tartarian_heart_
Thanks for watching :)
Music: Ambiment - The Ambient by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. creativecommon...
Source: incompetech.com...
Artist: incompetech.com/

Пікірлер: 274
@tedburycombo2178
@tedburycombo2178 2 жыл бұрын
I'm Gunditjmara/Gamililai... Perhaps you've found the canal that goes from lake to another perhaps dried up now.... Also Stonehouses found in scrubby creek further nth now knocked down Gunditjmara~Kerrupjmara lake condah..I heard Elder's talk about stone circles that had much to do with stars every person born under a particular spot of the circle... Love your work... Next time you're out in the bush in a situation like that call out before entering let the residing spirits know of your intentions,"hint" tell them that your there to learn perhaps your outcome would be different...
@everythingisupsidedown9593
@everythingisupsidedown9593 2 жыл бұрын
Spirits cannot tell someone's intentions? Do they need to hear x y z in English before they allow or provide p or q?
@QuestionThingsUseLogic
@QuestionThingsUseLogic 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe it was Yowie country....usually no birdlife and there's an uneasy feeling. Sightings have been made of them not that far away from there.
@luketutolo
@luketutolo 2 жыл бұрын
@@everythingisupsidedown9593 you got no chance of getting thru that kettle of fish .spirit yowie cacca convicts didnt build our past and neither did the indigenous because if they were survivors of the last reset they would of had a bit more knowledge of old world technology because i dont see how a reset can reset the land and full grown adults brains. Not being a smart arse but if your the survivor from an old world civilization with that technology you wouldn't come into the reset and not be able to write or draw technology and the way marvels from the past worked cos if we were reset right now and i survived im pretty sure if i didnt have any thing of our modern marvels today around me or accessable i would still be able to speak draw paint pretty much a better picture of my past reset i survived than two stick figures and a spirit snake. If you have a wide open mind you can see where im going with this
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967 2 жыл бұрын
@@luketutolo yeah maybe a reset can’t make ya forget but inv@ding peoples can murder all adults,take the children and brainwash them to the point no one remembers or to afraid to remember,and what technology do ya expect them to paint,a tv,a car,a aeroplane,no that’s rubbish tech,we were all natural tech,no one claiming us black fellas had crap tech like today,jeez we can’t get any credit for anything
@everythingisupsidedown9593
@everythingisupsidedown9593 2 жыл бұрын
@@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967 we waz Kings! But now we are drunks! If yiu were so great why ain't even 50% of you able to reboot??
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967 2 жыл бұрын
awesome work,the government has done some serious destruction and hiding of us indigenous peoples history,and we couldn’t have been nomadic because we got laws to not wonder on other tribes lands,when we need to we had to get permission and bring a gift for that tribe,so yes we had permanent territory to live on,thank you for your hard work,it brings some peace to my soul,I knew the government was lying about us
@tomhorseman9832
@tomhorseman9832 2 жыл бұрын
Of everyone's history. Melted buildings my friend. We are all lied too. This stuff was built by all of our ancestors, and then destroyed by means that produced unimaginable heat (which is why it looks the way it does)......wasn't built by primitive tribes.
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967
@jfkfitirjdjjsisieirirjfjdj5967 2 жыл бұрын
@@tomhorseman9832 not really,wyte people pretty much have put themselves up on a pedestal already and dogged the crap out of us indigenous peoples,you’ve already taken credit for almost everything,ok,they must hide the truth from us indigenous so they can justify stealing,murder,and lies of my people you know the rest,cmon dude 🤣peace anyway
@ozradek1
@ozradek1 2 жыл бұрын
This is my favourite type of video - 1st hand account, on site, by beautiful curious open minded folk with no agenda other than seeking truth. Love you guys.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
❤️🙏
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
Same
@leesafrey6931
@leesafrey6931 2 жыл бұрын
That’s incredible I had no idea and that my friend is because of what we were taught in school. And made to believe our indigenous built nothing farmed nothing. So sad. I knew Australia must have more history then what we’ve been told. Keep up the great work and thanks so much for bringing this to us
@billyzig
@billyzig 2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant presentation. I never bought the mainstream narrative that the indigenous people of Australia didn't have housing etc. even as a kid at school. Thanks for doing what you do! BTW, check out the Unesco logo. It's literally a Tartarian building.
@terryandrews3186
@terryandrews3186 2 жыл бұрын
Just like Africa. They said they were primitive. Yet they had castles.
@adamhebb82
@adamhebb82 2 жыл бұрын
@@terryandrews3186 They had castles? Where's this info coming from bro?
@XfromDarkHorse
@XfromDarkHorse 2 жыл бұрын
@@adamhebb82 I think he might be referring to Great Zimbabwe.
@midsummerstardust3607
@midsummerstardust3607 2 жыл бұрын
AMAZING!!! Honestly, these stone walls and ruins + the landscape reminds of castles in Scotland.
@17joy32
@17joy32 2 жыл бұрын
OmGodess of truth... WOW. INcreadible find. ALso the coastal fish farming network of at least 5000 mariculture systems on eastcoast. Unique mariculture system unlike any other. Using king tides to gather preggy fish n folks milk the fish so all eggs are contained til next big tides. This culture seems to have/Had the enviroTECH that sustained wild fish stock across d plane. VERY Koooooool vid thnxxxx
@grantmcdonald2501
@grantmcdonald2501 2 жыл бұрын
The stone walls near the Sth. Australian country town of Sedan, are very similar.. and go for 100's of kilometres..
@whatthe661
@whatthe661 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Casey. That was fascinating. Have never heard of them before
@sarahsue4065
@sarahsue4065 2 жыл бұрын
Makes me so angry that we aren’t free to explore where we want - this planet belongs to everyone.. fascinating, thank you 🙏
@shaespear407
@shaespear407 2 жыл бұрын
Sarah Sue Yes, me too sister, me too. All of this is to be shared freely with all of humanity. Not hoarded & controlled by fake lords. I cannot wait the last stone is turned! I believe in the promise "no stone will be left unturned".
@BCEden1
@BCEden1 2 жыл бұрын
You need to know your limit and boundaries, surely these walls show that
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
Me Too, it fujing infuriates Me
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
@@BCEden1 lol
@Dmaher1111
@Dmaher1111 2 жыл бұрын
super cool adventure time. Consider getting a drone ? Could be a good thing. Awesome cheers.
@noelalexisshaw-nas-noz5142
@noelalexisshaw-nas-noz5142 2 жыл бұрын
Using a drone over such areas would also show if there is any Energy Interference with the Drone,Camera and Receiver...Much Love and Peace 🤜🏼❤🤛🏿
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
Ikr, great idea
@BatMan-to8im
@BatMan-to8im 2 жыл бұрын
I love how the universe works to have had you you stumble across this part of the world
@petermcgrath1830
@petermcgrath1830 2 жыл бұрын
The stone walls and house remains you found were built by european settlers, the round buildings of the Gunditjmara people are round and much smaller and usually built in close grouped villages. They are easiest viewed at the Tyrendarra Indegenous Protect Area south of Mount Eccles. The stone weirs and diversions are also much lower in the rivers, creeks and lakes, and almost never straight.
@banditbusta
@banditbusta 2 жыл бұрын
A Really interesting film. Many good points raised. Those walls look very similar to the agricultural dry stone walls in North Wales UK.
@johnhermann8121
@johnhermann8121 2 жыл бұрын
This is amazing! In no way were the aboriginal peoples of this land simply hunters and gatherers. Australian National University has denied the existence of a ruined city near Uluru, and the excavation that has taken place there. There is an incredible story waiting to be told here.
@alby6728
@alby6728 2 жыл бұрын
I went there in the 70’s don’t remember what I was taught about it, but yes had a similar feeling that there was a history there. Thank you for sharing..
@appppppppeeee
@appppppppeeee 2 жыл бұрын
Great footage and loved the narration. A good balance of personal story and facts. The only way Australia can be saved from the current tyranny is if we properly acknowledge Indigenous people and their long history on this land. We must give back all the rights to their land and let them have the final say to what happens to it. I want to see an Australia that is united under the journey for reclamation and redemption. We all need to decide as a people that we've had enough this corporate shell of a government. We need to call a referendum and create a new Australia that is free of all corrupt, foreign bodies who, above all, are raping this land and us for profit. It says in our constitution that we have the power to do this. We just need to come together, united as one and create a better constitution that is free of the monarchy and free from parasitic corporations.
@bassmit9753
@bassmit9753 2 жыл бұрын
How do you get around carrying all that white guilt toggaf
@colette5680
@colette5680 2 жыл бұрын
The stones would have been built by the Alantean survivors. As the house and walls were after the volcanic action. Walls like these are all over the world. Built because of ancient forgotten technology. Stone walls are meant to follow energy lines and be used to transfer energy. The survivors may have forgotten their original meaning but knew that "they must build the walls." Their length is not meant to be broken. So now you can investigate what I have told you.
@tomhorseman9832
@tomhorseman9832 2 жыл бұрын
You seem to not be aware of the melted buildings all around and beneath you. You should look into the fact that mountains are not mountains.
@colette5680
@colette5680 2 жыл бұрын
@TOM Horseman Dear Tom, melted construction on the coastline was not relevant to Energy Walls made of Stone. You may find that if you get this theory substantiated by Remote Viewing that the melting, if true, was done by ETs. As with most demolished ancient buildings/cities.
@k-w627
@k-w627 2 жыл бұрын
So true, Africa is full of the remnants of this ancient forgotten technology. I learnt about this through Michael Tellinger, wonderful man.
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
Truth, corroborated by all the research I've done, Which is extensive, I feel as if those assholes gotta PhD after soon long in University learning absolute BS, Then We *Myself for 8yrs Minimum should earn us a Real World PHD, For we're not less 'Doctors of:' and experts in soooo many subjects, majoring in Truth, history & Dscipline *Rabbit Holing, following all leads to conclusion or dead end, non-biased open mindedness just to name a few! Edit: was censored by autocorrect, fuk U google!
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
@@tomhorseman9832 1000% still fux my head up
@traciekimyinyoga2386
@traciekimyinyoga2386 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the work that you do to show us what happens when we ask questions. I loved this episode. I have felt for all of my life that there is something energetic & powerful in this land Australia. You are brave to ask & seek & I am si grateful that you share all of this. Much LOVE & gratitude
@theonewithnoname8137
@theonewithnoname8137 2 жыл бұрын
I truly believe a drone with camera would provide you additional colorful perspective to your incredible research! I truly appreciate what you are doing here.
@gleefully4965
@gleefully4965 2 жыл бұрын
One of the Best alternative (TRUTH) history channel in existence!
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
🙏❤️
@mrtea7562
@mrtea7562 2 жыл бұрын
I remember on the Bush Tucker Man tv series he was trying to find a giant stone fort with high walls in the outback that the aboriginals still talked about, the story goes that the Dutch built it hundreds of years before Captain Cook arrived
@shyguy1658
@shyguy1658 2 жыл бұрын
pretty sure in an earlier episode they mentioned this
@mrtea7562
@mrtea7562 2 жыл бұрын
@@shyguy1658 Ah ok only seen this one and up to episode 7
@nickquantick3490
@nickquantick3490 2 жыл бұрын
Hello from the south of England. I have enjoyed watching your films and what a fascinating place Budj Bim is. To me, though, the stone walls look 100's of years old, definitely not 1000's. If they were that old, they would be buried or collapsed by now. You can roughly date them by the size of the lichens. They grow approx 1mm per year here, maybe more where you are. The walls would not be strong enough to hold water even if they were watertight, certainly for imported livestock. The rectangular houses with the chimneys are European style, probably British, the indigenous people would have built round houses with a central fireplace or cooked outside. If the landscape was greener it could be in the north of England or Scotland. I'm sure there is a much older story there, don't be distracted by those walls.
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, but that still too is educated speculation.
@bobbylad8920
@bobbylad8920 Жыл бұрын
I think that’s a bit of a harsh thought especially if the aboriginal people talk about how they made these structures, in the dream time witch in my personal opinion is before they were properly civilised them selfs when they were dreaming of a better life then they made it so.
@debraworth8861
@debraworth8861 7 ай бұрын
They do look very European, it would be great to know exactly how old they are, and where the stones came from.
@estherfourfourteen5508
@estherfourfourteen5508 2 жыл бұрын
This was so amazing! Thank you for sharing your curiosity and research so freely! I am loving your work so much.
@shyguy1658
@shyguy1658 2 жыл бұрын
i grew up in western victoria and it never gets enough attention for its mysteries. thanks for this video
@laurenjenner8304
@laurenjenner8304 2 жыл бұрын
Oh wow this is amazing!! I just wish you could time travel to see what was going on all those years ago!
@heatherreiss
@heatherreiss 2 жыл бұрын
Casey that was brilliant. Southern Africa that we used to tour (with groups) pre c0vid, has very similar displays of stone walls with with banal government explanations for their use. We spent time with Michael Tellinger on these tours and so much was revealed . Happy to talk,
@azyhbe
@azyhbe 2 жыл бұрын
where they the musical stone circles? what an amazing place to visit.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
Ooh that would have been fascinating! He is a legend 🙌
@heatherreiss
@heatherreiss 2 жыл бұрын
@@TartarianTruthers yes from the accretion disk earth shape, to the giants' bones , to the Anunnaki DNA eugenics pods and more.
@RealityAwareness
@RealityAwareness 2 жыл бұрын
I am fascinated by your videos and in the middle of this first/original playlist of yours. Sooo much as taken my breath away - but these have stopped me in my tracks. I was born on a cattle station 1 hour East of Broken Hill NSW. There is nothing but arid red dirt cattle country out there. I am 38 now, but when I was a kid, my Dad used to take me out on the property and we would go to old sites - LIKE THESE! Dad told me, that obviously he was told - it was the old stopping station for the Cobb n Co Horse and Cart track from Perth to Sydney back in the early 1900's. We used to fossick for old bottles and find broken crockery, bottles and all sorts in the old dump (apparently) under about 1-2ft of red dirt - you dig down and it is a huge pile of - what Dad told me, an old rubbish dump. Upon seeing these stones in this video now, it dawned on me. Um, no. That wasn't a rubbish dump! Why was THAT much 'rubbish' of beautiful porcelain crockery and old bottles (from New York and the like glass embossing on it btw) and - all smashed in a pile and burnt to cinder?! And not very far from the old stone houses that were crumbled - and exactly as you said and showed here - with very intricate flooring and chimneys still in tact! The same! The stones there, weren't black like these in this video though, they were/are whitish colouring. The floors and the 'way' they are built here in this video though - EXACTLY the same. I even found a necklace that I still have today, I was 14 at the time and it is a carved - must be bone!? Still don't know today, but it has all the astrological symbols on it with the gemini symbol in the middle - I have kept it till this day because I have ALWAYS every time I pick it up, wonder how it got there, what it's story is and where on Earth did it come from if all the bottles and porcelain are from overseas... You're making me think much deeper now about that place where I was born. I always couldn't wait to get back out there with Dad and look around wondering what we would find but... the energy of the area, was definitely.. different, eerie or just... strange - hard to describe. There were several of those sites on the property, all in ruins now of course. I LOVE Tartaria and kept asking the question - but what about Australia?! Then I found your channel, so so grateful for you both putting all this together! Especially with this reminding me of the place I frequented as a child - I had a feeling it was much deeper than... the surface. Thank you.
@Eleven1921
@Eleven1921 2 жыл бұрын
I have been looking around my small town- in America- and I have also found stone walls....but they are sunk. (Lots of sunken stone houses...the chimneys and bell towers poking up out of the ground.... They say they are markers or "monuments" and capped them off) but the walls have been fascinating me. They stick up about just a few feet....but higher in other places....and run all through the neighborhoods...from end to end in our town. Ive been asking my higher self to reveal the answer to why these walls existed... Why did people need such long stone walls everywhere? When were they built? Are they medieval?? So its a great coincidence that the next video I watch from you ladies is talking on stone walls. (Ive been watching your videos in order from the beginning for the last few weeks) Anyway, it's your channel that inspired me to photograph my town.... Soooo much shady history here. Tons ot sinkage. "Underground lakes" (yeah right.. Lol) tunnels, stone "basements"- it's amazing! Thank you for the inspiration!
@jaxraymond173
@jaxraymond173 2 жыл бұрын
That’s amazing, especially how the narrative explains it all away 😂 What town are you in?
@webdesignerandrew6957
@webdesignerandrew6957 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Watching this later tonight will be the highlight of my evening.
@parisdegrassie1013
@parisdegrassie1013 2 жыл бұрын
Talk about a gifted human being!! Gosh that episode has me on the verge of tears! Just the sincerity & emotion! Thanks as always!
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
❤️🙏
@ngbsolo138
@ngbsolo138 2 жыл бұрын
Great video and new knowledge, thank you.
@teoderik5093
@teoderik5093 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting find! The stone wall around the complex is there to keep the energy coming out of the earth in this place. You can clearly see its effect on the sporadically charred trees, which quite often appear in the film. 3:57, 4:06, 4:55, 5:40, 10:05, 10:07, 11:00, 12:32, and 14:06. This phenomenon is called "Plasma fires" and it can burn only the bark or inside of the tree, leaving other material unburned. Also dry leaves and the rest of the tree. The energy comes from below and must be controlled so as not to become destructive. It follows some conductive materials in the earth. The phenomenon is silenced by the authorities. But that was probably the energy you felt at the place. This is obviously a place with electrically charged energy!
@nuovopianetaterra5484
@nuovopianetaterra5484 2 жыл бұрын
Brava,you really help people to see the lies,thanks.
@melchizedek144
@melchizedek144 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Ty for sharing 🙏💖
@mcbusinessmonkey
@mcbusinessmonkey 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome work. It's up to us to rewrite the false narrative. Thank you for your contributions!! Xo
@pockets3121
@pockets3121 2 жыл бұрын
you need a drone so you could have flown it over the top, great work
@danmax537
@danmax537 2 жыл бұрын
Another great episode. These stone walls run hundreds of kilometres West of Melbourne and we were led to believe a lot of them were built by the convicts and settlers as boundary walls. This is fantastic and requires a lot more investigation.
@philharmonicwittgenstein9662
@philharmonicwittgenstein9662 2 жыл бұрын
Hello Ladies, and in this instance Casey. This is a mind blowing revelation that needs more investigation. Thankyou so much for your work. It opens the minds of those that are clouded and brings forth the questions that must be asked. I lament how much truth has been lost forever.
@andrewwilliams3897
@andrewwilliams3897 2 жыл бұрын
Very enjoyable. Looking forward to more of your nartives. The oldest bones know in the world are from Australia, the cradle of civerlization!?
@craigpeterdg9093
@craigpeterdg9093 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks ladies that was amazing.
@TheMinipea
@TheMinipea 2 жыл бұрын
The Geelong area also has Indigenous eel farming infrastructure...l remember that from school .👍
@MrBTBusch
@MrBTBusch 2 жыл бұрын
That usually means at the very least, very large rivers.
@ozmarideon
@ozmarideon 2 жыл бұрын
Great work Casey, More questions than answers..
@paulhargreaves9103
@paulhargreaves9103 2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant work……. Supporting you from clitheroe (northern England)
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate
@texasredneckhippy
@texasredneckhippy 2 жыл бұрын
Lots, miles of stonewalls in Kentucky,USA. Enjoy your channel
@dimebar4617
@dimebar4617 2 жыл бұрын
More his-story falling apart. Great work. 👍💜💕💕
@alkemikchic9306
@alkemikchic9306 2 жыл бұрын
Loved your explorations though this documentary.. Let’s hope someone gets curious and follows your tracks and gets some drone footage of that ‘no trespasses place’! Love your channel 💗
@autarko
@autarko 2 жыл бұрын
Lucky your husband came prepared with a chainsaw. Seriously I can't believe how you find all this cool stuff out and about. Great job with the video.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
We live on the road, we have a small chainsaw in the car always 😊
@curvebuster
@curvebuster 2 жыл бұрын
Always excellent. 🤗🤗🤗
@thomasbylund1530
@thomasbylund1530 2 жыл бұрын
Great,Great video Casey, wow I'll have to watch this one again , this part of Australia must have had the highest concentration of Eels in the world ! ! ! Yes the Originals had quite a sophisticated and massive community in that region, thank you for all that you and Jo Jo bring to light!
@johnwatson9779
@johnwatson9779 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, blown away. Thank you for sharing
@caronwilliamson951
@caronwilliamson951 2 жыл бұрын
Beautiful video, made me cry,I'm in Burra north of Adelaide exploring surrounding areas and town itself, the stones are showing me there's alot more going on,also there's alot more water up here than we've been led to believe💛 thankyou
@davidvaughn367
@davidvaughn367 2 жыл бұрын
This place, and your description of the feeling in the air,reminds me Very much of an area of New England, and New York State where there are miles, and miles of stone walls that go over hills,and through the woods. There are mysterious stone circles, and structures. Most are considered to have been built by colonial farmers,because they preferred farming rocky hillsides,and dragging around stones that weigh many tons to build a root cellar that happens to be aligned with the solstice, or equinox. At Mystery Hill is a place called America's Stonehenge. Very much worth a look. There is also the Gungywamp,and a place called The Cliff of Tears. The air in many of those places is electric, and yet peaceful at the same time. Very similar!
@MX-op7nf
@MX-op7nf 2 жыл бұрын
Love the episodes in Victoria!
@freedomcall5233
@freedomcall5233 2 жыл бұрын
Thank You for your research Tartrian Truthers for beinging the curiousities for examination and showing Tartria to the world, yes i did say Tartria. Peace and much respect.
@marumali_girlmn1195
@marumali_girlmn1195 2 жыл бұрын
So much warranyan (love) to you beautiful souls for this one especially ❤️💛🖤
@mattlag8558
@mattlag8558 2 жыл бұрын
Fabulous!!!
@dariussmith2954
@dariussmith2954 2 жыл бұрын
Omg your killing me with all these fantastic videos thanks again.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
🙏❤️
@seang2424
@seang2424 2 жыл бұрын
Loved this thanks your voice is very calming 👌🏼and great info
@davidbyrnes2089
@davidbyrnes2089 2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for sharing. Such an interesting place. It sure creates a lot of questions. So heart breaking what has happened to the first nations people at the hands of the British, and sad that so much knowledge has been lost.
@123downtown123
@123downtown123 2 жыл бұрын
Here in the foothills of California, same thing, stone walls in the middle of nowhere and really long. We are told the Chinese built them during the gold rush but they don't make since.
@tarapayne4945
@tarapayne4945 2 жыл бұрын
Aloha Love an Light -Gratitude - Great Post!🐗
@juicyjackson822
@juicyjackson822 2 жыл бұрын
Casey and Jo-Jo, your videos are enlightening and wonderfully entertaining. I love learning about the hidden history of Australia from you both. I always wondered how the Aboriginal people of Australia could be considered simple and nomadic (according to the official narrative), when their culture spans many tens of thousands of years, in a time span where many civilisations have come and gone. It never made sense to me, so thank you for everything you do.
@whitelight000
@whitelight000 2 жыл бұрын
Check out Chattahoochee National Forest in America. Apparently access is restricted there too the rock formations too
@pash9956
@pash9956 2 жыл бұрын
Great digging, great story, Truther!
@Kevin-pr1qw
@Kevin-pr1qw 2 жыл бұрын
You ladies are one of my favorite blessings from God.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
🙏❤️
@rickrandazzo
@rickrandazzo 2 жыл бұрын
absolutely awsum video...
@drewroe3455
@drewroe3455 2 жыл бұрын
I've heard accounts of settlers coming across fields of Yams as far as the eye can see... Maybe there's a connection?
@QuestionThingsUseLogic
@QuestionThingsUseLogic 2 жыл бұрын
Me too, plus their villages, fish farms, granaries, terraced farming, deep farming techniques unique in the world etc.
@aliciakerr7639
@aliciakerr7639 2 жыл бұрын
There is/was similar stone walls in Rockbank, Victoria. Some said it was first settlers to keep sheep, but they were far to low for stock keeping. Some of them were bulldozed for highway upgrades.
@jordankodiak6956
@jordankodiak6956 2 жыл бұрын
I loved the video Casey great job out there.
@TartarianTruthers
@TartarianTruthers 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Jordan 😊
@woodhengecarvings
@woodhengecarvings 2 жыл бұрын
Great video thank you! 👏🙏❤️☘️
@bryans6141
@bryans6141 2 жыл бұрын
I've heard of egyption hyrogliphs somewhere around you in the central coast.
@rosered3919
@rosered3919 2 жыл бұрын
Gosford Glyphs.
@bryans6141
@bryans6141 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you I'm going to find them and have a look
@carolynrose9522
@carolynrose9522 2 жыл бұрын
That is in NSW not Wesrern Victoria where Casey was
@bryans6141
@bryans6141 2 жыл бұрын
@@carolynrose9522 Yes, I'm only 40 odd klm North of there
@carolynrose9522
@carolynrose9522 2 жыл бұрын
@@bryans6141 I've seen them and my impression is they are real and not some recent works as some claim.
@NickThunnda
@NickThunnda 2 жыл бұрын
It would be great if our government did an archaeological dig of the area and showed we taxpayers all of the results. Well explored by you two. Cheers.
@LevelUpDaily434
@LevelUpDaily434 Жыл бұрын
When you had Google up to show where you were, there was a large crescent shaped mound and another big line running thru it horizontally, something major is buried there for sure, no doubt at all
@harrystouwdam8423
@harrystouwdam8423 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video, (you know Stonehenge is not real? )
@ANAHATAJADE
@ANAHATAJADE 2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating our world history is rich with mystery and truth; and likely beyond our imagination and most definitely beyond what we already know.
@paulhargreaves9103
@paulhargreaves9103 2 жыл бұрын
It would b interesting to get a drone up in that area.
@Aaron-cz2ds
@Aaron-cz2ds 2 жыл бұрын
Kanaka walls maybe. We have them in Bundaberg. Stones removed from the fields for planting small crops or sugar cane.. Elliott hds qld still has a few walls remaining. Biggenden had old stone buildings as well..But no stone walls.
@cheechmcduck7013
@cheechmcduck7013 2 жыл бұрын
Im a dry stone waller.. i find it very therapeutic... i was told it was an old english way to wall... only it looks more like dry stone walling was infact old old world... id post Icouple of photos of some walls, but can't post pictures on here
@jaxraymond173
@jaxraymond173 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting Casey, anything with UNESCO stamped on it, is something being taken from us! Funnily enough you pronounced the place name Tumuli differently to how I read it when I saw it. Here in England Tumuli is plural for Tumulus, which is an ancient burial mound of usually a prolific tribe leader. Generally we see a number of them in a certain place like you saw, and they are built with stones and earth. So to me those smaller ones aren’t lava blisters but burial mounds made out of what was in abundance in that area at the time eg lava rocks. Also I’m surprised that the area isn’t more lush as volcanic lava promotes fertile growth, so maybe an earlier poster that said about the plasma fires is correct.
@ralphthomas7868
@ralphthomas7868 2 жыл бұрын
Send a drone over the no access areas
@sendit1924
@sendit1924 2 жыл бұрын
Haha I love finding new types of crazy, thanks for the laugh!
@Annie6460
@Annie6460 2 жыл бұрын
Wow! That was so very interesting. It’s a petty you can’t ask questions of the First Nations People from there what their stories are. This is a great learning curve for me and I thank you for this. ❤️
@dcala2
@dcala2 2 жыл бұрын
Beautiful!
@marumali_girlmn1195
@marumali_girlmn1195 2 жыл бұрын
Ahhh that Robinson - He is responsible for the death of my Grandfather - Mannalargenna & My Grandmother Tanleeboneyer and many of my ancestors💔
@tennisgleem
@tennisgleem 2 жыл бұрын
Love your work!
@youshutupsamnow7140
@youshutupsamnow7140 2 жыл бұрын
Firstly I absolutely love an admire your work!! it's so good to see that there are people who genuinely care. Now what I don't get is, destroying ancient monuments is a very serious crime, how is nothing being done about this? there destroying our history!! is there a way to start some petition or something cause if we don't do something, they will continou destroying It?? Jojo or Casey, is there a way I can contact yous or even meet for coffee. cause I have some information/ locations might find interesting.
@tomhorseman9832
@tomhorseman9832 2 жыл бұрын
Lol. I love that a meltologist put. "Wtf?! no" on the natural Bridge sign.
@islowq184
@islowq184 2 жыл бұрын
this is awesome
@deancarr5112
@deancarr5112 2 жыл бұрын
I can't say what happened to the original inhabitants of the area "I live about 40km's from Budj Bim" but I can tell you with certainty that the stone walls were used to keep rabbits out of cropping areas for farming in the late 1800's. If you're lucky enough to gain access to a few larger properties you may find some round stone walls which kind of look like old water tanks, around 6-8 feet in diameter and around 6 feet high. I've even found a few old stone buildings around the Dundonnel area which is about 12km's west of Woorndoo. Shoot me a message if you want to know more..
@camulasmars9989
@camulasmars9989 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@tetramorph3144
@tetramorph3144 2 жыл бұрын
Great footage i never knew of this, thanks for sharing. Its pretty sad really, the extent the originals went to in building their civilization is just phenomenal...yet this is the proof we've been denied of.. we live on a land of many truths covered up by many lies. Next time im confronted by a sign in the wilderness that says forbidden access i will definately be entering to see what isnt wanted to be seen.
@bradleypark1936
@bradleypark1936 2 жыл бұрын
Thank-you for your video. I spent 2 days exploring Budg Bim. I saw a lot of the structures and walls. Miles of them. Interesting that there are thousands of miles of rock walls in other areas of Victoria. Many are property fences, many are not. We are told by museums and books the walls were made by convicts, but I'm sure they would have had more pressing duties at hand. There would not have been enough of them to construct all of this in the stated timeframe anyway. There must have been many centuries of settlement here before the poms arrived. It is hard to fathom how history is bent, twisted and silenced to suit the needs of those in power at a later time. We are now at the point where no record of this previous history of Australia exists. History is only what the last person that (supposedly) witnessed, says happened. Books are the same - here say, part truths and false witness.
@XfromDarkHorse
@XfromDarkHorse 2 жыл бұрын
Please do a video about Brewarrina fish traps
@mathewtaylor9124
@mathewtaylor9124 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing
@emiska2950
@emiska2950 2 жыл бұрын
Sound Life is a Gift of Gifts, Truth driven, what eles matters? Heart Earth Ear ...Hear Heart knows the way. Listen to as Real (YOU) do... Hugs warm hearted Girls ...Lie is smart but not wise. Listten to Your heart.💕
@andrewbarker9773
@andrewbarker9773 2 жыл бұрын
freestanding stone walls are prevalent all across UK in farming areas especially around Yorkshire, not saying these walls are anything to do with the british but the fact they are found lots of countries
@chikasha3297
@chikasha3297 2 жыл бұрын
"The Doctrine of Discovery" says it all
@NickyBsHistory
@NickyBsHistory 2 жыл бұрын
most of this looks like it could have been shot in the UK!! amazing how similar the realm is regardless where you are!
@2pintsofcremedementh
@2pintsofcremedementh 2 жыл бұрын
This is wonderful empirical research you are doing. Funny that here in NZ, the official his/story downplays vulcanism across the ditch, usually citing the difference in supposed age of the Australian continent vs our young and geologically volatile islands. But it is clear that these rock walls use the same volcanic stone that is abundant in many parts of New Zealand, especially around Northland and the central North Island. Maori legend supports evidence of lost high civilisations here too, and the narrative that Catholic missionaries recruited local Maori boys in the 19th century to build all the incredible rock walls around here deserves scrutiny.
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