I grew up in the UP ! I could show you all kinds of hidden wonders up there! I live in Missouri now but I had minibikes and three wheelers growing up and for a kid at the age of 8 years old I was on adventures that my parents would have had a cow, typical ride out exploring would be White Pine to Ontonogan through pipelines, trails, beaches, river crossings to White Pine to Porcupine Mtns. Straight through the woods on old miners trails to Lake of the Clouds! I had a troubled, abused childhood and those rides (ADVENTURES) kept me alive! I will always love the UP. Thanks for sharing!!!
@@Daniel-n5v5s Thanks for sharing this, same with me! I didn’t have motorized anything, but I would walk for miles and miles through the woods with my dog, from age 8-12. Abusive home. Ran away at 16 and hopped trains and hitchhiked all over the country. I’m lucky to be alive, but beyond blessed now with my own family and grandkids too. We adventure all the time, it’s our favorite pastime! Hope you’re well and blessed too. 🙏🏻💗
The Keweenaw people did copper mining at this location since seven thousand years ago. It looks megalithic, as both sides are very straight, at constant depth. This is an amazing discovery and location, that deserves serious study instead of coverup and dogma.
@@SomewhereInTheSolarSystem Legend of King Solomon contracting Phoenician ships of Tyre via King Hiram to make the voyage for copper. Bronze was quite important in their time. The originally Hebrew Israelite, Tribe of Dan supposedly married into Phoenician princely bloodlines and were advanced in their knowledge of seafaring commerce. It would be amazing to find some of the behind the scenes historical evidence, if any, that supports the legend.
@@00leaveralone Certainly it would be such a find, but I tend to think those ancient American sites are not related to post-YD old world (Europe, Near East and North Africa) civilizations. The pre-YD is another story, since there are extensive evidence of a common culture and construction techniques around the world. A serious, worldwide, open archaeologic research of the shallow seas, in search of old seaside civilizations from when the ocean was 300 to 600 feet below current levels, could explain a lot of forgotten ancient human history.
@ . Evidencing the ruins of ancient civilization in the Western Hemisphere makes more sense, I agree. Tenochtitlan, Olmec, Cascadia, Nurembega, Lemuria and the legends of these cultures/civilizations provide a lot of food for thought. Any one of them a need to mine copper would be there. The legend of a mirrored-of-Egypt Fertile Crescent existing in the Gulf of Mexico; pyramids underwater of the coast of NW Cuba, etc. Looking forward to an honest historical account of the pre-Colombian Western Hemisphere from the secret societies that hold those secrets. I won’t hold my breath, though. Thanks for your perspective and insight….
@@00leaveralone I watched a video last month and they were talking about DNA test from Native Americans and they were most closely related to middle eastern and Jewish bloodlines !
Back in the 70s, we would go up there climb out to the edge and take a group shots for school photos ! 50 years ago we called the stone outcrop the natural wall that’s what the locals referred to it .
@@Tucsondawn They should walk down the ravine to see if there are stones laying along the ground. I'm wondering if it's a washed out damaged or if locals took the stones for new structures elsewhere.
All I'm going to say is that the ancient Phoenicians were here around 950 bc and since then, mining copper and other minerals. This is documented historically. (The metals have been traced to these mines. This is how we know this, and it was documented on scrolls that have been unearthed as well.) The natives also speak of their ancestors interacting with with a foreign people who came from the sea and traded with them and were more advanced than they were. (Ie. Weapons of bronze, etc..)
Looks like the ruins of what was once an ancient dam. I guess they went too high with the build over several year's, decades, until it finally failed. What do you guy's think?
My uncle’s nephew’s grandad has a grandson who gets his hair cut at a barber who also cuts a landscapers hair. The landscaper cut this ladies grass and her nail technician worked on this old timers nails. He said his great aunt told him that this was a failed damn from the early 1880s. I can ask up the ladder if you want more info. Might take a while to hear back though.
@bichanopinto5963 - that was my first thought upon seeing it, and the fact that it looked like it went across the ravine at some point👍🏻 But I'm definitely no expert on recognizing what's man-made and what nature can sometimes produce.
The Keweenaw people did copper mining in this location since seven thousand years ago. It looks megalithic, as both sides are very straight, at constant depth. This is an amazing discovery and location, that deserves serious study instead of coverup and dogma.
Mining engineer student ...studied *ELEVATION* OF ALL ANCIENT "INDIAN"/ NATIVE MINING ...ALL SAME ELEVATION ...HE REASONED : WATER/LAKE LEVEL MUCH HIGHER ...ANCIENTS TOOK CANOES/BOATS AROUND ISLANDS ...NO GOILAGE ...WAVES SCOURED/POLISHED COPPER SEAMS ...ANCIENTS MADE ROCK HAMMERS TO BREAK PURE COPPER LOOSE AT SHORELINE
The proposed theory for the formation of the wall is misleading, because in any other occurrence in the entire world, only one side of the formation is smooth: we can clearly see that in this formation both sides are smooth, a thin wall with geometric blocks. It can be natural, but the proposed theory is misleading. For me, it looks megalithic. Researchers found tools dated to seven thousand years BP, from the Keweenaw culture. People need to stop the dogma and start doing real science.
@@ERICKAJANDER What you describe can be seen as a tourist attraction at Adventure Mine. Super worthwhile visit for anyone interested in contextualizing ice age Michigan.
@@andyhowe4081 thanks for the tip. I'm very interested in that subject. I've lived in Michigan all but 1 year of my 44 so far on this Earth. I'm fascinated with the geology and history of the state. But my interest has mostly been observational. I just like to look around in whatever place I'm in, and imagine what the place was like during the ice age and what forces shaped the landscape. It's a really remarkable place we live in. The topology must be relatively recent compared to other areas of the country. It would be nice to see the mine.
The upper peninsula is very mysterious. I have heard there are copper mine up there that are thousands of years old. Some scientists think that a lot of the Egyptian gold from ancient Egypt came from Michigan upper peninsula. There are hundreds of pyramids in our Great lakes as well, especially lake Superior...the rabbit hole is deep.
You need to visualize the ravine was covering that exposed vein thousands if not millions of years ago. Through time , the erosion from the creek has uncovered the vein structure.
What a coincidence that the vein is conveniently crossing a ravine along the same path people might like to travel on their way to/from Bronze Age copper mines, and the joints in the rock are coincidentally at right angles, oriented both horizontally and vertically, and the wall is of uniform thickness, and the width is perfect for human traversal. That's a lot of coincidences. What type of stone is it? If it's softer than the bedrock, there's no chance of it being natural. Where does the bedrock begin below the soil? The stone can't be that hard if people were carving their names in it. Yes, you can see the graffiti.
Furthermore, if the vein was as old as the bedrock, the ravine wouldn't have that nice V shape everywhere except where the wall is. The erosion of the surrounding land would be channeled by the vein, and there would be much more rock and soil backing the wall. Clearly, the wall is younger than the erosion that formed the ravine, which would be at least tens of thousands of years, although probably much longer if it's cut into rock.
@@WitchNectar you is a triggurd librul sissecuck n u is triggur LOL LOL TRUMP STILL UR PRECADINT U FUACKIIKKIN LIBCUCK LOL LO L LOL LOL L L L L LOL LOL TRUMP!!!!
@@WitchNectar The wall is sitting almost on top of keweenaw fault, and it's made of the same sandstone that covers this area. This is definitely a bed of sandstone that was turned vertical when the adjacent fault was active about 1 billion years ago.
Being a Michigan girl, your title caught my eye. Loved this. My husband and I spent a week n the UP in August and saw tons of interesting things and places. Now that I have found your UA-cam channel, i will be subscribing to it and binge watching!
Saw you on an older video from Bright Insight about the Sage Wall and decided to find you! Such amazing info in your videos!! Thank you so much. Shared and subbed!
The American "back country" (off-road, in the wilds) is so beautiful everywhere you find it. I wonder if there are any megalithic sites in Big Bend in Texas..
What about the block clearly stamped with Hendrickson? 10:06 ts It is a huge copper mining area. The angle of the hills could be tailing piles. Probably part of those operations that have been going on there for over 100 years. Some say thousands.
Yeah nice catch so how did these guys miss that? It sure does seem like a man made wall but it appears a bit thin to be a dam or anything that needs to be very stable. The stones look like they were melted have you seen Our Melted Reality? He finds a lot of old mills (supposedly) and stuff like that in the woods of Alabama that look similar.
I noticed one guy said they were trying to build a dam in the 1800s that’s exactly what I believe this was. They are trying to build a dam. They may have built one, but maybe it failed but this is the remnants of it.
It kind of looks like graffiti. If it was stamped, I think you would see it in other blocks as well. There were several areas that had a nice, even mortar layer between blocks. Definitely man made IMO
at 10:01. I'm wondering if anyone know anything about Hendrickson (1824) ? neatly carved into the rock. It looks like there is more text, i can't make it out clearly. looks to me like it may have been some sort of dam. maybe like a mill pond to power some sort of large machine.
Post timestamp, I missed that there are names on the rock... So these guys showing us a wall...and.....? First time on this channel so I don't know who they are. How about; What kind of rock, in geology terms, and how tall? What's up and down creek? Surrounding trees and approx age of trees? Local Tribes knowledge on what they know of this? This is manmade for Sure. Is this kind of stone or rock found in the area? We get No answers, just face and beard and steep terrain and half a wall in Keweenaw Peninsula somewhere. If you can narrow down the general area that would be helpful also. I've been to copper harbor and my grandpa and grandma lived in copper harbor after retirement in Livonia.
looks to have been a dam. I explore the woods around my home all the time and find all sorts of neat sites, I find a lot of copper too. Oh, I live in Houghton County, Copper Range area or also known as Range towns. Thanks for sharing, love history.
so epic!!! im from the U.P. had no clue,, whatever it is, its amazing up there. so much history , some of the oldest surface rocks in the country! great content brother! as always, thanks for sharing! catch yah in the next 1!
A video of the wall was made a year ago by Alexis Dahl who had geologist input revealing the blocks as possible "Tessellation". ua-cam.com/video/-X3EE_jNDRg/v-deo.html It's an interesting site certainly. Lidar might reveal more of the area history.
I can see the word HENDRIKSON and underneath it seems to read 1904. So someone discovered at that point. But that name rings a bell. How far are you from the nearest town, name?
I used to love walking in the woods, but now at 70 a bad hip and arthritis don't allow for much walking let alone climbing hills. Thanks for putting this up!
That’s what my dad told me 35 years ago when he brought me here to show me…he actually called it, “The Natural Wall” so that’s what I grew up calling it. I think the name carved in was just someone carving their name in it…for a while no one was allowed out there…the owners said they didn’t want it to be vandalized anymore than it already has. They must not be enforcing that anymore if they still own the property…this was probably 20 years ago, I don’t think many ppl know where this is anymore so probably not such a concern anymore? I think they also said ppl were trying to climb it and were eroding the surface of the stone breaking pieces off and the banks of the ravine.
Wow, definately a wall structure. Michigan is covered with ancient megalithic structural formations "if you look for them". Looking at satellite images, using Google Eath, and topo maps will provide details you would easily miss just looking for them. And let's you see their general geometry even if kicates on private property or restricted areas. Good to see people take an interest in locating and publishing them. 👍
@@sic6sixboi There's a stone henge under water in lake michigan. Also, you might already know that many canals and waterways were dug by natives all over america. There's the Intracoastal Waterway, a major example that isn't talked about enough. When you look at Michigan and nearby Canada on Google Earth, you can find similar derelict canals and waterways. A lot of fields have filled them in, but you can still see them with satellites.
@sic6sixboi the giant mound in Oklahoma is on private property near Salina OK. We identified its parameters using Google Earth. And found old digs made by Spanish expirers. In fact we found one of them with his helmet and regalia. It is old, very old. We have found bones in it that are from the Pleistocene period. It is by no means a Native American mound by any natives we know of now.
great stuff. UP is loaded with cool stuff. lots of lore that will make your head spin. houghton college has put some pretty wild stuff as well. they been starting to use lidar up there to try and identify stuff like this and prehistoric copper mines as well.
For those saying he shows his face to much..WTF are you talking about. Im so glad im not one who goes by the comments. This was well done and exactly what you would see if it were a tv show. Anyway, new sub here and as someone who lives in the U.P. thank you. ❤
I appreciate the kind words and support! I’m not a big channel or good at editing so just doing my best and sharing adventures and places around the world using basic IMovie to make videos! 🤣 Maybe eventually I can afford someone to edit the videos even better! I’m glad you enjoyed it and grateful for the support! 🙏
I agree. Him & his team put a lot of hard work into their jobs. I'm in Chicago & make monthly trips to Detroit for work. If you aren't from the Midwest you have no idea how brutal 30° is with the wind coming at you across an open area. 30° can have a wind chill factor ("𝘙𝘦𝘢𝘭 𝘍𝘦𝘦𝘭") of 18° at times. Besides that, being a Chicago Native, I still feel like the woods in MI are kinda creepy even in the day (🧌👻💀😱). The UP is 𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘯 𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘦 Mysterious. You gotta have a back bone to do this type of stuff. So I Say, show your face with pride. Don't mainstream news anchors show their faces during most of the hour? I prefer to see the speaker, and not hear the same mundane AI Voice mis-pronouncing words.
@@1Dreamking or 1970 maybe. Found the name Hendrickson in a geological survey of the penninsula. Maybe the same guy.. there is a section about the wall being sandstone.
indians are fake news never existed invented by liburuls to trick us patriots into thinkin we owe red and black men money we is the SUPERIOR RACE why god named it the SUPERIOR lake u fuckkkin libtard KILLMALA kissur!
Hi Wolf, sehr interessantes Mauer Bauwerk und direkt in den Berg hineingemauert. Soetwas habe ich auch noch nicht gesehen. Ich denke sie muss schon sehr alt sein. Gibt es in der Gegend noch Eingeborene Indianer, die eventuell etwas darüber wissen? In Germany finden sich mancher Orte sogenannte Menhire, Steinquader mit einer Lochbohrung, ihr Alter wird auf ca. 3000 Jahre geschätzt. Liebe Grüße aus Berlin 👍🏻🫡
So glad you made it here and thank you for the support! It’s hard to say but if you want a rabbit hole to dive into, look into Phoenicians in the Americas 😉
@@Martin-mb7yb You obviously have never seen a " WALL " in your life. I'll describe one to you. 90 degree angles, STRAIGHT LINES and block work set in a row at a uniform height..... What effing lava flow created that genius? Are you really that mind controlled or are you simply a satanic agent trolling the comment section, conducting " damage control " to make sure the FALSE HISTORICAL NARRATIVE doesn't get figured out and spread to others?!?? I'd BET you'd say that the giants never existed as well. P.S. the earth is FLAT and " aliens " are simply demons playing their age old roles of deception... they also play the role of " ghosts " Did you know the word NASA means.... LIAR in the Hebrew language?!??🤔
I have a lot of questions. I have the remains of an 18th century stone and dirt dam on my property. In some respects, this wall looks very similar. It could be a combination of manmade works added into a natural rock formation, which is how my dam is. All the trees in that gorge look very young, as well. Were there any older trees in there? I’d love to see this in person.
thank you for going out and getting this footage! one thing, why not show us the other side of the wall in as much detail? would have loved to see both sides documented thoroughly, hopefully you've got another video of this thing and the surrounding area coming out soon!
Yeah, I noticed the same thing. What is he hiding or what is this? This is might be a legit wall, but this ain’t no legitimate video especially when you can’t show both sides.
What happened to the blocks on the side that is no longer there. I did not see in the video a pile of blocks where the wall might have crumbled from age. The one side just looks like it is just gone.
At 10:45 you can see a red spot that's spread out over three blocks. It looks like proof that it are not separate blocks, but that it's one rock that has been cracked.
Look for an old rocket launch site at the end of 41or beginning as it were. Also, the northern most point sign is around there as well. You gotta really search. In Copper Harbor. Lots of amazing stuff in the Keweenaw!
Thats really an amazing one. The mainstream explanation ignores the soft dirt on both sides. Not natural at all. Look at how it was layered and segmented. Look at Pie Town New Mexico.
soft dirt on both sides... how is that not natural? locals out there with shovels and lots of wasted effort? I was thinking landslide because of how steep it is, what are the other implications?
@@stig Check out, Alex, Delia I’m not sure how do you spell it but she’s a wonderful girl and she does it take on the wall but she says it’s natural. I’m from up there And there are many things that CNH built in it deteriorated it almost what’s the capital of Michigan at one time
@@stig yeah but many of the seams of the blocks line up. I’ve never seen a wall built that didn’t have the blocks staggered. A few are staggered but most are in line or close to in line.
Isnt it an old damn? Maybe during some Mining up there.? What's closest mine to this? Lots a copper mines up there. Just saying it looks like it was built by early setters
Back in the early 1990s I did a stone tool analysis on material from the State Forests surveys. Seems there were several projectile points. I did a survey near Glen at the old KI Sawyer Airbase. I found a few there myself.
It does have a name. We locals have always called it NATURAL WALL. Periodiically friends and I will go there and have a campfire cookout on the ridge above the wall.
I looked up the fault lines of keweenaw because I'm a geology nerd. And are you sure this is the place you call Natural Wall. I found this in Wikipedia and the photos do not look the same. The Natural Wall is what the the main jutting up fault line in that area are called but it is at a 85° angle and has water at its base in the photos. I think it looks like hand cut jacobville sandstone to make a bridge across this ravine for mining operations. I'm not saying you are wrong I just couldn't find pictures of this Natural Wall looking the same as the video we are watching currently.
Thanks for sharing this site with us. The depth of it doesn't seem enough to hold back water if especially the water went to the top. However the erosion on the upper side says that it was holding back water. Maybe I'm underestimating how strong it was. The one thing I'd say that could be used to say it's natural is that the markings/sub-texturing on the rocks are consistent across the courses/lines. Meaning if it was man made they would have had to place the rocks in the exact same position that they had when they were quarried. Not a huge problem to overcome but an extra step needed in the construction. However, with that said keeping them in the same layout could have some structural advantages. This wouldn't be an unusual thing to do as this was done at multiple locations in Egypt for their dark "paving" slabs in some of their "temples".
Not alleged- it’s true. Rock lake has MANY structures in it. The “pyramid” is not a pyramid but an elongated structure about 100’ long. My dear friend’s father dove on the site long ago and discovered a bunch of crazy stuff down there.
Awesome video. Like the boots on the ground type of videos. Get a selfie stick if you're wanting to be in the video along with whatever you're there to see.
You should think about the flooding which left over 40 yards of mud in a lot of places all over the planet. We have only started digging for a few years. And don't forget that big capital is not interested in the truth about our past.
@@fibsniper786 so that area is still MOSTLY untouched. It's been kept from development, and the entire area had populations in small clusters but they mostly stayed in regular travel routes between towns. The only people that would see these structures are hunters/fur trappers over the last 300ish years. And even then, rarely, and even less often talked about.
There was lots of old mining activity in the Keweenaw - mostly copper. I would guess this are remains from that as there are tons of other remains from mining activity all over the area.
Hey, I'm new to this channel, just found this video in my feed. I live in lower Michigan, from the stories of the old Copper mining operations up in the UP, I figured you'd be looking at something a bit more "Old World", but that wall almost looks older. My first impressions make me think this was part of a Dam System, as i see several others thinking the same, but the wall thickness doesn't seem to be enough to hold back massive amounts of water, unless it's backed up with tons of aggregate and lined with clay on the one side, I'm doubting that theory as well, although it may had been a Dam. It looks like it is damming off that passage for sure, and at some point in time, it burst open, taking out that large section. Im very curious to what you think after spending some time there. We could come up with many uses and purposes for building a Dam there if that was indeed a river that flowed through there at one time. I'm certain Native Tribes inhabited the UP, centuries ago, and this structure appears it could fit that time frame. Then there came in the Copper Mining Industry which was big in the 17-1800's. I believe, Copper had been found and mined in the UP by Viking Era or maybe even the Phoenicians before that. Was this part of their camps or part of their mining systems? I suppose that could also be possible, as the block work isn't necessarily complex, but appears as walls were being built in the 18th Century, using a primitive looking sand cast block to build their walls with, made from the very gravel, sand and soil that exists right there at or very near the structure. This site deserves a lot more investigation! Very interesting! Thanks for making this video. I'm now a new subscriber! 👍🏻👍🏻
I live up the road from there we call it Natural Wall my wife's uncle's used to own the property and now it's Bonny & Timothy Lions and they asked the public to see them first before going onto their property to look at it . But I'm sure you must have gotten permission to film it. I once took my kid's n nieces tobogganing down there the snow was deep and fluffy me being 200 pounds I went first made a good trail by sinking into the snow had to grab small trees to turn and slow us down it was fun then at the bottom rail road bed we went sliding down the road on Oldcoloney rd which every one used to . Some winters Michigan Tech students would come and make a fire on side of the road n go sledding it is a fast road to slide down n your probably going 30 miles per hour for half a mile or so. I'm thinking it's not safe anymore because of more people living down the end driving up and down the road to go store n what knot.😂
super cool. I feel like I've seen other photos of it, but you have really taken a good serious look at it. I wonder if some one had knocked out the wall where the bottom of the ravine is , for passage. the ancient local Indians would surely know a lot about this . great job guys.
Watching from land o' lakes,wi....80 miles away !,,,, tnx..ancient dam???........wow...your in part of the oldest mountain range in the U.S.,,,,the Copper Range,,(porcupine mountain),,lake of the clouds....,,,,pat & family.
Upper Peninsula of Michigan 💕 Here 🙋♀️So excited that you came to explore this. On my bucket list for sure💕 Hope you were able to pick up a Yooperlite 🔦 as a souvenir off of Lake Superior ✨🌊🪨🌲Fantastic Drone footage as well.
Mike you're gonna get that HENDRICKSON dude mad at you for renaming his wall. Hahaha Since he appears to have etched his name on it. but I seriously wonder how they got up that high to etch a name there with a ladder? Thanks for showing us this (:
Those aerial shots were awesome. So many things it could've been. Were they're ever any settlers on the land. How high had the water come up historically? What does it look like in the summer. To the person above that said they rode their 4 wheelers and dirt bikes though there... that had to be awesome... one with nature
Nope. Pretty random, as you would expect from a natural rock formation that has been eroded over time. Especially in an environment like northern Michigan, there is a lot of freezing and thawing, leading to cracking in rock that makes it look like “blocks”. This is relatively a unique formation, but completely natural.
I grew up in the UP ! I could show you all kinds of hidden wonders up there! I live in Missouri now but I had minibikes and three wheelers growing up and for a kid at the age of 8 years old I was on adventures that my parents would have had a cow, typical ride out exploring would be White Pine to Ontonogan through pipelines, trails, beaches, river crossings to White Pine to Porcupine Mtns. Straight through the woods on old miners trails to Lake of the Clouds! I had a troubled, abused childhood and those rides (ADVENTURES) kept me alive! I will always love the UP. Thanks for sharing!!!
@@Daniel-n5v5s Thanks for sharing this, same with me! I didn’t have motorized anything, but I would walk for miles and miles through the woods with my dog, from age 8-12. Abusive home. Ran away at 16 and hopped trains and hitchhiked all over the country. I’m lucky to be alive, but beyond blessed now with my own family and grandkids too. We adventure all the time, it’s our favorite pastime! Hope you’re well and blessed too. 🙏🏻💗
Abusive childhoods must be a thing in the U.P. Me, too. Spent my formative years in the woods in the U.P.
born in L'Anse. moved when i was 2.
@@AuthenticChronicVision Yep, me too. Violent childhood in the U.P.
Would be very interesting to do lidar scanning of the wall and surrounding area.
The Keweenaw people did copper mining at this location since seven thousand years ago. It looks megalithic, as both sides are very straight, at constant depth. This is an amazing discovery and location, that deserves serious study instead of coverup and dogma.
@@SomewhereInTheSolarSystem Legend of King Solomon contracting Phoenician ships of Tyre via King Hiram to make the voyage for copper. Bronze was quite important in their time. The originally Hebrew Israelite, Tribe of Dan supposedly married into Phoenician princely bloodlines and were advanced in their knowledge of seafaring commerce. It would be amazing to find some of the behind the scenes historical evidence, if any, that supports the legend.
@@00leaveralone Certainly it would be such a find, but I tend to think those ancient American sites are not related to post-YD old world (Europe, Near East and North Africa) civilizations. The pre-YD is another story, since there are extensive evidence of a common culture and construction techniques around the world. A serious, worldwide, open archaeologic research of the shallow seas, in search of old seaside civilizations from when the ocean was 300 to 600 feet below current levels, could explain a lot of forgotten ancient human history.
@ . Evidencing the ruins of ancient civilization in the Western Hemisphere makes more sense, I agree. Tenochtitlan, Olmec, Cascadia, Nurembega, Lemuria and the legends of these cultures/civilizations provide a lot of food for thought. Any one of them a need to mine copper would be there. The legend of a mirrored-of-Egypt Fertile Crescent existing in the Gulf of Mexico; pyramids underwater of the coast of NW Cuba, etc. Looking forward to an honest historical account of the pre-Colombian Western Hemisphere from the secret societies that hold those secrets. I won’t hold my breath, though. Thanks for your perspective and insight….
@@00leaveralone I watched a video last month and they were talking about DNA test from Native Americans and they were most closely related to middle eastern and Jewish bloodlines !
This is adjacent to my family’s property. My husband used to run up and down that hill as a kid and wonder about this wall. Thanks for sharing!
where on Keweenaw is it exactly?
Can you do a dig for artifacts?
Back in the 70s, we would go up there climb out to the edge and take a group shots for school photos ! 50 years ago we called the stone outcrop the natural wall that’s what the locals referred to it .
Does your husband know who Wilfred Hendrickson is? That name is carved into the wall at 10:00.
@@KellyPalosaari if it's near copper harbor, some people were there long ago, mining the copper !
The block near the bottom has a name stamped into it. Hendrickson. Show more wall, we know what you look like.
I saw that! It looks to me like a very old bridge or maybe even damn wall or something of that nature?
Or just a security wall depending on eho built this and when
I don't think that is stamped. Someone carved that. And it says Wilfred Hendrickson.
I think it says Kilroy was here I've seen it before.
@@juniorjohnson5961 No. It doesn't say anything close to that. Why do you keep posting that? It says Wilfred Hendrickson.
Less face more wall.
@@Scottaskadly this guy loves blocking a good shot with his face. The sage wall video he never really left the shot 🤣🤣🤣
@@smalltownblackouts
Ha! It's cool and all I guess, I'm just not that into dudes and his face is not what brought me to the video😂
@Scottaskadly for sure 🤣 to his credit, he did show the world the sage wall so I guess he deserves some recognition lol
the space bar will pause the video
@@Scottaskadly I was literally thinking the same exact thing.
Seems like a dam. So cool how much of this is coming to light. Thank you.
I thought the same thing
That's not how dams are made.
@slappy8941 , okay sloppy I won't think that anymore. Are you a civil engineer? An expert?
@@Tucsondawn They should walk down the ravine to see if there are stones laying along the ground. I'm wondering if it's a washed out damaged or if locals took the stones for new structures elsewhere.
@@Tucsondawn I thought the same thing… A dam…
All I'm going to say is that the ancient Phoenicians were here around 950 bc and since then, mining copper and other minerals. This is documented historically. (The metals have been traced to these mines. This is how we know this, and it was documented on scrolls that have been unearthed as well.) The natives also speak of their ancestors interacting with with a foreign people who came from the sea and traded with them and were more advanced than they were. (Ie. Weapons of bronze, etc..)
Looks like the ruins of what was once an ancient dam. I guess they went too high with the build over several year's, decades, until it finally failed. What do you guy's think?
@@markhardman-haworth6583 I mean, why else would you put a wall across a steep ravine? Makes sense!
@@Ge1Ri4Why would anyone in their right mind make a dam out of sandstone you numbnuts?🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
A damn dam for sure.
Walls kind of thin though
@@flouserschird maybe thats why it's in ruins... my guess would be they went too high with the buid over time.
My uncle’s nephew’s grandad has a grandson who gets his hair cut at a barber who also cuts a landscapers hair. The landscaper cut this ladies grass and her nail technician worked on this old timers nails. He said his great aunt told him that this was a failed damn from the early 1880s. I can ask up the ladder if you want more info. Might take a while to hear back though.
@bichanopinto5963 - that was my first thought upon seeing it, and the fact that it looked like it went across the ravine at some point👍🏻
But I'm definitely no expert on recognizing what's man-made and what nature can sometimes produce.
@@Ballerbandit genius
Yeah it looks like we did it, There are pieces of stone jammed into crevices, although that may have come later and they maybe repurposed it. IDK
Yep
@@Ballerbandit wtf did you just call me?
Awesome! Theres a ton up here that we're not taught about. The Dolmen on Huron Mtn. The face carved rock on Mummy Mtn. etc
@@maggieroks in the U.P.? I've lived in Michigan all my life and am just hearing about these.
@ReikiRosie yup, in the yoop. I live in the Marquette area. You in the area?
@ I'm downstate but love the U.P. My son went to Northern! Marquette is lovely!
@ReikiRosie if your ever around, the wife and I are always exploring some new hidden corner around here.
@ I just subbed to your channel! Like minds! Appreciate you!
The Keweenaw people did copper mining in this location since seven thousand years ago. It looks megalithic, as both sides are very straight, at constant depth. This is an amazing discovery and location, that deserves serious study instead of coverup and dogma.
Mining engineer student ...studied *ELEVATION* OF ALL ANCIENT "INDIAN"/ NATIVE MINING ...ALL SAME ELEVATION ...HE REASONED : WATER/LAKE LEVEL MUCH HIGHER ...ANCIENTS TOOK CANOES/BOATS AROUND ISLANDS ...NO GOILAGE ...WAVES SCOURED/POLISHED COPPER SEAMS ...ANCIENTS MADE ROCK HAMMERS TO BREAK PURE COPPER LOOSE AT SHORELINE
Geologists have studied it. It is a natural formation. It wasn't built.
The proposed theory for the formation of the wall is misleading, because in any other occurrence in the entire world, only one side of the formation is smooth: we can clearly see that in this formation both sides are smooth, a thin wall with geometric blocks. It can be natural, but the proposed theory is misleading. For me, it looks megalithic. Researchers found tools dated to seven thousand years BP, from the Keweenaw culture. People need to stop the dogma and start doing real science.
@@ERICKAJANDER What you describe can be seen as a tourist attraction at Adventure Mine. Super worthwhile visit for anyone interested in contextualizing ice age Michigan.
@@andyhowe4081 thanks for the tip. I'm very interested in that subject. I've lived in Michigan all but 1 year of my 44 so far on this Earth. I'm fascinated with the geology and history of the state. But my interest has mostly been observational. I just like to look around in whatever place I'm in, and imagine what the place was like during the ice age and what forces shaped the landscape. It's a really remarkable place we live in. The topology must be relatively recent compared to other areas of the country. It would be nice to see the mine.
"well, there it is."
Procedes to show his own face in this
endless selfie video.
Still interesting though...
the facial grooming at the beginning had me clicking over to a less cringe video by Alexis
The upper peninsula is very mysterious. I have heard there are copper mine up there that are thousands of years old. Some scientists think that a lot of the Egyptian gold from ancient Egypt came from Michigan upper peninsula. There are hundreds of pyramids in our Great lakes as well, especially lake Superior...the rabbit hole is deep.
it was ancient greeks that mined michigan copper, not theory ether its been proven couple hundred times since the 60's.
The mine (or one of them anyway) is located on Isle Royale.
The history they teach in schools is mostly BS, one lady has a channel that says this is a "naturally formed over millions of years ago" riiiiiiight.
Actually, it was the Phoenicians @@squarecircleCo
I've heard the same.....
This world continues to astound and amaze!!!
You need to visualize the ravine was covering that exposed vein thousands if not millions of years ago. Through time , the erosion from the creek has uncovered the vein structure.
What a coincidence that the vein is conveniently crossing a ravine along the same path people might like to travel on their way to/from Bronze Age copper mines, and the joints in the rock are coincidentally at right angles, oriented both horizontally and vertically, and the wall is of uniform thickness, and the width is perfect for human traversal. That's a lot of coincidences. What type of stone is it? If it's softer than the bedrock, there's no chance of it being natural. Where does the bedrock begin below the soil? The stone can't be that hard if people were carving their names in it. Yes, you can see the graffiti.
Furthermore, if the vein was as old as the bedrock, the ravine wouldn't have that nice V shape everywhere except where the wall is. The erosion of the surrounding land would be channeled by the vein, and there would be much more rock and soil backing the wall. Clearly, the wall is younger than the erosion that formed the ravine, which would be at least tens of thousands of years, although probably much longer if it's cut into rock.
@@WitchNectar you is a triggurd librul sissecuck n u is triggur LOL LOL TRUMP STILL UR PRECADINT U FUACKIIKKIN LIBCUCK LOL LO L LOL LOL L L L L LOL LOL TRUMP!!!!
@@WitchNectar The wall is sitting almost on top of keweenaw fault, and it's made of the same sandstone that covers this area. This is definitely a bed of sandstone that was turned vertical when the adjacent fault was active about 1 billion years ago.
Can you prove those dates and that theory using real science? I know you can't because that is just so story telling.
Being a Michigan girl, your title caught my eye. Loved this. My husband and I spent a week n the UP in August and saw tons of interesting things and places. Now that I have found your UA-cam channel, i will be subscribing to it and binge watching!
So glad you found your way here and enjoyed the video! Thank you for your support! I’ll be going back up after the cold weather ends 🥶 🤣
Saw you on an older video from Bright Insight about the Sage Wall and decided to find you! Such amazing info in your videos!! Thank you so much. Shared and subbed!
@@pattisimmons67 So happy to have you here! Thank you for your support!
The American "back country" (off-road, in the wilds) is so beautiful everywhere you find it. I wonder if there are any megalithic sites in Big Bend in Texas..
What about the block clearly stamped with Hendrickson? 10:06 ts It is a huge copper mining area. The angle of the hills could be tailing piles. Probably part of those operations that have been going on there for over 100 years. Some say thousands.
Good eye! I went back and saw the Hendrickson on the block.
Looks like there is possibly a year underneath, 1901 or maybe 1904, and something written above that starts with a W.
Yeah nice catch so how did these guys miss that? It sure does seem like a man made wall but it appears a bit thin to be a dam or anything that needs to be very stable. The stones look like they were melted have you seen Our Melted Reality? He finds a lot of old mills (supposedly) and stuff like that in the woods of Alabama that look similar.
I noticed one guy said they were trying to build a dam in the 1800s that’s exactly what I believe this was. They are trying to build a dam. They may have built one, but maybe it failed but this is the remnants of it.
It kind of looks like graffiti. If it was stamped, I think you would see it in other blocks as well. There were several areas that had a nice, even mortar layer between blocks. Definitely man made IMO
at 10:01. I'm wondering if anyone know anything about Hendrickson (1824) ? neatly carved into the rock. It looks like there is more text, i can't make it out clearly. looks to me like it may have been some sort of dam. maybe like a mill pond to power some sort of large machine.
Hendrickson is a family name here and the copper mines were all over, but I think the mining was a little after 1824. I'm not sure.
What does the Engraving say on the wall? I have heard stories about Ancient copper mining.
Wilfred Hendrickson 1921
Oh wow THATS JUST CRAZY! Thank you soooooo much for bringing us along on your adventures
What does the writing on it say, and why haven't you shown it up close?
Post timestamp, I missed that there are names on the rock...
So these guys showing us a wall...and.....?
First time on this channel so I don't know who they are.
How about;
What kind of rock, in geology terms, and how tall?
What's up and down creek?
Surrounding trees and approx age of trees?
Local Tribes knowledge on what they know of this?
This is manmade for Sure.
Is this kind of stone or rock found in the area?
We get No answers, just face and beard and steep terrain and half a wall in Keweenaw Peninsula somewhere. If you can narrow down the general area that would be helpful also.
I've been to copper harbor and my grandpa and grandma lived in copper harbor after retirement in Livonia.
It says Wilfred Hendrickson . Might have a date underneath. 10:00
looks to have been a dam. I explore the woods around my home all the time and find all sorts of neat sites, I find a lot of copper too. Oh, I live in Houghton County, Copper Range area or also known as Range towns. Thanks for sharing, love history.
I live in Houghton County also. I had no idea this was here
so epic!!! im from the U.P. had no clue,, whatever it is, its amazing up there. so much history , some of the oldest surface rocks in the country! great content brother! as always, thanks for sharing! catch yah in the next 1!
Neat formation! Thanks for making the trip afield and sharing your video. Will check out your other 700 videos 👀
There's another natural wall off Traprock Rd. Just outside of Laurium village.
@@TheGreatSnafoo This is the same wall.
@jimcurtis569 oh its so over grown now I couldn't tell lol
Hey Boss good morning
I was up in Manistee in emerald city painted the water tower painted it forest green love it up there anytime of the year
Yes, I really liked it from a Michigan girl !
A video of the wall was made a year ago by Alexis Dahl who had geologist input revealing the blocks as possible "Tessellation". ua-cam.com/video/-X3EE_jNDRg/v-deo.html It's an interesting site certainly. Lidar might reveal more of the area history.
Thanks! Her video is very good and completely explains the feature.
except there is a manufacturer stamped on one on the blocks - Hendrickson...
@@Lt.-Dans-Legs Who's the hater? I live here???
@@jvin248 That seems very unlikely.
Alexis knows her stuff...she's done a ton of vids up here, and ALWAYS has a pro to detail it with her.
I can see the word HENDRIKSON and underneath it seems to read 1904. So someone discovered at that point. But that name rings a bell. How far are you from the nearest town, name?
It's between Lake Linden and Calumet...there are Hendrickson's in both towns.
It says Wilfred Hendrickson.
@@LadyYoop really? I live in Lake Linden and didn't know about this. Is this near the falls?
I used to love walking in the woods, but now at 70 a bad hip and arthritis don't allow for much walking let alone climbing hills. Thanks for putting this up!
It looks like the wall they found in Texas, but there it was under the ground level. They said it was a natural formation.
Yes, so many perfect walls in nature...
That’s what my dad told me 35 years ago when he brought me here to show me…he actually called it,
“The Natural Wall” so that’s what I grew up calling it. I think the name carved in was just someone carving their name in it…for a while no one was allowed out there…the owners said they didn’t want it to be vandalized anymore than it already has. They must not be enforcing that anymore if they still own the property…this was probably 20 years ago, I don’t think many ppl know where this is anymore so probably not such a concern anymore? I think they also said ppl were trying to climb it and were eroding the surface of the stone breaking pieces off and the banks of the ravine.
I live here in the Keweenaw. We call it The Natural Wall. Have always called it that.
It is carved and has ancient ochre paint stains still visible.
I don't live to far from there. Didn't even know it was there. So cool.
@@LadyofFe same here, it is cool, I still don't know where lol but I'm not far I know that much
Wow, definately a wall structure. Michigan is covered with ancient megalithic structural formations "if you look for them". Looking at satellite images, using Google Eath, and topo maps will provide details you would easily miss just looking for them. And let's you see their general geometry even if kicates on private property or restricted areas.
Good to see people take an interest in locating and publishing them. 👍
Do you have any examples? As somebody from Michigan that loves megalithic things i've always wondered if we had any here
@@sic6sixboi There's a stone henge under water in lake michigan. Also, you might already know that many canals and waterways were dug by natives all over america. There's the Intracoastal Waterway, a major example that isn't talked about enough. When you look at Michigan and nearby Canada on Google Earth, you can find similar derelict canals and waterways. A lot of fields have filled them in, but you can still see them with satellites.
@sic6sixboi the giant mound in Oklahoma is on private property near Salina OK. We identified its parameters using Google Earth. And found old digs made by Spanish expirers. In fact we found one of them with his helmet and regalia. It is old, very old. We have found bones in it that are from the Pleistocene period. It is by no means a Native American mound by any natives we know of now.
great stuff. UP is loaded with cool stuff. lots of lore that will make your head spin. houghton college has put some pretty wild stuff as well. they been starting to use lidar up there to try and identify stuff like this and prehistoric copper mines as well.
Be interesting to see some measurements of the blocks.
That’s different. So is that all of it? What does it look like from the top of the hill? How long does it run for at the top?
It was a damn from the logging industry to float logs😊
@@johncurtis1472 You said float logs
trees are fake u fukkkin idiot liibtard
@@bobsana4590 Grow up, genius....
@@Rick-i1s At least I am a genius at eleven
For those saying he shows his face to much..WTF are you talking about. Im so glad im not one who goes by the comments. This was well done and exactly what you would see if it were a tv show. Anyway, new sub here and as someone who lives in the U.P. thank you. ❤
I appreciate the kind words and support! I’m not a big channel or good at editing so just doing my best and sharing adventures and places around the world using basic IMovie to make videos! 🤣 Maybe eventually I can afford someone to edit the videos even better! I’m glad you enjoyed it and grateful for the support! 🙏
I agree. Him & his team put a lot of hard work into their jobs. I'm in Chicago & make monthly trips to Detroit for work. If you aren't from the Midwest you have no idea how brutal 30° is with the wind coming at you across an open area. 30° can have a wind chill factor ("𝘙𝘦𝘢𝘭 𝘍𝘦𝘦𝘭") of 18° at times. Besides that, being a Chicago Native, I still feel like the woods in MI are kinda creepy even in the day (🧌👻💀😱). The UP is 𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘯 𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘦 Mysterious. You gotta have a back bone to do this type of stuff.
So I Say, show your face with pride. Don't mainstream news anchors show their faces during most of the hour? I prefer to see the speaker, and not hear the same mundane AI Voice mis-pronouncing words.
If you have a face might as well show it .
could it be flood prevention for an old settlement downstream i wonder
That looks so cool! Did you follow the wall up top? What are the letters at 10:02 ? Any ideas as to what it was?? Also, HI ANDREW! HI JEFF!
It looks like Hendrickson and below a year.. 19 something
@@Valkyrie_71 1921?
@@1Dreamking or 1970 maybe. Found the name Hendrickson in a geological survey of the penninsula. Maybe the same guy.. there is a section about the wall being sandstone.
It says worked Henderson 1901 👍
It says Wilfred Hendrickson.
Looks like for water retention. I seen similar one in the middle east or Asia. Any ancient settlements close to it? Wonder what Lidar would reveal
Could be what's left of an ancient dam! The north was home to the iroqouis nation! They were very advanced in construction!
indians are fake news never existed invented by liburuls to trick us patriots into thinkin we owe red and black men money we is the SUPERIOR RACE why god named it the SUPERIOR lake u fuckkkin libtard KILLMALA kissur!
Wow! Some massive blocks in there. What type of stone?
Hi Wolf, sehr interessantes Mauer Bauwerk und direkt in den Berg hineingemauert. Soetwas habe ich auch noch nicht gesehen. Ich denke sie muss schon sehr alt sein. Gibt es in der Gegend noch Eingeborene Indianer, die eventuell etwas darüber wissen? In Germany finden sich mancher Orte sogenannte Menhire, Steinquader mit einer Lochbohrung, ihr Alter wird auf ca. 3000 Jahre geschätzt.
Liebe Grüße aus Berlin 👍🏻🫡
Fantastic find
Does the wall continue anywhere on the opposite side?
Just found your channel & subscribed 👍 Who do you think built this ? I live in Michigan.
So glad you made it here and thank you for the support! It’s hard to say but if you want a rabbit hole to dive into, look into Phoenicians in the Americas 😉
@@WanderingWolfI'll check it out 👍
"Out in the middle of nowhere" could be anywhere north of Saginaw.
Saginaw is not in the "Yooper."
How did this survive the receding glacier when everything else was turned to dust?
That's part of the Midcontinent Rift System or Keweenaw Rift that split apart about 1 billion years ago, exposing rock layers.
ua-cam.com/video/-X3EE_jNDRg/v-deo.htmlsi=KxH7mJbXGw0bXBVh
😂
I knew if I scrolled the comments I'd find the adult LOL. These people don't know a natural formation when they see one...
@@Martin-mb7yb You obviously have never seen a " WALL " in your life. I'll describe one to you. 90 degree angles, STRAIGHT LINES and block work set in a row at a uniform height..... What effing lava flow created that genius? Are you really that mind controlled or are you simply a satanic agent trolling the comment section, conducting " damage control " to make sure the FALSE HISTORICAL NARRATIVE doesn't get figured out and spread to others?!?? I'd BET you'd say that the giants never existed as well. P.S. the earth is FLAT and " aliens " are simply demons playing their age old roles of deception... they also play the role of " ghosts " Did you know the word NASA means.... LIAR in the Hebrew language?!??🤔
Yeah.
That would be a hard NO.
Start over and try again.
I have a lot of questions. I have the remains of an 18th century stone and dirt dam on my property. In some respects, this wall looks very similar. It could be a combination of manmade works added into a natural rock formation, which is how my dam is. All the trees in that gorge look very young, as well. Were there any older trees in there? I’d love to see this in person.
thank you for going out and getting this footage! one thing, why not show us the other side of the wall in as much detail? would have loved to see both sides documented thoroughly, hopefully you've got another video of this thing and the surrounding area coming out soon!
Yeah, I noticed the same thing. What is he hiding or what is this? This is might be a legit wall, but this ain’t no legitimate video especially when you can’t show both sides.
Where is this in the keweenaw, have you seen the seastack just west of smith fisheries in the Keweenaw.
I don't want to alarm any archeologist.S or structural engineers , but I think that's a wall.....
You guys should try holding a compass next to some of the rocks
Keep up the good work! Thank you for uncovering hidden/forgotten/misunderstand history and evidence of previous civilization(s)!
at 10:24, you can see some kind of text on the block. Any idea what it says? Looks like it's in English. But I'm not sure.
Yes i think it says henderson
What happened to the blocks on the side that is no longer there. I did not see in the video a pile of blocks where the wall might have crumbled from age. The one side just looks like it is just gone.
Did you check the date on the corner stone?
Wow, way cool 😎
Very cool find. Could this be a really old dam that just fell to ruins...??!
At 10:45 you can see a red spot that's spread out over three blocks. It looks like proof that it are not separate blocks, but that it's one rock that has been cracked.
As if that couldn’t have grown on the wall. That’s not evidence.🤦♂️🙄
Red spot post construction 🤤
Look for an old rocket launch site at the end of 41or beginning as it were. Also, the northern most point sign is around there as well. You gotta really search. In Copper Harbor. Lots of amazing stuff in the Keweenaw!
Looks natural to me..... Dig down and see if it's an outcrop, or if it is a laid foundation.
@@clamsoup impossible
Its definitely natural. You can the colored veins of mineral crossing the "joints", which are really just cracks in the rock.
We have places all around here like over there, Marquette county has that is
Thats really an amazing one. The mainstream explanation ignores the soft dirt on both sides.
Not natural at all. Look at how it was layered and segmented. Look at Pie Town New Mexico.
Did you want to show us the wall, or your face?
@@Starlingchaser Are you kidding with the trolling? Both his face and the wall are beauties.
soft dirt on both sides... how is that not natural? locals out there with shovels and lots of wasted effort? I was thinking landslide because of how steep it is, what are the other implications?
@@stig Check out, Alex, Delia I’m not sure how do you spell it but she’s a wonderful girl and she does it take on the wall but she says it’s natural. I’m from up there And there are many things that CNH built in it deteriorated it almost what’s the capital of Michigan at one time
@@stig yeah but many of the seams of the blocks line up. I’ve never seen a wall built that didn’t have the blocks staggered. A few are staggered but most are in line or close to in line.
Isnt it an old damn? Maybe during some Mining up there.? What's closest mine to this? Lots a copper mines up there. Just saying it looks like it was built by early setters
did you follow the edge on the flat land up top , did it continue on like wall to a fort or farm ?
People say you can't find arrowheads in the upper peninsula of Michigan also, I find them all the time lol
@@mintbeastwood-l5e what type of stone are they?
Back in the early 1990s I did a stone tool analysis on material from the State Forests surveys. Seems there were several projectile points. I did a survey near Glen at the old KI Sawyer Airbase. I found a few there myself.
Great video, as always!
Very interesting place! Nice video!👍
Where do you think the stone was cut from and that I see writing on the stone wall?
It does have a name. We locals have always called it NATURAL WALL. Periodiically friends and I will go there and have a campfire cookout on the ridge above the wall.
Sure, it wasn't called NOT MAN MADE wall hahahah? JK
I looked up the fault lines of keweenaw because I'm a geology nerd. And are you sure this is the place you call Natural Wall. I found this in Wikipedia and the photos do not look the same. The Natural Wall is what the the main jutting up fault line in that area are called but it is at a 85° angle and has water at its base in the photos. I think it looks like hand cut jacobville sandstone to make a bridge across this ravine for mining operations. I'm not saying you are wrong I just couldn't find pictures of this Natural Wall looking the same as the video we are watching currently.
It's kind of like the wall in Texas. So cool! Many questions?!
Thanks for sharing this site with us. The depth of it doesn't seem enough to hold back water if especially the water went to the top. However the erosion on the upper side says that it was holding back water. Maybe I'm underestimating how strong it was.
The one thing I'd say that could be used to say it's natural is that the markings/sub-texturing on the rocks are consistent across the courses/lines. Meaning if it was man made they would have had to place the rocks in the exact same position that they had when they were quarried. Not a huge problem to overcome but an extra step needed in the construction. However, with that said keeping them in the same layout could have some structural advantages. This wouldn't be an unusual thing to do as this was done at multiple locations in Egypt for their dark "paving" slabs in some of their "temples".
Lots of stuff in the Marquette big ay area also...born and raised in Marquette 47 years old
Rock lake in southern Wisconsin allegedly has a pyramid structure under water. Cool vid
Not alleged- it’s true. Rock lake has MANY structures in it. The “pyramid” is not a pyramid but an elongated structure about 100’ long. My dear friend’s father dove on the site long ago and discovered a bunch of crazy stuff down there.
@ That’s wild. I guess it’s a fairly ancient lake . Over 10,000 years old. Must have been interesting to dive on it.
possibly something really really old- pre ice age?
Lidar needed?
Great video 👍🏼
Awesome video. Like the boots on the ground type of videos. Get a selfie stick if you're wanting to be in the video along with whatever you're there to see.
That is so very cool!!!! Goodness, how old could that be? Columbus Was for sure not the first.
How is this possible?! How can there be NEW discoveries?! Amazing … truly untapped, completely hidden mysteries surround us
@@fibsniper786 Возможно во сне увидеть древних строителей если свещенное место
You should think about the flooding which left over 40 yards of mud in a lot of places all over the planet.
We have only started digging for a few years.
And don't forget that big capital is not interested in the truth about our past.
This ISN’T a new discovery, genius. Keweenaw wall has been known for ages.🤡🤦♂️🤷♂️
@@fibsniper786 so that area is still MOSTLY untouched. It's been kept from development, and the entire area had populations in small clusters but they mostly stayed in regular travel routes between towns. The only people that would see these structures are hunters/fur trappers over the last 300ish years. And even then, rarely, and even less often talked about.
@@adriaanbertdeveldeharsenhorst ur so woke teach me to be woke like u libtard
There was lots of old mining activity in the Keweenaw - mostly copper. I would guess this are remains from that as there are tons of other remains from mining activity all over the area.
I bet the mainstream historians are actually chuckling when they declare these things as natural formation.
ur so woke teach me to be woke like u libtard
Hey, I'm new to this channel, just found this video in my feed.
I live in lower Michigan, from the stories of the old Copper mining operations up in the UP, I figured you'd be looking at something a bit more "Old World", but that wall almost looks older.
My first impressions make me think this was part of a Dam System, as i see several others thinking the same, but the wall thickness doesn't seem to be enough to hold back massive amounts of water, unless it's backed up with tons of aggregate and lined with clay on the one side, I'm doubting that theory as well, although it may had been a Dam.
It looks like it is damming off that passage for sure, and at some point in time, it burst open, taking out that large section. Im very curious to what you think after spending some time there.
We could come up with many uses and purposes for building a Dam there if that was indeed a river that flowed through there at one time. I'm certain Native Tribes inhabited the UP, centuries ago, and this structure appears it could fit that time frame.
Then there came in the Copper Mining Industry which was big in the 17-1800's. I believe, Copper had been found and mined in the UP by Viking Era or maybe even the Phoenicians before that.
Was this part of their camps or part of their mining systems?
I suppose that could also be possible, as the block work isn't necessarily complex, but appears as walls were being built in the 18th Century, using a primitive looking sand cast block to build their walls with, made from the very gravel, sand and soil that exists right there at or very near the structure.
This site deserves a lot more investigation! Very interesting!
Thanks for making this video.
I'm now a new subscriber! 👍🏻👍🏻
I live up the road from there we call it Natural Wall my wife's uncle's used to own the property and now it's Bonny & Timothy Lions and they asked the public to see them first before going onto their property to look at it . But I'm sure you must have gotten permission to film it. I once took my kid's n nieces tobogganing down there the snow was deep and fluffy me being 200 pounds I went first made a good trail by sinking into the snow had to grab small trees to turn and slow us down it was fun then at the bottom rail road bed we went sliding down the road on Oldcoloney rd which every one used to . Some winters Michigan Tech students would come and make a fire on side of the road n go sledding it is a fast road to slide down n your probably going 30 miles per hour for half a mile or so. I'm thinking it's not safe anymore because of more people living down the end driving up and down the road to go store n what knot.😂
super cool. I feel like I've seen other photos of it, but you have really taken a good serious look at it. I wonder if some one had knocked out the wall where the bottom of the ravine is , for passage. the ancient local Indians would surely know a lot about this . great job guys.
I couldn't read the word engraved on the wall from the first drone shot. My video was too grainy. Anyone know what it said?
this is the same area the Phoenicians mined Copper from, there's a whole episode of America Unearthed by Scott Wolter on it
There were never Phoenicians in ancient America you dumbfuq.🤦♂️🤡
Watching from land o' lakes,wi....80 miles away !,,,, tnx..ancient dam???........wow...your in part of the oldest mountain range in the U.S.,,,,the Copper Range,,(porcupine mountain),,lake of the clouds....,,,,pat & family.
Upper Peninsula of Michigan 💕 Here 🙋♀️So excited that you came to explore this. On my bucket list for sure💕 Hope you were able to pick up a Yooperlite 🔦 as a souvenir off of Lake Superior ✨🌊🪨🌲Fantastic Drone footage as well.
believe i read somewhere, pre internet that SW turquoise was found in keewanaw peninsula and UP Copper was found in SW.
Mike you're gonna get that HENDRICKSON dude mad at you for renaming his wall. Hahaha
Since he appears to have etched his name on it.
but I seriously wonder how they got up that high to etch a name there with a ladder? Thanks for showing us this (:
The cracks line up in vertical makes me think it is not constructed. However this could happen to a constructed wall, too, erosion.
You should check out the wall in Rockwall Texas
Those aerial shots were awesome. So many things it could've been. Were they're ever any settlers on the land. How high had the water come up historically? What does it look like in the summer. To the person above that said they rode their 4 wheelers and dirt bikes though there... that had to be awesome... one with nature
Nice presentation w/o over the top, etc. just good dudes.
Are those blocks rectangular? Keeping their shape in both sides? Hard to see in the video
Nope. Pretty random, as you would expect from a natural rock formation that has been eroded over time. Especially in an environment like northern Michigan, there is a lot of freezing and thawing, leading to cracking in rock that makes it look like “blocks”. This is relatively a unique formation, but completely natural.
@@ManivanAdventures thanks for the insight