Exploring the Pacific Northwest: Washington State Native American Petroglyphs. Monster Depictions
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- Опубліковано 15 вер 2024
- Pacific Northwest Ancient Native American Stone Carvings (Petroglyphs) found in Washington State Columbia River Gorge. Depictions of unknown creatures, monsters and animals. Bigfoot? Sasquatch ? Native American artifacts stone carvings found in the legendary Columbia River Gorge in Washington State. Filmed in Klickitat County, Washington along the Columbia River. The Petroglyphs were excavated from the gorge cliff walls, preserved and moved downstream to avoid being flooded by a dam and lost forever to history. Honor the Past and Respect the Present. Peace friends!
Music by Paul Graves and BonzaiRod
~Rico
Copyright 2017 Pacific Northwest Extreme Videos by Rico Savage and the Bigfoot Diaries.
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It seems that dams locations may have been disproportionately chosen to be constructed in areas of historic significance to ancient people's in america.
Sad indeed
@Salazar payne there are always multiple agendas being satisfied when the powers that be spend large sums of money on a project.
Walla Walla Washington is in SE Washington and it's without a doubt what some would call an oasis in terms of folliage within a high desert. It's history is deep but more than anything sad. The Whitman Mission Massacre is an unfortunate but true example of this. I love this town of mine. History has been found in my own backyard when I stumbled upon several arrowheads within the first year of my house being built. On the flip side of that is that I also found muscat balls. It's heart breaking but I do my best to preserve the ground beneath my feet the artifacts I find and the history the area holds.
cool! much respect to you
Much older than whitman by thousands
Oh my gosh. Some of the rock pictures are very similar to Chatham Island & other parts of mainland NZ. Origin unknown.
Thank you for the video and you’re time making it. FYI the expressions depicted in the rocks are what the ancient people saw in their sky and the novae that happened to the Sun, Fact! The Thunderbolt Project will get you caught up if interested. Aloha
Cool, thanks for the info
@@PacificNorthwestExtremeVideos I have walked all around that area before the vandals found out about it. The popularization of She Who Watches attracted them.
Vandals are assholes that can't make anything so in order to feel powerful they break stuff.
There are some real spooky petroglyphs around there. White people aren't welcome. You can feel it.
The Dalles dam inundated Celilo falls and continues to destroy the Columbia River to this day. The dam is located down river from Horsethief Park.
There is a native village that existed for thousands of years located under Horsethief lake.
The name "Horsethief Lake" is a misinterpretation of the village which once existed there. The name came from European intruders assuming because the natives had so many horses that the horses must have been stolen.
It's not a lake anyway. It's an extremely polluted river runoff that acts as an incubator for algae.
excellent comment , great info. sad story
what is the source of pollution?
@@PacificNorthwestExtremeVideos farm chemicals, a previous nuclear power plant, warming of the water because of the dams,....
the fallls were also the top archaeological in the world for artifacts from all around the world that used to come to the snake and columbia river for the salmon run and trade. Roosevelt is the biggest POS that ever lived and was responsible for destroying what the northwest was known for! fuck TEDDY R ROOSEVELT!!!!!
The name Horsethief Lake/Butte actually was a nickname given by workers of The Dalles Dam in the late fifties when spaghetti westerns were popular. It had nothing to do with actual stolen horses or indigenous peoples.
We have some of those on the coast of British Colombia . The natives of Bella Coola told the first explorer there that the natives before them had made them . At another location they had to be destroyed to build a lighthouse.
I am thankful not all were destroyed. They are an important part of ancient history in North America.
These are awesome! I came from the tribes that lived in these areas and it really makes me wonder if one of my actual ancestors created one of these beautiful images. It really does make you feel connected and left a gift from the ancestors. Love it.😊❤
I think they are really cool too!
These petroglyphs mean nothing taken from their original place. Most man-made lakes and Dams cover Native Indigenous villages and camps, across the world. Sorry I just can't appreciate taking the petroglyphs from their original place, but, put them back together the way they were found at least. I appreciate you showing us. It's not your fault. We wouldn't know about them at all if you hadn't shared with us, so Thank You 😊. Very interesting, but all meaning was lost.
I agree it is tragic and sad. I am happy though that someone knew enough way back then to preserve them.
I'm going to have to check this place out.
That one figure looks like Windago.
There are petroglyphs at the Ginko Petrified Forest State Park in Vantage.
Have stone tools perfect patene & material match
I live in Clallam County. I’m sad that I can’t find many places to explore with an inhabited background. The environment eliminates all evidence. I’m 64. When I was a kid my dad followed every dirt road and we had so many adventures. I want to know the stories within my reach, but don’t know how to find them.
Coming here right at 6666 views.....
I thought this is gonna be more of a video of the Columbia river gorge. I’ve lived in Washington, all of my life in the Gorge.
Seeing is the dry part of it you come up in the Skamania county up in Gifford Pinchot it’s a lot more beautiful timbered you talk about volcanic rock there’s a place up by goose lake back in the woods a ways there is actually a human footprint in the lava rock, somebody or something years and years back stepped in some hot rock
It's not a lava flow. It didn't flow anywhere. Think marshmallow in a microwave.
bubbled up out of the ground?
Energy from the sun burned and blistered the land. Think magnifying glass and paper. Probably happened at the end of the Bronze Age.
If a person wants to find out about the lava flows; Central Washington University Ellensburg has a series of video lectures by a real geologist that doesn't just make shtuff up. They are very well done by an by an excellent lecturer.
Yep not a single volcano did that that is basalt it is up to three miles to 2 miles thick in some places it covers most of Washington and Northern Oregon and I would look up Walla Walla State College professors
@@ThomasistheTwin you are very wrong. The lava flows that cover this area, where I live, in what's being called the Columbia Gorge, were very viscous and covered thousands of miles from where the lava spewed out of cracks in the earth called fissures. These cracks were in the Eastern WA, OR area and some flowed all the way to the Pacific ocean.
These hundreds of lava flows occurred around 15 million years ago, for a few million years. Each lava flow is around a hundred feet thick. Some of the basalt lava is as thick as a couple miles.
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Is it possible to take tracings of these petroglyphs?
No there was a fence and that is not a good idea anyway as far as long term preservation goes.
11:15- this rock is different. It seems to be sanded, or etched, not chipped like the others.
Also, at the lower right, there seems to be a pattern? Like it is part of something bigger.
I would love to see what is hidden under water!
is this park still closed?
it closes for 8 months a year
only open during summer months
Nothing extreme here
nope , just stuff you see everyday