Mysterious Ancient Stone Ruins At Saihuite In The Highlands Of Peru

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  • Опубліковано 16 вер 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 146

  • @sherishaffertheartistandmy7948
    @sherishaffertheartistandmy7948 Рік тому +71

    As much as I dislike technology and abhor the transhumanisn plan, I am very thankful for how the internet has allowed me to become so aware of things I had no idea about! In that aspect, the endless supply of knowledge (when it's not being deliberately censored) easily at my fingertips is mind-blowing! Thank you so much, Mr. Forester, for bringing the astounding remnants of ancient technology in ancient civilizations to the forefront! Without you, most of the world would still be blissfully unaware!

  • @internationalicon
    @internationalicon Рік тому +34

    It would be interesting to get digital models of these carved andesite boulders. Since it seems to be a model of landforms and water flow, I’m sure much could be learned if a 3D scan of the objects here could be dispersed to various scholars.

  • @ericlang8895
    @ericlang8895 Рік тому +10

    Hi Brien! Yes, I always look to see the sides better than shown here in this video. I remember the video where you, and another man had water in a couple of bottles, then you pored the water on the top, and the water traveled through the internal canals, and poured out of the lower portions, just like the landscape it was replicating. A truly amazing feat of engineering all around depiction of the topography, and the inner workings of water flow dispersion! A real representation of the technology practiced at this time, and location! Whom were they, why they left is another mystery of that time! Peace!

  • @amandacollyer645
    @amandacollyer645 Рік тому +9

    This artifact is just wild - I want to visit the area so badly :)

  • @jeshuagray6411
    @jeshuagray6411 Рік тому +4

    Just a guess. It looks as though the mountain in the background directly in line with the stone and incan structure is the same shape as the stone. Any LIDAR scans or archeological exploration?

  • @bob_frazier
    @bob_frazier Рік тому +11

    I have andesite boulders here on my property in Oregon. Not only is it hard, but it's very tough to break into smaller pieces. I can not imagine making anything flat, square or even slightly intricate with it using hand tools.

    • @eaglethefox
      @eaglethefox Рік тому

      Have you ever tried? It is pretty easy if you dont try it the hard way. The old civilization still living there explained me how this was done. You drill superficial holes around the rock's line of solidification. put wooden poles in the holes tightly hammered. burn the wooden poles until they fall out and then jam a metal pin in the holes and hammer it

    • @bob_frazier
      @bob_frazier Рік тому +2

      @@eaglethefox I see no such holes in their work. How would this help carving the animals?

    • @eaglethefox
      @eaglethefox Рік тому

      @@bob_frazier aah sorry i thought you meant making the boulder flat. intricate features is hard work with small hard tools. no big chisels!

  • @Orbacron
    @Orbacron Рік тому +6

    What is quite interesting is that you see the child size steps right alongside the megalithic size steps

  • @greeneaglz2573
    @greeneaglz2573 Рік тому +7

    If that boulder did have the drainage/water system of a particular area, it would not have to show the actual topography above land but just the waterways below land as it would model water flow below ground and not terrain above ground. If this is the case, it may be possible to find out where it represents by looking at the lakes and reservoirs above ground and line them up with the water sources on the model.

  • @silkeeberle8484
    @silkeeberle8484 Рік тому +2

    I love those Steps, side by side the same path together. That 3D Boulder is fascinating! I'll look at your other clip. Thank you Brian!

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Рік тому +3

    I feel like this was the first example of abstract art.

  • @StopListenThink
    @StopListenThink Рік тому +4

    Like a diagram of the city - Architectural

  • @JupiterJane1984
    @JupiterJane1984 Рік тому +4

    Soo it seems that represents a "blueprint " of the actual site, very cool 😎

  • @Tailss1
    @Tailss1 Рік тому +5

    That carved stone is (was) a fountain, likely had water fed to it perhaps from underneath, was likely carved to represent a nearby city (possibly the royal government seat) and it appears to be a centerpiece for that structure behind it, likely a palace or other important building with an administrative function. Really no different to elaborate sculptures you often see outside corporate buildings or government buildings you would see today.
    Just my 2 cents on what I think that was.
    -Oh and it's obviously no longer sitting at the plane it was when made/in use so water flow "tests likely would have different results then when it was made.

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 Рік тому +5

    Hmmm....very amazing site brother Brien...Hmmm...am wondering if this was a site that was used to "train" craftsmen in the art of stone softening techniques and transport of these to other sites???Hmmm...Ty Brien for this

    • @bearwill4737
      @bearwill4737 Рік тому

      Assumptions with chemical stone softening & doesn't explain the glass like finish on extremely hard stone, which leans more towards extreme heat, but how would you handle extremely hot stone. So many questions & very little explanations of how it could be done, as we're still light yrs. behind the technology used. Rounded inside corners on massive 150 ton mountainside stone still has me in awe.

  • @charly4594
    @charly4594 Рік тому +4

    Great coverage of such an important sculpture. It looks as if it's purpose was to model and test water works ideas for incorporation into the design of towns or cities.
    I can envision changes made to perfect the ideas as well. I wonder if the uniformity of erosion can show that some designs were worked on at different times.

  • @jamessharpe6699
    @jamessharpe6699 Рік тому +3

    It amazes me the amount of people that are into our ancient history are not even aware of the pre-flight logs from India from thousands and thousands of years ago for their flying machines / airplanes that going to so much detail and even tell them how to fight against other wingedcraft

  • @lindalee3408
    @lindalee3408 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, Brien

  • @christiandoeman4599
    @christiandoeman4599 Рік тому +2

    Good stuff🤯

  • @TheDinnermoney
    @TheDinnermoney Рік тому +4

    That broken andesite stairway is obviously part of a larger more impressive structure, I find it hard to argue with Brian's conclusion that it was built by a lost civilisation using lost technology.

  • @city_survivor9995
    @city_survivor9995 Рік тому +4

    Could that first stone carving you showed us been somewhat of a "test cutting stone "? Where are they would test cut before cutting bigger pieces of stone

  • @Bellyup6969
    @Bellyup6969 Рік тому +2

    Be neat to see what lidar may reveal,, you might be standing on what the model represents

  • @ShortbusMooner
    @ShortbusMooner Рік тому +2

    Amazing!

  • @Rock_Girl_Daze
    @Rock_Girl_Daze Рік тому +3

    I simply love Peru ❤️

  • @pjhue6607
    @pjhue6607 Рік тому +1

    great work

  • @grahamthomas4804
    @grahamthomas4804 Рік тому +2

    the fact bronze age went around the world also suggests migration of information, tin and copper make bronze, how come so many diverse cultures came up with same idea and developed advanced processing around the whole world is a reasonable question. that very hard stone was carved obviously not by bronze is ideed a mystery.

  • @bearwill4737
    @bearwill4737 Рік тому +2

    Is there a impact spot on the split stone & could the shaped stone be a layout plan to step terracing a mountain top to explain to the indigenous people ?

  • @VenturaIT
    @VenturaIT Рік тому +3

    The smooth sides and bottom make it look like a geopolymer, a cookier cutter type creation, not a carving. Geopolymers are almost impossible distinguish from natural stone. These boulders seem more like geopolymer foundations for high-tech that is no longer there. The first boulder shown seems to be the plans or the working model for a big gold mining sluice.

  • @occamsrazor9183
    @occamsrazor9183 Рік тому +2

    I tend to see this as some form of a map, maybe a training device, or war planner...

  • @warnerhome1
    @warnerhome1 Рік тому +1

    And that large central carving is a scale diorama of a village.

  • @MushroomMagpie
    @MushroomMagpie Рік тому +3

    Two possible explanations:
    1. Shrink ray
    2. Megalithic smurf town

  • @Eye_Exist
    @Eye_Exist Рік тому +5

    it never stops amazing me how someone can literally find clay pottery from a megalithic site, make the incredible calculation that the people who left the pottery there must also have constructed the site, and still be called a professional archaeologist. and that is basically how every south american megalithic site has been dated. if we'd do real sciences with this level of deduction we'd still be living in bronze age.

    • @Eye_Exist
      @Eye_Exist Рік тому

      @@cashgrab3139 as if countless of people, mr. Foerster included, haven't tried. their whole institute is built on a lie which enforces itself with authority. it's not science and you cannot change their paradigms no matter how much you argued against them.

    • @Eye_Exist
      @Eye_Exist Рік тому

      @@cashgrab3139 i'm sure they did 😂 they will never graduate if they fail to accept the narrative. come back to me talking about the truth when msa isn't calculating ages of megaliths from clay pottery.

  • @michaelpepper885
    @michaelpepper885 Рік тому +2

    Some of them look like miniature models of the layout of a city

  • @davidwhiren817
    @davidwhiren817 Рік тому +1

    It is all mind blowing , but the megalith that is snapped into 2 distinct pieces takes the cake !!! to generate enough energy to burst that kind of rock cleanly is beyond my comprehension & with no sign left of something hitting the outer surfaces !!!

    • @LadyBits2023
      @LadyBits2023 2 місяці тому

      ... Are you aware that that region is one of the most earthquake prone in the entire world, especially around that time and prehistory???... I understand it almost no one in this comment section does any amount of research or really has any idea about geology but there are thousands tens of thousands hundreds of thousands of examples of stones like this being broken by literally simply earthquakes...

  • @rainbowhiker
    @rainbowhiker Рік тому +1

    These stones are from masonry schools in the area. You had to learn stone working somewhere and this place, and its rocks, was one of the schools where you practiced.

  • @1erinjames
    @1erinjames Рік тому +4

    It looks like a carved city!!

  • @davejohnston5158
    @davejohnston5158 Рік тому +3

    Looks like something has been blown into many pieces. The big piece with the steps looks like it broke in half where it landed. Imagine how much more might be buried in the area.

    • @TomReidarGrndahl
      @TomReidarGrndahl Рік тому +1

      Look even closer and you see it is broken off and was a part of another structure. Yes big 💥

  • @metal--babble346
    @metal--babble346 Рік тому +1

    this is some high quality cool stuff !!!

  • @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz
    @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz Рік тому +2

    @Brien Forrester Sir, If the Inca couldn’t carve and work in adamite, how did they bore out the hole to make the Sun calendar?
    But it must have happened after the last great solar and universal catastrophe, as it couldn’t have been useful as a calendar before hand, as the sun would not be in the same place.
    Also, were these all simply models, why are the stairs too large to be models in some, and barely the size a child can use in others, like that one right before your upcoming events calendar at the end with the four or five year olds playing on it? One must wonder if there was some tiny little miner species genetically engineered by the Anunnaki.
    Yet another breathtakingly fascinating video. Thanks so very much…
    Cheers

  • @LostBeagle
    @LostBeagle Рік тому +3

    Whoever constructed the megalithic structures expected to be around for a long, long time

    • @MushroomMagpie
      @MushroomMagpie Рік тому +1

      I don't know, they seem to have been very hard on their buildings.
      Possibly they were even just quickly built as hard fortifications both with and against high technology.

  • @Tyler.i.81
    @Tyler.i.81 Рік тому +2

    I believe they were testing water flow on a small scale.

  • @kirstenmarcussen8232
    @kirstenmarcussen8232 Рік тому +2

    What is the difference in erosion inside the cracked boulder to the outside ? Could give a hence of how long it was whole

  • @inbetweenthebeats509
    @inbetweenthebeats509 Рік тому

    A petrified “cement, sand”. Castle. Cool!

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 Рік тому +2

    Some could be discarded mistakes. Or stones for carving students. Seems like they would find a bunch of practice art.

  • @1967wazzy
    @1967wazzy Рік тому +2

    One question then why is the soil or grass disturbed around the stones like grass didnt grow around it or is the stone not allowing grass to grow or am i missing something not sure if this has been mentioned

    • @hoodwinker5449
      @hoodwinker5449 Рік тому +1

      Landscaping for tourists. It's a public park.

  • @youfirst.
    @youfirst. Рік тому +3

    It's amold geoploymer

  • @Cardioid2035
    @Cardioid2035 Рік тому +3

    For what it’s worth, DIG UP THAT EARTH.

  • @CraftEccentricity
    @CraftEccentricity Рік тому

    The miniature model of what could have been the city is awesome! Imagine if it was based on natural rainfall to predict whether they would be in flood, or drought!

  • @manchicheng23
    @manchicheng23 Рік тому +3

    Looks like those advanced Anunnaki/pre-flood human created these as stone chair for resting!

    • @marktwain368
      @marktwain368 Рік тому

      Well, is pre-Inca synonymous with pre-Flood? Don't just throw Anunnaki into the mix...we need answers not wild guesses.

    • @manchicheng23
      @manchicheng23 Рік тому

      @@marktwain368 well, there is no answer. Everybody is just guessing!

  • @mattmichniuk2727
    @mattmichniuk2727 Рік тому +3

    Wait you say Inca was of the bronze age,yet a culture older than them made the carving,with what materials,tools ,stone or copper with wooden mallets???

    • @charleshutson2741
      @charleshutson2741 Рік тому +1

      The image of a young child walking up the small steps to be sacrificed just popped into my head 😫

  • @warnerhome1
    @warnerhome1 Рік тому +1

    Her Brien
    I just had an insight. This rock carvings with stairs and niches were amphitheaters. Those holes, especially the square ones were for supporting beams for other structures.

  • @jesperandersson889
    @jesperandersson889 Рік тому +1

    is this the sky map we were looking for (to unlock Chavin)

  • @RidinWithMyLocsOn
    @RidinWithMyLocsOn Рік тому +1

    What does the archeological community say/think happen here? I mean they are spread out, but probably not spread out enough to have been part of a volcanic eruption that could have blasted them away from where ever they first were built. Or are they just random boulders that the people just carved on from where they laid?

  • @srf2112
    @srf2112 Рік тому +1

    I would propose that the large stone with the steps that was snapped in half was due to erosion beneath one side of the stone removing support and causing the stone to cantilever and split where it did.

  • @marktwain368
    @marktwain368 Рік тому +2

    If it hasn't been done yet, someone please link up Brien's incredible work with the Solar Micronova Event predicted by and explained very well in Ben Davidson's work (Weatherman's Guide to the Sun; Suspicious Observers youtube channel).

  • @rovingenglishman
    @rovingenglishman Рік тому +1

    Why can’t it just be an art piece by these ancient stone crafters? Looks like a fun folly for people to enjoy looking at.

  • @davidgriggs3967
    @davidgriggs3967 Рік тому +2

    Needs that whole area gone over with ground penetrating radar , you will find more of those stone buried.

  • @dmd5645
    @dmd5645 Рік тому +2

    The water channel one looks like it's sitting on a mountain top. Anyone ever do LIDAR over that whole mountain?. Maybe it's a miniature version??! Also, the cracked one...could those extra pieces lying about have been blown apart from it?. Makes some sense to me;! Just a thought....

  • @Tatti8338
    @Tatti8338 Рік тому +2

    There are similar stone structures as far away as Japan

  • @LoriQuaid
    @LoriQuaid Рік тому +1

    It would be interesting if these were "school projects" for young people who were leading their trade

  • @soundfaenger
    @soundfaenger Рік тому +1

    this looks like a 3d map of a city or a model for builders

  • @johnmcclure2149
    @johnmcclure2149 Рік тому +3

    It looks like a map

  • @slarbiter
    @slarbiter Рік тому +1

    Every time I see fingerboard skateparks I think of this boulder

  • @cheguevara3392
    @cheguevara3392 Рік тому

    Have you asked if the people run around the bolder (sculpture) despite the fence, or if they put chemicals around the bolder?
    Because in the near of the bolder there is no grass at all! The grass grows not directly at the bolder itself?

  • @Unemployed_Jedi
    @Unemployed_Jedi Рік тому +2

    Hi Brian, does the hitching post stone or the broken stone appear on the scale model stone anywhere?

  • @truthchurch5173
    @truthchurch5173 Рік тому +1

    I have come to the conclusion that the reason why we find such magnificent carvings, caves, stonework, etc...... these people had nothing to do except hunt, eat, and carve things out of rock during these periods.

  • @reyesbravo1341
    @reyesbravo1341 Рік тому +1

    I can see ancient kids playing figures on that stone. Almost like a park and it was made for kids but since they were giants a kid giant would have been 5ft tall

  • @simonn4077
    @simonn4077 Рік тому +1

    I reckon they're practise pieces. A stone mason showing their skills - inside and outside corners, curves, relief, etc...

  • @johndavis6119
    @johndavis6119 Рік тому +1

    That stone and some of the other things looks like an earthquake hit it.

  • @tclanjtopsom4846
    @tclanjtopsom4846 Рік тому +3

    There's no way these stones are made by Incas, they appropriated the monolithic stuff just like the Egyptians.

  • @thegirlatthebeach3221
    @thegirlatthebeach3221 Рік тому +1

    I always thought this looks like a map or schematic

  • @pennycainelane
    @pennycainelane Рік тому +2

    13,500 years ago, according to ancient damage done in Egypt

    • @marktwain368
      @marktwain368 Рік тому

      Yes! Do a comparative study of other ruins Brien has identified and connect the dots!

    • @pennycainelane
      @pennycainelane Рік тому

      @@marktwain368 that's right! And those dots span the entire world.. we're just now finding out how connected the world was.. from ancient south America, to ancient Europe and Asia, to Egypt, and that's just for a start!

  • @kalijuri
    @kalijuri Рік тому +1

    imagine what this site looked like intact?! that big stone looks like an engineering plan for the site.

  • @andrewroberthook3310
    @andrewroberthook3310 Рік тому +1

    Do a mirror image of it using a photo app

  • @jameskelmenson1927
    @jameskelmenson1927 Рік тому

    The thing with the water being poured on top of the stone and it channeling down and off the stone reminds me of the nazca lines. In both cases theres an understanding of geometry and scale. You can make something huge with great precision and high predictability by first making a scale model.
    To me this looks like some sort of school, university, or practice/planning location. Clearly a big dreamer who was inspired by stone steps, terraces, and carving spent a lot of time here. Its really not that hard to believe that with a few fine chisels this sort of work could be accomplished. A fine chisel like that would likely have been buried or hidden at some point, thus explaining why there are no examples.
    If you had access to some sort of ore and some kind of especially hard chisel, would you have shared that with everyone? Maybe not. Maybe one individual found some kind of meteorite at some point and made it their lifes work to make a single hard chisel. Who knows. Its possible there was an advanced civilization but i think its also very possible that there were some nice chisels floating around

  • @lisaroriguez4196
    @lisaroriguez4196 Рік тому +1

    Mystery rock replica of H2O system sure looks more like the cross section of a giant heart, the designs are the diffrent structures. Perhaphs they were carved out more or just erroded over time.
    The water ran thru perfectly becausee the veins & arteries perfectly deliver blood thru-out the body, even when it is enormous.

  • @thebeeinthereeds9845
    @thebeeinthereeds9845 Рік тому +1

    Hey Brien my birthday is on Friday and your one of my heroes. I Was wondering if I could get a response or a shoutout. It would mean the world to me. Thank you Brien ❤️❤️❤️

  • @thundercatt5265
    @thundercatt5265 Рік тому +2

    Pre-Inca ....i think he's right,it's a scale model ,a acoustic device that can crack stone,broke the large stone in half ,see that crack on the corner of the box in the king's chamber, a acoustic weapon did that ,leading to t being disabled ,Inanna was trying to kill Mardu /Ra ,before he founded and Puma puku had to be built ,it was broke by the original builders ,the same mining tools that built Puma puki ,Baalbek ,great pyramid ,last ship left from South america ,the "winged serpent" Thoth was exiled to South America, brining some of Sumer with him = Olmec ,it gave way to the native culture in South America ,that's where the strawberry blonde haired ,exiled Sumerians

  • @adammillwardart7831
    @adammillwardart7831 Рік тому

    "Ou a ta na" means "where you put stuff you don't use" in Patois. Or more precisely, "where is your no". After spending hundreds of hours on Google Earth, I think there's a very interesting story buried phonetically in place names. All around the world, if you pronounce place names phonetically and in Patois, a combination of English, French and Spanish, the names mean something related to the area or the history of the place that makes sense in Patois. Such as - Ollantaytambo "Ollan té temps beau" - Fill pots in good times. There are many many small lakes in Peru and Bolivia that have the sound "olla" or "jocha" in them. I think they used to fill pots with seeds and water and tie them to rafts that floated in the water, hanging not far below the water, so any shockwave from a large earthquake might be absorbed by the water and not break the pot etc... And I think that "Viracocha" is actually supposed to be pronounced "Vira-si-olla". Vi Ra Si Olla - If the sun is shining? Yes, make pots. Basically the same meaning as "Make hay while the sun shines". Hay feeds animals if there is a cataclysm that blocks out the sun, and causes "dark ages". Pots of seeds and fresh water, can feed and hydrate people. Is it a coincidence the Spanish word for "jewel" - "joya" - is pronounced the same way as olla? Some of these lakes have names that sound like "Coca-olla"- and those ones are almost always in areas where they are a bit more remote, and they could be more easily defended. I wonder why...

  • @josteincarlsen2905
    @josteincarlsen2905 Рік тому

    Is this the school rock? I remember something about a big stone that someone said looked like somebody had trained on. But it was another place.. ??

  • @rydeovashit
    @rydeovashit Рік тому +1

    Looks like an explosion in Sahuite

  • @R.E.A.L.I.T.Y
    @R.E.A.L.I.T.Y Рік тому +1

    Obviously a city model.

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Рік тому +3

    The stone looks very like one of Gutzon Borglum's "models" for carving Mount Rushmore. I kept hoping you were going to point out features in the landscape around the model that showed life-sized features built, or carved, from the rock. My initial impression was of a culture who suddenly found themselves in an alien elevation, their world upended and compressed, thrust into Andean heights, at the JSS Moment mentioned in Joshua. There is a distinct connection between the deepest penetration of the Andes' stone ramparts, and an "impact" site in the Pacific Ocean, one that points to the easternmost edge of the continent, and offers insight into the OT world of chaos and upheaval.
    I'd love to go on the trip (too many good reasons why), with y'all, but I'd feel obligated to point out all inconsistencies in theories about who, why, and when. Our past is as FUBAR as religionists, with the willing assistance of all the "Blind Indian Fakirs" whose specialty is describing elephants, can make it. The survivors who lived in what we now refer to as "the Andes" (evidenced by all the terraced fields around Lake Titicaca, lifted to above 12,500 ft), found themselves, one afternoon, more than 3 miles above the previous elevations their homes had been sitting at, maybe twelve hours, applying, totality and receding. Fortunate for them, they were on the eastern slopes of the mountains pushed up with them, so the tsunami, when it returned from slamming into the eastern Asian coast, probably filling the South China Sea, and depressing the area that had likely been very shallow, and much smaller, only washed the lower western slopes of the Andes' massif.
    I'm certain the death toll was stunning, so "survivors" is probably a polite reference to those who stumbled out of the jungles and dug out from under rock and earth piled in great jumbles around them. Shattered by the experience, demoralized by the loss of 9 out of 10 fellows, an astute leader recognized the best thing was to turn them to some form of recovery. A model to make the rest of the landscape function in their best interests would have been just what the doctor ordered, with the added benefit of creating a new home for all the displaced persons who would have flocked to their location, simply because there was no where lese to go. All landmarks had been obliterated, they likely had no idea where the ocean was, for years after, terrain being too unstable and confusing to cross.
    This was circa 1344BC, and peoples all over the world were engaged in similar efforts to survive and cope with catastrophe, to rebuild and reorient their lives to their meaningful, and important pursuits, in a world gone topsy-turvy and upside down.
    ©BW2022
    anarchitek™

  • @jaymesjmathias9390
    @jaymesjmathias9390 Рік тому

    Lol, that stone was most definitely a work in progress, if only they had flood insurance. Then again every insurance 'agency' were wiped out as well apparently.

  • @tra7594
    @tra7594 Рік тому +1

    A stone in the shape of a boat covered with hundreds of animals.... hmmmm...

  • @paulfreegard1271
    @paulfreegard1271 Рік тому +1

    why no tools ever found

  • @Halbatar-Hilaraizon
    @Halbatar-Hilaraizon Рік тому +1

    On dirait des maquettes de villes ou de cités.

  • @andrewroberthook3310
    @andrewroberthook3310 Рік тому +1

    You need to get a rubber cast

  • @valerianthemackiii5896
    @valerianthemackiii5896 Рік тому +2

    ⭐*⭐*⭐*⭐*⭐

  • @Phaota
    @Phaota Рік тому +2

    More than likely, this location was one of the many impact points of the nuclear attack back then, which evidence abounds all over the world, especially in Indonesia, where radiation in certain areas is still immensely high, causing birth defects and cancer. Then you have the vitrified sand and scorched, blown apart structures in various places (here in Saihuite and other South American sites, Egypt, Scotland, the Middle East, Indonesia, etc.). Those steps and flat areas in Andesite couldn't have been done with primitive tools from the Inca. You'd need the stone soften powder or ancient concrete molding techniques to make it so perfect. Then you have the perfect three half-circle depressions at 3:51, which clearly show rotational grinding lines in it from a powerful drill machine. The shot at 8:46 really does give a perfect view of the sites explosive destruction with rocks from the original structure thrown in all directions, except for the large detailed ones in the center.

  • @Andy97906
    @Andy97906 Рік тому +1

    or like a map of a city

  • @UndocumentedHuman
    @UndocumentedHuman Рік тому +1

    Does anyone talk about these being CLAY when made?

  • @willholley9345
    @willholley9345 Рік тому

    Along with lost science, the lost animal species from catastrophe I believe is key to understanding our heritage. I wish there was more research and consideration of domesticated mega-fauna (mastodons… mammoths and others) during pre-iceage and further that provided the labor to move the megaliths and plow the jungles.
    I think it should be considered- a lot of the science was not lost- especially astronomy and architecture -it’s the loss of the “legendary beasts” (mentioned in many holy books)created a dark-age for humans and their ambitious megalithic project’s.
    Humans have always been tied to the animals of the areas. Humans have manipulated animals through domestication and we still have relics of this with plants and many species
    …and there is little understanding or willingness of consideration in contemporary science of how any of this really happened.

    • @willholley9345
      @willholley9345 Рік тому

      on a further note I think it should be considered that it is because of domestication that they were such great loss of Megafauna. When you look at animal breed such as dogs,that are genetically selected, they’re prone to disease and many other auto immune weaknesses. If we can pause are engrained rational thinking or random Darwinism, Could many mega fauna herded and imported around the world through various means be a marvelous short lived project. A genetically flawed domestication attempt

  • @logenmattsen
    @logenmattsen Рік тому

    Looks like what I used to do when I was a little kid playing in the dirt so maybe this is how they taught their children to morph rock.

  • @markusdylewski7592
    @markusdylewski7592 Рік тому +1

    Ja mysle ze to jest antyczny model miasta.

  • @worldoneprofessorjamesperr2417

    Conjecture

  • @joekuhl3500
    @joekuhl3500 4 місяці тому

    The structure is pre Inca but the whole is Inca… please explain that

  • @Antique803
    @Antique803 Рік тому +1

    Rinse and repeat. Our earth has done it over and over.

  • @Zeonoid
    @Zeonoid Рік тому +1

    Anunnaki gift for children to play. Stamped in 3 seconds with their technology

  • @mizzougrad001
    @mizzougrad001 Рік тому +1

    Woof woof

  • @user-yu2sq7dv3i
    @user-yu2sq7dv3i Рік тому

    秘鲁之所以有这么多的巨石遗迹,是因为姆大陆的移民在那里居住过很久,当时在秘鲁和玻利维亚的交接处建立过一个大城市,就是你所知道的普玛彭古和周边地区。时间可以追溯到1.45万年之前,当时的文明和科技已经高度先进。 姆大陆消失于1.45万年前,没有沉没的地方都变成了太平洋上的一个个小岛,当然最有代表性的就是复活节岛,此岛上面的摩艾石像也是建于1.45万年之前。 布莱恩你好,这就是你想知道的真相,你不必相信,但你应该知道。