Thank you to my channel members and patrons for supporting the channel! If anyone else would like to join my community here are the links: 😊 Patreon: www.patreon.com/MegalithHunter Membership: ua-cam.com/channels/0Hs5t0U6Uf993Tba22YmKA.htmljoin
I missed the premiere on this one. Did you have a good turnout? These older sites in the Americas don’t get much attention. This plaza is quite a unique spot. Very cool! Thanks Laura!
Maybe it was a royal/outpost/fortress for a foreign group of people expanding into this region, hence the narrow defensive entry mixed with finery. A young king can never be too careful 😅⚔
When these types of architectural anomalies comes up, I'm reminded that our ancestors may have had limited tools, but they accomplished some impressive results nevertheless. It is my personal opinion that there were vast trade networks and travel in the Americas at that time. There were Frank Lloyd Wrights even then, who adapted styles found in other areas.
@@tinkerstrade3553There's been ancient roads found interlinking various settlements from the U.S. SouthWest into into Central America. Pretty amazing!
hello, Laura! nice to see some info on sites in the Americas.....nothing quite as old as the mideast sites but, before the pyramids, maybe.....still, impressive feats of architecture, for the time.....the abilities of "primitive" people were global.....and, because the average human has the ability to think, ideate and construct, there are those pesky similarities in structures, symbols and infra-structure found world-wide.....not aliens or early, global, highly technological civilizations.....just ordinary, yet sophisticated folk. that's my take on it, anyway....could be... probably is... wrong....whadda i know so, kiddo, how's the family? hope y'all are well and happy! x's 'n o's all around! til next we meet, m'lady⚔
I thought nothing cultural, especially megalithic happened in the americas before the Aztecs and Mayans. I am from Appalachian America, that was sarcasm.
the dates in this are Completely WRONG - A Posnansky wrote that Tiahuanco complex was 40,000yrs in his estimate, which has Never been constructively refuted, just ignored, i have his book, and i have read it, the Tiahuanco/Lake Titicaca complex are some of the oldest pre-flood ruins left
Thank you to my channel members and patrons for supporting the channel! If anyone else would like to join my community here are the links: 😊
Patreon: www.patreon.com/MegalithHunter
Membership: ua-cam.com/channels/0Hs5t0U6Uf993Tba22YmKA.htmljoin
I hadn't heard of this before. Thanks very much.
I missed the premiere on this one. Did you have a good turnout?
These older sites in the Americas don’t get much attention. This plaza is quite a unique spot. Very cool! Thanks Laura!
Wasn’t too bad a turnout. Not as good as my last video. This circle gives me Stonehenge vibes. Quite different to the other plazas. Very interesting.
@@MegalithHunter yeah, Barry and i weren't there😂 we'll both try to make the next one.....right Barry?
Megalithhunter does very good research keep up the excellent reporting
Thank you!
I love me some Megalithic Pizza. Great video cheers
Maybe it was a royal/outpost/fortress for a foreign group of people expanding into this region, hence the narrow defensive entry mixed with finery. A young king can never be too careful 😅⚔
Intriguing, raises more questions than it answers as most of these sites do .👍
Howdy from Temple, Texas, USA!
Plazas are unusual? In every town and village in Central and South America, there is at least one.
Not megalithic. Not this old. Not on the highlands. It’s an interesting one.
When these types of architectural anomalies comes up, I'm reminded that our ancestors may have had limited tools, but they accomplished some impressive results nevertheless.
It is my personal opinion that there were vast trade networks and travel in the Americas at that time. There were Frank Lloyd Wrights even then, who adapted styles found in other areas.
@@tinkerstrade3553There's been ancient roads found interlinking various settlements from the U.S. SouthWest into into Central America. Pretty amazing!
Quartz, Crystal's are amazing, & what these Ancients used them for is still a mystery?
Thanks Laura
Wouldn't it be quite outstanding to be a fly on the wall about 25k years ago
hello, Laura! nice to see some info on sites in the Americas.....nothing quite as old as the mideast sites but, before the pyramids, maybe.....still, impressive feats of architecture, for the time.....the abilities of "primitive" people were global.....and, because the average human has the ability to think, ideate and construct, there are those pesky similarities in structures, symbols and infra-structure found world-wide.....not aliens or early, global, highly technological civilizations.....just ordinary, yet sophisticated folk. that's my take on it, anyway....could be... probably is... wrong....whadda i know
so, kiddo, how's the family? hope y'all are well and happy! x's 'n o's all around! til next we meet, m'lady⚔
Hey again Floyd! It is good to see these older sites in the Americas.
@@barrywalser2384 hey, Barry👋 yup! good stuff!
When you say "mortar" you mean lime mortar or clay?
Isn't a flat topped pyramid a ziggarat?
Yeah, kinda; if it’s a stepped pyramid.
A ziggurat reminds me of Le Hotel Meridien, Newport Beach. I used to work there in Accounting, and it was so much fun.
@@kristjiannne accounting, some would say writing was invented for you.
I thought nothing cultural, especially megalithic happened in the americas before the Aztecs and Mayans. I am from Appalachian America, that was sarcasm.
the dates in this are Completely WRONG - A Posnansky wrote that Tiahuanco complex was 40,000yrs in his estimate, which has Never been constructively refuted, just ignored, i have his book, and i have read it, the Tiahuanco/Lake Titicaca complex are some of the oldest pre-flood ruins left