Were the Azores home to an ancient civilisation? - BBC REEL

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  • čas přidán 27. 10. 2022
  • History books tell us that Portuguese navigators found the Azores islands uninhabited in the middle of the Atlantic during the early 1400s. But some intriguing constructions suggest that people occupied this area long before.
    So, who was this civilisation, and why did they leave?
    Video by: Next Stop Stories
    Narrator: Sam Hartford
    Executive Producer: Griesham Taan
    - - - - -
    Subscribe to BBC Reel: czcams.com/users/bbcreel?sub...
    More videos: www.bbc.com/reel
    #bbc #bbcreel #bbcnews

Komentáře • 2K

  • @johnnorth9355
    @johnnorth9355 Před rokem +731

    Excellent - this is the kind of content that the BBC used to be famous for. More please.

  • @ghomem
    @ghomem Před rokem +1278

    To be honest, I live in this island since I was born and I *never* heard about this *ever* . This was such an interesting video! It changed my mind about Azores prehistoric origins.

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před rokem +21

      You must not subscribe to Rare Earth.

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před rokem +13

      They should be ashamed of themselves, stealing from a smaller CZcamsr.

    • @saschamarr495
      @saschamarr495 Před rokem +37

      Check out Randal Carlsons work

    • @TheMariepi3
      @TheMariepi3 Před rokem +29

      There is a documentary of Discovery about Atlantis in which in one of the Azores islands is seen in the so-called "cart ruts", in another a "columbarium" is seen (a special way of burying the ashes of the dead that were burned, typical of Roman times) and Phoenician anchors also appear

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před rokem +36

      @@TheMariepi3 Ok so your island was probably inhabited by the phonecians at some point and the vikings later, both who abandoned it after large volcanic eruptions or tsunamis. At least 4 times in the last few thousand years those islands have been settled then abandoned after apocalyptic eruptions and tsunamis, the survivors leaving and telling everyone on whatever mainland they landed on to avoid that place forever, then (after the plants and trees grew back and it looked nice again) ever time hundreds of years later it was "discovered" and settled by another group of people and the Portuguese are the most recent. It's on a list of possible Atlantis locations but that's probably Santorini not the Azores. But the Azores were once hit by a tsunami from La Palma partially collapsing into the ocean, that completely went over the entire islands. I just watched a video about this guy who bought a life boat from an oil rig, the life boat is fireproof, unsinkable, and can be dropped from hundreds of feet up into the ocean without injuring the occupants. I recommend having something like that if you live there, just in case. I am kind of joking, but kind of not. I wouldn't wanna just suddenly loose everything or even die in a natural disaster.

  • @condeuiosandilixtos7858
    @condeuiosandilixtos7858 Před rokem +106

    Just a random portuguese guy dropping by. I hope I live to see some serious studies and archaeological digs in the Azores. I'm utterly fascinated by ancient cultures, and despite Portugal being so rich in prehistoric sites, they barely receive any attention or care.

    • @ems4884
      @ems4884 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes. Let's see what archeology turns out.
      At first glance, however... I would be quite skeptical. The Azores are quite remote.

    • @karwashblark7499
      @karwashblark7499 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@ems4884 Skeptical about what? The megalithic architecture is clearly not from 1400 thats for damn sure

    • @birutybeiruty4469
      @birutybeiruty4469 Před 2 měsíci

      Random Portuguese guy?

    • @HF06
      @HF06 Před měsícem

      Not true, I live in the Minho and we have a ton of dolmens, the municipalities take good care of them, as well as the Bronze Age castros.

    • @wandaruth3833
      @wandaruth3833 Před 4 dny

      Sím, my Vavão was born in Ponta Delgada and her mother grew up there. Nobody really hears about Portugal here in the USA outside of communities like Newark NJ and Fall River MA, and you NEVER hear about these big discoveries!

  • @lordcommandernox9197
    @lordcommandernox9197 Před 4 měsíci +27

    The best part of this documentary are the subtitles, thank you for letting me hear the Professor's voice.

  • @dixietenbroeck8717
    @dixietenbroeck8717 Před rokem +615

    Even as an "advanced non-speaker of Portuguese," I could actually understand at least 50% of this man's speech due to his excellent enunciation - which made this fascinating piece of pre-history *_EVEN BETTER!_*
    Thank you very much for this lovely video.

    • @KangaRuude
      @KangaRuude Před rokem +5

      That would have to come with Pronunciation as well before enunciation

    • @adriananovais7240
      @adriananovais7240 Před rokem +40

      It is his cadence of speech, he talks like my old university professors. You could understand them even if you were in the back of a room with 100 people.

    • @kikoplaysgames
      @kikoplaysgames Před rokem +38

      @@adriananovais7240 he actually was a teacher at the university of the azores. Prof. Félix Rodrigues, a genius man!

    • @adriananovais7240
      @adriananovais7240 Před rokem +6

      @@kikoplaysgames yeah, I found his profile and already got some of his papers!

    • @elephantchilds
      @elephantchilds Před rokem +11

      What is an advanced non-speaker of Portuguese?

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Před rokem +617

    The fact that ancient civilizations found places like this and Hawaii (and many others) only proves what capable navigators they were.

    • @jaystrickland4151
      @jaystrickland4151 Před rokem +37

      Hawaii wasn't settled until 300 to 800 CE.

    • @anthonylemkendorf3114
      @anthonylemkendorf3114 Před rokem +24

      @@jaystrickland4151 and it’s still controversial as to who the first really were .

    • @sl4074
      @sl4074 Před rokem +28

      These people were from North Africa and are called Guanches they settled mostly in canary islands and some reached as far as Bahamas, when Colombus reached Bahamas (Guanahani) The people he first met named Lucayan were Guanches he even wrote in his memoirs that they looked the same. They went extinct one decade after contact with Europeans mostly sold as slaves. The same people reached Azores and also other islands in the carribean where they mixed up with arawak people. This is history and I belive it suppressed by the west as it would show that an African people reached the new world decades before the Spanish. I am writing a book about this called the Real history of america and it will be out in two years. This is the truth and one day we will all know it. Do your research and you can connect the dots

    • @spanqueluv9er
      @spanqueluv9er Před rokem +1

      @@sl4074 That stock answer does not work for every post- do you understand? Shut up already.

    • @sl4074
      @sl4074 Před rokem +4

      @Andrew who reached canary island first then ?

  • @blondie9909
    @blondie9909 Před rokem +33

    Im portuguese (although im from porto) but i never heard anything about this, its wonderful to discover new things about the great history of my country. I really wish everyone could understand portuguese and what he is saying because he is not using overly formal language , its all very simple and acessible anyone can understand its like he is having a conversation with you and not a speech or lecture and i think its a nice reflection of our culture

  • @sousa5407
    @sousa5407 Před rokem +206

    This is truly a masterpiece!
    Thank you so much for this video.
    I've been living in S.Miguel Island, part of the Azores archipelago, for 25 years, and it has always baffled me how people are so non-receptive to the possibility that the Portuguese sailors were not the first ones to arrive and populate these islands.
    Clearly we underestimate the ingenuity and braveness of the ancient sailors.

    • @rebjorn79
      @rebjorn79 Před rokem +6

      Randall Carlson talks a lot about the ancient history of the Azores

    • @azorian888
      @azorian888 Před rokem

      0:17 pausa olha no fundo do mar um muro 1200 km/5 km

    • @azorian888
      @azorian888 Před rokem

      @@rebjorn79 i told him exact place where to look

    • @duaneelliott5194
      @duaneelliott5194 Před rokem +2

      For the same reason they are called "explorers" instead of "invaders".

    • @garylake1676
      @garylake1676 Před rokem +7

      The Europeans rock up on the America’s and ‘discover’ them, I should just rock up at the local WalMart and ‘discover’ that store and claim all the spoils as my own.
      Discovery is often theft.

  • @fungaltoe3748
    @fungaltoe3748 Před rokem +39

    some of my great grandparents came from the Azores, so it's super cool to finally learn something about the islands

  • @deanfirnatine7814
    @deanfirnatine7814 Před 4 měsíci +72

    Two things not mentioned, remains of domestic sheep far older than Portuguese discovery have been found, someone had to bring them there and then there is the statue, when the Portuguese discovered the NW most island in the Azores Corvu they found a statue on the Western rim of the island made of stone, it was a man with a cloak and hat on a horse with no saddle with his right arm out pointing with his index finger Westward towards North America. The statue had undecipherable writing on its base, the statue was eventually disassembled and brought to Lisbon only to with time go missing, only a mural of it on a building in the village on the island remains as a reminder. There is some historical writings that indicate the Carthaginians or their ancestors the Phoenicians before them knew of islands that far out in the Atlantic in that direction but to have remains 4500 years old it would probably have to have been the Minoans, we know of no other great sailors at that time period, then again if the great megalithic builders like those in Malta could create what they did they probably could figure out sailing and navigation.

    • @Jennagosu
      @Jennagosu Před 4 měsíci +4

      it could have been the Tartessians as well

    • @zweispurmopped
      @zweispurmopped Před 3 měsíci +2

      There are stories of sea people in ancient scripts. Nobody can tell who they were. There are some guesses, but no evidence for any of them being right.

    • @Bongo40
      @Bongo40 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@JennagosuTartesians were an Atlante colony in Spain 🖖🏻😊

    • @RoofLight00
      @RoofLight00 Před 29 dny +2

      Look at the beautiful carving of the steps in these structures, the rounded entrances and so on.
      These people were highly technologically advanced for a nearly five thousand year old culture. Amazing

    • @jeanjacqueslundi3502
      @jeanjacqueslundi3502 Před 19 dny

      Minoans i.e. the Atlanteans :)

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 Před rokem +64

    Many Thanks for the Production! Tracks like the ones shown exist in Anatolia(Turkey), where there are underground cities[Derinkuyu]. The niches for ashes exist in Crete and in S.Thrace[Bulgaria] as well , in Glukhite Kameni[ photo in The Thracians by R F Hoddinott]. The use of the niches was a mystery until the similar site in Crete served for comparison. In Sardinia can be found tombs of the mound or 'tholos' type like in Thrace or the Phrygian Gordion in Anatolia. Dating is of crucial importance to determine who were the builders but unhappily the tracks remain a mystery.

    • @TheBlaqOrder
      @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +1

      The ancient Greeks and Phoenicians had overlapping colonies around the Mediterranean so its possible the paid the Azores a visit

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      Minoans were the ones spreading knowledge, culture and probably the language around our "Middle Earth", the Mediterranean.

  • @FaughtyEmit
    @FaughtyEmit Před rokem +90

    Going on the fact that the sea level has risen so much globally since the last ice age - I think most of our distant past is underwater. Think about how many millions of people still live next to the sea for all sorts of reasons. It has always been the same, but now the ancient shore lines (and therefore archaeological remains) are completely submerged under tens of meters of water.

    • @purplemnkydshwshr
      @purplemnkydshwshr Před rokem +12

      The flooded Black Sea villages, that's a fun one to read about, also very terrifying.

    • @JamesSongCovers
      @JamesSongCovers Před rokem

      I'd imagine theres a ton of ancient evidence in places like Doggerland, former land-bridges that are now submerged.

    • @YelrahNaws
      @YelrahNaws Před rokem +3

      @@JamesSongCovers there have been tools and spearheads and such found on the sea bottom where doggerland is

    • @no_talking
      @no_talking Před rokem +5

      I think even thousand of feet of water, check out Randall Carlson if you haven’t

    • @ms-jl6dl
      @ms-jl6dl Před 4 měsíci +5

      Latest dramatic increase of see levels happened at the end of the glaciacion period ca.12,000 years ago. So any civilisation after that should be visible today.

  • @cat_pb
    @cat_pb Před rokem +82

    Finally BBC is doing Azores! Whether the Phoenicians or the Vikings it’s a marvellous study!

    • @yt.personal.identification
      @yt.personal.identification Před rokem +12

      Atlantians.
      See Randall Carlson

    • @mayanktripathi8726
      @mayanktripathi8726 Před rokem +12

      Phoenicians..maybe..

    • @zendog7212
      @zendog7212 Před rokem +4

      Well they traded for tin in Cornwall.
      And Phoenecia was the Greek name for Canaan. Which leads on to a whole other myth.
      "And did those feet in ancient times....." .

    • @jC-rv5rr
      @jC-rv5rr Před rokem

      Or, were Vikings lost Phoenician outposts? If we are to surmise out of Afrika I and II with a Proto European adaption of Neanderthal and Denisovan attributes; a highly adaptable hominid, then perhaps we misinterpret biblical Noah as a fall of the first Phoenician empire, and the tower of Babel becomes the result of climatization isolation, and when those cultures resumed contact when the environment was again hospitable, the morphology of language had splintered humanity into clear clan groups immovable from their own understanding of purpose and creation? That there was a large megalithic culture prior to 10,000 years ago that spanned the world over is in little doubt, what is in doubt how closely those cultures communicated, and when their communications began to drift.

    • @sl4074
      @sl4074 Před rokem +3

      These people were from North Africa and are called Guanches they settled mostly in canary islands and some reached as far as Bahamas, when Colombus reached Bahamas (Guanahani) The people he first met named Lucayan were Guanches he even wrote in his memoirs that they looked the same. They went extinct one decade after contact with Europeans mostly sold as slaves. The same people reached Azores and also other islands in the carribean where they mixed up with arawak people. This is history and I belive it suppressed by the west as it would show that an African people reached the new world decades before the Spanish. I am writing a book about this called the Real history of america and it will be out in two years. This is the truth and one day we will all know it. Do your research and you can connect the dots

  • @sirmiles1820
    @sirmiles1820 Před rokem +20

    Finally after becoming a topic from Rare Earth, Azores got into the spotlight.

    • @vice.nor.virtue
      @vice.nor.virtue Před rokem

      they aren't the first, there's another guy on yt who already made a video about this, and its really well produced.

  • @manukumsharma2812
    @manukumsharma2812 Před rokem +5

    Great insight.I hope further research will enable us to understand more about the civilisation indepth.

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před rokem +1

    This was a very interesting and informative video. I love this type of content and could happily watch stories like this all day.

  • @trickyricky2903
    @trickyricky2903 Před rokem +14

    The CZcams channel Rare Earth has released some fantastic content on this subject.

  • @vyvienvp3413
    @vyvienvp3413 Před rokem +93

    I love it when there is a new discovery, a new mystery relating to our planet and humanity. Kept thinking what tools might have been employed to cut all this rock, shape the huge anchors, and rather beautiful round pools?

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před rokem +2

      Honestly, probably just other bits of rock. As I recall, "tuff" is _not_ very "tough", but instead quite easy to work.

    • @Pistolero007
      @Pistolero007 Před rokem +1

      Atlantis

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@absalomdraconisthe anchors are nor turf!

  • @aaronjennings8385
    @aaronjennings8385 Před rokem +19

    The fact that the Portuguese got there by boat suggests others from Portugal got there by boat... only much earlier.

  • @simongross3122
    @simongross3122 Před rokem +14

    I like this guy. I can't understand his language, but his passion is obvious.

  • @troymueller7747
    @troymueller7747 Před rokem +30

    Are we going to let him slide on “no four legged animal can drink water below its paws” ?? That is absolutely untrue haha.

  • @_Painted
    @_Painted Před rokem +208

    I think the Azores were not permanently inhabited, but various ancient peoples had myths of certain "blessed isles" in the Atlantic, where particularly honorable dead went in the afterlife. The Romans, Greeks, and Celts have similar myths. The Romans in particular wrote about these islands as if they were completely real, but required a dangerous several days of sailing in the open Atlantic west of Hispania. I think it's possible that various ancient people, such as the Romans, Greeks, Celts, and possibly Phoenicians and Vikings, visited the Azores but never established lasting settlements. I think some of the ruins may be sites created for the ceremonial interment of honored dead, but that leaves the question of where those remains are now unless if the sites were never used after their construction. [Actually, it makes sense that the remains simply washed/blew away over time if they were cremated.]

    • @sl4074
      @sl4074 Před rokem +15

      These people were from North Africa and are called Guanches they settled mostly in canary islands and some reached as far as Bahamas, when Colombus reached Bahamas (Guanahani) The people he first met named Lucayan were Guanches he even wrote in his memoirs that they looked the same. They went extinct one decade after contact with Europeans mostly sold as slaves. The same people reached Azores and also other islands in the carribean where they mixed up with arawak people. This is history and I belive it suppressed by the west as it would show that an African people reached the new world decades before the Spanish. I am writing a book about this called the Real history of america and it will be out in two years. This is the truth and one day we will all know it. Do your research and you can connect the dots

    • @_Painted
      @_Painted Před rokem +78

      @@sl4074 As long as you're motivated by a genuine desire to seek truth, and not hate, I wish you well on your book.
      Just so you know though, there was a successful genetic testing of Lucayan remains in 2018, and it found that they were closely related to indigenous tribes of Brazil.
      I think the similarities in appearance to Guanches was likely because they lived at similar latitudes with similar climates and solar exposure, so had similar amounts of skin pigmentation. Columbus was probably not very good at telling non-Europeans apart (he did think he had traveled to the east Indes afterall).

    • @philmckenna5709
      @philmckenna5709 Před rokem +24

      @Painted
      You just laid a large dollop of rationality on this 🤡. He won't be able to handle it.

    • @JohnSmith-tl8pq
      @JohnSmith-tl8pq Před rokem +22

      @@sl4074 You have no evidence, only conjecture. Also why would Europeans care about this supposed group reaching North America before the Spanish? The Vikings arrived in North America 500 years earlier!

    • @sl4074
      @sl4074 Před rokem

      @@JohnSmith-tl8pq i know europeans only care about money not history... thats why they destroyed so much of it

  • @Nilguiri
    @Nilguiri Před rokem +4

    Muito interesante. I had no idea about this; really fascinating. More like this from the BBC, please!

  • @TheBlaqOrder
    @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +7

    If similar structures are in Malta then my guess is that the Azores were an ancient Phoenician stopping point on their way to the Americas with a small colony there to keep things ticking over.

    • @redtobertshateshandles
      @redtobertshateshandles Před rokem +1

      Logical. Or a convoy of ships from Malta got stuck there?? The local people probably had legends that are now lost.

  • @christiandaly4281
    @christiandaly4281 Před rokem +57

    The rabbit hole of Graham Hancock-Esque ancient history has just kept getting deeper

    • @dido.the.side.h0646
      @dido.the.side.h0646 Před 2 měsíci +2

      its not that ground breaking to suggest people lived on the azores before the 15th century... there's more isolated islands in the pacific inhabited at that time

  • @donaldbaker1554
    @donaldbaker1554 Před rokem +60

    having been to the Azores in 1958, I found it a Fascinating place
    The Stone shown was more than likely an Anchor for a very small fishing Boat
    Then The Main crop to support their Society was the Pineapple.
    I have some wonderful pictures of the Island and for heating and Lighting they had been using Whale oil
    The Women stood on the Coastal hills and made Wailing noises as well as pointing in the Direction the Whales were moving from and to while the Whale Hunters took directions to follow the Whales and Spear them.
    Once Harvested the Whales were Flenced. They were then boiled down for their Oil
    I have pictures of the cliffs and can remember the Bus Driver when he told us the Story of the process

    • @ValdemarDeMatos
      @ValdemarDeMatos Před rokem +4

      Maybe you could publish these photos with the comments somewhere

    • @breezybeautiful34
      @breezybeautiful34 Před rokem +2

      My ancestors were whale hunters, PICO and FAIAL. :)

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      Wow.
      That should have felt as time travel!

  • @brianvittachi6869
    @brianvittachi6869 Před 3 měsíci

    Fascinating. Thank you for the upload.

  • @CursedDepartmentEastOffice

    This reminds me of how the Canary Islands, during the 15th century, was discovered by the Portugese to have a native population called the Guanches. They were related to the mainland Berbers.
    But 1000 years before that, in the 5th century BCE, the great Carthaginian civilization discovered the islands...but found the islands to be uninhabited. The only thing there was ruins of great buildings. Makes you wonder about the true indigenous peoples in the area, the ones who originally settled there first before everyone else.

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      How do you know if the Carthagians found it unhabited or not?

  • @antonioazevedo2363
    @antonioazevedo2363 Před rokem +32

    The quality of BBC is unquestionable! They actually did a report on azorean archeology and they didn't interview a single Azorean archaeologist. Bravo!

    • @grammarlings6517
      @grammarlings6517 Před rokem +6

      It's an 8 minute piece on Félix Rodrigues of the University of the Azores's theory.

    • @snailrancher
      @snailrancher Před rokem +2

      @@grammarlings6517 He’s a physicist, not an archaeologist. Yes, he’s asking some interesting questions and making some reasonable conclusions, but he’s no more qualified to properly investigate this than an archaeologist is qualified to go research physics. For example, an archaeologist would know that a piece of ceramic could be investigated as to where it was made based on its fabric (local? Import?), perhaps identify the culture (or its relatives) that made it, and also know about techniques for dating it, and that’s just a start. Did he compare any of this material besides the anchors to sites in the Canaries, Iberia, or North Africa? Does he know about the relevant publications? He may, but an archaeologist certainly would.

    • @grammarlings6517
      @grammarlings6517 Před rokem +2

      @@snailrancher I think that's a very reasonable criticism - but there are also some counterbalances. He might be very good at dating given that he is a physicist - I don't know. He also is in the agriculture department?? so perhaps he does have an idea of archaeology. But I agree that his findings are purely anecdotal so far - it all should be thoroughly peer reviewed. As for him not being an archaelogist... there is actually a hidden benefit here - sometimes fields get caught in established 'facts'. I wonder about these stone anchors because sure the big ships use metal anchors, but what about the smaller boats for landing. The whole thing might be total nonsense. I'd look forward to the findings.

    • @007LvB
      @007LvB Před rokem

      Most archeologists would deny these theories as hogwash - would they not?

    • @ProfessorTravis
      @ProfessorTravis Před rokem +1

      @@grammarlings6517 " he might be very good at dating"
      Yes, he should be very aware of isotopic dating. Yet we have none in this whole video.

  • @FilipeCardoso1
    @FilipeCardoso1 Před rokem +39

    Finalmente começam a falar sobre isto! Espetacular!

    • @luisantos1996
      @luisantos1996 Před rokem +3

      Nem fazia a mínima ideia que os Açores tinham sidos abitados antes, deve ser a tal Atlântida.

    • @RuiPedroRocha
      @RuiPedroRocha Před rokem +2

      @@luisantos1996 🤦‍♂️

    • @LoveFromAzores
      @LoveFromAzores Před rokem +2

      Fiz alguns episódios com a Senhora Antonieta Costa sobre este assunto 😉

    • @isaqueteixeiraobregon
      @isaqueteixeiraobregon Před rokem +2

      @@luisantos1996 Claro que não, só pq fica no Atlântico? Que conclusão mais infundada... kkkkkkkkk E ao que se percebe era uma civilização megalítica, os gregos descreviam Atlântida como mais evoluída que eles, então como isso era mais evoluído que as pólis gregas???

    • @Yes-gq6rr
      @Yes-gq6rr Před rokem +1

      Atlântida é um mito criado pelos os antigos filósofos gregos, acho que foi o Plato. É um mito desde o início.

  • @drdrai7479
    @drdrai7479 Před rokem +9

    The Azores is such a fascinating place, I really hope I get a chance to visit.

  • @monorau4888
    @monorau4888 Před rokem +27

    Finally this is getting the attention it deserves! There are more studies prooving this. Some published by a large number of Universities. Having read Professor Felix Rodrigues work, witch is truly fascinating (and backed up by other Phds in archaeology like Nuno Ribeiro And Anabela Joaquinito), a lot is not being said here. The evidence is very solid. Look it up.

    • @prsimoibn2710
      @prsimoibn2710 Před rokem

      Have someone traced the link between Dilmun and Azures yet?

    • @ProfessorTravis
      @ProfessorTravis Před rokem +2

      I need more convincing. A physicist trying to convince me of archaeological prehistory without isotopic dates is definitely a red flag. And if they've got them, why in the world wasn't it talked about in this video.
      This smells of a conclusion looking for evidence. Instead of evidence, providing a conclusion.

  • @GVUEpi
    @GVUEpi Před rokem +13

    At times I feel like we are the only civilization in history that was lost while it still exists.

    • @Jetmab04
      @Jetmab04 Před 4 měsíci

      ❤ Exactly - well written 🤗

  • @Ollie2846
    @Ollie2846 Před rokem +91

    Once again we learn how little we know about the planet we live on. Why is it so difficult for people to understand the planet was inhabited long before written history. They probably were to busy trying to survive to write anything down. Or it was lost or destroyed over the years by other civilizations who inhabited the area. As with most origins it's all just speculation. Super interesting. I'd watch a full length documentary on the island.

    • @jeanlundi2141
      @jeanlundi2141 Před rokem +4

      We are raised ti never question academia, and academia control what is taught in school. That's how these taboos are created. A kid can't question what he learns in school a young man or woman can't question what they learn in college. Not 'really'. We just calcify our data thinking it's actual facts.

    • @sarahstrong7174
      @sarahstrong7174 Před rokem +3

      It took some time to develop the art of writing & longer for the art to spread to more than very few academics.

    • @invictusfarmer7188
      @invictusfarmer7188 Před rokem +4

      its called....learning.

    • @miguel23fev
      @miguel23fev Před rokem +2

      Man be smoking weed all day

    • @topcatcoast2coast579
      @topcatcoast2coast579 Před rokem

      Maby a populace moved up to the mountains and made caves when the lowlands became uninhabitable? What about hydrostatic pressure and land bridges? Talk about voyages, not all are by sea. Makes you wonder about My.Olympus and the older pantheons, Mediterranean burial practices and anthropology.

  • @jessiecaruana9268
    @jessiecaruana9268 Před rokem +40

    The parallel canals on the Azores are fascinatingly similar to the ones (called "cart ruts")in Malta where I live! Could there be a link....
    I also enjoyed listening to the original language, Portuguese.

    • @prsimoibn2710
      @prsimoibn2710 Před rokem +1

      What does caruana mean?

    • @jessiecaruana9268
      @jessiecaruana9268 Před rokem +2

      @@prsimoibn2710 As far as I know is derived from the arabic word for "caravan" meaning a camel caravan. The surname seems to exist in Spain too due to Moorish presence in the country. It is rather common in Malta.

    • @prsimoibn2710
      @prsimoibn2710 Před rokem +3

      @@jessiecaruana9268 I thought you're Maltese, but thanks for the explanation , in Malta there's an even greater Arabic influence on the language and family names..👌

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci +2

      They are the same width, so they are related.
      By now we can say with a great degree of certainty the Minoan Civilization was the One who spread the knowledge and culture across the Mediterranean and, as it seems, beyond.

    • @pedroferrr1412
      @pedroferrr1412 Před 2 měsíci

      @@prsimoibn2710Do you mean "caravana" or "carruagem" , both could mean a car(carriage) pushed by bulls or horses. I do not know "caruana" word, Portuguese here.

  • @michelemarr76
    @michelemarr76 Před měsícem

    Wow! This is amazing! I'm fascinated by this! Thank you from US.

  • @cholst1
    @cholst1 Před rokem +4

    I read about this about a decade ago, so weird that it's suddenly popping up everywhere now.

  • @-Vektron
    @-Vektron Před rokem +3

    This is incredible!

  • @Miamcoline
    @Miamcoline Před rokem

    Very cool. Well done and thank you for this.

  • @ayachan7
    @ayachan7 Před rokem +2

    "I can't live with doubts. I need to answer them." - Dr. Rodriguez
    These simple words are the reason for my admiration for this type of people, an inspiration i find daily from people. I hope he lives longer with good health.

    • @HF06
      @HF06 Před měsícem +1

      Rodrigues*

  • @samfibrofox
    @samfibrofox Před rokem +13

    Randall Carlson says the azores is the most likely location for atlantis love this insight into the fact that most of our world history is forgotten x fascinating more pls
    😍

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      Randall Carlson is a dumbass.
      Greeks called the Ocean the River Okeanus.
      So the sea in wich Atlantis lies can not be the Ocean.

  • @iainsutherland1113
    @iainsutherland1113 Před rokem +10

    The caves with the square recesses cut into the walls look more like they were used to encourage nesting birds. You see similar type things in Italy and France and were used to collect eggs or the birds themselves as a food source.

    • @tamerebel
      @tamerebel Před rokem +5

      In Cappadocia, Turkey holes like that were used for pigeons which fertilised the land. But since they used typological methods they probably know better what they were used for.

    • @Heopful
      @Heopful Před rokem

      Great observation!

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      That's where the name comes from.
      But it's known they are much older and had other purpose.

  • @markusmeldre
    @markusmeldre Před rokem +1

    6:40
    Azores looks so lush, beautiful and lively.

  • @slugogoodrich5573
    @slugogoodrich5573 Před 3 měsíci

    I lived on terceria island for a few years, my dad was stationed at lajes field AFB. Beautiful place, awesome video ❤️

  • @benmckinney2941
    @benmckinney2941 Před rokem +6

    Really interesting and the Azores look amazing.

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +35

    Fascinating! I had read something but I was not aware of the wealth of the findings, which seem overwhelming and not just some random unexplained item. The dolmens are very characteristic and should date to at least c. 1000 BCE (i.e. 3000 years ago), when Dolmenism basically disappears in Western Europe (it may have lingered for longer in parts of North Africa, unsure), replaced by Iron Age (mostly cremation) new forms of individualized burials (which may or not be represented by the columbaria (I'm aware of Roman columbaria but not aboriginal West European ones).

  • @zaaohound4055
    @zaaohound4055 Před rokem

    Wow. This is amazing

  • @havingalook2
    @havingalook2 Před měsícem

    Fascinating. Well done.

  • @mariadaluzmoutinho5701
    @mariadaluzmoutinho5701 Před rokem +7

    E incrível ..conheço os Açores possuidora de deslumbrantes paisagens naturais enquadradas entre a paisagem terrestre e marítimas, mas não conhecia estes mistérios em volta desta ilha...Este investigador é uma fonte de procura e de conhecimento ...Estes quebra cabeças das civilizações antigas ...dão ânimo para a busca do saber do que os moveu para serem tão precisos e concisos nas suas formas de vida!! Excelente aprendizagem e o escrutínio do culto ao sol a água às pedras e à morte!! Mais uma civilização perdida... cheia de enigmas por encontrar!!

  • @markeddowes1467
    @markeddowes1467 Před rokem +6

    As an archaeologist more detail of the horizontal stone stacking in the megaliths would have been interesting…..

  • @IrinaSilveira
    @IrinaSilveira Před rokem

    Fascinating video! I'm azorean, but I had no idea. I always had some questions about our past!

  • @deedorothypapineau6920
    @deedorothypapineau6920 Před 4 měsíci

    Archeology has always fascinated me. What a beautiful place to be.

  • @bungeechord1
    @bungeechord1 Před rokem +6

    We sometimes underestimate the abilities of our distant relatives.

  • @wetbobspongepants
    @wetbobspongepants Před rokem +12

    There was also a story of a statue found by the first explores of someone on a horse pointing towards the west.

    • @tiagopaim3060
      @tiagopaim3060 Před rokem +1

      There was not

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@tiagopaim3060the history exists.
      Told by Damião de Góis, the official historian of the portuguese crown.
      He tells the King sent an "expert" to the island to study the statue. It was decided to transport the statue to the mainland, it broke in pieces before being put in a ship sailing to Lisbon and was presented to the King.
      What happened afterwards no one knows.
      Damião de Góis was an extremely reputed man. There is no reason to doubt what he wrote.
      He built the crown archives!!
      Which sadly burned during the 1755 earthquake.

  • @udontknowme7798
    @udontknowme7798 Před rokem +5

    The Vikings must have been in the Azores, I saw some old maps from the Norse Viking era 793- 1066, and 7 Islands was far out in the Atlantic on the oldest map, two was probably not found from the map dated around 800. But on a map from 1030, then 9 islands did show, plus Madeira that also was on the first one. But Madeira is closer to the mainland

    • @persimmontea6383
      @persimmontea6383 Před 4 měsíci +2

      The Viking presence has pretty much been confirmed. They even have shown that the wild mice on the islands have DNA most like Scandinavian mice!

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      Wich map?!...
      I would like to see a viking map 😂😂

  • @sandiicx3
    @sandiicx3 Před rokem +19

    I was in Madeira last year which is close to the Azores. It is such a magical and lush place. I mean we never ate at restaurants because the vegetables and fruits that we bought there were the best we ever had. Everything grows there. From bananas to Papayas to even Avocados. Not to mention all the waterfalls and mountains/hills... If there ever was a place like Atlantis, it must have been in that region for sure.

    • @ivosilva8747
      @ivosilva8747 Před 7 měsíci +10

      I think you're confused about the location. Madeira is to the south near the African coast. Azores is located thousands of miles away from everything, between the Iberian peninsula and the Americas.

    • @essential.technology
      @essential.technology Před 5 měsíci

      Only 960km of distance. Both places could have been once part of the same island nation.@@ivosilva8747

    • @Jetmab04
      @Jetmab04 Před 4 měsíci

      😊 Next time, you should definitely visit the Azores. They are wonderful and yes, kind of magic. Everything in this documentary makes so much sense - thanks!!
      I was there twice this year, managed to visit 4 of 9 islands and, I'll be back...probably many times...so, so much to be discovered in these islands and yes, all the fruit and vegetables - absolutely perfect 💓!!

    • @tiagogomes3807
      @tiagogomes3807 Před 3 měsíci

      Atlantis, if it existed, wasn't in the Ocean.
      It would have been in the Atlantio Sea. Wherever that was.
      But definitely not in the Ocean as greeks used Okeanus River to refer to the open ocean wich they knew circled the planet.

    • @essential.technology
      @essential.technology Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@tiagogomes3807 Incorrect. Do not make up things and read Plato.

  • @d.mac-6193
    @d.mac-6193 Před rokem +4

    My family comes from the Azores, and I have visited many times over the years. I have seen the "cart ruts" described in this video on the island of Pico as well. I always thought it was odd when I saw them as they don't seem to serve any modern purpose.

  • @philbowflaggon8363
    @philbowflaggon8363 Před rokem +4

    Those "basins" remind me of Roman latrines. And they flush to the sea as the gentleman pointed out.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      I thought the same but almost certainly not. The ritual libation space sounds very likely.

    • @philbowflaggon8363
      @philbowflaggon8363 Před rokem

      @@LuisAldamiz I agree.

  • @asinelliplatamona8348
    @asinelliplatamona8348 Před 3 měsíci

    Fascinating 🙌

  • @jeanjacques1987
    @jeanjacques1987 Před 3 měsíci

    Merci beaucoup pour ces informations !

  • @roses9339
    @roses9339 Před rokem +3

    We of the modern world believe the ancients were uncivilized and ignorant. With all the knowledge that exists now, experts still can't work out how megalithic rocks were moved, carved etc. It's an extremely interesting subject, I'm 72 yrs and I don't think I'll see the answers before I leave this earthly plain. Rosemary

  • @CrackinJacks138
    @CrackinJacks138 Před rokem +4

    Those same rock anchors with the holes are all over the coasts of florida as well

  • @TheQuangBang
    @TheQuangBang Před rokem +1

    My first thought was it reminds me of the structures on Malta, could not believe it when they showed the tracks later in the video!

  • @MrPortugal871
    @MrPortugal871 Před rokem +19

    There are similar structures like these on the azorean Island of São Miguel. Félix Rodrigues says it is from Phoenician architecture

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +2

      Phoenicians did not build dolmens. The columbaria might be (or not) but the dolmens are of West European (Vasconic) or NW African (Berber) origin.

    • @bottytoohotty
      @bottytoohotty Před rokem

      @@LuisAldamiz Korea have an extraordinary amount of dolmens . Its too hard to say where they originate from .

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +1

      @@bottytoohotty - The closest links are in Caucasus, Syria and India (the former two are older, the latter contemporary). I have some blurry memories of reading something about a possible trail of some sort via Central Asia but don't take my word on this.

    • @jeksixten5751
      @jeksixten5751 Před rokem

      @@LuisAldamiz Berber maybe

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +4

      @@jeksixten5751 - It's a possibility but I lean for a more maritime oriented group: the (proto-)Tartessians of SW Iberia, incl. most of modern mainland Portugal, who had civilizations in Portugal itself (VNSP and others) first and later in West Andalusia (Tartessos, documented by the Phocaeans/Massilians and probably destroyed by the Phoenicians) and who reached history as semi-civilized "tribes" (Turdetani, Turduli, Conii, etc.)
      Dolmens and other megalithic structures (tholoi very notably) in Tamazgha (NW Africa, ancient Lybia) are mostly found in what is now Algeria (although this may be a research bias), which is not so directly oriented to the Ocean. Also we don't see historically (or even in prehistory, with the Canarian exception) Berbers being very active at seafaring, not until the (ethnically complex) Barbary Pirates period (Modern Age). When they are accounted for among the "Sea Peoples" in Egypt, they always seem to invade via land, the strict "sea peoples" are others (anyhow "sea peoples" is a modern moniker, Egyptians did not use that expression: even if *some* "sea peoples" are described as coming from "the sea" or from "their islands").

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 Před rokem +1

    On Malta, I understand that some of those mysterious tracks continue into the sea. Is that case on this island as well? Has any research been done just off the coasts of the Azores islands to see if any tracks/ structures can be identified...? Very interesting video.

  • @thecrazygamer333
    @thecrazygamer333 Před rokem +2

    I really believe this is clues to more subtle evidence of prehistorical human civilizations that were advanced in thought,culture,agriculture,sea navigation, and spanned globally. The thoughts on Malta connect much with Graham Hancock and his theories

  • @davidpulidomendoza1026
    @davidpulidomendoza1026 Před rokem +23

    Doesn't it look like the ancient structures and caves found in the Canary Islands?

  • @tylerweston7981
    @tylerweston7981 Před rokem +6

    Everyone of those islands. All the way from the coast of California even off the coast of Florida. Allllllll the wayyyyyyyy to easter Island. Seriously. Look into all the islands of Oceania independently and you will find some crazy stuff..

  • @BartvanderHorst
    @BartvanderHorst Před měsícem

    Very interesting and such relief no crazy theories are mentioned.

  • @JulianoMarcello
    @JulianoMarcello Před 4 měsíci

    Espetacular 🙌🏽

  • @doomsdaybooty1072
    @doomsdaybooty1072 Před rokem +3

    Similar ancient cart ruts in Malta, running from land under water, implying potentially that they were made when sea level was lower

  • @luism.raposo5138
    @luism.raposo5138 Před rokem +4

    My dear Mom was born in Açores and my dad in São Miguel. Me? I was born in South Africa Angola Malanje in 1971. I'm proud to be Portuguese and living in my beautiful California, U.S.A. Good video. I subscribed to your channel. I been learning a lot from your channel. Thank you and God bless.

    • @RuiPedroRocha
      @RuiPedroRocha Před rokem

      Well, which is it? South Africa or Angola?

    • @HF06
      @HF06 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@RuiPedroRochaHe's quantic, he was born in two places at the same time.

    • @RuiPedroRocha
      @RuiPedroRocha Před měsícem

      @@HF06 😅

  • @jamesewanchook2276
    @jamesewanchook2276 Před 4 měsíci

    yes I was in the Azores, It is more than a weird car ride.... thanks for this. Cheers from Vancouver!

  • @badguy5554
    @badguy5554 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Just look at Google Earth, to the south of the Azores. At the bottom of the ocean, one sees a rectangular plain, with a large ditch to the North and west still visible. The dimensions of that rectangular plain match EXACTLY the dimensions given by Plato. To the south of that plain one can see a square enclosure (enclosed by mountains) where the city of Atlantas could very well have been located. One can even see what looks like a portion of the circular ring that surrounded the city. Oh to be able to investigate that area in a deep sea submarine!

  • @augustwolf_2256
    @augustwolf_2256 Před rokem +14

    This was an amazing video! I had always wondered if the ancients had managed to get to the Azores or were at least aware of the islands, the Gauche people got the Canaries, while the Carthaginians exploration of the Atlantic went as far south as Guinea. I suspect the islands may have been settled by the Phoenicians at some point as that structure that the scientist believed was funery in nature is similar to the ones built by the Phoenicians in Carthage and elsewhere, who cremated their dead. this video is so though provoking, wonderful stuff.

    • @monty58
      @monty58 Před rokem +5

      It's unfortunate that Rome so thoroughly destroyed the Phoenicians, because it seems like they were an incredibly advanced maritime culture for the time.
      They could've had expeditions way farther than our current estimates, and we have no real way of knowing anymore.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před rokem +1

      @@monty58 : The Phoenicisns proper had been done in before Rome got to them, as they were actually from the Fertile Crescent. Carthage was really more of a child civilization by that point.

    • @monty58
      @monty58 Před rokem

      @@absalomdraconis the second punic war is why they became a child empire.
      They had an army running around Rome's door step sacking villages.
      The romans forbidding their possession of a navy after they won the 2nd was probably what killed their off shore territories, if I were to hazard a guess.

    • @TheBlaqOrder
      @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +1

      That's what I thought too

  • @this-abledtheextravertedhe5299

    I can’t believe it’s taken this long for people to pay attention 🤷‍♀️

    • @Rodrigues-xg3ln
      @Rodrigues-xg3ln Před rokem

      Igreja católica é a resposta para a seu comentário

  • @tepidtuna7450
    @tepidtuna7450 Před rokem +1

    How much we think we know, and as we learn more, we discover how much we do not know.
    Fascinating.

  • @ludoviccelle5781
    @ludoviccelle5781 Před 2 měsíci

    Good work by BBC. Very interesting investigation.

  • @1ACL
    @1ACL Před rokem +10

    Someone needs to dive in the surrounding ocean. If there was an ancient civilization there, there might be evidence under the sea (due to "recent" sea level rise).

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      Not likely at all. Atlantis was in what is now Portugal (mainland, just west of Torres Vedras).

    • @JesseValentine
      @JesseValentine Před rokem

      This has been done, and there is some evidence.

    • @1ACL
      @1ACL Před rokem +1

      @@LuisAldamiz there are many remains of civilizations under the sea all over the world, not just about Atlantis. Off the coast of India, Cuba, S. America, Japan.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      @@1ACL - All of them are not just dubious but fake news. I'm familiar with some like the Bimini "highway" and it's nothing but a natural formation. It's like imagining the Everest is a "pyramid"...

    • @Adil_Turysbek
      @Adil_Turysbek Před rokem

      @@LuisAldamiz Well, Atlantis was an Empire (Plato said there were 10 kingdoms). But we are really interested in the Capital city.

  • @taterkaze9428
    @taterkaze9428 Před rokem +19

    Never underestimate the ancients. They were more sophisticated than we think. If they weren't, we wouldn't be here.

    • @nick_0
      @nick_0 Před rokem +2

      Yes, from 2000 years from now they might say the same about us

    • @PedroOrtega1993
      @PedroOrtega1993 Před rokem +3

      @@nick_0 Provided we humans last for another 2000 years or more.

    • @princeofcupspoc9073
      @princeofcupspoc9073 Před rokem

      ...because all the non-sophisticated species died out. Wait, what? Moron.

    • @007LvB
      @007LvB Před rokem

      ​@@PedroOrtega1993 We are nearing a tipping point, with the progress in technology and artificial intelligence. A great cataclysm could set us back. If there are people in 2000 years pondering this question, that would indicate a cataclysm. Otherwise, given the rate of growth, humans will probably merge with AI to create a new species of hybrid biology and machine, and the contributions of our current civilization would be so small and meaningless that they wouldn't even be considered.
      I think.

  • @mjolnir_swe
    @mjolnir_swe Před rokem

    Very interesting, well done dr Rodriguez.

  • @bk1147
    @bk1147 Před rokem

    Wonderful thought provoking post

  • @sugarfree1894
    @sugarfree1894 Před rokem +4

    These structures can't have been constructed by people merely passing through. This must have taken, literally, ages.

  • @Concetta20
    @Concetta20 Před rokem

    Happy 100th bday BBC!

  • @PlantaJah
    @PlantaJah Před rokem

    parabens pelo trabalho e esforço

  • @4npushap352
    @4npushap352 Před rokem +7

    Now that I live in Terceira, I plan to visit those unique locations 😁

  • @alexanderren1097
    @alexanderren1097 Před rokem +7

    There's mounting evidence that most of the Azores Plateau (currently underwater) was above sea level during the last Ice Age. This means the Azores would have been a significantly larger island/island complex compared to what's left of it today.
    This was nearly all submerged around 9600 B.C. at the end of the Younger Dryas and last stages of the Ice Age when sea levels rose by approx. 300m.
    Coincidentally, 9600 B.C. is the date Plato gives for the subsidence of Atlantis but I'm sure that's completely unrelated...

    • @PK1312
      @PK1312 Před rokem +1

      you're right! it IS completely unrelated. good job using basic critical thinking skills

    • @alexanderren1097
      @alexanderren1097 Před rokem

      @@PK1312 Ok bot

    • @007LvB
      @007LvB Před rokem

      I don't think it's unrelated. Graham Hancock is likely right, and I think he will be proven right as more and more people are beginning to ponder his findings and perform excavations instead of being in denial.
      Let's entertain the thought that there was an advanced civilization that abruptly ended 12800 years ago. How did humanity recover so fast, basically going from primitive hunter-gatherers to doing advanced masonry, without the help of this ancient civilization? And if that is the case, how did that ancient civilization help humanity if it was completely extinct? Okay so it did not go completely extinct. Clearly a small part of it survived, and then gradually died out, or spent their remaining energy merging together with the rest of humanity.
      As an ending note: There is NO way that Plato would have been aware of an ice age, or of comets from outer space. The date is too much of a coincidence to be pure imagination. Btw. the ancient greeks also measured the circumference of our planet - was it also coincidence that they managed to get really close? And how would they suddenly get the means and the knowledge to do so, when in the rest of the world people were hitting each other with wooden branches?

    • @PK1312
      @PK1312 Před rokem +1

      @@007LvB it is an allegory

    • @007LvB
      @007LvB Před rokem

      @@PK1312 You make a case, but not an argument. Progress requires two components: Rational thought, and an open mind.

  • @robertwood9939
    @robertwood9939 Před 4 měsíci

    Very nice! Thank you!

  • @josephpatricio851
    @josephpatricio851 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting. I lived in terceira from the age of three until the age of nine. This brings back memories although I’ve never seen the structures described in this video. I have a longing to go back and may someday.

  • @elizabeth_777
    @elizabeth_777 Před rokem +3

    There is no way the Mediterranean was as busy as it was to not have someone venture out to see what was beyond the straights of Gibraltar. My Grandson’s father’s family is from the Azores as was my mother in law. ………..beautiful people 🥰

  • @mnk9073
    @mnk9073 Před rokem +22

    The Azores were repeatedly sighted by sailors who did the so called "Volta do mar" exploiting the North Atlantic Gyre to quickly return from the west African coast and the canary islands back to the Iberian peninsula. Earlier arrivals must have been largely accidental since the navigational knowledge to reliably and repeatedly reach a location as remote as the Azores is realtively young. Since there are Phoenician activities recorded on the Canaries and the West African coast it is possible that some of their ships got caught in the North Atlantic Gyre leading to the temporary population of the islands, if I am not mistaken some punic coins have been found on the Azores dating to the 4th or 3rd century BC but those could as well be just from shipwrecked sailors.

    • @samuranga8537
      @samuranga8537 Před rokem +1

      I think ancient sea travel was a more advanced than we think. Have you seen maps before the 1600s that have Antarctica in its exact location along with other maps show islands that have not been above water since the ice age

    • @mnk9073
      @mnk9073 Před rokem +2

      @@samuranga8537 That has been debunked 100 times by now...

    • @mnk9073
      @mnk9073 Před rokem +1

      @Proteuzeumzone Sailing up and down the coast as Hanno did is something completely different than hitting a needle in a haystack like the Azores. Also Heyerdahl proved it was theoretically possible to reach Polynesia from Peru (by drifting, the Kon Tiki was literally unsteerable) but his theory of the settlement has nontheless been refuted by recent genetical analysis.

  • @calvinduke4810
    @calvinduke4810 Před rokem

    Fascinating

  • @antimatterhorn
    @antimatterhorn Před rokem +2

    "No four-legged animal can drink water below its paws." Say what now? *Every* four-legged animal drinks water at a level below its feet. And besides, those pools look almost exactly like latrines and that they empty out into the ocean is pretty good evidence that's exactly what they were.

  • @davehayes5969
    @davehayes5969 Před rokem +4

    i lived in terceira for 5 years in the 70's because my father was in the c.i.a. and the island has a lot of gov. sneaky crap going on... my bros and sister found theses buildings and explored most of them.... just thought i would share that... so yeah...

  • @bearh8928
    @bearh8928 Před rokem +6

    No four-legged animal can drink water below their feet level? That's totally false.

    • @Leadfoot_P71
      @Leadfoot_P71 Před rokem

      Yeah, how else would they drink?

    • @estefarivas9788
      @estefarivas9788 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, that totally made all his theories crumble for me from that point on...if that's the kind of "facts" and researches he bases things on..

    • @inhabitantwaps3qs803
      @inhabitantwaps3qs803 Před rokem

      It is mind boggling why these would be carved it almost looks like its for ritualistic purposes i cant think of much else. why cut such a specific keyhole shape for a drinking troth, also the cave with holes in the walls, We only have remnants of stone because that's all that would last, maybe there was large wooden towns indicating some civilisation but all the remnants are 10s of thousands of years old and lost to floods and rotting. None of these structures seem to have any practical use for an island civilisation.

    • @fantabuloussnuffaluffagus
      @fantabuloussnuffaluffagus Před rokem

      @@inhabitantwaps3qs803 The cave with all the niches could easily be used as a dovecote.

  • @Marcelo7717
    @Marcelo7717 Před rokem

    Thanks from Brazil 🇧🇷.

  • @shannonlohr1565
    @shannonlohr1565 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Amazing

  • @therealunclevanya
    @therealunclevanya Před rokem +5

    The "relheiras" are found all over the World, in Malta, Turkey and as far as China. Nobody can explain them in those locations either. The Maltese ones are both above water and well below in area not above the Sea since the Younger Dryas Extinction Level Event some 12000 years ago.

    • @jennymay4720
      @jennymay4720 Před rokem +2

      Could they have been to do with water:?

    • @StuffandThings_
      @StuffandThings_ Před rokem

      @@jennymay4720 Huh, now I'm wondering if ancient peoples noticed the sea level rising and tracked it. After all, in Japan people marked out tsunami high water lines to warn future generations of the danger. I'm sure the ones above water could be explained by tracking river levels or rain or something else.

    • @Liethen
      @Liethen Před rokem +1

      @@jennymay4720 I always figured they were to channel rainwater to a cistern. Though if that were the case someone would probably have found such a hole. But getting a reliable source of fresh water on an island can be tricky, so maybe?

  • @sandramiller7972
    @sandramiller7972 Před rokem +4

    Perhaps the tracks lead to towns under the ash or water. Unfortunately the volcanos may have destroyed all the evidence. F. Miller

  • @lennonwilson6407
    @lennonwilson6407 Před rokem

    Wish the video was longer!!!