The Mysteries of Tiwanaku and Puma Punku (Documentary)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
  • A few years ago, my friend Ethan and I took a backpacking trip through the Andean highlands of South America. During our trip, we spoke to locals about their ancient myths and legends. In this documentary, we attempt to juxtapose these myths with archeological and anthropological fact. We are not experts, so we encourage viewers to keep an open mind and do their own digging on the subject.
    Music:
    Cue 2 - Deep-Dark-Tribal-African Drum focused (Uncanny Valley) by Soularflair
    Suspect Located by Scott Holmes
    Betterdays by bensound.com
    Slow-motion by bensound.com
    Pill by Blear Moon
    Horror Ambience by unknown artist.
    Sources:
    Zimmermann, K. (2017, August 29). Pleistocene Epoch: Facts About the Last Ice Age. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.livescience.com/40311-ple...
    Zea, M. (2018, December 13). Lake Titicaca: Underwater museum brings hope to shores. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-...
    Vranich, A. (n.d.). Interpreting the meaning of ritual spaces: The temple complex of Pumapunku, Tiwanaku, Bolivia. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from repository.upenn.edu/disserta...
    Storey, A., Ramírez, J., Quiroz, D., Burley, D., Addison, D., Walter, R., . . . Matisoo-Smith, E. (2007, June 19). Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.pnas.org/content/104/25/1...
    Storey, A., Ramírez, J., Quiroz, D., Burley, D., Addison, D., Walter, R., . . . Matisoo-Smith, E. (2007, June 19). Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.pnas.org/content/104/25/1...
    Polynesian sweet potato mystery solved: Epic transoceanic journey to South America. (n.d.). Retrieved September 15, 2020, from en.mercopress.com/2020/07/09/...
    Paul VoosenNov. 14, 2., Adrian ChoSep. 15, 2., Ian MorseSep. 14, 2., Eli CahanSep. 14, 2., Scott Waldman, E., Jon CohenSep. 11, 2., . . . Rebekah TuchschererAug. 26, 2. (2018, December 26). Massive crater under Greenland's ice points to climate-altering impact in the time of humans. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/...
    Núñez, R., & Sweetser, E. (2010, February 11). With the Future Behind Them: Convergent Evidence From Aymara Language and Gesture in the Crosslinguistic Comparison of Spatial Construals of Time. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/a...
    Lawler, A. (2010, June 11). Beyond Kon-Tiki: Did Polynesians Sail to South America? Retrieved September 15, 2020, from science.sciencemag.org/conten...
    J.. Armstrong, A., Austin, D., D.F.. Austin, Z., J.J.. Doyle, J., Emory, K., L..
    Excoffier, P., . . . D.P.. Zhang, J. (1995, January 01). AFLP assessment of diversity in sweetpotato from Latin America and the Pacific region: Its implications on the dispersal of the crop. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from link.springer.com/article/10....
    Gates, W. (1976, March 19). Modeling the Ice-Age Climate. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from science.sciencemag.org/conten...
    Fisher, M., Koenig, G., White, T., San-Blas, G., Negroni, R., Alvarez, I., . . . Taylor, J. (2001, April 10). Biogeographic range expansion into South America by Coccidioides immitis mirrors New World patterns of human migration. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.pnas.org/content/98/8/4558/
    Dillehay, T., Ramírez, C., Pino, M., Collins, M., Rossen, J., & Pino-Navarro, J. (2008, May 09). Monte Verde: Seaweed, Food, Medicine, and the Peopling of South America. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from science.sciencemag.org/conten...
    Dansgaard, W., White, J., & Johnsen, S. (n.d.). The abrupt termination of the Younger Dryas climate event. Retrieved September 15, 2020, from www.nature.com/articles/339532a0
    Link to pdf: drive.google.com/file/d/1PkF0...
    Created by John Frenzel

Komentáře • 238

  • @erniemajor
    @erniemajor Před rokem +14

    Nice work! So easy to watch. I love that you do NOT run off endless weights of stones and distances, nor have some bearded guy standing in front of the camera obscuring the subject matter. No jarring music. I salute you. Thank you.

  • @carlcromwell8713
    @carlcromwell8713 Před rokem +9

    Very well done, and at a professional level. Hope you do more. God Bless!

  • @dominiquesee468
    @dominiquesee468 Před rokem +12

    Really great job in putting together facts and a hypothesis, as well as great storytelling tone, style, and pace!

  • @groundedtreemassagetherapy8521

    Excellent documentary. Made for a beautiful evening while I ate dinner. I've always been interested in phenomena regarding early human migration, especially after reading Graham Hancock's "Fingerprints of the Gods". It's all extremely fascinating to me. Thank you for citing your sources, and for carefully crafting together a short documentary for us to all ponder about. I guess we'll never know for sure what happened in those time periods, but man, it's amazing to speculate/theorize and to challenge pre-conceived notions.

  • @barbramcgill7435
    @barbramcgill7435 Před 2 lety +8

    Very well put together and presented . I enjoyed it.

  • @BobWebb1066
    @BobWebb1066 Před rokem +8

    great informative film. Being someone who has read a few of Graham Hancocks books as well as watching Randolph Carlsons talks, you have pulled together many of the issues to do with this as well as other ancient sites of mass destruction including the Giza plateu in Egypt. So many huge magalithic blocks are still partially buried deep at all these sites showing some kind of cataclysm has definately happened, as they do not follow at all the models of structures buried naturally due to degredation.

  • @noelpeacock3476
    @noelpeacock3476 Před rokem +5

    Thankyou. I love this. Civilization is much much older than thought I believe. Like Graham Hancock I believe that there are forgotten chapters in human history.

  • @michaellyne8773
    @michaellyne8773 Před 2 lety +9

    Absolutely amazing work creating this documentary, thank you for sharing your fabulous journey and researching for everyone to see. Makes us wonder how they moved rocks of that size? Thank you again.

  • @israellopez959
    @israellopez959 Před 3 lety +18

    Very good hypothesis of how TIAWANAKU began. I've been to the site three times and I still think there's simply so much mystery and read different theories about it that makes me think that this site and Puma Punku are much much older than mainstream Archeology claims. Many of the stone work at Puma Punku indicates use of high tecnology tools!

  • @saeidnia1689
    @saeidnia1689 Před 2 lety +6

    I enjoyed your documentary with your calm voice and well researched John thanks, looking forward to more videos.

  • @nataliekay286
    @nataliekay286 Před 2 lety +20

    Love this! Great documentary. Its such an interesting, well articulated, and well researched video. Thank you!

  • @deborahmckenzie6117
    @deborahmckenzie6117 Před rokem +7

    you have a career as a documentary maker. I have a book you can order online, by Ettie Route titled "Maori Symbolism", she interviewed a Maori Elder and Legend Keeper in the 1920's who gave here an account of the legend of People who came from the Fertile Crescent Northern Africa Egypt over many centuries travelled across Asia, the South Pacific to the Americas, to Lake Titicaca and then fled Titicaca to Easter Island, to Rarotonga and then to New Zealand. I had hoped to document this visually, but you would do a much better making this than I would. With the way the world is currently, we need to return to the ancient ways to heal and to heal our planet. I see you too are interested in Graham Hancock's ideas. Thanks so much for making the time and effort to make this doco, kia ora , Deborah (Tepora ) , 52 generation Maori

  • @sheldonwheaton881
    @sheldonwheaton881 Před 3 lety +10

    Puma Punku looks like it got hit by a wave and tossed around?🗿

  • @Godshonestruth
    @Godshonestruth Před 8 měsíci +4

    Amazing documentary! Loved it! 10/10

  • @janetlahm3207
    @janetlahm3207 Před rokem +4

    Fascinating. Thank you for all your work n research. We will probably never know but marvelous to consider.

  • @borninvincible
    @borninvincible Před 2 lety +3

    This is gold! Thanks for sharing. I subscribed.

  • @nexttime9272
    @nexttime9272 Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome lil’ doc team. Good stuff. ‘I choose not to believe in anything, instead I choose to forever wonder’ Rumi

  • @thatwasprettyneat
    @thatwasprettyneat Před 3 lety +19

    Wow, a real speculative documentary about Tiwanaku instead of something outdated from 1997 or something just talking about aliens or something.

    • @NewCommunion32
      @NewCommunion32 Před 3 lety +5

      Thank you! I for sure tried to make it as dated as I could. But information changes so quickly these days.

  • @TheSwanvillan
    @TheSwanvillan Před 3 lety +6

    Excellent Job! Appreciate the citations. Thanks for sharing.

  • @wgalloPT
    @wgalloPT Před 3 lety +20

    It would have been interesting to mention that the salt water of lake Titicaca is explained by it being the remain of water invasion from the pacific during the young dryas catastrophe that in fact explains also the reason of why the rocky structures of TIWANUAKU are all spread and turned over. Just saying....amazing ...awesome documentary!

    • @Alarix246
      @Alarix246 Před 3 lety +1

      Are they toppled from one direction only?

    • @billteneyck3766
      @billteneyck3766 Před 2 lety +5

      I’ve been there, it’s a freshwater lake.

    • @stephenfennell3952
      @stephenfennell3952 Před 2 lety

      Q.

    • @ThomiX0.0
      @ThomiX0.0 Před 2 lety

      @@billteneyck3766 , but the species living in the lake, had an saltwater origine, and evolved over time..

  • @malcolmclarke3033
    @malcolmclarke3033 Před 3 lety +9

    Hi, I just found your channel and found this video to be fascinating. It must have been a great adventure and the enthusiasm comes through in your narrative.

  • @ultimatesoccershow
    @ultimatesoccershow Před 2 lety +3

    Great production & narration!!! Its so enjoyable when its done like this. Thank you

  • @CosmosNut
    @CosmosNut Před 2 lety +1

    Anyone intelligent enough to say hypothesis instead of theory gets my attention immediately, thanks for this very interesting study.

  • @falkenvir
    @falkenvir Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for making this refreshing Archeology Docu, instead of Alien Conspiracy theories.

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch Před 3 lety +4

    Ancient books as the Mahabharata from India and the Popol Vuh from the Maya tell us that the earth is suffering from a cycle of natural disasters. These disasters are causing a huge tidal wave, floods, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and a bombardment of fiery meteors. Many animal species become extinct, mankind hardly survives. This creates a cycle of civilizations. One of these civilizations is, near the end of their existence, higher developed than our civilization today. They vanished 20,000 years ago because of the next recurring, thus predictable, disaster. To tell us that they existed, they constructed huge monuments like the pyramids in Egypt. And places to survive a disaster high in the mountains like Puma Punku and Tiwanaku in Bolivia and Machu Picchu and Saqsaywaman in Peru. And they left behind countless artifacts that certainly could not have been created by a primitive civilization. To learn much more about the cycle of civilizations and its timeline, recurring floods, ancient high tech and alien deities, read the e-book: "what I know about Nibiru". You can read it nicely on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Just search for: know Nibiru

  • @jimmyrustler8983
    @jimmyrustler8983 Před 3 lety +14

    A thought that occured to me recently was that, if these Megalithic structures DO date back past the Ice Age, would the theory of these ancient civilisations using megafauna to transport materials, and help build these structures make sense?
    That being said, this doesn't help explain how they managed to carve Granite without metal tools....

    • @thelaurens1996
      @thelaurens1996 Před 2 lety

      They supposedly knew of a lost technology through chemistry (combining plants and minerals) that could make rocks such as granite and marble less hard in the applied spots or even make it soft.
      This has more and more evidence supporting this , not only in south american civilizations, but also in Africa and the like.

    • @GLOWINGUP1234
      @GLOWINGUP1234 Před rokem

      It's not granite.. it's petrified wood. Check out Wise UP channel

    • @Pierre-B
      @Pierre-B Před rokem

      They totally had metal tools, ancient civilisation of south america are known for their skills in metal forging!

    • @al2207
      @al2207 Před rokem

      @@GLOWINGUP1234 you do not understand you are in a delusional cult based on nothing

    • @GLOWINGUP1234
      @GLOWINGUP1234 Před rokem

      @@al2207 No, I am not in a "delusional cult", and my wisdom comes from a lot of [something], not "nothing". FYI, Wisdom, is knowledge put into action. So, if you are one of those "followers" of what the popular or trending mass consensus is, then you are fast asleep, lazy, and/or simply not chosen. Hope you learn our TRUE past history, given that your not afraid of the truth that is.....

  • @wag0NE
    @wag0NE Před 2 lety +4

    The traces of diffusionism are clear genetically so it is great work looking at the language as you can imagine if a culture crosses over and they have no particular word for the item they are trading they would surely just go with what the others call it. The similarity of 'far' got me too because I can only imagine them trying to explain how far they had come. Their conception of far might be a few miles, and they go no... far far far away.

  • @edmundosanchez4994
    @edmundosanchez4994 Před 3 lety +4

    Amazing piece
    Thanks for the doc guys

  • @SurfKwonDo1
    @SurfKwonDo1 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Quality content

  • @trevorluarks567
    @trevorluarks567 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Its always nice and refreshing to see our young minds piece thiscpuzzle together and spending time on this too is remarkable. The perception of the old schools about the new school is skewed and judgemental bc youngsters are interested in these topics,clubbing and taylor Swift is their focus,Lol very good to see you guys peaking your interest on the anomalies of this planet,true history is what we should be on. Thx guys and i really appreciate your time and efforts towards this

    • @anthrolens
      @anthrolens  Před 2 měsíci

      Thank you! I completely agree. Younger generations are seldom taught the full extent of the deeper echelons of history. It’s our responsibility to spread the word and help piece together the puzzle.

  • @MakHash420
    @MakHash420 Před 3 lety +9

    Very logical and well done. You deserve more subs for the quality of work you do. Keep it up please and thank you.

  • @TonyTrupp
    @TonyTrupp Před 2 lety +1

    Tiwanaku is at an elevation of 3800 meters, so rising sea levels wouldn’t have been related. If the locals refer to a flood, that likely would have been from nearby lake titicaca, perhaps fed by glacial meltwater. The younger dryas was also more of a north American phenomenon, where the swing in temperature in south america was much more gradual and less extreme. The megafauna extinctions in south america peaked about 400 years after that in north america, where many megafauna species lived for thousands of years beyond that point. So the notion that it was a younger dryas comet impact cataclysm that wiped out the megafauna in south america doesn’t really stand up to scrutiny. We also see a slow and steady progression in the advancement of lithic tools through the younger dryas, where that period doesn’t seem to have caused a loss of technology or cultural setback due to some cataclysm. The symbol of viracocha in the tiwanaku arch is also very similar to that of the inca, so likely that they have close cultural roots, rather than belonging to some other long lost distant civilization. We also see the proliferation of tiwanaku pottery during the rise of that culture, where that pottery can be accurately dated at numerous sites in the area. So the notion that tiwanaku is far far older isn’t really supported by archeological findings. It’s also worth noting that Graham Hancock was originally a science fiction writer, and even now about half of what he alleges is psuedoscience at best, mixed with naive uninformed speculation, which really isn’t supported by a close examination of evidence. It makes for an intriguing story, and helps his book sales, but he’s really not a credible source for people looking for the truth.

  • @stephenstacey8075
    @stephenstacey8075 Před 3 lety +6

    This documentary is very well done indeed very interesting topic

  • @jimbo8743
    @jimbo8743 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Awesome 👍

  • @lilschrager
    @lilschrager Před rokem +4

    Very well done, and really interesting hypotheses, but I feel it would have helped to know more about the Imara origin stories to further help piece together whether or not they are descendants of Tiwanaku. Also great job listing your sources I suck at getting that stuff together.

  • @jimanastasio192
    @jimanastasio192 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video. I've seen many videos on this subject but not examined from this perspective. Good stuff.

  • @bradgregory6995
    @bradgregory6995 Před 3 lety +23

    Good text sourcing, and nicely logical, and appropriately restrained, theorizing.
    It seems to me that the tendency to expect to find a SINGLE answer to most questions is really hampering the investigation of South American settlement and civilizations.
    The
    a) multiple population sources (Japanese, Polynesian, Siberian),
    b) frequent and dramatioc (in geological terms) changes in depth and extent of Tititcaca and
    c) an older and more technologically accomplished civilization, destroyed near or after the end of the Maximum Glaciation by some as-yet undefined cataclysm, did exist and accounts for the remarkable and inexplicable building techniques in Sachsuyaman, Puma Punku, Cuzco, and so many other sites...are ALL VALID HYPOTHESES.
    This is fascinating, and it's kind of depressing to see evidence suppressed by "scientists" protecting their reputations, academic positions and grant money by insisting we have already a full explanation. We don't.

    • @anthrolens
      @anthrolens  Před 3 lety +7

      Thank you for your comment! I completely agree. There certainly exists some pretty damaging biases in the archeological community that can prevent progress. I’m glad you enjoyed the content and questions proposed in the video!

    • @leteng7
      @leteng7 Před 2 lety

      Here is more information in the "inexplicable building techniques" czcams.com/video/rf9qK9QTlq0/video.html

  • @mrmanch204
    @mrmanch204 Před rokem +6

    Absolutely first class objective piece of exceptionally well researched work. So glad you didn't get fixed to the date of construction the 'experts' use, thus never getting past the first post of discovery.
    Thank you.

  • @cowdog3940
    @cowdog3940 Před 3 lety +9

    You make some really great points/connections here. You don’t have to look very hard to see the Japanese/Asian connections to the people of South America. It shows up over and over again in the continent’s most ancient artifacts/figurines.

  • @OMADRevolution
    @OMADRevolution Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant. Thanks!

  • @jonathanmitchell9886
    @jonathanmitchell9886 Před 3 lety +11

    There's a book by A. Hyatt Verrill & Ruth Verrill called *America's Ancient Civilizations* which apparently has been completely forgotten, but the authors made an interesting case for contact between pre-Columbian cultures and seafaring Near Easterners. A long list of Sumerian and Aymara/Quechua cognates is provided at the end of the book.

    • @NewCommunion32
      @NewCommunion32 Před 3 lety +3

      I will check that out, thank you!

    • @Kinetic-Energy117
      @Kinetic-Energy117 Před 2 lety +1

      I have that book in my lap as I type this...I'm on pg 204, "the gateway to the sun"
      Let's discuss more, subscribe to my page and comment or however you can get me so we can share thoughts my friend...

    • @jonathanmitchell9886
      @jonathanmitchell9886 Před 2 lety

      @@Kinetic-Energy117 Will do! I'm glad to hear that someone else is familiar with the book.

    • @jasonhutter7534
      @jasonhutter7534 Před rokem

      When was the book published? Im sure there are engineering cognates across the globe but I think it has more to do with the way humans think than any notable contact.

  • @dineshramjattan8336
    @dineshramjattan8336 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent work.. very informative...

  • @marianlewis1603
    @marianlewis1603 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely Fascinating ! Great Job .

  • @2ellas2
    @2ellas2 Před 2 lety +1

    Great production

  • @jasonberezny9705
    @jasonberezny9705 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent presentation.👁❤️

  • @HelmetVanga
    @HelmetVanga Před 3 lety +3

    @ 16:55 The elephant, it appears to depict the face of an elephant, but my study and training and observation since the age of 10 yrs old now 63, what you see is two CONDOR picks standing upwards.. The Tiwanaku people were obsessed with the condor, snake and puma. If you want to see this evidence find the Kuntur Monolith which has the face of a condor and human body.

  • @christophermacbeth4034
    @christophermacbeth4034 Před 3 lety +5

    THE ANNUNAKI

    • @NewCommunion32
      @NewCommunion32 Před 3 lety

      yes, I think it is all linked together. Thank you.

  • @huntergatherer8972
    @huntergatherer8972 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent documentary

  • @shermanatorosborn9688
    @shermanatorosborn9688 Před 3 lety +6

    Conduits at Tiwanaku have stalactites that are 12000 years old . Gpr says 2 more sunken plazas

  • @newbermuda
    @newbermuda Před 2 lety +1

    incredibly well-done

  • @raygardener9310
    @raygardener9310 Před rokem +2

    Well Done young Sir

  • @eglwysfawr4076
    @eglwysfawr4076 Před 2 lety +1

    Absolutely awsome video... I thank you for your work ✌🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿... subbed too.

  • @msg36093
    @msg36093 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent work.

  • @reviewsfitness
    @reviewsfitness Před 3 lety +2

    You did a great job keep it up 👍

  • @Merovigne
    @Merovigne Před rokem +2

    Great find. well put together. I can save your search alot of time. There is much more linguistic connection to Hindus Tamil Sanskrit. From the gods to the divine consciousness. What is found inside at the bottom of these temple pyramids is a huge clue to the god that South Americans and Hindus worshipped.

  • @KbB-kz9qp
    @KbB-kz9qp Před rokem +1

    It makes sense that an Asian culture may have visited South America so many centuries ago.

  • @explorerlouis
    @explorerlouis Před 2 lety

    Nice content! Keep going! :)

  • @Alexandra36968
    @Alexandra36968 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the knowledge

  • @andyoclover
    @andyoclover Před 3 lety +3

    Well done!

  • @SashaTibelius
    @SashaTibelius Před rokem +2

    You visited Puma Punku and Tiwanaku. Why you didn’t mention about high level of technology which was used to build those sites?

  • @TJ-uo8ct
    @TJ-uo8ct Před 3 lety +3

    Nice Job - well spoken

  • @togwm
    @togwm Před 8 měsíci +2

    Iturralde crater...have you ever heard of it.?..it would have made a horrific cataclysmic event...from what I read about it...says the impact happened somewhere between 5000 and 11000 years ago with the effect of a not unlike nuclear mega blast that would have vaporized anything organic in its path also leaving scorched scares.on structures made of stone and totally demolishing others...If you just look for it you will at least find this.particular possible answer ..but it still leaves you with the mystery of how all these ancient structures were built in the first place.. like Puma Punku..and many other sites!!!
    One day I hope to visit these sites in person and see which sides of the structures are scorched and see.if the sides correspond with the Iturralde airburst asteroid site...on that note I enjoyed tagging along with you on your video😊😉

    • @togwm
      @togwm Před 8 měsíci

      One more thing...there are sea horses in Lake Titicaca😊

  • @jeffcampbell1555
    @jeffcampbell1555 Před 3 lety +7

    Very well done, Thank you. I appreciate the citations and scholarly restraint. South America, like Egypt, seems to ignite quests of understanding among intellectual explorers. Academics are bound by rules of evidence that frustrate alternative researchers, but sometimes the latter push facts in fantasy. Your conclusions seem well grounded. I love how genetic links can prove a hypothesis that has no archeological evidence--yet found--making humans the bearers of living history.

  • @xxbabywolf3396
    @xxbabywolf3396 Před 3 lety +1

    This was very good

  • @DavidPerez-hf1lm
    @DavidPerez-hf1lm Před 2 lety

    Good Job!

  • @walkerflocker7811
    @walkerflocker7811 Před 3 lety +4

    I wonder if there is any connection with that ainu(sic?) People of Japan? They were the original inhabitants of the island and were white skinned and had big beards. There are a few of them left today, they have long been regarded as second class citizens in japan, from my understanding.

  • @MichaelJohnson-jt5cu
    @MichaelJohnson-jt5cu Před 3 lety +9

    Underground water tunnels in Puma Punku has been dated to 12-13 thousand years old at a minimum.

  • @walkerflocker7811
    @walkerflocker7811 Před 3 lety +6

    This is excellent!

  • @dionerueti357
    @dionerueti357 Před 3 lety +5

    We call sweet potato, Kumara in Nz too!

  • @calenlight6817
    @calenlight6817 Před rokem +1

    The original settlers at Lake Tiwanaku were red and blonde haired people high large stature! They arrived there after a long migration from what is currently called Iran around 7- 9,000 years ago. Much information can be seen in this documentary:
    "The Bearded Gods Speak" - By Thor Heyerdahl (1971):
    czcams.com/video/gW1udPORHbA/video.html
    Conformation of this can be seen in this video below and more vids in the side bar of it!
    'The Redheads' New Zealand Ancient History Documentary:
    czcams.com/video/BRjyDGOVcXE/video.html

  • @Eigil_Skovgaard
    @Eigil_Skovgaard Před 3 lety +2

    It would be helpful if local authorities allowed further excavation of the sites. The same problem exists in Egypt. What are they hiding or preserving? Think about an underground facility filled with the ancient tools necessary to make precise stone cutting in granite and basalt. Who would want to discover it first? The local authorities of course, either to be the first to present it - or to keep it a secret.

    • @batpoolzilla3200
      @batpoolzilla3200 Před 2 lety

      The Bolivian government is afraid of the city getting damaged as a colateral effect of new excavations. I rember that one highschool teacher showed us a documentary which explained that Tiwanaku was the Lost city of Atlantis. It is said that coca leafs have been found in ancient egyptian tombs. Aymara and Quechua being similar to japanese is not true at all though. Because the japanese language has the all the vowels aieuo, while Quechua and aymara only have a,i,u. The way that some words are spoken in Quechua would be hard if not impossible to be spoken by a native japanese speaker. I am bolivian and the government tried to forcé Quechua into the currículum of schools, which is really counterproductive considering that everyone in the country speaks spanish. And the minorities which don't speak spanish, neither speak Quechua or Aymara but other toungues that are not even spoken by millions but by hundreds or thousands at most.

    • @Eigil_Skovgaard
      @Eigil_Skovgaard Před 2 lety

      @@batpoolzilla3200 Normal human curiosity would make me dig further. It's a site of global interest. National authorities should look at these sites as a common heritage of humanity. And modern excavation methods are safe if they are well planned. The excavation could be one section after the other so the tourism remained undisturbed.

  • @trevorluarks567
    @trevorluarks567 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Tiwanaku goes back to the flood,look at how the massive stone are thrown around like legos and buried deep in muddy sediment. Its hella old,flood story which is about 36,000 years ago or older

  • @vikjoe
    @vikjoe Před 3 lety

    Kudos.

  • @SNROPQUEYR
    @SNROPQUEYR Před 2 lety

    ***Excellent Documentary***
    Henut Taui, or Henuttaui, Henuttawy 1000 BC was an Ancient Egyptian priestess during the 21st Dynasty whose remains were mummified. She is mainly known for being one of the so-called "cocaine mummies".
    Distance from Lima Peru to Cairo Egypt by air using a Vimāna (Ancient flying craft) 12,500 km.
    Distance from Lima Peru to Cairo Egypt by sea around south Chile, to Gibraltar onto Cairo 23,500 km. certainly a tedious sea voyage!

  • @nickidaisydandelion4044

    Those cement blocks were made out of a geopolymer. A professor from Bolivia examined the material and even found plant material particles, bio carbon particles and plastic polymer particles evenly distributed throughout the stone or cement material. He tried to recapture the migration route and whether the ancient natives could have created this. He leaves this open for discussion. I believe that much more advanced civilizations have visited there and created settlement cities. This could have happened even millions of years ago possibly 30 million years ago before the human lineage ever evolved to this level. I believe that there were lineages of humanoids who evolved from dinosaurs 100 million years ago or farther back. Humans evolved from small dinosaurs as well but much later.

  • @raf171
    @raf171 Před rokem

    I think it’s pretty obvious that the natives in that area (all of turtle island from Alaska to Chile ) are descendants of the civilizations that were there way before

  • @mikem4432
    @mikem4432 Před rokem

    It is clear that Tiawanaku was destroyed by a tidal wave of mud that covered it and blew away the structures made of tons of rocks like sticks more than 30,000 years ago. It was ancient by the time any humans came there. It was not built by man, but a man-like(branch from the hominids) ancestor that went extinct before the first people came from anywhere else. The carvings on the sun gate where made much later by human tribes.

  • @bankjob71
    @bankjob71 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Puma Punku
    Now the whole earth had one language and the same words. And as people migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there. And they said to one another, “Come, let us make bricks, and burn them thoroughly.” And they had brick for stone, and bitumen for mortar. Then they said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens, and let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth.” (Genesis 11:1-4)
    Puma Punku
    And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the children of man had built. And the Lord said, “Behold, they are one people, and they have all one language, and this is only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another’s speech.” (Genesis 11:5-7)
    Tiwanaku
    So the Lord dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city. Therefore its name was called Babel, because there the Lord confused the language of all the earth. And from there the Lord dispersed them over the face of all the earth. (Genesis 11:8-9)

  • @shadowdancer3531
    @shadowdancer3531 Před 2 lety

    You have one big problem with the theory of younger dryas, there is no way possible it could have raised sea levels to over 10,000 feet to flood Tihuanaco and Lake Titicaca and have no evidence else where. The Caral civilization pre-dates Tihuanaco and there is no evidence that the Caral ruins experienced water damage. In fact all Peruvian and Bolivian sites pre-Inca should have water damage and be buried in mud or sediment layers but we do not find this. So it’s a true conundrum how Tihuanaco was buried and it’s structures damaged how they were. Some of the megalithic stones are as faraway as 30km from Puma Punku.

  • @akatikbalang
    @akatikbalang Před 3 lety +1

    I think PUMAPUNKU is a engineering school ..of stone cutting ..thats is why all we can see in there is masterpieces cut stones...all pieces are just showcase of drilling and cutting techniques....thats why theres no way to assemble those stone cuts into a ..single structure...

  • @danielschmitt1935
    @danielschmitt1935 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Those are molds. Somehow they melted granite and poured it into molds.

  • @giggletitty
    @giggletitty Před 3 lety +8

    This is great! I'd recommend looking into the video from this Geopolymer Institute in Europe; it's really long, but they concluded that the blocks at Puma Punku are most likely a cement-like mixture, with gravely andesite (they were also able to locate the source) combined with organic compounds. It makes more sense to think they were "molded" as opposed to "carved." Also, fascinating Japanese/Aymara connection! Another cognate is Birako (Sha?) and Viracocha. Bira Ko is a large lake in Japan. I don't know enough japanese to get any deeper into that, though.

    • @anthrolens
      @anthrolens  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks for your comment! Awesome, I will for sure check that video out!

    • @valentintin2
      @valentintin2 Před 3 lety +5

      The "moulded" theory opens even more questions to me. Today's concrete last for 150 to 200 years and inserting iron wire in it is a must. Those blocks lasted for thousands of years almost intact.

    • @tonytimonis8732
      @tonytimonis8732 Před 3 lety +2

      Geopolymer ???? 😂🤦‍♂️

    • @mickleblade
      @mickleblade Před 3 lety +2

      @@valentintin2 the romans used concrete in their constructions without steel reinforcing, think colloseum

    • @mickleblade
      @mickleblade Před 3 lety +1

      @@tonytimonis8732 concrete...

  • @disklamer
    @disklamer Před rokem

    Nothing about how these structures were built? Not even the observation that the stonework is beyond extraordinary even by today’s technological standards.

  • @MrJota440
    @MrJota440 Před rokem

    Good.

  • @brynsaltmashe4810
    @brynsaltmashe4810 Před rokem

    I’m still fascinated on how they carved these H blocks and more importantly what was this structure for was it some kind of refinery maybe even a Stargate 🤷

  • @vOCesUGa1
    @vOCesUGa1 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank Brein

  • @SimonSozzi7258
    @SimonSozzi7258 Před 3 lety +1

    Regardless, it was still built by indigenous people. Just because it was long abandoned by the people there at the time doesn't mean some different groups of indigenous peoples didn't build it. Especially since Peru has some of the oldest cities in the WORLD. Caral for example...the Chavin culture, the Moche, the Chimu and many others way before the Inca and the Wari. Maybe, maybe, maybe there might have been contact with Pacific Islanders. But direct contact with 1st generation Japanese is HIGHLY unlikely. That's ridiculously far. Plus the genetics just don't bear that out. We definitely don't know all there is to know about these ancient cultures but that we know.

    • @NewCommunion32
      @NewCommunion32 Před 3 lety

      Yes, I believe that too. It was people who we likely have no history of at this point.

    • @colinchampollion4420
      @colinchampollion4420 Před rokem

      This Megalithic City was Atlantic built

  • @twstf8905
    @twstf8905 Před 2 lety +1

    Hahaha Sweet Potato seeds aren't carried across vast tracts of ocean atop floating debris lol they're transported there, throughout the South Pacific from the mainland inside the belly of multiple species of Sea Birds and Gulls.
    (That's the whole, "Birds," part in; "The Birds and the Bees," thing, ya dig?! 😇)
    (I'm just sayin' 🤜 💥 🤛)
    #ConstructiveCriticism
    #DontShootTheMessenger ✌

  • @Dovid2000
    @Dovid2000 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Could Tiwanaku have been built by peoples that inhabited the land before the Great Deluge in the days of Noah?

  • @jchrg2336
    @jchrg2336 Před 3 lety +1

    That's not just a stone, that is also art, of a lion catching both his spouse and the one betraying the ritual of union by the leg and displays them upside down
    Severe punishment followed for them both afterwards..

  • @HelmetVanga
    @HelmetVanga Před 3 lety

    @ 20:36 the bearded monolith is evidence that Tiwanaku and Puma Punku is a 4 cultural civilization en sequence. The bearded monolith tells us that was one Culture with rudimentary tools. The second civilization is the one that did the amazing cuts and drilling with precision, then the Pukina speaking people and lastly the Aymara culture came last who were mostly concern about farming and weather. The Pacific may have reached this area long long ago if you watch the motifs on Ponce monolith you will see crabs around its body. The Tiwanaku people appears to have learnt stone masonry from the Chipaya culture which is much older. See the Chipaya court yard which resembles to the Tiwanaku sunken temple but less elaborated.

  • @stevesalkas9128
    @stevesalkas9128 Před rokem

    Love puma history

  • @HelmetVanga
    @HelmetVanga Před 3 lety

    People traveling from Beringa to the Andes highly unlikely. It was more probable to have reached from the Pacific. To substantiate this watch the magna bowl at the museum, this bowl has Sumerian inscription found by a farmer near Lake Titicaca. Polynesians' writing altogether different from Sumerian.

  • @al2207
    @al2207 Před 2 lety

    please update your video the Greenland meteor impact was at 2.5 millions years ago mark

  • @stan7764ify
    @stan7764ify Před 3 lety +1

    How many centuries would it take for Noah’s flood to cover the pyramids with sand?

  • @akwabanthebe5836
    @akwabanthebe5836 Před 2 lety +1

    The meaning of TIWANAKU is "Stone and Clay Writings". There should definitely be such writings within the vicinity.
    Also PUMA means CUBE or BAR
    The PUNKU sounds like A PILE which will make Puma Punku a PILE OF CUBE STONES ( CUBE stone walls)
    From the most ancient and first international language of man, in Africa and Asia, the Akan language.

    • @batpoolzilla3200
      @batpoolzilla3200 Před 2 lety +1

      Punku means door in quechua

    • @batpoolzilla3200
      @batpoolzilla3200 Před 2 lety

      Tiwanaku is also pronounced as tihuanaco which literraly means where the huanaco sits down

    • @akwabanthebe5836
      @akwabanthebe5836 Před 2 lety

      @@batpoolzilla3200 Wow !!, TIHUANACO means differently from Tiwanaku.
      Literally "ti-hu-anaco" translates in Akan as "sit-to-see-Anaco" meaning an elevation where either the king, the god or the army sat to see or watch over Anaco* ( should be the name of the city).
      This confirms your statement " where the Huanaco *sits down*

    • @akwabanthebe5836
      @akwabanthebe5836 Před 2 lety

      @@batpoolzilla3200 could also be right when is related to the geography of the site. The valley between two piles ( hills) always creates a gateway and puma punku could translate as such.
      In related words in Akan, 'po-nkum' means "hill and valley".
      Po- hill
      Ku- steep Valley
      The natives could have created a gate in the Valley for security / tax collection post leading to the city.

    • @HelmetVanga
      @HelmetVanga Před rokem

      @@batpoolzilla3200 there is discrepancy when it comes to the word tiay which means to sit down in quechua. The tiwanaco people spoke different language, possibly Pukina, and the people who live near the lake speak Aymara.

  • @CC8CY
    @CC8CY Před rokem

    Great video. But the background music is too loud and distracting!

  • @pennypop408
    @pennypop408 Před 3 lety +4

    well done Thanks.

  • @depurodinerohomie5006
    @depurodinerohomie5006 Před 3 lety +2

    thanks for not mentioning aliens bro. Finally someone who uses common sense research.

    • @anthrolens
      @anthrolens  Před 3 lety +1

      Haha, thanks! I always found some of the ancient astronaut theories to seem like a bit of a cop out.

    • @louieapicella6470
      @louieapicella6470 Před 3 lety +1

      I agree.. tha alien angle reeks of mild racism in my humble opinion

    • @GPDusty
      @GPDusty Před 3 lety +3

      @@louieapicella6470 Racism? tf? I'd love to hear your logic behind that claim.

    • @louieapicella6470
      @louieapicella6470 Před 3 lety

      It seems to me that the "alien agenda" assumes that the ancient natives were incapable of creating these incredible sites. Aliens had to have helped if not created them entirely. Racism might be too harsh a word however. But just because we can't figure out how they did it...doesn't mean that they didn't.

    • @GPDusty
      @GPDusty Před 3 lety

      @@louieapicella6470 Pretty sure they didn't. What this video didn't show is the later reproductions of walls around sites like these, using crudely paired rocks and mortar, while the old walls are a perfect fit with no mortar needed. That kind of precision shows up in sites all around the world, and is always followed up by crude recreations of ancient cultures that the science falsely claims are the constructors of the original megalithic structures. It's nothing to do with racism, it's a simple fact that those most recent civilizations didn't have the capability to utilize such precision. If you're talking about the civilizations before the great flood, there's plenty of old text detailing how gods came down from heavens, created humanity, gave us technology (e.g. ancient sumer).

  • @stevesalkas9128
    @stevesalkas9128 Před rokem +1

    8000 to 1200 years old