Massive Megalithic Mountain In The Jungle Of Bolivia

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  • čas přidán 26. 01. 2015
  • www.hiddenincatours.com
    Located in the high Bolivian jungle, Samaipata is a unique ancient megalithic site whose creators are as of yet unknown...
    More about Samaipata here:
    hiddenhumanhistory.com/?s=sama...

Komentáře • 248

  • @chuckufarley5573
    @chuckufarley5573 Před 9 lety +20

    Historians can't come up with logical explanations, so they say it was done by a civilization that was clearly incapable, and that post-dates the era when the carvings were actually done. Truth is, they don't have a clue. Love the insights Brien, keep up the good work!

  • @Gatofranco
    @Gatofranco Před 6 lety +3

    Bolivia turns out to be one of the most misterious and fascinating countries in the World! Thank you very much for the posting. Your work and endeavours are unique!

  • @jedjohndalhaus
    @jedjohndalhaus Před 9 lety +23

    I'm writing an essay on your work for college at this very moment. Thank you for all of the amazing information over the years, great video.

    • @clairehughes6280
      @clairehughes6280 Před rokem

      Ive just discovered Brien and it's got my interest
      You may be interested in hangman1128

  • @larrygrant8818
    @larrygrant8818 Před 9 lety +2

    For those who have guessed that Samaipata is a mountain top full of portals, Amaru Muru and Midas City Times X, you are probably right. Portal capability is likely why this special mountain top was desired even though so far from other outposts. It’s a question of Value. This was a valuable location and it looks very old.
    Virtually any race, human or otherwise would be powerfully driven to find such a place and use it while it was active as It may still be.
    The best sense of portal value can be realized first by defining a portal as two separated points which have a connective relationship that allows anything from information to living beings to go in to one end and come out of the other.
    The machinery that connects the two points over miles to light years may remain invisible and incomprehensible to the user. In the most advanced form you step through without even sensing that some small or great distance has intervened between the two points although you may have a visible entrance and a visible exit as seen on this mountain top.
    Portals may be bidirectional, with both entrance and exit the same opening like any common doorway.
    We have already pushed the viewing-only form of portal almost to the limits and the results have proven immensely profitable.
    Apple Computers has just passed the highest income quarter of any company ever and what do they make?
    Portals.
    Little portals, big portals, portable portals, portals are their most popular manufactured product.
    Made by the millions and millions of copies.
    These electronic portals can take you places, at least the sight and sound of places. You can see the surface of the entire globe through the Google Earth portal, access almost infinite amounts of information, buy almost anything through portals, watch detailed pictures, both moving and still from a large expanse of history.
    With the tap of a finger we can view the actual surface of Mars.
    When you hold any of these electricity based portal devices in your hand you are holding something which all of history would have paid any price no matter how dear, travelled any distance to see, gone through any privation to own.
    The idea of viewing portals is very ancient and likely begins with the idea of Skrying or Crystal Ball gazing.
    The weakness of Crystal Ball portals is that the images do not appear for everyone and while perhaps the visions of the future and past do tap into realities they are very dicey and I doubt that anyone could use Skrying for actions that require high levels of accuracy such as international finance, transfers of funds, tracking one’s bank account. The crystalline images are not necessarily predictable and can distort and invert as with the mental portal of prophecy.
    Around 1832-37 we developed practical electricity, the child of lightning which terrified our ancestors but now purrs like a kitten for us. With electricity came the telegraph and we suddenly existed in a new world where information could be rapidly transferred to great distances with perfect accuracy from portal entry to portal exit.
    While the history of the first viewing portals has a complex beginning the practical opening of visual portals began in the 1820’s with the first photographs. These primitive processes produced black and white portals that could record an accurate look into the past to the date on which they were taken.
    Portal invention really went berserk when we invented both the ‘peep show’ device, the ‘Kinetoscope’ and its larger scale audience devices, the motion picture camera and projector in the 1890’s.
    At this moment in time portal invention went far beyond impressive! One could love or hate or fear or be sent into reams of soaked handkerchief emotion by what amounted to no more than shadows cast on a wall, shadows in silver which moved in exactly the same ways as the people who were acting in front of cameras somewhere else in time and place, shadows which to the eye and mind showed real people doing real things.
    Then came Phonograph records, portals to music, Radio, invisible waves that talked and Television, Coast to Coast visions of Lucy and Desi!
    These original portals have become overwhelmingly important parts of human life and due to their amazing value we have advanced the idea of visual portals as far as we could at each step in technology.
    Now we have portals into almost any aspect of the world, portals which any of us can view through at any moment, portals which can let us look out at the real surface of the head of a comet, confident that if we could go there the landscape would look exactly as we see it through our amazing electronic portal devices.
    But the power of portals has so far denied us one important factor which is still vastly more valuable than viewing through portals; reaching through them or walking through them into the places we want to go, to bring back for our own the actual objects we desire upon seeing.
    Our present portals, no matter how appealing and seductive and profitable are still shiny windows but not open doors. We can look but not touch and we cannot travel through them.
    Yet.
    So the corporation that can understand how simply carved doorways in stone reach far into space and dimension and past AND future will own the world due to the desire we will instantly express to not just see there but to be there.
    Because we go totally crazy over the portal experience. ANY portal experience!
    Can we actually do this? Can we complete the cycle of portals into the ultimate touching and touring device?
    Of course we can! We have done so many ‘impossible’ things with technology that we need only discover one more step forward and we are there.
    That step has begun with the discovery of dark matter boiling out of the core of our sun. Soon we will find that it also boils out of the core of our own planet. At that point we can begin the analysis, engineering and production of Mega-technology and the opening of physical portals just like those used by the beings that carved these doorways into stone walls, only a bit smaller and lighter.
    First through Amaru Muru and the others, then onward into forever.
    Hold on to your hats and batteries folks, the real ride is very close to beginning.
    Larry

  • @MrMagnumforce1
    @MrMagnumforce1 Před 2 lety +2

    Very nice as always. The Earth is so big and you manage to find these great places and share with us. Thank you

  • @queenbodicea
    @queenbodicea Před 5 lety +1

    You have a great level fitness to climb those steps and still be able to talk! Well done.

  • @brienfoerster
    @brienfoerster  Před 9 lety +58

    The latest video with my quad copter Pachacutec.

    • @SkyValleyStuff
      @SkyValleyStuff Před 9 lety +2

      i enjoy your videos, keep up the good work !

    • @SkyValleyStuff
      @SkyValleyStuff Před 9 lety +3

      ***** any of the knowledge that may have been left at the end of the egyptian people who may have had any information about the people before, was burned by the christians in the crusades, and then we had 1000 years of nothing (the dark ages) but our best guess is 10- 13,000 years ago.

    • @PYakMan1
      @PYakMan1 Před 9 lety +1

      Will be very interesting when the archaeologists scan all the country with LIDAR etc and find all the cities/monuments as are doing in other countries. An American lady found the Lighthouse of Portus etc and much more in a much more efficient manner, especially when vegetative cover is in place, these methods excel.
      Maybe we'll have to get a funding thing going and buy you a LIDAR kit for your Quad-Copter lol, just kidding mate, they are too big (I Think).

    • @supafly1982
      @supafly1982 Před 9 lety +2

      nunya bidness it was not the Christians burning the stuff in the crusades, the templars never burned material, neither did the catharsis, it was specifically the Vatican, they also burned the cathars and templars die to the knowledge they brought as it was a direct risk to the Vatican, the catholic/pagan religion.

    • @supafly1982
      @supafly1982 Před 9 lety +1

      I'm well aware of the genocide that took place, our culture was destroyed by these people long before the albegensian crusades, the crusades, Spanish inquisition, native americans etc our Gaelic tribal heritage was under attack for thousands of years, eventually monarchy and religion slowly eroded it. Sure in the end we still have clans however the burning of our works that were eventually written down were either twisted or burned. Religious wars destroying thousands of years of our culture, we lost a lot and the dark ages just topped it all off

  • @AlexFate
    @AlexFate Před 9 lety

    Fantastic shots of a great site. Cheers Brien.

  • @nihilisticnut9916
    @nihilisticnut9916 Před 9 lety +2

    Love your work Brien. Brilliant!

  • @MrGoulden
    @MrGoulden Před 5 lety

    Its so obvious that our ancient ancestors had technology that we can only dream of, thank you Brien for sharing your knowledge with the people

  • @nigelking1559
    @nigelking1559 Před 9 lety

    Awesome! Thankyou Brien.

  • @stevenstech128
    @stevenstech128 Před 9 lety +2

    Great vids as always thanks.

  • @cfapps7865
    @cfapps7865 Před 9 lety +2

    That is pretty incredible. Those 2 evenly placed tracks just look like they served a specific important function here. Looks like "tracks" from other pre-history sites. I have read where there are animal carvings here, just wondering if they are from the Inca, and if they are anthropomorphic depictions? Another really ancient site over a mile in elevation. Great video !!

    • @spacecreatorband
      @spacecreatorband Před 9 lety +1

      agreed . , just like the "cart ruts" on malta . , ,www.newgeology.com/index.php?lang=en&id=malta_1

  • @filiporkowski
    @filiporkowski Před 9 lety +1

    Great stuff, thank you Brien!

  • @DylanFanification
    @DylanFanification Před 8 lety

    Thank u again good sir! Another awesome vid.

  • @gcrady
    @gcrady Před 9 lety +2

    Wow,, what another amazing world treasure !
    During one of the high cam shots,,, there appears to be additional bench-cut hilltops, adjacent to this one.

  • @PYakMan1
    @PYakMan1 Před 9 lety

    Superb quality quad-copter video Brian. This places flummoxes my mind lol. Most places I do have my own opinion/idea/fantasy of what they MAY be, this place, haven't got a clue, brilliant. Huge, took thousands of man hours to shape, yet doesn't make sense to us, so cool.
    Take care, look forward to more megalithic mystery tours.

  • @redmercurypr
    @redmercurypr Před 9 lety

    Thanks for your videos. It's the only way I'll be able to visit these places.

  • @texasbuzzard4970
    @texasbuzzard4970 Před 5 lety

    Awesome video. Excellent work

  • @walts440
    @walts440 Před 9 lety

    Really like your videos Brian. Thanks for them

  • @valam4745
    @valam4745 Před 9 lety

    Thank you Brien on you wonderfull work !!! It is is so natural and real it feels like I was there :)

  • @MichaelMartinussen
    @MichaelMartinussen Před 9 lety +2

    Awesome :) Thank you:)

  • @daisy3690
    @daisy3690 Před 9 lety

    yay for Pachacutec, may it serve you well and long! Great view. TY for sharing. bye

  • @johanwise9713
    @johanwise9713 Před 9 lety

    Hello Brien, thanks for showing all this interesting Locations.

  • @1990Heuw
    @1990Heuw Před 9 lety +2

    What the heck! Thanks for showing us Brien

  • @brianporteous8065
    @brianporteous8065 Před 9 lety +1

    This site is new too me !! Awesome Brien. ! Thank you from Brian. U.k.

  • @Dina8453
    @Dina8453 Před 9 lety +1

    Hi Brian.
    When I looked the reduced mock-up of replica carved mountain, suddenly, I had an intuition that it is a template to construct a spaceship on the shape of monolithic hull. Exactly what we do with high technology to build car hull today. Observe the details carefully on the track 1’ 2”. Cheers.

  • @captkirkconnell
    @captkirkconnell Před 7 lety

    I love your work.

  • @cozmoruckaz
    @cozmoruckaz Před 9 lety

    so freaking amazing Brien....

  • @casaamaril
    @casaamaril Před 9 lety +12

    Very interesting and rare footage, at least to me, I had never heard of this site. It reminds me of the complex at Yonaguni, Japan.

    • @MooPotPie
      @MooPotPie Před 9 lety +1

      What complex? Do you mean the natural geological formations mistaken for manmade construction by people who are not geologists?

    • @casaamaril
      @casaamaril Před 9 lety

      MooPotPie It all depends on how you look at things, it may be and it may not be a natural geological formation. Fact of the matter is that pyramid like structures have been found all over the world either on land or in the ocean.

    • @MooPotPie
      @MooPotPie Před 9 lety +1

      Of course there are pyramid like structures around the world, I was referring to the so-called Yonaguni Monument specifically. Unlike obviously manmade megaliths, it can be attributed to natural geological forces.

    • @MooPotPie
      @MooPotPie Před 9 lety

      seanlaca I agree that it's natural. I tend to trust the assessment of geologists over that of "new age" speculators when it comes to matters of geology.

    • @MooPotPie
      @MooPotPie Před 9 lety

      seanlaca Nat Geo presents differing opinions, but does not come down on one side or the other . . . at least not in this article:
      news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/070919-sunken-city_2.html
      Personally, I'm putting my money on Dr. Schoch's analysis. I trust his expertise on the erosion of the Great Sphinx, and I believe he's right about Yonaguni as well . . . same goes for the Bosnian "pyramids".

  • @memebump9229
    @memebump9229 Před 9 lety +5

    Damn this stuff amazes me and I am ignorant to most things.

  • @ShrKhAan
    @ShrKhAan Před 9 lety +1

    Well Mr Brien, till today after some 20 years of reading about this stuff I'm astonished to contemplate a job of giants. By looking at the rock surface what time guess would do a geologist since the rock carving times... to me this is a quarry, on a past video of yourself on top a small hill you showed also some incredibles carving on rock stones, even you showed what appeared to be the trace of a giant tool wich (maybe 30cm thick or more) had eroded a channel on the rock itself. What is the dimensions of a civilization with these huge amazing tools...
    This really shows the work of something very different to wich we can think of, serious job you are doing, thanks a lot !

  • @GianfrancoFronzi
    @GianfrancoFronzi Před 9 lety +2

    This is fascinating .
    What the hell is this unique singular massive cutaway ?
    From before the cataclysm , but not a complicated assembly of stone .
    But a working of one huge outcropping .
    Ah , the stone though has some clues , possibly ?
    As in ; I don't see thousands of years of wear , the cuts are still square and sharp .
    And a lichen has grown on it that , I believe is an indicator of the rocks ability to harbour a life form without destroying it with salinity or vibrational emissions .
    Although the lichen looks aged or even scrubbed .

  • @Henrikbuitenhuis
    @Henrikbuitenhuis Před 9 lety +2

    Thanks from Denmark

  • @TopJimmyWinn
    @TopJimmyWinn Před 9 lety

    Love your channel, i subbed ya too.

  • @sandramowery6727
    @sandramowery6727 Před 8 lety +20

    It looks like a carving of a mother ship.

    • @j2stoud129
      @j2stoud129 Před 5 lety

      I think your right. Maybe actually it is a Mothership. Fossilized by the flood..

  • @brianfriel9382
    @brianfriel9382 Před rokem

    I have been to Samipatta its absolutly amazing when i was there many Condors were flying around

  • @CochabambaIPS
    @CochabambaIPS Před 9 lety

    Great to see that El Fuerte is getting some recognition as one of the most amazing reminders of a more sustainable way of living - but the site has been specifically chosen because it is not in the rainforest.

  • @jamesbegley481
    @jamesbegley481 Před 9 lety +5

    Love your videos keep on exposing the truth

  • @noaglverbodentoegang
    @noaglverbodentoegang Před 7 lety +1

    I wonder if this has been build on a laylines of that area.
    Also when i look at this structure several ideas come to mind.
    Relegious purpose, housing area on top of a mountain or even city of the dead and portals to the afterlife.
    I have recalled reading in some historical books that some locations are not as old as 1500 bce, though stone excevated areas are sometimes hard to be dated unless that you can date the worked upon stones by erosion and other techniques.
    I still think some locations and religions must be a lot older then our calendar dating indicates.
    Thank you for sharing these videos, Hope in the future you would make a documentary of all the locations you have been. I am enjoying it to the fullest.

  • @PTTurboe
    @PTTurboe Před 9 lety +1

    Good one!

  • @mrspesul
    @mrspesul Před 8 lety +16

    Kind of annoying how incans and Egyptians take credit for the ancients work.

    • @heightsofsagarmatha
      @heightsofsagarmatha Před 5 lety +5

      Don't think the Incas took credit for this, they said it was there long before. Modern historians falsely attribute it to the Incas.

  • @gconol
    @gconol Před 9 lety +1

    Amazing work Brien. Your videos really make me have to stop and think about the ancient past. The one thing that keeps popping on my mind is that all these structures seem to have similar building characteristics or techniques. There must have been a civilization that had global influence kinda like what United States is now except they were unchallenged.

    • @TonyTrupp
      @TonyTrupp Před 2 lety

      There’s definitely different styles between different regions though. For example most of the inca attributed sites have trapezoidal doors, windows and niches.

  • @dbradley4065
    @dbradley4065 Před 8 lety +1

    Great video, thanks for your hard work and dedication, that was truely amazing. How about going to the Ural megalithic site? They say the stones there are 3000 to 4000 tons, on top of a mountain, my question is why or what were they trying to keep out, wasn't chickens.

  • @bergmanp2211
    @bergmanp2211 Před 8 lety +2

    Dear Brien ;
    First of all to congratulate you for tour videos
    I grew up in santa cruz de la sierra.ive been to El Fuerte samaipata numerous times 1981,1989,1996 maybe a couple more in between
    Till 1991 they used to let you walk over it .the damage is clear 1989 the "fuerte" was still in ok shape you could distinguish the jaguar,the snake and various other shapes etcetc nowadays this shapes are less clear than what they were.
    Ive heard theories from the locals about it from
    The last frontier of the Incas fighting the Chiriguanos to interstellar airport
    Did you get to see the chinkana? a sort of hole made of the same sandstone that descends in a spiral shape? Theories say it what ans underground tunnel to cuzco and other theories however in the 1980's they say they pulled out a huge snake from it

  • @Fuuten
    @Fuuten Před 9 lety +1

    The lowest of the outcrops, many look like squares for housing, and above said squares there're either ledges or small outcrops that look to be able to hold wooden poles, great places to build a small (or later in the video) big town hall.

  • @MrMkrick
    @MrMkrick Před 9 lety

    I'm stunned! I'm speechless!!!

  • @JoJoghetto
    @JoJoghetto Před 9 lety

    Amazing, it appears as though it was sculpted on top of the world. Beautiful really.

  • @bhajandaniel9771
    @bhajandaniel9771 Před 5 lety +1

    This very much reminds me of the underwater site off the coast of Japan explored by Graham Hancock.

  • @Brentster1953
    @Brentster1953 Před 9 lety +2

    Brien, I think you made a salient point, at the end. How the Inca settled in and did their work, on almost all of the ancient sites? Perhaps marring antiquity?

  • @walterpalmer2749
    @walterpalmer2749 Před 5 lety

    Never heard of this in Bolivia. So many mysteries.

  • @Antipodean33
    @Antipodean33 Před 9 lety

    It does have a quarried look to it though. Maybe it was a quarry and there is some fantastic structure that was built with the stone, that has yet to be found

  • @terrencedays5186
    @terrencedays5186 Před 9 lety +3

    Come on Brian you should be in great shape by now...all the climbing and hiking buddy...lol great vid as usual...sometimes I wonder without all the deception would we have connected all the dots by now from history

  • @mikescot8874
    @mikescot8874 Před 9 lety +1

    I absolutely love your open mind and great video. Just curious, when you say "we got permission," does that mean paid off gaurds? Thank you for letting people know curiosity and common sense are good things.

  • @Welv1987
    @Welv1987 Před 9 lety

    I love what you are doing. One day, when I have the money I will go with you, we have a lot of knowledge to share.

  • @leroylem51
    @leroylem51 Před 9 lety

    The quadcopter is a great tool in these videos; nothing like birdseye view.

  • @Waltercamposg
    @Waltercamposg Před 9 lety

    Muy bueno...

  • @JSondersETVHunter
    @JSondersETVHunter Před 3 lety

    I try to use interglacial periods to date some ancient sites, especially the higher ones and also what was the global weather such as high or low sea levels and so on. It's more than just looking at stone and try to figure out how old it is by apparent erosion. The logic is that the ice covered many places and preserved them and maybe destroyed via glaciation too and it seems logical that they were built as least before the last glaciation which could easily place them from 50,000 to 75,000 years old or more.

  • @17soulable
    @17soulable Před 9 lety +1

    Maybe it was built at that elevation because the builders wanted someone to see it and recognise it. If so, they would have orientated it in a direction recognisable to their target people also? Was there a solar carving on top?

  • @PeerGent
    @PeerGent Před 9 lety +3

    I've seen those rut like lines on top, in books, but I never knew the whole structure was so elaborate. The books tend to only concentrate on them. I don't think it's a quarry, if it is, the model would be sort of like a negative, and you could take clay or something to press into it, to see what the finished product would have looked like. You see similar things in other places, just not as elaborate as this. To us they seem frivolous and nonsensical, but they must have had a purpose. Wow.

    • @PeerGent
      @PeerGent Před 9 lety +1

      I've been studying this for quite some time now and I wonder if the randomness could just be that, random. Is it possible that this structure and others similar, could just be where someone was just teaching someone how to use the machine? Or showing what the machine could do? A sample maybe, or an example? Whatever super duper machine it was.

  • @Clovistoolsdotcom
    @Clovistoolsdotcom Před 9 lety

    Amazing

  • @Lighthazzles
    @Lighthazzles Před 9 lety +9

    Technology Brien? Why, the usual and trusty chicken-bones and copper chisel tool kit of course accompanied by lashings of the whip and chains :D ;)))
    Thanks for yet another new and exciting discovery. How many more artifacts like this are yet to be discovered? More tantalising mysteries.

    • @Whatuniverse
      @Whatuniverse Před 5 lety

      Dumb dumb it's an ancient site. What u think it's suppose to look brand new? After your ppl and moors raped the land and killed and moved the ppl off their lands with TRICKERY?

    • @jeffersonthomas9360
      @jeffersonthomas9360 Před 5 lety

      @@Whatuniverse ummm... it was built thousands of years before the Inca. If you watch Briens videos you will see time after time where the Inca built on ruins they discovered.
      You need to relearn your history, the Inca were gone long before the SPANISH raided Mexico and South America...

  • @Zsolt_Peter_Kodner
    @Zsolt_Peter_Kodner Před 9 lety +1

    Please, Brien Foerster if you have free time make videos at
    Caral, or Caral-Supe (in the Supe Valley, near Supe, Barranca province, Peru, some 200 km north of Lima),
    Pisac (an hour northeast of Cusco),
    Kuelap (what lies in Northwestern Peru),
    Chan Chan (in and around the city of Trujillo),
    Lost City or La Ciudad Perdida (can be reached after a 3 day hike from the city of Santa Marta in Colombia) too.

  • @rosiemarsili265
    @rosiemarsili265 Před 9 lety

    Grazie Brien ,,k

  • @MrPoilleke
    @MrPoilleke Před 4 lety

    Hi Brien, l heard about the ancients using kinda liquid to soften the stones, and it should still be available in the area, ever heard about this?

  • @avlisk
    @avlisk Před 9 lety +5

    Being that the pre-historic cultures thought nothing of moving megalithic blocks hundreds of miles, this site could be a quarry, and the stones removed could still be hiding under thousands of years of Bolivian rain forest growth, yet to be discovered.

    • @Ph0be
      @Ph0be Před 8 lety +2

      How do you know what prehistoric cultures think?

  • @vladtepes9614
    @vladtepes9614 Před 7 lety +2

    No. Mainstream archaeology does not attribute everything at this site to the Incas. The oldest structures were built by the Chané culture. The Incas built their own additions after conquering the city.

  • @scottcromwell1146
    @scottcromwell1146 Před 9 lety +3

    Hey Brien, the overhead shots are really outstanding. However, the continual movement of the quadcopter doesn't allow the viewer a chance to see these particular places of interest you point out for more than a second or two as it flys on by. I mean these new ariel shots are fantastic, but, I also think that if you can get Pachacutec to stop and hover ocassionally over certain sites of interest so we can get a longer overhead view for say 5 to 15 seconds or so, I think would be a nice touch of diversity and a better viewing experience...just sayin'! Great stuff, buddy!

    • @artcarsnguitarsAdamS
      @artcarsnguitarsAdamS Před 9 lety +1

      I can see what you mean, but I just click the pause on 720p. You can observe till the heart's content.

    • @hunakosdem
      @hunakosdem Před 9 lety +1

      I totally agree. Also, in many cases we have Pachacutec (how do you spell this bird?) flying only from one direction of the given site and that is repeated in the video many times. I commented to Brien few times that he is doing some extra important job, but his video skills are somewhat behind. I think these are far the greatest opportunities to make some nice and really valuable shots of the sites, but the opportunities are somewhat remained unfulfilled.
      Fly slowly, show all sides of the site, give overall look from very high, and add some dramatic flybys. That would be totally great and would support his truly amazing work.
      No offense here, I will keep coming back to see his uploads, but only wishes to see some even better footage.

    • @artcarsnguitarsAdamS
      @artcarsnguitarsAdamS Před 9 lety +2

      Today, I was showing a friend of mine and band mate, who is just as fascinated as I am now, in the amazing places Brien has been to and continues to go, of the mind blowing masonry created by the I will say, "inhabitants at the time", in particular his early videos, we both agreed how grainy,shaky and too close to truly enjoy and appreciate the complexity and precision of the work. the quality has improved drastically but the piloting skills I would agree could be improved to fully appreciate the work involved to provide us the footage of his adventures.

  • @TonyTrupp
    @TonyTrupp Před 2 lety

    Even mainstream archeologists don’t think the work on the main rock is from inca times. They think that’s from around 300AD, which is why it’s eroded. The inca did occupy the site much later, but no archeologists I’m aware of are attributing all that stonework to them. Brien is misrepresenting that mainstream understanding here.

  • @haraldpetrulperu-undsudame7750

    Whe we get to see part two ?

  • @mary4011
    @mary4011 Před rokem

    Looks like a lot of other things were carved on top of that as well.

  • @Etihwkcirtap
    @Etihwkcirtap Před 8 lety

    i jave degrees in mathematics and physics, also done construction. the worlds megalithic structure with harmonic resonates defy modern explaination. my human belief is homo capensis and the cone head skulls had iq ranges 150 average. with those high intellectual abilities the developed different technologies than us. im truly humbled by all this

  • @1948DavidS
    @1948DavidS Před 9 lety +1

    Brien, we eventually need to see if Bolivia will permit an extended study of small samples from the mountain to get a better idea of the age by cosmogenic dating. I am not sufficiently educated in geology or archaeology to know which samples to take and the mathematics and statistics of the process. In addition, we are still awaiting our first 3He results for the funded project. You are connected with some scientists that can help. Food for thought. BTW, what kind of sandstone? High silica or feldspar?

  • @BabaMakhanya
    @BabaMakhanya Před 5 měsíci

    Wow! Those doors carved out CLEAN CUT on the side of that rock looked like they were portals that lead to another place because why would one carve out doors on the side of a rock out in the open that lead to a dead end that wouldn't make sense. The way they are clean cut is a sign that those carvings were made with HIGH POWER technology that can do something like that which is technology that has NOT been recorded in the books of history as of yet. 🔥🔥🔥

  • @juliaschnelle6385
    @juliaschnelle6385 Před 7 lety

    beautiful footage.. this highlights your point better than any i think. totally agree by the way that we are post civilization-civilization. i am a permaculture farmer and feel that the definition of farming needs to shift towards "stewardship hunter-gathering" as opposed to, there wasn't enough to eat and then there was agriculture....and my other big question is..How many of the earths deserts are man-made??

  • @Todd4America
    @Todd4America Před 8 lety

    Larry Grant has the best responses and theories on your videos(yes I read everyone's response).can you work on a project together?

  • @jerryrollf5997
    @jerryrollf5997 Před 5 lety

    Nevermind the erosion, check out the seashells dotting the entire length. That thing was under water for a time, eh. Whatd'ya think?

  • @lusijarplo3050
    @lusijarplo3050 Před rokem

    watching the mock-up I had a picture of a spaceship .. probably an illusion, but maybe you can see it too???🤔

  • @mercurywoodrose
    @mercurywoodrose Před 5 lety

    how hard is this sandstone? you have talked about metamorphosed sandstone, which would be quartzite, and metamorphosed limestone, which is marble. but what i want is actual hardness scales from each site, cause i think sandstone and some others have variable hardness depending on age/conditions formed. if this was hard sandstone verging on quartzite, then its definitely high tech work. but even if not, its cut like the high tech stuff, really mysterious, like a quarry, but not....used?

  • @darbycrash5320
    @darbycrash5320 Před 9 lety

    It reminds To me Yamaguni, Japan, The underwater site

  • @TheBcambron
    @TheBcambron Před 6 lety

    I often wonder if the Inca had their walls plastered, perhaps brilliant white, partly to cover the fact that their construction was of much smaller, less fitted stones than the original work.

  • @theriffguy8237
    @theriffguy8237 Před 7 lety

    Great exploratory work, Brien. For your interest, you may want to note the name Samaipata - Sam, Sama, Samai & Pata, are dialectic variants of Buddha (cf. Godfrey Higgins: Anacalypsis: Vol. 1: Bk. V: Ch. I: § 2, p. 153. (1836). Herodotus mentions them as Samians, being "seven days travel from Thebes (Histories, Bk. II: Disappearance of Armies), p. 185. Of course, this puts them in Abyssinia, aka Ethiopia, aka nether India, aka Cush or Kush (note Lalibela and Axum, or As-Cham or Ham, i.e., sons of Ham, i.e., Blacks. St. Jerome cites Bardesanes, and notices them in East India as Samaneans, "divinely wise", as being either Brahmins or Buddhists, or Sarmanes. After 20 + years of research the lost art of megalithic masonry is undoubtedly surviving with a Buddhist creed, and always has. It is they who traversed the Earth, mapped it etc. The Pyramids (Giza), for example, are Buddhist monuments, as Buddha (by whatever name) is a Triangle. Egypt was founded by Buddhists in exile. The Sphinx faces East (home) before the Mahabharata or Great War of India, when the Brahmins & Buddhists (by whatever name or rank) went at it. All the European languages are derived from the Sanskrit, hence the Indo-European language family, and the Tamil is identical to the Hebrew before being corrupted by Jesuit missionaries. The Old Testament is based on Ayodyha or Ajodhya in India, which was called the Brahmin Yuda or Juda by Jesuit missionaries, Gudea in Sumer, and Judea in myth, just as Palestine is derived from Palli or Shepherd in India, those shepherd kings who came from the East (Abraham or Brahma and Sarah or Sarasvadi) to reform this ancient civilization of the World. Therefore, I contend it likely that Samaipata was named after ancient Buddhists, and you have no doubt stumbled upon another mystifying work done by a most ancient species of Buddhists. Of course, just a theory, but one cannot pass by such a name as Samaipata without seeing an extreme ancient Buddhist influence, which later became Juda-ism or Judaism, from which we now have the Abrahamic religions, viz., Judaism, Christianity & Islam, of which, Mecca was formerly surrounded by 360 stones, supposedly built by Abraham & Ismail, and was for ages a route for Indian pilgrimage & trade, whereby Christ was dialectically confused with Cristna (See Vasco da Gama diaries). Complex subject, but well worthy of sinking teeth into. You'll find serious chronological anomalies when you discover Anau in Turkmenistan, when compared to Gobekli Tepe. Without the former, we would have no domesticated animals, agriculture or irrigation. You may also like Lord Kingsborough's "Mexican Antiquities" (1833). He argued that in Central & South America were lost tribes of Israel, and Joseph Smith would go on to argue the same in the same year with Moroni; but it is more likely they were seeing remnants of an identical mythos in decay rather than a literal interpretation. Of course, the Dominicans, Franciscans & Jesuits saw imitative fruits of the Devil in Cent & Sth America, but those arguments hold no water. They knew, and sought to conceal the similarities. Keep up the excellent work.

  • @jsan632
    @jsan632 Před 9 lety

    Wish I could do this kind of work

  • @joseluispepino2010
    @joseluispepino2010 Před 7 lety

    great idea using dron

  • @fatimanaqvi2976
    @fatimanaqvi2976 Před 8 lety

    maybe this is a quarry, from which large stones were cut and used in construction at other sites..

  • @xparade0de
    @xparade0de Před 9 lety

    1:04 what ist that thing in the middle it reminds me on a circle with superconductors

  • @denaredford6701
    @denaredford6701 Před 8 lety

    Ayes Rock in Australia , it reminds me of that monolith

  • @poppopartist3870
    @poppopartist3870 Před 4 lety

    Brien Graham Hancock and Roger from Mudfossil U should do a collab. 3 best inquisitive minds in the game.

  • @gyro5d
    @gyro5d Před 8 lety

    I see the collection of molten dust that gathered, after the plasma blast between planets. The plasma blasts seen around the world, craved on cave walls. These plasma blast can be duplicated in labs. (Micheal Steinbachers theory) The people carved the sand stone while it was semi molten. Are these rocks annealled from the heat and are they magnetizable?

    • @gyro5d
      @gyro5d Před 8 lety

      Also reminds me of the different level gardens, they make in those times. Aren't those garden beds, cut into the soft rock from the Gods, above? Rock heated to the molecular level, would stay soft long enough to crave. (Like the molten, twin towers did.) Back then, who wouldn't want to go their food in the rock from the Gods?

  • @MsArgentana
    @MsArgentana Před 9 lety

    It's incredibly similar to the Surkh Kotal area.... Afghanistan,,..Ecah civilasation builds upon the rests of the previous ones think about Troia... seven levels or Jericho 12.000 years buileings...

  • @leroylem51
    @leroylem51 Před 9 lety

    A quarry makes sense if you can buy into the fact that the blocks were transported. ...And we know they could, but how, and where too we don't know yet. And isn't sand stone fairly soft, if not the softest rock?

  • @francolaveglia5493
    @francolaveglia5493 Před 7 lety

    what is the purpose of this megaliths?

  • @medlinesunsonsound2954

    Seems totally like the huge underwater carved stone complex nea rthe Japan coast.

  • @guillermohorruitiner2440

    Samaipata is in the jungle ???? what jungle, in the highlands ??? I dont see any jungle there,

  • @goujeewugee2458
    @goujeewugee2458 Před 9 lety

    Almost looks identical to the massive structure in Yonaguni Japan 60 to 80 feet under sea water...

  • @RonnieM
    @RonnieM Před 9 lety

    Why so many false doors and windows? This must have been important to who ever carved this large outcropping. It would be interesting to hear what a geologist would say about the weathering, but it does look very old!

  • @payank505
    @payank505 Před 6 lety

    Looks a bit like corporate and individual box seats at an NFL stadium. Nice flat area in front...

  • @laserus3333
    @laserus3333 Před 9 lety

    At 1 minute 8 seconds in to this video. That is a model of a ship. A huge craft! yup. It took my brain about 10 seconds when my pre frontal gyrus kicked in. Accessing my entire brain. Suddenly I heard trumpets and could hear the angelic realms cheering as I had my Ah haaaa moment LOL.I apologize it’s just my arm is not quite long enough to give myself a nice hearty manly man pat on the back.

  • @siegejohnstone5174
    @siegejohnstone5174 Před 6 lety

    That robot at the start sounds almost like the Maori from where I'm from in new Zealand, I wonder if that's where some of our ancestors came from down through Peru

  • @randysrdh
    @randysrdh Před 8 lety

    It would be so much better if you would point the camera at the surroundings instead of your face the entire time ... you show the structure for 2 seconds ugh...