4 Out-Of-Place Artefacts that Shouldn't Have Existed

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects  Před 6 měsíci +40

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    • @rohankurian5641
      @rohankurian5641 Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you 🗽🇺🇸🗽
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    • @samiam4544
      @samiam4544 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Where can I sign up for commercials every 2 minutes? Oh wait, I am already here.

    • @allwaizeright9705
      @allwaizeright9705 Před 6 měsíci +3

      15:07 your CHAPTER 4 BREAK has the CHAPTER 3 TITLE CARD... Otherwise great stuff...

    • @poorlydunbarvideos1472
      @poorlydunbarvideos1472 Před 6 měsíci +4

      the surfshark cut was a little hamfisted

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 6 měsíci

      Lol Simon's door has the same design as the german rail service has on their regional trains. Probably "found" by fact boy 😂

  • @rockinbobokkin7831
    @rockinbobokkin7831 Před 6 měsíci +493

    Just an interesting side fact about Vinland: a study of trees in Iceland and Greenland has lead some botanic researchers to theorize that vikings were transporting seeds and saplings from Canada to support tree farms back home. This is very recent discovery, and I think it's very interesting.

    • @nenasiek
      @nenasiek Před 6 měsíci +9

      Oh cool, im gonna look that up, thanks

    • @pawoodsman1737
      @pawoodsman1737 Před 6 měsíci +27

      I remember seeing something about lumber found in old buildings on greenland came from Canada. The dating of the timber proved people had been harvesting timber from Canada long after vikings were to have left the new world

    • @apanapandottir205
      @apanapandottir205 Před 6 měsíci +6

      That's pretty cool. If true, I wonder how much it has changed the flora.

    • @rodjacksonx
      @rodjacksonx Před 6 měsíci +8

      I doubt vikings brought seeds and saplings for no good reason (it's not as if North America didn't have trees.) I think the theory that these trees are similar because, via Pangea, the land masses were close or actually together, suits this better.

    • @nayrtnartsipacify
      @nayrtnartsipacify Před 6 měsíci +26

      ​@@rodjacksonxwhy wouldnt vikings bring tree saplings and seeds with them? Scandinavians were farmers too. They would have seen the value of bringing plants they liked from another location with them. The span of continental drift spans such a great length of time the divergence of evolution would likely be much greater.

  • @gso619
    @gso619 Před 6 měsíci +374

    The penny story is amazing, not because it's actually that remarkable of a find, but because of the mental image of someone amazed at the discovery and talking about how revolutionary it is, while Mellgren just digs though his shell pile and goes "Cool. Go tell someone who cares"

    • @dilloncrain9111
      @dilloncrain9111 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Best comment on here brother 🤝🤣

    • @wowplayer160
      @wowplayer160 Před 6 měsíci +5

      I was thinking same thing about this comment.

    • @bobbyknight3589
      @bobbyknight3589 Před 5 měsíci

      😂😂😂😂😂🤜🤛

    • @Schmorgus
      @Schmorgus Před 5 měsíci +22

      This is actually a terrifying thought. Imagine how many items in archeology that has been thrown away, simply because they didn't care about that particular find. I know for a fact (I have a high interest in archeology) that during the early 1900's, a lot of archeologists actually only cared about finds that would generate money, so if they didn't get anything for it, they just chucked it in the bin. Modern time archeologists have been doing work on previously known places and found a lot of items that the previous archeologists just left in the ground.

    • @ThePaulv12
      @ThePaulv12 Před 3 měsíci

      In the book Lies My Teacher Told Me by James Loewen phd, he has a chart that with percntages of probability of visitation to the Americas by Europeans for trade well before their supposed discovey. It had been going on fo a thousand or more years but just wasn't in mainstream consciousness. The printing press changed how information became available to the mainstream.
      It's completely unsurprising really.

  • @jackreisewitz6632
    @jackreisewitz6632 Před 4 měsíci +30

    Having worked in a foundry, i can guarantee that if that hammer had fallen in hot slag, the handle would have been completely consumed by fire.

    • @patrickkirwan3353
      @patrickkirwan3353 Před 29 dny

      😂

    • @westonbooth6230
      @westonbooth6230 Před 20 dny

      How are you going to age a f****** rock that's been melted?

    • @joeday3526
      @joeday3526 Před 20 dny +1

      good thing thats not what happened then

    • @jackreisewitz6632
      @jackreisewitz6632 Před 19 dny

      @joeday3526 Yeah, I don't think that's a rational explanation, either.

    • @awilliams5007
      @awilliams5007 Před 12 dny

      @@westonbooth6230 ir you cant dazzle em with brillance, baffle em with B.S.

  • @MikeHughey728
    @MikeHughey728 Před 6 měsíci +27

    "The London Hammer" is totally going to be my MMA nickname. It's perfect, apart from the fact that I don't know MMA. And that I'm not from London.

  • @michaeltelson9798
    @michaeltelson9798 Před 6 měsíci +43

    I had a conversation with a Seneca Iroquois that had a theory about the Vikings. He stated that there are about 200 words in the Iroquois language that are identical to Old Norse in every way.
    Don’t know if others investigated it.

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Simon, if that is true that woudl be fascinating

    • @chrisgrill6302
      @chrisgrill6302 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Doesn't sound that improbable but if so I wonder why I haven't heard it before.

    • @michaeltelson9798
      @michaeltelson9798 Před 6 měsíci +10

      @@chrisgrill6302 my exMIL was part Onadaga Iroquois and active in tribal affairs, but had no comment on it.
      Remember there was a saying that you could dress an Iroquois in the latest fashion and have him walk the boulevards of Paris without anyone knowing the difference.
      This Seneca gentleman also had a theory on 3 of the Big Island of Hawaii’s pantheon of gods (each island had a separate pantheon until conquered by Kamehameha). Since Madame Pele, her brother, the war god and their sister weren’t physically the same they may have come from a Norse voyaging ship that made it around Cape Horn. These 3 were tall, white if skin and either blond or red heads. Norse and Polynesian voyaging were in the same time period about 1000 CE.

    • @patrickday4206
      @patrickday4206 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I read about a norse coin found drilling a well in Newyork

    • @chrisgrill6302
      @chrisgrill6302 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@michaeltelson9798 as a sailor I find that story about a Viking boat making it all the way to Hawaii not credible. Thats a really long way. Lief Ericcson left Iceland with I think 13 vessels, only 8 made it only as far as Greenland (something like that). I've no trouble imagining that some of the Nova Scotia Icelanders mixed or traded with the locals (though according to their writings the "skraelings" were extremely hostile. Kidnap seems as likely).

  • @robertwilliamson922
    @robertwilliamson922 Před 6 měsíci +308

    I stupidly lost a Roman silver denarius from my collection here in southern, Ontario, Canada. A first century B.C.E. denarius. It had been in my pocket, and I was shocked to find my pocket had gotten a hole in it just big enough for the coin to fall out.
    Just imagine someone finding it years from now and claiming that Romans must have crossed the Atlantic and made it to the Niagara region of Canada.

    • @cbob213
      @cbob213 Před 6 měsíci +32

      Why would you just walk around with it loose in your pocket. You were shocked it fell out? I’d be shocked if you hadn’t lost more if you just casually walk around with loose ancient coins in your pocket.

    • @robertwilliamson922
      @robertwilliamson922 Před 6 měsíci +20

      @@cbob213 Yeah, I was shocked it fell out…and gone. First and last time I made that mistake. Yes..I kicked myself in the ass for that one. I guess someday…some lucky person will find it. Get it identified, and think “Wow….the Romans must have made it to North America.”

    • @TommygunNG
      @TommygunNG Před 6 měsíci +9

      Yes, it is an odd story. Our friend here might simply have some aversion to the idea that the White Norsemen might’ve had a bigger impact on North America than previously believed.

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 6 měsíci +5

      😂 i found it and took it back to europe. I burried it in one of the od mc donald Douglas planes. Now imagine that find 😂.
      Allegedly 😏
      Sorry to hear of your loss

    • @ratha8799
      @ratha8799 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@robertwilliamson922or some kid found it and threw it in a trashcan and now it's sitting in a dump jaja

  • @MuppetZonk73
    @MuppetZonk73 Před 6 měsíci +88

    The Vikings visited Vinland around 1090, based on dendochronology of trees used for the huts at L‘Anse aux Meadows. Sonia’s not too far fetched to discuss if one of their pennys found their way further down the coast, either through the Vikings themselves or as a token that was transferred between Native Americans.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Před 6 měsíci +6

      Probably traded along. It was attractive and unique, so it had trade value in societies that didn't have our version of money.

    • @unclemartin7711
      @unclemartin7711 Před 5 měsíci +11

      Vikings have been here 500 years before Columbus.
      New Jersey coastline, BARNEGAT BAY LIGHTHOUSE.
      They found a Viking village there in the 1930s.
      1964 there was a helmet and shield of vikings flowed up on Jersey Shore. I brought the current event in, for proof on my fourth grade. I received a D- minus because I said The Vikings were here first. Teach said, "I don't care, do you want an A"? I said, "absolutely"!
      She says, "then just follow what's in the book"! Just a thought from the cowboy from🗽🇺🇸 Scottsdale Arizona
      @unclemartin7711

    • @SciFiFemale
      @SciFiFemale Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@unclemartin7711 I hope you doubled down and said no, you go by evidence. My daughter was told that the island Guernsey, in the British Channel Islands, did not exist, so my mother's family could not have come from there. Teachers can be so stupid.

    • @unclemartin7711
      @unclemartin7711 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@SciFiFemale
      There is more to the story. I went to 4 fourth grades. I had the same test 4 × !
      1.B) 2.B) 3.B+) 4.D-)
      My parents were teachers, I said the teacher was wrong.
      They immediately said, never tell a teacher they're wrong!

    • @unclemartin7711
      @unclemartin7711 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@SciFiFemale
      My mom pulls out the current event that I had on my last fourth grade, said show her the evidence. Ask her to reasses your grade.
      Again, when I show her the evidence,she tells me she knows about it. If I want an A follow what's in the book! I was blessed to see at that age, school was rigged. Never believed anything I read, until I applied it in life.That was pretty Crummy what they were doing to me. Now they're teaching KIDS individually, what pronoun they should be. Just a thought🗽 from the cowboy from Scottsdale Arizona🇺🇸

  • @23ofSeptember
    @23ofSeptember Před 6 měsíci +49

    I'd say the Norse coin was probably traded for something and it gradually made its way down to Maine.

    • @BradBrassman
      @BradBrassman Před 3 měsíci +8

      Yes, the simplest explanation is often the truth.

    • @wingerding
      @wingerding Před měsícem +1

      Wow like exactly how he said in the video?

  • @Ubique2927
    @Ubique2927 Před 6 měsíci +87

    I dropped a plastic comb in a trench that I was digging in Germany in 1985,
    I later learned that people were doing a dig in the area in 1990.
    I wonder what they would make of a plastic comb being found at the Stone Age layer?

    • @YusufGinnah
      @YusufGinnah Před 6 měsíci +3

      Were you carrying it in your sock?

    • @Shiny101
      @Shiny101 Před 6 měsíci +5

      They would be able to tell a trench was dug in recent years lol. At least any archeologist worth their salt.

    • @mr.joshua6818
      @mr.joshua6818 Před 6 měsíci +13

      Ancient aliens provided the proto-German people with advanced grooming technology...

    • @patrickday4206
      @patrickday4206 Před 6 měsíci

      There was a Norse coin found drilling a water well in Newyork

    • @LutherMahoney
      @LutherMahoney Před 6 měsíci +1

      Why did you have a platic comb on you digging a trench?

  • @flechette3782
    @flechette3782 Před 6 měsíci +8

    Funny how that amateur archeologist was so flippant about the Main Penny because he was interested in old pottery, not coins. Now the coin is all that he is remembered for.

  • @nedgoldreyer8761
    @nedgoldreyer8761 Před 6 měsíci +41

    In the top drawer of my Ikea desk is a 19th century American gold $10 coin. Considering Ikea was not founded until 1943, how on earth could such an object have been deposited there?

    • @KovarrBlue
      @KovarrBlue Před měsícem +4

      Uh....there's a huge difference in a loose penny in your drawer, and a coin unearthed under hundreds of years of accumulated soil.

    • @hainleysimpson1507
      @hainleysimpson1507 Před měsícem

      You ever heard of flash floods and landslides or tectonic shifts. Or humans dumping up on land. It really wouldn't take long for that much soil to be dumped up by humans.

    • @timber72
      @timber72 Před 22 dny +1

      I take it you've never heard of archaeology, which is the science of understanding the past through material, like artifacts...?
      Because the conclusion an archaeologist would come to if they found your coin in your Ikea desk hundreds of years from now (assuming your Ikea desk hasn't distintegrated) is NOT that the Ikea desk was around a century before it could have been, but that your coin...much like the coin in this video...was placed in the LATER artifact.
      Do you understand? The coin wasn't just found on the beach, surrounded by nothing. It was found in an archaeological dig...a poorly recorded one, but one nonetheless...containing artifacts OF A SIMILAR AGE to the coin.
      That is, if your 19th century $10 Eagle was discovered in the theretofore undisturbed grave of Thomas Redman, who died in 1868, then they would identify the coin and Redman as *contemporaries* , but would NOT identify your Ikea desk as such.
      Archaeology is a real thing.

  • @jedison2441
    @jedison2441 Před 6 měsíci +9

    The problem with the birds is the figurines depict a having a tail rudder, birds don't need them since they use ailerons.

    • @charlesunderwood6334
      @charlesunderwood6334 Před 6 měsíci

      Flying fish do

    • @Evert1992
      @Evert1992 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yup the "airplane" model they used is actually a figurine of a suckerfish i believe its called.
      Bottomfeeder fishy.
      Thats why it had round shapes and eyes on the top of the head.

    • @charlesunderwood6334
      @charlesunderwood6334 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Evert1992 Or a gurnard/searobin

  • @davidvavra9113
    @davidvavra9113 Před 6 měsíci +40

    If you pull the hammer from the stone, you become the king of the blacksmiths
    Pretty obvious
    Really though, why does it have a wooden handle?

    • @fett713akamandodragon5
      @fett713akamandodragon5 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Because one made of beets wouldn't hold up well lol! And I love the idea of king blacksmith from pulling it from the stone, gave me a chuckle.

    • @EddieRiff
      @EddieRiff Před 5 měsíci +1

      You become "king arm and hammer." Yeah I know, it's bad.

    • @madogmabz
      @madogmabz Před 23 dny

      Was thinking along the same lines😅😅

  • @sean5558
    @sean5558 Před 6 měsíci +36

    Absolutely absurd for hammer to exist 400 million years ago. It’s clear case of time travelers leaving their equipment behind

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 Před 5 měsíci +10

      Blasted tourists and their blasted littering!

    • @Jayhit-
      @Jayhit- Před 28 dny +3

      Imagine being a time traveler you travel back in time with a fn hammer with wooden handle. Idk I figure the technology would probably be a lot better in the future.

    • @Dinobot69420xxx
      @Dinobot69420xxx Před 24 dny

      @@Jayhit-well, I can't say for certain how time travel works but I doubt you can take everything with you. So say it was time travel, maybe they needed a hammer and forgot to pack one and decided to make one

    • @zippytrippy3041
      @zippytrippy3041 Před 21 dnem +3

      Would be funnier if it was a 10mm socket

    • @tonyhoable
      @tonyhoable Před 21 dnem +1

      A wooden handle wouldn't last 400 million years.

  • @MinionofNobody
    @MinionofNobody Před 6 měsíci +97

    Please don’t distract me with facts when I have latched onto a perfectly good conspiracy theory.

    • @ShadeedTheGenerator
      @ShadeedTheGenerator Před měsícem +5

      Dont worry i have better one for you….This concretion theory has weight. If the hammer could have been covered in concretion instantly (not that long ago), why couldn’t that be the case with the other artifacts that are claimed to be thousands or millions of years old?

    • @ryann6067
      @ryann6067 Před měsícem

      😂

    • @schaeferstudios
      @schaeferstudios Před měsícem

      😂😂😂

    • @jackreisewitz6632
      @jackreisewitz6632 Před 29 dny

      Don't need a conspiracy to explain this.... the ancient aliens did it.

    • @emergpa1
      @emergpa1 Před 26 dny +2

      Hahah. As scarce as the truth is the supply always exceeds the demand

  • @KevinCoop1
    @KevinCoop1 Před 6 měsíci +16

    The Maine Penny, if truly found there, proves one thing and only one thing. It was not there before it was minted. Once minted, it could have gotten there a year later or 100 years later or 500 years later. It just can’t be there before it was minted.

    • @AwesomeFish12
      @AwesomeFish12 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Particularly since he didn't take notes on the depth it was found at. It could have been traded and worn as a necklace for a long time before it ended up there.

    • @ripn929707
      @ripn929707 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I think the point wa that the refuse pile had been abandoned, and the contents the penny was found in dated back much farther than 1492. That's why it's a mystery... but, it's not a mystery. Norse explorers used objects they had plundered to make jewelry and adornments to show off their conquests. It could have easily been a part of one of those, and was either taken by, or traded to natives in the north, then traded along the trade route down the east coast.

    • @gilligan1350
      @gilligan1350 Před 3 měsíci +2

      When I get my time machine I'm planting this coin there earlier just to spite this comment 😂

    • @frankfrank366
      @frankfrank366 Před měsícem

      Nah, it could have been there as an unfinished piece of metal, in the shape of a coin but without anything engraved/embossed, then transported to Scandanvia and minted there.

    • @timber72
      @timber72 Před 22 dny

      @@frankfrank366 No.

  • @Kelnx
    @Kelnx Před 6 měsíci +150

    I wouldn't actually find it surprising if odd bits of Norse artifacts are found here and there along the US East coast over time (other than they would just be few and hard to find). The fact they made it to Newfoundland, and that they had a tendency to just follow coast lines for extremely long distances to see what is to be found suggests there might have been a voyage or two along the East Coast. It's not like they kept good records of anything. Of course that doesn't mean they did much other than sailing down and back up and maybe occasionally meeting some natives and possibly trading with a few or hauling interesting things back home. There's just as equal a chance they never did go anywhere near the US coastline either.
    Another thing I've always wondered is how much "junk" could have crossed the Atlantic or Pacific over time and ended washed up on shorelines either carried by storms or lodged inside dead sea life. We see such in the modern day plenty, even metal objects not just plastics and the like. Or how many people might have been swept out to sea and actually survived to also wash up on a far coastline. As unlikely as it is for anyone to have intentionally made it across those oceans before deep sea sailing, it had to have happened a few times on accident. I find it improbable that the Old World and the New World stayed perfectly, pristinely isolated for thousands of years without the odd something or someone washing up here or there.

    • @mukathompson7490
      @mukathompson7490 Před 6 měsíci +9

      Also regarding historians saying that the Vinland settlement lasted for mere decades, that's the site of L'Anse aux Meadows. It's widely known that Greenland's Vikings continued doing expeditions to North America to get timber.

    • @nelsonx5326
      @nelsonx5326 Před 6 měsíci +1

      They were always looking for new places to pillage.

    • @joshuahadams
      @joshuahadams Před 6 měsíci +10

      Trade. Ramah chert from Ramah bay in the Torngat Mountains of Labrador has been found as far away as the Great Lakes. Trade routes and off-and-on contact between the Inuit, First Nations, and Norse are pretty much the simplest answer.

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 Před 6 měsíci +5

      I immediately thought that an animal like a fish or bird could've brought that coin there; ofc that doesn't have to be the case.

    • @kimweaver1252
      @kimweaver1252 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Or even down the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi.

  • @knurlgnar24
    @knurlgnar24 Před 6 měsíci +213

    The hammer immediately looked like ordinary flowstone as you see in any mine. It is insanely common to find tools completely encased in stone in a mine that has been abandoned for only decades. Strange this object gathered any attention at all. It's interesting, yes, but very ordinary.

    • @012689
      @012689 Před 6 měsíci +10

      It's more of an interesting curio than anything.

    • @kimweaver1252
      @kimweaver1252 Před 6 měsíci +20

      Accretion like this happens in decades. It doesn't even take centuries.

    • @nopeandnope6306
      @nopeandnope6306 Před 6 měsíci +20

      I Grew up in New London, Texas where it was found and there are no mines where it was found. . The soil is very sandy with lots of iron ore deposits. so lots of quarries but the ground would be too unstable for mining. If i had to guess the hammer was probably used in railroad construction or during the oil boom. Really not sure how it would have ended up incased in the rock

    • @hherpdderp
      @hherpdderp Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@nopeandnope6306clandestine smelting?

    • @ericrogers1241
      @ericrogers1241 Před 6 měsíci +33

      OK fine, but if the rock was dated to 100,000,000 years old doesn't that call into question the dating methods?

  • @leanderfoldy9293
    @leanderfoldy9293 Před 6 měsíci +3

    7:00
    Question: "Is it possible that humans and human technology are much older than previously believed?"
    Answer: "No, because the artifact in question didn’t gain traction quickly enough"
    Bravo. Can’t defy that logic! 👏

  • @davidconner-shover51
    @davidconner-shover51 Před 6 měsíci +10

    IIRC there were a few artifacts from the Columbus expeditions that made it a ways up the East coast as well.
    plenty of other cross contamination as well. Lots of stories of sea kayaks with dead occupants showing up on European shores.
    As to the settlement of Greenland, The Vikings showed up first, then the Thulies showed up about a hundred years later.
    Written records from the Viking expeditions themselves showed how poorly they treated the locals, and were subsequently run out.
    Randomly shooting people dead along a beach from your ship for laughs and giggles will not bring about a nice reception when you finally come ashore.

  • @AeronHale
    @AeronHale Před 6 měsíci +25

    Even if out of place artifacts usually end up being hoaxes, fakes, and whatnot are still a lot of fun and the legit ones like the Antikythera Mechanism are absolutely fascinating and often raise so many questions.

    • @MarcelNL
      @MarcelNL Před 4 měsíci

      I now only see the thumbnail; that's limestone that quickly formed around it. There even are hats covered in limestone, and christian channels call them "fossils".

    • @williamsulman2646
      @williamsulman2646 Před 3 měsíci

      All the megalithic construction in the ancient world is mind blowing. Loads of jars found on Egypt that look exactly like they have been core drilled. How else is possible, an archologist can tell me they used copper and sand and whatever nonsense they come out with. Having worked with mega hard stones. Granite for example is so brittle that there is no way im going to belive that they did not have some lost ancient technology. Definitely not some posh man on CZcams who im gonna assume has never worked with granite. Let alone dolomine, that's without even mentioning the marks left on blocks of stone that look exactly the same as a cut mark made by a petrol cutter with a diamond blade. Ive done it a million times and it looks exactly the same.

  • @childofcascadia
    @childofcascadia Před 6 měsíci +45

    I grew up in a place with beyond hard mineralized well water. The well was 150 ft deep and hit a huge aquifer in solid rock. There was one faucet for drinking water that didnt run the water through the water softener. About every 3 years, you had to chip bits of concretion off the faucet mouth. It was caked on around the faucet mouth and the consistency of cement. If you didnt do that, the concretion would have turned into a foot long stalactite within a decade.
    The London Hammer is nothing spectacular. Anyone who grew up with a highly mineralized well will tell you how fast concretion can grow.

    • @dirtfarmer7070
      @dirtfarmer7070 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I also find it astonishing how fast these natural processes can occur. However, when it suits us, it must have taken millions of years.

    • @jimbracknell5648
      @jimbracknell5648 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@dirtfarmer7070 different kinds of rock form at different rates. Flow stone precipitates out of water and doesnt take long for enough to accumulate to cover something.

    • @maryanneslater9675
      @maryanneslater9675 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@dirtfarmer7070 Geology textbooks are expensive, but you could probably find some at your local library. It's all fascinating. I mean, basalt, pumice and obsidian and other igneous rocks might be formed as soon as the lava and ash start to cool, but some tuffs take longer for the ash to cement together. Calcium carbonate deposits can solidify more quickly than sandstone or mudstone, which need to be buried under more layers to consolidate firmly. If limestone is buried deep under layers of other sediments, heat and pressure will turn it into marble over the course of millions of years.

    • @dirtfarmer7070
      @dirtfarmer7070 Před 5 měsíci

      @@maryanneslater9675 thanks for the tip. Not a geologist but very interested in the world around me. Have watched much of this happen in my own lifetime. Sometimes in a matter of hours during massive local flooding. The power of nature is truly awesome.

    • @genekelly8467
      @genekelly8467 Před 5 měsíci +4

      There was a similar claim about an ancient sparkplug found in a lake in California; same story-it was a 1920s sparkplug that had been concreted by minerals in the water.

  • @johnbrereton5229
    @johnbrereton5229 Před 6 měsíci +32

    Its documented that a Bristol trader Richard Amerike financed a voyage to the USA in 1497 and it was claimed that his charts were used by Columbus. This was dismissed, yet recently documents were found in Spanish archives which not only confirmed that his chart existed and had his name on it, Amerike, but also that Columbus had actuallt used it. Therefore, it was Richard Amerike's surname on the original chart that was used as the name of America, not Amerigo Vespucci first name. It would in fact be unprecedented to use a commoners first name in such a way.
    The interesting thing is, that its also claimed that Bristol fishermen knew of lucrative fishing grounds off the coast of America for centuries before, but kept it quiet. Could this coin have been taken there by a Bristol fishermen I wonder ?

    • @jwhatheduck
      @jwhatheduck Před 5 měsíci +7

      1492 ocean blue… I feel like something is wrong with your statement

    • @sophierobinson2738
      @sophierobinson2738 Před 5 měsíci +6

      I’m happy that we weren’t named North Vespucci and South Vespucci.

    • @aengusdedanann181
      @aengusdedanann181 Před 4 měsíci +1

      when do you think columbus set sail for the america's?

    • @jedague
      @jedague Před 3 měsíci +1

      Interesting name, Amerike. Ancient Mesopotamians worshipped two ancient gods, Enlil and Enki. Enlil represents a group of people that are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible represented by Biblical Abel. Enki represents another group represented by Cain, Canaanites. This god Enki, may have brought genes of violence to Mesopotamia from Ancient Northern Eurasian hunters that originated in Kostenki Russia. The origin of paganism, human sacrifice, slavery, warfare, and genocide may have originated with the ancient mammoth hunters of Sunghir Russia who were burying their dead with weapons, rich grave goods, and red ocher over 30,000 years ago.

    • @jedague
      @jedague Před 3 měsíci

      Richard. This is “Rich One”, “Rich”, “Reich”, “Right”.

  • @judewarner1536
    @judewarner1536 Před 6 měsíci +14

    Very interesting as usual. When it was announced in the late 1960s that Britain's money was going to be decimalise, there was a rush to save less common dates of very common coins from those in circulation. During this period I removed from my pocket change a few pennies and halfpennies from the Victorian era. Pre-1921 sterling silver shillings, florins and halfcrowns were more numerous than Victorian bronze, and 50% silver coins from George V and George VI were common. I still have hundreds of these coins in a box! It is not a great leap to imagine that a Norse coin from the 10th century, having been used as an inherited pendant, might still be kicking around a couple of hundred years later until lost or discarded in Maine, USA.
    While the other artefacts shown appeared to be photos of the actual objects, the coin shown appeared to be complete, with no evidence of corrosion or a lost puncture hole. One is forcibly reminded of a certain popular CZcams "archaeology" channel that shows Hollywood film scenes and artefacts from totally different times and cultures to illustrate its narration. Few people have ever had the broad education to distinguish the real from the artificial in such circumstances, and there is a danger that the false image is conflated with the truth. If an original artefact cannot be fairly represented, better it not be falsly visualised unless it's made absolutely clear what's being shown instead.

    • @Frank_Nemo
      @Frank_Nemo Před 6 měsíci +1

      AI or just never heard of paragraphs?

    • @judewarner1536
      @judewarner1536 Před 5 měsíci

      @Frank_Nemo I do paragraphs, but CZcams doesn't recognise them for some reason. I'm willing to bet important parts of my anatomy that my English is better than your English, but your IT will almost certainly be better than mine.
      If you have an explanation as to why my paragraphs, as written, do not appear as presented here, I'd be pleased to see it?

    • @timber72
      @timber72 Před 22 dny

      I'm very surprised you found silver coins circulating in the UK in the late 1960s, especially since you did away with circulating silver entirely in 1947. Canada ended their silver circulating coins in 1968 (after experimenting for a year with .500 fine from .800 fine), and the US took all the silver out of the dime and quarter in mid-1965 (when they finally stopped striking 1964 dated coins), and finally from the debased half dollar (.900 to .400) in 1969 (the 1970 halves weren't produced for circulation.)
      But I AM impressed that you know the difference in silver content changed, but you're a year off. The sterling to .500 happened in 1920, not 1921. I imagine most folks are unaware of the change from sterling to .500 from 1920 to 1946.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Před 6 měsíci +69

    Somewhere where I grew up in British Columbia, Canada is a 13th century Scottish coin which my dad lost from his coin collection in the 1960's. If someone finds it, they would be silly to conclude that the Scots of the middle ages ever visited.

    • @YourHineyness
      @YourHineyness Před 6 měsíci +9

      Soooooo. Did you have anything to do with this alleged "loss"? Perhaps traded for a few baseball cards or a slingshot? Fess up. You're anonymous here. Though we will notify your Dad. :)

    • @UnicornsPoopRainbows
      @UnicornsPoopRainbows Před 6 měsíci +2

      With how extensive trade routes were, it wouldn’t surprise me at all that a Viking would have either traded with a Native American or some NAs found the coin after a squirmish between the two groups. Then they ended up bringing it south for trading. It seems pretty simple and far more plausible

    • @claytonberg721
      @claytonberg721 Před 6 měsíci +3

      This is exactly why it wasn't until 1960 that it was accepted that the norse traveled to NFLD. There had been local legends through out NFLD for more than a hundred years of viking artifacts. Many of which were probably fabricated. many of which were probably displaced from private collections and then later found.
      The burden of proof to 'officially' change history is quiet high.
      It took finding actual DNA evidence very recently of Polyansian travel to south america for the scientific community to widely accept it as fact. Despite there being a great deal of evidence for a very long time now.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@claytonberg721We just need an archeological dig to prove things like this. Without proper applied techniques and documentation anyone could have placed anything anywhere.

    • @johnchandler1687
      @johnchandler1687 Před 6 měsíci +4

      No one would believe that a true Scotsman would lose a coin and not move heaven and earth to find it.😅

  • @katmandoism
    @katmandoism Před 6 měsíci +15

    The wood would have turned to stone or rotted away a long time ago.

  • @Morganstein-Railroad
    @Morganstein-Railroad Před 6 měsíci +7

    Either they were visiting later than previously thought or - and remember this - I could take my 1667 Charles II Crown and take it anywhere, lose it and it would be found much later and someone could use it's existence in that location to assume that British people visited that area during the reign of Charles II, even if the area in question hadn't been discovered in 1667. The date or proven age of a coin does not mean it has been there since that time.

  • @cat-star5403
    @cat-star5403 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Hard to believe the wooden handle of the hammer would last 400M years

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 6 měsíci +10

    0:50 - Chapter 1 - The maine penny
    2:00 - Mid roll ads
    3:20 - Back to the video
    6:00 - Chapter 2 - The london hammer
    8:35 - Chapter 3 - Quimbaya artifacts
    11:55 - Chapter 4 - Samotherium

  • @cybergothiche2
    @cybergothiche2 Před 6 měsíci +15

    You used the Quimbaya Artifacts title card for both parts 3 and 4

  • @wikid4948
    @wikid4948 Před 6 měsíci +8

    The coin could have been taken from the dead body of a Viking and made into a pendent by a Tribes man and found its way down the coast.

    • @mariovillarreal8647
      @mariovillarreal8647 Před 3 měsíci

      I thought it was a 12th century English penny; not a Norse coin? Were there two different out of place coins in this segment?

    • @frankfrank366
      @frankfrank366 Před měsícem

      @@mariovillarreal8647 It's one that they first thought was English and then thought was Norse. He interrupted that segment with the sponsored segment hence the confusion.

    • @mariovillarreal8647
      @mariovillarreal8647 Před měsícem

      @@frankfrank366 it seems they referred to an old English penny, then started calling it a Norse coin. Thank you for clarification. Love&Peace from CentralCoastCalifornia 💕

  • @dobrzpe
    @dobrzpe Před 5 měsíci +5

    i love how everyone glosses over the fact that ancient people possibly - just quite possibly - couldn't have any "artistic expression" when making cave paintings or sculptures or drawing on a stone tablet. it's *ALWAYS* "this thing that's weathered a millennia in the elements looks closest to this thing that i know about today, so THEREFORE, *that* must be what it is!" eye roll

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The same principle applies about them apparently not seeing the colour blue due to their text's way of describing it, it doesn't say "blue" so therefore they didn't see it according to certain types of people.🙄

  • @breaneainn
    @breaneainn Před 6 měsíci +677

    The hammer has fallen in silicate slag from a smelter. Slag contains a concentrated amount of impurities from a large amount of ore, so if you measure certain radioactive isotopes, it's going to give you an inaccurate reading compared to the ore it came from...

    • @Adrian-vd6ji
      @Adrian-vd6ji Před 6 měsíci +27

      kool beans

    • @childofcascadia
      @childofcascadia Před 6 měsíci +91

      @breaneainn
      Naw, its a mineral concretion. They can grow so fast its mindblowing. Source: grew up in a place with highly mineralized well water and had to chip golf ball sized concretions off faucets every few years. They look and feel like cement.

    • @Noone-jn3jp
      @Noone-jn3jp Před 6 měsíci +22

      @@childofcascadiaThis is true. Same/current experience

    • @breaneainn
      @breaneainn Před 6 měsíci +24

      @@childofcascadia I suppose mineralised concretions would concentrate carbon and oxygen isotopes as well... hmmm. Basic limestone would do it I guess.
      For some reason I thought the hammer was found in a mine

    • @crwydryny
      @crwydryny Před 6 měsíci +56

      The hammer was found in a mine (or may have been a cave can't remember) water dripping through the rock carried disolved bits of limestone which when it fell onto the hammer formed a concretion of stone.
      As the rock is millions of years old any radioisotope testing of the concretion from the rock would date it back to that time. Even though the concretion formation is only a few years old.
      Short of hitting atoms with a neutron source radioactive decay is pretty steady even changing the form the isotope is in (dissolving it, melting it, freezing it etc) does nothing to change this thus the rock will always date to the same age.

  • @GAMakin
    @GAMakin Před 6 měsíci +6

    #1 Artefact: Probably delivered there by the Basque whalers, who had a whale processing station on an island (easier to defend) on the St Lawrence, a few Kilometers East of present-day Montreal...

  • @marshalllyon6454
    @marshalllyon6454 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Re: the Norse silver penny. I think the most likely explanation is that a Norse settler/traveler traded (in Labrador) it to a Native American who then wore it/took it to Maine. Then, while in Maine lost it in the midden pile.

    • @soylentgreen6082
      @soylentgreen6082 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Or someone lost their precious Norse coin from their collection because they had a hole in their pocket😂

    • @ValeriePallaoro
      @ValeriePallaoro Před 4 měsíci

      isn't that what he said?

  • @itsapittie
    @itsapittie Před 6 měsíci +4

    The Maine penny isn't particularly mysterious. There's a significant body of evidence to support the idea that Greenlanders made periodic trips to North America long after the abandonment of their settlement in Newfoundland. As to how it got to Maine, the most likely explanation is that it was carried there by a Native American. Native American trade networks were extensive. Excavations of the Spiro Mounds in Oklahoma turned up items which originated in Illinois and Mexico. Prehistoric Europeans had trade networks which stretched from the Near East to the British Isles. It would be laughable to suggest that 12th century Native Americans couldn't have traded an interesting trinket from Newfoundland to Maine.

  • @trikepilot101
    @trikepilot101 Před 6 měsíci +21

    I have heard the "London hammer" mentioned often. I am surprised that the concretion explanation was never mentioned. I suppose it would have spoiled the story.

    • @caodesignworks2407
      @caodesignworks2407 Před 6 měsíci

      Might be the sources for sure. Anytime I've ever heard it mentioned, it was usually in context of "but it was common for this sort of thing in this sort of conditions in that area followed by other similar objects

    • @treydixon5399
      @treydixon5399 Před 6 měsíci

      I highly recommend the 2009 documentary Land of the Lost. It explains how modern devices occur in stone from millions of years ago.

  • @robertwalker-smith2739
    @robertwalker-smith2739 Před 6 měsíci +43

    I can imagine the Maine Penny being passed from group to group as an exotic ornament.
    Someone was probably crestfallen to lose their shiny pendant.

    • @lawman592
      @lawman592 Před 6 měsíci +7

      It also could've been a conversation piece among the indigenous tribes. Each possessor of the coin would tell a story about how he or she acquired it from a tribe up the coast who in turn got it from some pale hairy men who spoke a strange language.

    • @IamnotfromUSA
      @IamnotfromUSA Před 6 měsíci +2

      It also could have been from Vikings

    • @contumelious-8440
      @contumelious-8440 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@IamnotfromUSA said; " It also could have been from Vikings"
      Of course it was from the Norsemen. The penny was authenticated as 11th century Norse, the video said :"There is no debate." I apologize if you have a learning disability, but the posters above you were discussing the travels of the obviously Norse coin after it came to the Americas since it's origin is not in question and was firmly established in the video.
      I am glad you are not from the USA, btw.

    • @IamnotfromUSA
      @IamnotfromUSA Před 6 měsíci

      @@contumelious-8440 I wrote it because I thought it could have been from them from maybe even from the ones from greenland who stayed there and traded with other people. Sorry that I didn't write it in more sentences.

    • @IamnotfromUSA
      @IamnotfromUSA Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@contumelious-8440 BTW I also didnt read the other comment before watching the video farther. About the choise of my name I did it when I needed to name all 50 states of USA and point them on World map which I can do I also know US history better then a lot of americans.

  • @AlexandraKuper
    @AlexandraKuper Před 6 měsíci +2

    My favorite is when archaeologists are like. What is this tool? what is it used for? We have no idea yet. It’s some thing that still being used by farmers.

  • @ragdolltrucking
    @ragdolltrucking Před 6 měsíci +5

    Considering the penny was essentially found on a beach, it was probably a part of something else that just drifted accross the ocean

  • @yiffytimes
    @yiffytimes Před 6 měsíci +12

    Funny thing You mentioned that hammer. The Smithsonian deemed it modern it seems what happened to it was common for that mine.

    • @tessjuel
      @tessjuel Před 6 měsíci +7

      The clincher is the wood handle of course. It wouldn't have survived many centuries under such conditions.

  • @brealistic3542
    @brealistic3542 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Easy explanation for the hammer. The T-Rex was smarter then you think and developed making hammers as weapons because they had such small arms.

    • @dayaautum6983
      @dayaautum6983 Před 6 měsíci

      I thought that the T Rexes were dentists by trade and used such hammers to remove stubborn plaque.

  • @brianstevens3858
    @brianstevens3858 Před 5 měsíci +4

    The problem with the penny is it could have gotten there at literally anytime middens aren't completely undisturbed, somebody could have been digging it a week earlier and lost their good luck piece. No way to know.

  • @skrungy1428
    @skrungy1428 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Considering that before the British discovered the Americas, the Americas existed and it’s always possible a ship with British coin got lost

  • @justingoodman9352
    @justingoodman9352 Před 6 měsíci +4

    HAPPY TURKEY DAY, EVERYONE! 🦃 GOBBLE! GOBBLE!

  • @markhalver3391
    @markhalver3391 Před 6 měsíci +6

    4:12 It's nice that your editor has labeled AI art

  • @Mikepun51
    @Mikepun51 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I love how people conclude an animal existed during a time period because of a sculpture. Even if it didn't represent a deer, it would still just be artwork.

  • @TheGravitywerks
    @TheGravitywerks Před 6 měsíci +15

    Coins with holes were not likely pendants....they were carried by stringing them together,..sometimes woven into clothing for travel. Thank you for the video.

    • @excelsior6365
      @excelsior6365 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That is not true. Coins with holes are not the true weight minted and are sold as jewelry to this day in Middle East Souks and India. It is debased currency and not carried as a means of exchange. Coin shaving was a capital offense for a reason.

    • @TheGravitywerks
      @TheGravitywerks Před 5 měsíci

      Using other historical accounts......this is not the case always. Your statement is not entirely true either. Thank you.@@excelsior6365

    • @Schmorgus
      @Schmorgus Před 5 měsíci +1

      Norse people, or "vikings" used their earnings from around the world as jewelry, because the value was not in the coin, but the iron, silver and/or gold it was made of. We didn't even have currency at that time in history in the Nordic countries :P
      I have heard of money being woven into clothing, but that was very specific to certain finds if I remember correctly.

    • @hernerweisenberg7052
      @hernerweisenberg7052 Před 3 měsíci

      @@excelsior6365 Denmark still uses coins today that have holes in the center from their tradition of putting them on strings in the past. However you are right ofc that ppl would drill holes and turn coins into jewelry too.

  • @withatcontext
    @withatcontext Před 6 měsíci +20

    i think the frog is a representation of a revolutionary war era Tank, due to the spurred wheels in the rear. the hopping may be a depiction of canon kickback, or possibly the color of the corrosion of forge iron turning green.

    • @YeshuaCameAndGaveUsLifeandLove
      @YeshuaCameAndGaveUsLifeandLove Před 6 měsíci +1

      Lol

    • @Sojoboscribe
      @Sojoboscribe Před 6 měsíci

      If you mean the gold statue with the emerald in it, there are some people that thing that, due to the "gears", "mudflaps" and squared off tail, it is supposed to be an image of a backhoe, but conventional guesses say a jaguar.

  • @sgt.tattoo9609
    @sgt.tattoo9609 Před 6 měsíci +26

    A Sailor had an old coin as a pendant for good luck and got to Maine and lost it...why make it more complicated than it has to be?

    • @timber72
      @timber72 Před 22 dny

      Because that "sailor" would have to have been around in the 12th century, as that is the archaeological strata within which the coin was found.

    • @sgt.tattoo9609
      @sgt.tattoo9609 Před 20 dny

      @@timber72The strata it said the cion was found in is just hearsay; it was not documented, and in case you are unaware, people lie.

  • @HarleyHerbert
    @HarleyHerbert Před 5 měsíci +2

    One thing the Quimbaya sculptures do prove however is that their culture did have some very skilled artisans
    It's also possible that the coin made its way there because a settler took it with them. People do like to collect old stuff after all, even back then.

    • @johnbrobston1334
      @johnbrobston1334 Před 5 měsíci

      I'm thinking a Native American of the time wouldn't have much use for a Viking coin other than "Oh, pretty". So put a string on it and wear it around his or her neck. After a while somebody offers to trade something for it and so it ends up where it was.

  • @DH.2016
    @DH.2016 Před 6 měsíci +11

    What intrigues me is why no-one seems to compare the flying Quimbaya artefacts with flying fish. aren't flying fish found in both the Pacific and Atlantic in the waters around the north part of South America?Today there are about 60 odd types of this species (so who knows how many variations existed when these artefacts were made). If you review the various types, you can see so many similarities.
    Looking forward to Simon's scoffing, derisive approach explaining the unusual construction techniques used in the likes of Machu Picchu, Pumapunku and even the Pyramids ...

    • @williamwilson6499
      @williamwilson6499 Před 6 měsíci

      The first time I saw them, that’s the first thing I thought they were. But others have made the same connection.

    • @marielarrison101
      @marielarrison101 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Flying fish are mid-ocean creatures not usually found in the near shore zone. There's no archeological or other scientific evidence the cultures on the Pacific coast of South America traveled far enough out into the ocean to become familiar with flying fish. In addition, flying fish don't have vertical tail surfaces or delta shaped wings. The fins they use to glide over the water look like fins not wings.

    • @DH.2016
      @DH.2016 Před 6 měsíci +2

      We must agree to disagree. For example, Search on CZcams and you'll find video footage of flying fish off the coast of California. From what I've seen, it definitely confirms that the tail fins are held vertically when gliding. There are also over 60 types of flying fish. Also remember that the Inca Empire stretched along most of the western coast of South America (plus the Aztec Empire would have had knowledge of the modern day Mexican coast in the north) so it is perfectly plausible that they would know about flying fish. As for the delta shape, I think the artefacts have been stylised because of practical difficulties in manufacture or to make the items more robust for the use they were intended for. (e.g., one of many views is that some were funeral urns). For me, its the evidence of advanced construction techniques used at the likes of Machu Picchu or Pumapunku attributed to so called primitive peoples that is more of a mystery than these artefacts. @@marielarrison101 🤓

    • @mandywalkden-brown7250
      @mandywalkden-brown7250 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@marielarrison101 - so the flying fish that kept crash-landing in my boat while twenty metres off shore (Fiji) were completely imaginary then were they?? Sigh.

    • @primusstovis3704
      @primusstovis3704 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@marielarrison101
      Flying fish can and do get close to the shore. Flying fish are a species in the family Exocoetidae, (Exocoetidae derives from Exocoetus which translates to "fish that sleeps on the shore". So, there is no reason that the locals would have never seen a flying fish).
      Flying fish have vertical tails as do all fish. There is no fish that has a horizntal tail. Fish tails (vertical) go side to side, mamalian (horizontal) tails go up and down.
      If you look at all of the artifacts, you will see that they are all stylised versions of the animals that they represent. In the case of the flying fish the 'wings' are larger and some have little curls along the front edge depicting waves.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quimbaya_artifacts#/media/File:Precolombina_cultura_prc.jpg

  • @Eric-zo8wo
    @Eric-zo8wo Před 6 měsíci +49

    3:38: 🔍 A Viking coin found in the United States has been confirmed to be authentic, potentially challenging previous claims of Viking artifacts in the country.
    6:12: 🔨 A wooden handle with an iron hammerhead was discovered encased in a rock formation dating back over 100 million years.
    9:30: ✈ The Comire artifacts, which depict stylized creatures, bear a striking resemblance to airplanes and were likely looted from specific tombs.
    12:28: 🔍 A bronze rain ring found in modern-day Iraq raises questions about the existence of a domesticated species believed to have gone extinct 1 million years ago.
    Recapped using Tammy AI

    • @oriolesfan61
      @oriolesfan61 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Lies and misinformation

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 Před 6 měsíci +1

      😮 I was confused about the "rain" ring until I heard Simon talk about it re the chariots... It isn't "rain" ring ! It's 'rein' ring - to thread the _reins_ through to prevent tangling. Confused no more!!
      🐴=o=🐴=o=(___

    • @judewarner1536
      @judewarner1536 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@oriolesfan61 Indeed, you are correct. This is a repeat only of the fantasies and excludes the correct, rational explanation of each artefact. So, it is not at all helpful in illuminating the point of the whole video, which is about debunking stupid ideas and false theories.

  • @TheNighthawke502
    @TheNighthawke502 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Taken out of context, hearing Simon mention a "Pre-Columbian civilization in Columbia" does sound rather amusing...hehe.

  • @jackjones9460
    @jackjones9460 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Most important part of the Norse coin is explaining where Lucky Eddy lost his penny!

  • @colebierplease8448
    @colebierplease8448 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I was metal detecting in the Guadelupe River here in Texas and kept getting a very nice signal over what was smooth limestone rock. My pinpointer confirmed the hit but there was nothing but rock visible.
    So i dug and chipped about an inch and a half down and recovered a silver ring that was completely encased in the river bed rock. It must have been lost decades earlier and the limestone sediment eventually covered it and baked hard in the sun over many summers…idk

  • @burentoyongu1345
    @burentoyongu1345 Před 6 měsíci +12

    Great vid! Just one thing about Quimbaya artifacts. Birds don't have vertical tail feathers, but the figurines, do.

    • @williammagill9977
      @williammagill9977 Před 6 měsíci

      But the mainstream archaeologists say that they are birds...

    • @jorgelotr3752
      @jorgelotr3752 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I've seen pictures of those figurines and those vertical tails depend on the figurine in question: some don't have one, some have one but looks more bent than vertical (it's metal, it can bend in weak spots), some have one behind a more normal looking tail (which may easily be a feature to tie a cord around like those that appear in some frog figurines) and some are not birds at all (either insects or misidentified long-finned fish).

    • @retiefgregorovich810
      @retiefgregorovich810 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@jorgelotr3752 Yet some do have vertical tails. One looks suspiciously like a delta wing jet. You can't dismiss that easily. I'm not saying anything definitively, just that some of these can't be easily dismissed. I find that very interesting.

    • @LDam-pf6lx
      @LDam-pf6lx Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@retiefgregorovich810Huh. I find it rather easy to dismiss, actually. Occam's razor is *heavily* in favour of it depicting birds and insects, rather than a jet plane.

    • @katmandoism
      @katmandoism Před 6 měsíci +1

      The tails maybe a way to hold them or used it their making.

  • @zeroreyortsed3624
    @zeroreyortsed3624 Před 6 měsíci +6

    I wouldn't rule out that the people that made the quimbaya artifacts might have had a simple understanding of aerodynamics. Enough to play around with the idea of flight. Like Asian cultures did with kites. And Europeans with early gliding toys.
    Chances are we'll never know. Because anything that could have glided would have likely been made out of biodegradable materials.
    To be clear. I don't believe they would have had any conception of powered flight, just enough to make figures and toys.

  • @WhiteDragon689
    @WhiteDragon689 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Some possibilities. 1. there were advanced civilizations even that far back. 2. ET colonies 3. time traveler lost a hammer. I personally think its a combination of all 3. Of course it could be a modern hammer that has been misinterpreted wrong LOL.

  • @vanhetgoor
    @vanhetgoor Před 6 měsíci +9

    Sorry, common mistake, ROCKS can be made with some base materials and an agent to start the reaction. With gravel and that agent rocks can be made in any form the gravel was poured in. There are beautifully made walls with stones so close together that not even a knife could be sticked in between the stones. Those stones were made on the spot, the gravel was poured in a wooden mould. This hammer was somewhere in the wrong place when the gravel and the agent came came together, the rock formed around the wooden handle of the hammer, that is all.

  • @aserta
    @aserta Před 5 měsíci +3

    7:59 Yup. There's a cave on one of our neighbor's property. He uses it as a well from time to time. There's pipe in there that's circa 1956 ish that's basically embedded in the formations. And this isn't just in the cave, but even at the mouth. Nature can move both fast and slow. I could place a hammer in there and in a decade it would be completely encased.

  • @colleens1107
    @colleens1107 Před 6 měsíci +11

    I think the most likely explanation for the coin is a Native American was given the coin or stole it or found it lying around and turned it into a pendant. As you said it was a big trading hub for tribes so the best explanation was it belonged to a native who dropped it at the site

    • @dilloncrain9111
      @dilloncrain9111 Před 6 měsíci

      Bro it's crazy to me that they were just tossing those shells and meanwhile the native Americans in Texas would use them for spoons or make stylized ornaments with their shells. Some tribes in Texas would've killed for that stash 🤣🤣

    • @calanon534
      @calanon534 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I want to write a whole story about a lost Viking landing in North America and being taken in as a friend by an outcast Native American. Through struggle and shenanigans, they become like brothers. One day - tragedy. A wild Bear attacks, and though they fight bravely, the Viking is mortally wounded. He gives to his friend the only trinket he has remaining from home: His penny. From that day, the Native American wears it as a symbol of their brotherhood, finally meandering south to Maine, where he spends the rest of his days near that trade hub, before finally passing on, not long after losing his precious amulet.

  • @erikreber3695
    @erikreber3695 Před 6 měsíci +11

    I love how skeptical you are Simon. Sometimes i find myself agreeing and sometimes im frustrated. Never change.

    • @Schmorgus
      @Schmorgus Před 5 měsíci

      We need more people to be skeptical, especially when it comes to pre 20th century archeology.

  • @JounLord1
    @JounLord1 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Can't wait to see a retraction video when they discover some isolated pocket of still living sivatherium. I always loved the existence of out of place artifacts, seemingly impossible things of ancient designs such as the Bimini Road. Most if not all are fake or have differing interpretations but its cool to see these apparently anachronistic objects and what they could be evidence of.

    • @nicholaslewis8594
      @nicholaslewis8594 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Pretty sure the Bimini road is a natural formation.

    • @JounLord1
      @JounLord1 Před 6 měsíci

      @@nicholaslewis8594 It is by all apparently, hence the seemingly impossible thing about it. Its out of place because people are interpreting a probably natural formation as something man made. Its a bit like the hexagonal basalt columns in places like the Giant's Causeway, something that seems man (or giant) made but isn't. Also I apparently can't spell column without a spellcheck.

    • @YourHineyness
      @YourHineyness Před 6 měsíci

      How about the Coelacanth? Thought to have been extinct 66 million years ago and then a guy caught one in 1938 off the coast of South Africa. I would have loved to hear the "experts" back-pedaling on that one. I'd sure like it if scientists said "we think" more often and "we know" hardly ever.

    • @JounLord1
      @JounLord1 Před 6 měsíci

      @@YourHineyness Thats honestly what I was thinking of. Those "living fossils" that show up occasionally or the confirmed extinct animals that then a isolated group is found like the black footed ferret. Its HIGHLY unlikely, sorta like finding the fabled still living Wooly mammoths, but not entirely impossible either. Definitely agree on the "we know" vs "we think", I'm denser then lead and even I know science should never be taken as 100 percent fact, just fact as far as we know right now.

  • @rashkavar
    @rashkavar Před 6 měsíci +4

    So...who claimed the concretion around the hammer dated to the Cretaceous period? Or was it a concretion found within a larger rock formation that was so dated?
    As for the Vikings trading in North America: I've heard of a site up on Baffin Island where some archaeologists suspect there was trade between the Vikings and local Inuit populations. I'm not particularly up on recent developments in archaeology, however, so I have no idea what mainstream analysis of that site says. The evidence was rather tenuous, as I recall - a few nails and remnants similar to Norse sod construction that might have been a trading shelter...but nails can turn up in driftwood that makes its way across the ocean given enough time, and sod construction is just cutting layers of grass-rooted dirt into bricks and effectively results in a house made of dirt. It's a pretty simple idea that an Inuit person in need of shelter could have come up with (especially given that culture devised the idea of cutting bricks out of snow to make an igloo, it's really not that much of a stretch for someone to try seeing if grass will hold together well enough to do something similar), and furthermore, the analysis that suggested the presence of a sod building was a new process and may not have held up since then. All in all, interesting theory but has room for considerable skepticism based on the documentary I saw alone.

  • @bdpgarage
    @bdpgarage Před 5 měsíci +5

    Seems like the common denominator is grossly inaccurate dating methods…

  • @juanlugo7492
    @juanlugo7492 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Spike hammer used to drive in rail road spikes looks like it was abandoned in an old rusting century old locomotive since its encrusted in so much iron oxide

  • @barriepotter3753
    @barriepotter3753 Před 6 měsíci +4

    In Khartoum one of Gordon’s gun boats sits in the mud on the banks of the Blue Nile. When I was there at the end of the 80’s it had been converted into a cafe, and so I went on board. At one point I looked over the side, and there, sticking out from under its Hull was the bow of a fibre glass motor boat - would this count in your list?

  • @donkeyslayer9879
    @donkeyslayer9879 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I wondered where I lost that hammer.

  • @DerderianEclecticTravel
    @DerderianEclecticTravel Před 5 měsíci +1

    the concretion explanation certainly holds water. But begs the statement that, apparently the dating process is inherently flawed if it keeps happening.

  • @frankfrank366
    @frankfrank366 Před měsícem

    I like how the in-video titles for chapters 3 and 4 both say Qimbaya Artifacts but in the in-player titles neither of them do.

  • @chefscorner7063
    @chefscorner7063 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Out of all the items shown, I held onto the belief in the story behind the iron hammer. This was due to the story I read saying it had been found deep underground during a mining operation. Once I heard that it was actually found at pretty much ground level and next to running water, I immediately thought it was just an accumulation of minerals somewhat similar to how stelagtites or stalagmites are formed. (I know, a bit of a reach). I guess the only thing left to rediscover is how the Pyramids were built in the timeframe they were said to have been built in and also who actually built them. I've read that even ancient Egyptians were to have said they were already built before they settled in the area, but at this point it's difficult if not impossible to believe anything written about this. Still, I have hope the truth will come out in my lifetime, but at 60 years old it better happen soon! ;)

    • @donaldduck830
      @donaldduck830 Před 5 měsíci

      If the hammer had been aboveground in flowing water for an extended period, it would have rusted away and the handle would have rotted away before it was enclosed. It could have been dropped in a very mineral-rich spring, but even that is a reach.

    • @user-do1qn4pj4w
      @user-do1qn4pj4w Před 4 měsíci

      You have got the reach and already grabbed it, go the 7

  • @PotatoeJoe69
    @PotatoeJoe69 Před 6 měsíci +16

    Simon is certainly a man of many hats.
    Or, is it one hat that gets passed around and worn by many? 🤔💭

    • @doctordemento965
      @doctordemento965 Před 6 měsíci

      It's called the fur hat... not the tinfoil. Pimping second hand information to try and appear as a scientist and push an atheist agenda. While it's obvious that the hammer was probably a concretion... the THEORY of evolution has been debunked by MODERN science. The creation museum he is referring to wasn't founded to state the obvious, it was founded to debunk BAD science. In the park it resides, there are human footprints inside of t rex tracks. These have also been discovered in other areas but geology professors who are ingrained in academia and not questioning the findings will not address it. There in lies the problem. When you call yourself a scientist... your JOB is to look at everything and draw a conclusion based on the scientific method. The theory of evolution fails all FIVE points.

  • @cornpowa
    @cornpowa Před 6 měsíci +2

    The frog's angle and open mouth, a long with the wheel like things and shovel things on the "tail" makes me think it has a passing resemblance to some artillery pieces. It's just what it made me think of, I'm not saying it's 100% an ancient cannon.

  • @mattm8870
    @mattm8870 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Pretty clear to me that these quimbaya artifacts are mythological fish monsters

  • @95rav
    @95rav Před 6 měsíci +14

    If the hammer was encased in a limestone concretion, the 'rock' could be identified with vinegar which would dissolve it. Definitely with HCl, which wouldn't affect silicate rocks.

  • @jaysunbrady
    @jaysunbrady Před 6 měsíci +4

    The hammer head was placed in the cavity, then the wooden handle which had been soaked in water to make it pliable was inserted. At least thats how I've seen it explained and saw being tested in a video. It worked.

    • @playedout148
      @playedout148 Před 6 měsíci

      Nope. It was Utu. Utu be praised.

    • @johnchandler1687
      @johnchandler1687 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes. I was taught this long ago. When your hammer or axe head gets loose put just a couple inches of water in a bucket and sit the tool in it. Let it soak up the water from the end and it'll swell up tight as new overnight.

  • @snowdogthewolf
    @snowdogthewolf Před 18 dny

    The hammer of London is an interesting story. The couple that found it, discovered it by seeing a _wooden_ handle protruding from a rock. Unless petrified, that wood would have turned to dust long ago if it were as old as some believe it to be.

  • @SeahamV2
    @SeahamV2 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Problem we have is many expeditions would not have been recorded or the records have been lost.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Před 6 měsíci

      Proper expeditions would have records, but parchment was expensive and a failed expedition's inventory lists would have seemed perfect for recycling. Wash or scrape off the old writing and re-use it. Or they weren't well-kept and deteriorated over time.
      Given the technology and the expense, there may not have been as many as we think there could have been.

  • @josephd.4890
    @josephd.4890 Před 6 měsíci +9

    The hammer, the wheelbarrow and a bunch of other objects found in mines that were petrified in place were caused by telluric currents.

  • @sirenwerks
    @sirenwerks Před 6 měsíci +5

    Why did the penny have to be brand new when it was lost on the Maine coast? Could it not have been a 12th C British penny, or Norse coin or whatever, that a Brit brought over and lost in the 1700? Seriously, I lose old shit all the time.

    • @Bennie32831
      @Bennie32831 Před 4 měsíci

      Did you make any of that shit from scratch after finding the materials and fuel to make it you might not loose it if you had?

    • @ripn929707
      @ripn929707 Před 4 měsíci

      The issue is that it was found in a pile of discarded shells and bones that dated back to 1200. How did it get there, when the pile had been abandoned for hundreds of years prior to the English landing in that area? The most likely explanation is that it was acquired, or taken from Norse explorers, by natives far to the north, and traded again and again, eventually finding it's way down south. It was probably part of a necklace, and dropped off while someone was working, dumping stuff on the pile.

  • @jkausti6737
    @jkausti6737 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Btw the "Dorchester pot" is actually a Victorian candlestick, and was found in 1850's, which, as you can quess, is in the Victorian are.

  • @keithdurose7057
    @keithdurose7057 Před měsícem

    The 400 million year old hammer! Wow! Who thought that curling was around in those days!

  • @NScherdin
    @NScherdin Před 6 měsíci +7

    Doesnt even need to be aerodynamic. With modern brushless motors and batteries you can make a lawnmower fly. So i have no doubt that if they had made similar models of the frogs they would have flown as well.

  • @scottnunnemaker5209
    @scottnunnemaker5209 Před 6 měsíci +9

    These people would have loved this beach in California called Glass Beach. It used to be the town nearby’s dump and when I was a kid there were entire engine blocks and other things encased in the rocks there. It had only been a couple hundred years.

  • @morsemurraidh1314
    @morsemurraidh1314 Před 21 dnem

    In south-central Oklahoma, we've got a mineral-rich stream called "Travertine Creek." It's full of travertine, which'll come out of solution at the drop of a hat... or a bottle cap, or a bottle, or a hammer. We find modern junk embedded in travertine _all the time,_ and we all know there's nothing unusual about it.
    Not all rocks take _millions of years_ to form. A lot _do,_ but not _all._

  • @7thsealord888
    @7thsealord888 Před 4 měsíci

    Story #1 - Coins travel. The movie 'Sahara' has a good conversation about this, where one character talks about his father collecting coins from all eras and all over the world, all ending up in a shoebox under a bed in Brooklyn, NJ. That a Norse coin might have repeatedly changed hands, and eventually wound up hundreds of miles from any Norse settlement, is plausible.
    Story #2 - The big problem I have here is believing that a recognizable wooden handle survived for more than a century or so..
    Story #3 - The vertical fin on some of these artifacts suggest fish to me. That some guys made flying models out of certain forms is a neat trick but, with enough tweaks and enough power up front, you can make pretty much anything fly.
    Story #4 - The creature depicted could be various things, it might even be something made up. Plus, AFAIK, nobody says that such likenesses MUST be 100% anatomically correct, after all. OTOH, there have been instances of animals and plants previously thought extinct for ages, only for an isolated population to unexpectedly be found. Wollomi Pines and Coelacanths both immediately come to mind, and there have been others.

  • @magesentron
    @magesentron Před 6 měsíci +12

    They're not birds, they're not insects, they're not airplanes. They're fish.

  • @haruruben
    @haruruben Před 6 měsíci +7

    11:00 it is a little weird that the bird sculpture’s wings are connected at the bottom, usually birds wings are affixed to the middle of the body. When you hook at the frog sculpture the arms and legs are in roughly the correct place. Could be they had toy “paper” airplanes or kites these are meant to be gold versions of

    • @msmliars908
      @msmliars908 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Plus birds and insects don’t have upright tails like planes. While this isn’t needed for their flight, they are very important for aircraft control. That’s a rather larger difference.

    • @haruruben
      @haruruben Před 6 měsíci

      @@msmliars908 oh yeah, good point I didn’t even notice that I was so fixated on the wings. Yeah, I doubt they had airplanes or even large gliders you could sit in but lots of different cultures thousands of years ago had kites and different kinds of flying/gliding toys

    • @davidtherwhanger6795
      @davidtherwhanger6795 Před 6 měsíci

      That's what I was thinking, that they where representations of some kind of toy or kite.

    • @jaysunbrady
      @jaysunbrady Před 6 měsíci

      Did you not notice the seagull whose wings are on the top of its body?

    • @davidtherwhanger6795
      @davidtherwhanger6795 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@jaysunbrady You're not looking at it the same. In your reference you are considering the "Top" to be what we look at as the "Body" as a whole. What we are talking about is that the wings are connected all along the body all the way back to the Tail section. No bird I have ever seen has a Delta Wing configuration naturally. But some kites do.

  • @0x0404
    @0x0404 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If I remember the london hammer was forged with sulfur. Which isn't(?) something we really use today for iron/steel forging

  • @LawsonBarnette
    @LawsonBarnette Před 25 dny

    I must've missed the part where the birds and insects had a vertical stabilizer.
    I guess we'll just have to chalk those tail fins on the Quimbaya artifacts up to artistic license.

  • @Dan-gg8fk
    @Dan-gg8fk Před 6 měsíci +6

    I wish that Simon had been my teacher or professor. I can easily listen to him for hours in complete comfort and understanding.

    • @ohlawd3699
      @ohlawd3699 Před 6 měsíci +3

      If he was, you'd probably end up living under a bridge considering the way he just agrees with the mainstrean narrative and doesn't seem to think for himself. 😅

    • @cbob213
      @cbob213 Před 6 měsíci

      @@ohlawd3699like what bird has a vertical and horizontal tail like that. The engineers designing planes figured out they needed a vertical tail piece to keep the plane stable or it wouldn’t fly.
      Birds can twist their wings and bodies to change direction.

    • @andrewkielbasowycz1915
      @andrewkielbasowycz1915 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Pretty sure this guy still thinks covid was made in nature

    • @davidkymdell452
      @davidkymdell452 Před 6 měsíci

      He's a presenter...he doesn't write this stuff. Who knows WHAT he believes.

    • @Dan-gg8fk
      @Dan-gg8fk Před 6 měsíci

      Hi David. I'm just addressing presentation and not content.@@davidkymdell452

  • @GatlingHawk
    @GatlingHawk Před 6 měsíci +4

    Yeah my bad, I dropped that coin there, I’ll come grab it.

  • @andrewphillips8341
    @andrewphillips8341 Před 5 měsíci +1

    "disagreements with the indigenous people" a PC way of saying the Natives kept warring with the Vikings. However that flies in the face of the "the indigenous peoples were peaceful" narative.

  • @USLethal
    @USLethal Před 6 měsíci +1

    I do admire how the explanations from main stream archaeological, scientific, and historical sources have become more theoretical than the so-called fringe explanations in things even so simple as admitting that intelligent human beings existed thousands of years before they’re comfortable admitting.

    • @dayaautum6983
      @dayaautum6983 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes, because a hammer getting calcified is far more complex and outrageous than humans riding around on dinosaurs like the Flintstones cartoon.

  • @derpimuss
    @derpimuss Před 6 měsíci +9

    I found an Egyptian mummy in my backyard, it's totally a pharaoh. Trust me bro.

  • @joeduke8239
    @joeduke8239 Před 6 měsíci +6

    The Quimbaya artifacts are definitely NOT 2 to 5 inches long. Most of them are around a centimeter long. They are incredibly, incredibly small. You can see them at the Gold Museum in Bogota, Colombia.

    • @SmokeyChipOatley
      @SmokeyChipOatley Před 6 měsíci +6

      Also tangentially related, the following segment of the video after the Quimbaya artifacts was mislabeled as also being about the same subject. I know it was a harmless editing mishap. Just wanted to mention it in case anyone else noticed it

  • @tripendicular
    @tripendicular Před 6 měsíci +1

    It’s just so hilarious and crazy that the little gold “plane” started Ancient Aliens 😂

  • @Khyranleander
    @Khyranleander Před 6 měsíci +2

    Also, the Oak Islanders found 1000yo Roman coins - figure the Byzantines visited Canada? Not hardly; only real tie between forging & finding is that can't bury anything before it's made. Coins were always able to travel far before dropped & can last for centuries, esp if stored in treasuries on the way.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Před 6 měsíci

      Precious metals don't lose their value just because they're in the form of money no longer used. Who knows how many coin caches have been found and emptied over the centuries? The Romans and Byzantines employed Germanic mercenaries, and there was plenty of trade throughout Europe and into East Asia.