Only One Of It's Kind In The Americas! Ancient Rock Formation Hidden In Canada's Woods.

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  • čas přidán 17. 07. 2022
  • This is one of the most incredibly interesting things that I have discovered in all of my years of exploring Canada.
    Hidden in the woods, just outside of the small town of Larder Lake, about 1 hour north of New Liskeard in the Temiskaming Shores area, you can find the only ancient "Stonehenge" type of astrological rock formation in all of North and South America!
    Access to the site is fairly easy, but it is a bit tricky to find.
    Travel north from New Liskeard on the #11 Highway for approx. 20 minutes, then turn onto secondary highway #624 and continue travelling north for another 40 minutes until you reach Larder Lake.
    When you reach Larder Lake, Turn east onto the #66 highway for about 5 minutes. The road to the site is just before you cross the bridge at Bear Lake, Chief Tonene Lake.
    There will be an unmarked dirt road on the south side of highway #66. Go in about 2 kilometers (you may have to walk part way if you don't have a 4-wheel drive, but it's an easy walk)
    The site is right on the shore of Larder Lake near a place called Pearl Beach. You could access the site by boat.
    Here are the GPS co-ordinates on Google Maps:
    48.10059790453413, -79.64906672141629

Komentáře • 273

  • @bentroyoutdoors
    @bentroyoutdoors  Před 14 dny +84

    I hope people read this before further commenting, I would like to clear up some confusion by telling you that all of the information given in this video was taken from published scientific articles. Geologists, Archeologists, Historians, and Astronomers have been studying this site for over 40 years now, and their findings have been published and verified.
    Here is a link to one of the first articles I ever read about this place, which I found so interesting that I researched many other articles that were referenced in this one. You can all do the same depending on your level of interest.
    www.sudbury.com/local-news/northern-ontario-stonehenge-mysterious-boulders-explored-on-the-back-roads-3631836
    I hope this answers some questions for you, and that you now understand that none of these claims are coming from me - I merely read about them, and was interested enough to travel to see them, and made this short video while I was there.
    May you all have a wonderful and blessed day!

    • @Imightberiding
      @Imightberiding Před 14 dny +3

      Thanks for the clarification. Admittedly, your video came across as though you happened upon those stones & formed your own opinion.
      I will definitely look into this more closely. Cheers.

    • @danperry6217
      @danperry6217 Před 13 dny +4

      👍glad I found your channel, looks interesting!

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 13 dny +4

      @danperry6217 thank you, I appreciate it!

    • @sumatis5027
      @sumatis5027 Před 13 dny +1

      Fascinating! Thank you! Would love to know where you found the info on the constellation alignment

    • @sumatis5027
      @sumatis5027 Před 13 dny +1

      @@bentroyoutdoorsFascinating - thank you! Im off to find the constellation correlation details :)

  • @sharky6128
    @sharky6128 Před 20 dny +45

    I'd love to see an aerial photo of all the rocks and compare them to the constellation alignment but great video 🥳👍👏

    • @quebecpatriot1874
      @quebecpatriot1874 Před 14 dny +2

      One does wonder why this is not already done and why this is kinda kept secret

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/video/-bvjBZlG-fQ/video.htmlsi=rUalSjXz68gAmrJp

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @lynnethievin4827
    @lynnethievin4827 Před 19 dny +37

    Would be interesting to see this from a drone

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      Lelanders channel has a drone vid.

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/video/eV7DSegkUxQ/video.htmlsi=XFMKOAdP74k0lSLL

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @osmia
    @osmia Před 20 dny +21

    I've never heard of these before. Very interesting

  • @bluetocop
    @bluetocop Před 19 dny +14

    it maybe hard to find , but harder to believe

  • @petedean1926
    @petedean1926 Před 23 dny +27

    How about a pt 2 more information ,for example ... the type of stone , the origins of the stone ,an arial view to be able to see their orientation to all the different positions you indicated etc. This site is very interesting , thanks for your video

    • @osmia
      @osmia Před 20 dny

      +

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/video/-bvjBZlG-fQ/video.htmlsi=rUalSjXz68gAmrJp

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @skyportal
    @skyportal Před měsícem +47

    looks like glacial rocks. how do you know they line up with the stars? i live 2 hours north of larder and our whole area has large boulders brought by the glaciers.

    • @bparcej6233
      @bparcej6233 Před 20 dny +4

      Checked with compass, confirm alignment with Polaris…not sure about equinox however this has been previously confirmed/geologist.

    • @jeil5676
      @jeil5676 Před 16 dny +7

      It's hard to see with this video but it looks like there are large boulders that are not in a line. How would that line up with....anything? Receding glaciers can drop boulders almost anywhere.

    • @john543
      @john543 Před 14 dny

      @@bparcej6233 Not unusual.

    • @bparcej6233
      @bparcej6233 Před 14 dny +3

      @@john543 hi, in this case the area was inhabited by indigenous peoples from 6000 BC and is located close to mt Cheminis, a sacred place…has good feels

    • @wegapaul3616
      @wegapaul3616 Před 14 dny +1

      “Placed by glaciers” …coming to you by the same people who brought you “safe and effective”

  • @gerardosanchez796
    @gerardosanchez796 Před rokem +22

    It amazes me that I was raised in Ontario and have never heard of this place. I'm going to check it out this week. Thanks for sharing the hidden wonders in Canada!

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před rokem +5

      That's great Gerardo! It's surprising that even people from close to that area have never heard of it. It is a bit tricky to find, I left some detailed instructions on how to get there, in the video description.
      ...the bugs may be bad this time of year.
      Enjoy your trip!

    • @finnmcginn9931
      @finnmcginn9931 Před 21 dnem +5

      It's such a huge province. 250 000 lakes, there just might be more out there undiscovered. Cheers

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 21 dnem +3

      I agree 100%

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 Před 13 dny

      I grew up in Toronto and had a great education. But until I married an OPP officer and was posted to various spots in Northern Ontario, I never knew much about Northern Ontario. We even lived near Swastika Ontario, it's name did change while we lived there. So it's bizarre to say well im from Ontario and neverheard of this or that. It's a massive province. Sadly we've lost much industry in our north as wood is now lumbered from the Amazon vs our Forests which use to employ many people, including native tree planters.

  • @joel_m_v
    @joel_m_v Před 22 dny +13

    Thanks or sharing this brother, I live in southern ON and hadn’t heard of this before.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 22 dny +3

      You're welcome! I hope you have a chance to explore it one day! It's about a 6.5 hour drive north from Toronto.

  • @alanjameson8664
    @alanjameson8664 Před 16 dny +9

    They look like glacial erratics, and that they might well be---- but a glacier wouldn't have deposited them in such a formation. Astounding.

    • @john543
      @john543 Před 14 dny +2

      Since that is roughy where the glaciers stalled some 10,000 to 14,000 yrs ago, it makes perfect sense.

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      They are in a ring, and beyond them is a ring of sitting stones.

  • @JohnSeaward
    @JohnSeaward Před 9 dny +1

    And north eastern Ontario is next gods country it has the best kept secrets of beauty, fishing and hunting and just enjoying nature at its purist untouched form !

  • @andretimm1387
    @andretimm1387 Před 13 dny +3

    Oh Canada, thnx for sharing, sharing is our true power.

  • @unimaginaryemily
    @unimaginaryemily Před 18 dny +5

    Interesting! I've seen large rocks like that in the woods and coastline of NS and NB. I wonder if the rocks' orientation can be partly explained by glaciers picking them up far away and then depositing them in their current resting spots, their placement intentionally organized by the people there before the glaciers had actually melted all the way. It is a special place. Thank you for sharing this!

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      There is also a cairn along the shoreline

  • @suetoye506
    @suetoye506 Před 13 dny +3

    I've never heard of this site and I live about 1/2 hour away from it. Very interesting.

    • @morninboy
      @morninboy Před 12 dny

      go see the work th glaciers did

  • @greenquiltsgalore1326
    @greenquiltsgalore1326 Před 12 dny +2

    Amazing! Thank you for sharing!

  • @gkess7106
    @gkess7106 Před rokem +17

    Definitely not in a line. And how do you know a glacier didn’t deposit those rocks there?

  • @heatherbell5306
    @heatherbell5306 Před 13 dny +2

    Seriously cool! Thanks for your efforts to share…

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 13 dny

      You're welcome, thanks for leaving a respectful comment! 👍

  • @technoshaman001
    @technoshaman001 Před 8 měsíci +3

    i found a moundsite that aligns with a constellation in Arkansas, i am from Canada but knowing there is constellations all over the world really shows you how important the sky was to their way of life

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 8 měsíci +1

      True! I'm surprised at how many have been discovered so far in Canada.

  • @jerichol6807
    @jerichol6807 Před rokem +2

    Cool video, I was just in Larder Lake yesterday after hiking Mont Chaudron, relaxed at that beautiful beach, wish I had known about this trail before leaving the area, thank you for the info.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před rokem

      Thanks for watching! Yes, that's too bad you missed it. I hiked that mountain too when I wad there. It's a really interesting area!

    • @skyportal
      @skyportal Před měsícem

      been up that mountain lots!

  • @chertaylor3602
    @chertaylor3602 Před 23 dny +2

    I love this! I also have a soft spot for rocks thou but this is really cool thing to see! Thanks for sharing this 🎉

  • @robertwilliamson922
    @robertwilliamson922 Před 20 dny +5

    Glacial drops. Obviously. And yes, there are others close to the termination positions of the last Glacial Period.

  • @friedaspyder8485
    @friedaspyder8485 Před 22 dny +5

    Interested the drainage of the Grand Canyon area used to flow North to the Labrador Sea. They call it the Bell Paleo River.
    And still need to better understand Hudson Bay glaciation.
    Did the rivers through the area of this video also reverse direction?
    "Temiskaming Shores lies within an ancient rift valley that formed as ancient cracks in our continent. These cracks, or faults, formed about 155 million years ago as the supercontinent of Gondwana broke into 2 landmasses to form the new smaller continents of North America and Europe, with the Atlantic Ocean filling in between them. Cracks penetrated the North American continental rocks, creating faulted rift valleys. Today, these ancient rifts contain the valleys of the St. Lawrence River, Ottawa River, Lake Ontario and Lake Timiskaming."

  • @nicholasblackerman8376
    @nicholasblackerman8376 Před 15 dny +23

    Due to the type of rock and location. They were brought via glacier. Hence the lake.

    • @peteredwards8737
      @peteredwards8737 Před 12 dny +6

      Looks like random dispersal from a glacier. When he says "they came from other areas" he seems to be suggesting humans moved them many miles, not glaciers, which is ridiculous. If the solstice alignment is deliberately man made, perhaps the natives moved them a few feet here and there to make them line up. But I suspect it's all just co-incidence.

    • @sheilajac
      @sheilajac Před 11 dny +3

      yep, there's a giant erratic in okotoks, alberta too. actually, it's part of the "foothills erratics train" carried from jasper down to montana 20,000 years ago.

    • @ScurvyDawg
      @ScurvyDawg Před 9 dny +2

      If they've been there for thousands of years polaris wouldn't have been where it is today.

  • @geno604
    @geno604 Před 23 dny +2

    This is incredible!

  • @ryanbuckley3314
    @ryanbuckley3314 Před 14 dny +2

    If they were moved, I would expect to see a flat side. You could build a sled around it, but that would need constant rebuilding and it would be a very expensive project. I think this is glaciers. Keep looking for evidence, though, it's worth looking at. I would be curious to know the elevation of this formation compared to the elevation of the nearest network of lakes.

  • @hillbillyherb
    @hillbillyherb Před 12 dny +1

    Wow really cool, I gotta check that out, thanks for sharing. I know a spot near Bon Echo with a strange field of big boulders. I'm going to have to have a better look and see if they point in any direction.

  • @wegapaul3616
    @wegapaul3616 Před 14 dny

    Thanks for this interesting video!

  • @reubenmace6644
    @reubenmace6644 Před rokem +41

    Interesting hypothesis. Is there any evidence of human derived activity apart from the stones orientations? They look just like plain old glacial erratics to me

    • @gn0s1s
      @gn0s1s Před 23 dny +14

      @@bentroyoutdoors be interesting to get some drone footage to see the alignments on a map, as well as relative to the mountain.

    • @bobcaygeon6799
      @bobcaygeon6799 Před 21 dnem +4

      @@bentroyoutdoors Not sure if you'll answer but thought I'd try.
      Considering the possible (likely ?) connection with native settlements, what does the current native community think of this being shown on the Internet? Not trying to be divisive just thinking of consideration to their ways and, with all things sacred, they be consulted. I'd love an update on this. I would love to check this out some time, but do not want to infringe on any sacredness of their community. Thanks.

    • @sled9263
      @sled9263 Před 21 dnem +9

      @@bobcaygeon6799 so by your thought process google’s mapping service should have consulted everyone before gathering their satellite imagery.

    • @HughJanus9999
      @HughJanus9999 Před 17 dny

      ​@@bobcaygeon6799 Why are you trying to gatekeep information while hiding behind the guise of being racially conscious? This man made a video on land he was allowed to be on about rock monuments that arent even recognized by those who live on the land currently or the government. To everyone else they are just rocks, to him there is potentially historical signifigance that nobody else is recognizing. If anything he is doing more to protect the area than the gov or the people who live there.

    • @ruidadgmailcanada8508
      @ruidadgmailcanada8508 Před 17 dny

      Hard to find anything in glacier scraped 12,000 year old land.

  • @BonnieLiz-hy9vs
    @BonnieLiz-hy9vs Před 11 dny +1

    Theres a boulder in or near Buckhorn, Ontario - a Geo-Cache was there when i visited 20 yrs ago. Its similar in that its geologically unique, esp vs its surrounding environment.

  • @EccentricAuntWanda1
    @EccentricAuntWanda1 Před 8 dny +1

    there is another "America's stonehenge" in New Hampshire USA - see article in wikipedia, etc

  • @nancysparhawk4975
    @nancysparhawk4975 Před rokem +1

    WOW I would love to go there ✨

  • @neonwind
    @neonwind Před 13 dny +1

    It so reminds me of Finland. Thank you for your work.

  • @markbrennan8392
    @markbrennan8392 Před 16 dny +1

    Cool ... Unless in a park of course, would be cool to see a drone video of the site. The rocks may all be large enough to be seen from that POV 😃

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @DarkchyldeRising
    @DarkchyldeRising Před 10 dny

    I live in the center of town, but I'm descended from a long line of hillbillies. From the highlands in the old country, we came to Canada, and settled at the top of the highest mountain we could find in an area of rural Quebec known as the Pontiac. Over the years, most everyone left the mountain. Only a few remain there today, but when anyone speaks of it, they still refer to it as "Yach Mountain." The family name of my ancestors who settled at the top in the late 1800's.
    This music speaks to my soul. ❤

  • @hollsee9266
    @hollsee9266 Před 22 dny +11

    They aren’t glacial erratics?

    • @kylerose3174
      @kylerose3174 Před 14 dny

      I was thinking erratic too as soon as I saw the first rock

    • @paulthiessen6444
      @paulthiessen6444 Před 10 dny +2

      They very well could be, that doesn’t mean they were not arranged at one point

  • @cherylgawne711
    @cherylgawne711 Před 8 dny +1

    Would be cool to see drone view

  • @steadfast4837
    @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

    I love it here.

  • @stevetobias9097
    @stevetobias9097 Před 14 dny +1

    Very interesting! I visited another Stonehenge near Hedley, BC with an Inuit friend who discovered it years ago. He’s got a short CZcams video about it if you’re interested: BC’s Stonehenge by Inuit Artist.

  • @steadfast4837
    @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

    Thank you forsharing and raising awareness of this sacred site. It needs protection from miners.

  • @OutThere5
    @OutThere5 Před 18 dny +51

    The boulders were most likely deposited by glaciers

    • @OrrinLepp
      @OrrinLepp Před 14 dny

      Yup. I wonder how far similar stone is.

    • @larry4674
      @larry4674 Před 14 dny +5

      That wouldn't account for the alignments though...

    • @LightLadd
      @LightLadd Před 14 dny +1

      @OutThere5- It's better to remain silent and have people think you're a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.
      These large stone arrangements and structures, are worldwide and ancient, literally impossible for primitive humans to accomplish. The proof of our real history is archeologically all over the earth and is literally 'written' in stone... You only need to do your own research that is outside of the mainstream modern junk science narrative.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 13 dny +3

      Please read the pinned comment above.

    • @morninboy
      @morninboy Před 12 dny

      I think it is only a 99.999999999999% chance
      It is a conglomerate rock that no one would bother moving. It is also uncarvable which, if it was me I would have shaped it to loose a lottle weight and make it more interesting.
      I would file this report under cosmic debris

  • @steadfast4837
    @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

    Thwre are also balanced boulders at the site. It was first excavated in the 1970's by V. Dufresne

  • @bernadettezelenski3491
    @bernadettezelenski3491 Před 14 dny +3

    We shouldn't let the trees grow into this formation. I never knew there was such a thing. Would love to see it!

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      The trees were planted by the government years ago to obscure it

  • @keithdurose7057
    @keithdurose7057 Před 17 dny +2

    Southern Alberta has Red Rock Coulee. Round red rocks. Randomly strewn about in the coulee. Also, not of the same bedrock. It's a little bit south of Bow Island on the #3 highway.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 17 dny

      Yes, I actually visited Red Rock Coulee and did a video on that as well.

    • @kenbell8752
      @kenbell8752 Před 14 dny +1

      Those stones are concretions formed in the sea that formally covered the area. They are amazing to see!

  • @noelennon420
    @noelennon420 Před 23 dny +5

    My guess is ice brought them there....

    • @ruidadgmailcanada8508
      @ruidadgmailcanada8508 Před 17 dny

      Other than the alignments to Polaris and also the celestial map of the Drago constellation? 👍
      🤔

  • @keepitsimplestupid3012
    @keepitsimplestupid3012 Před 23 dny +3

    I would like to see some drone footage of this area.

  • @blazingstar9638
    @blazingstar9638 Před 16 dny +1

    No way this is incredible

  • @steadfast4837
    @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

    @lelanders this is good vid.

  • @johnyoung2705
    @johnyoung2705 Před 10 dny

    I appreciate the hands-on personal view of the site and stones, next step if you want to persuade people that these aren't just erratics moved by glaciers is to show a site diagram or aerial photo, with dashed lines demonstrating the alignment that is discussed but is not at all obvious in the video. Part of the difficulty may be the reference to Stonehenge, which is tightly structured and obviously human-manipulated in those repetitive stacked formations. These are not stacked or close enough to suggest they were moved. Has anyone analysed the possible belief structure behind them that may explain (for instance) the wide spacing? Any sign of a bordering wall or ditch as in European henges to suggest a spiritual enclosure marking off sacred space? Any sign of burials or ancient habitations, considering large numbers of people would have been required to move these from long distances? You've intrigued me and I'd love to learn more.

  • @kellygarnet6329
    @kellygarnet6329 Před 15 dny

    Did you record the GPS coordinates when you were there? Maybe take a drone to get some aerial video which would show the positioning.

  • @gr84all
    @gr84all Před 21 dnem +4

    This is 546 km away from me, as the crow flies. Certainly doable, but can I convince the wife...

    • @davidpetersen1
      @davidpetersen1 Před 14 dny

      Do you require your wife to breathe?🤣🤣 Dude.. go for a drive. Guaranteed she'll survive a weekend without you.

  • @ronb7481
    @ronb7481 Před 4 dny

    Rocks transported by glaciers. The same glaciers that ground the surface you're walking on flat. Such rocks, and much larger, were transported and dropped all over the place. They were not placed there by people, obviously.

  • @wocookie2277
    @wocookie2277 Před 14 dny

    My bet is on a glacier and lateral moraine depositing erratics along its length. Just need to confirm the direction of travel from striations on exposed bed rock in the area.

  • @freedomfreedom9523
    @freedomfreedom9523 Před 10 dny

    I live in Ontario was born here many many moons ago I've been all over but never saw this but I think I have heard about I once

  • @daveretiredbkk4701
    @daveretiredbkk4701 Před 14 dny +4

    Thanks for sharing. There are several Megalithic Sites in Canada and many in USA, but someone is trying to keep them quiet.

    • @missdragoness6132
      @missdragoness6132 Před 13 dny +1

      Probably because this proves others were here before native american peoples.

  • @steadfast4837
    @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

    The diamond and gold miners destroyed many of the rocks. The ones left were ones that could not be destroyed by their tools. The chief archaelogist in Thunder Bay sent a team out to see them, MNR led rhem down a different path and the team never saw them.

  • @Joeblow12349
    @Joeblow12349 Před 19 dny +1

    I’ve seen this ty

  • @ZRaStar989
    @ZRaStar989 Před měsícem +1

    Are they arranged in a circle formation? We are very interested to visit this. About how long of a drive from Sudbury is it?

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před měsícem +2

      They are not in a circle, they are arranged to form the constellation Draco. The large ones in the center are in a straight line following the sun on the solstices.
      Most of the rocks are now in the tree line but you can find them all in a few minutes.
      It is about 3-1/2 hrs from Sudbury.
      It's a little tricky to find, so I gave detailed instructions on how to get there in the description.
      Happy exploring!!

    • @ZRaStar989
      @ZRaStar989 Před 29 dny +1

      @@bentroyoutdoors Thank you very much for the doing the video on this fastening place and replying to my question. I look forward to visiting it soon! Thank You again for posting this!

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 29 dny +1

      You're welcome!

    • @skyportal
      @skyportal Před 15 dny +1

      prob around 6 hrs

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny +1

      There is a circle in the Draco shape.

  • @thekeytothegate
    @thekeytothegate Před 9 dny

    Do you have the Lat, Long for this location?

  • @gweflj
    @gweflj Před 16 dny +1

    Aliens. For sure.

  • @nancysparhawk4975
    @nancysparhawk4975 Před rokem +1

    I'm very GREATFUL FOR YOUR U- Tube channel ✨ VERY POWERFUL

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před rokem

      Thanks so much for the encouragement, I really appreciate it!
      Have a blessed day!

  • @freedomfreedom9523
    @freedomfreedom9523 Před 10 dny

    You should send a drone up on the solstice

  • @Hardacre-ok8dy
    @Hardacre-ok8dy Před 14 dny

    Following the popular ideas about “megalithic” structures being possibly pre ice age, perhaps these blocks were tumbled and deposited by the “Ice Giants” 12,000 years ago?

  • @nancysparhawk4975
    @nancysparhawk4975 Před rokem +1

    🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗

  • @gordonflowers9560
    @gordonflowers9560 Před rokem +2

    Interesting that the Mayan calendar had 18, twenty day, months.

  • @JohnSeaward
    @JohnSeaward Před 9 dny +1

    Hey 11 does not go through larder lake that's why 66 , hwy 11 goes north from Toronto to Timmins ont etc, I know I grew up that way !

  • @damianabbate4423
    @damianabbate4423 Před 17 dny +1

    Hmm. I don't know. Seems more likely to be glacial drop stones. You can make almost any random event fit an organized one like star alignment.

  • @bryanprice61
    @bryanprice61 Před 17 dny

    The stones were dropped when the last glaciers that covered this area melted. I live in west quebec and discovered the same thing here. it is natural, the stones just happened to drop in a line.

  • @441rider
    @441rider Před 21 dnem +2

    There are pictographs on rocks that can only be reached by canoe in Algonquin park.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 21 dnem

      Do you know which lake in Algonquin?
      There are also pictographs that can only be reached by canoe in Temagami.

    • @441rider
      @441rider Před 21 dnem +1

      @@bentroyoutdoors I should recall but was tripping for Camp Kandalore so it may have been on a Temagami trip. It was a rock face maybe 20 feet high straight up out of water on a grey light rock maybe a granite bolder. 50+ years ago LOL! They had musket training at camp back then LOL!

    • @TechOttawa
      @TechOttawa Před 15 dny +1

      ​@@bentroyoutdoorsThis sounds like Mazinaw Rock in Lake Mazinaw aka Bon Echo.
      There is also a petroglyph site near Lakefield, ON you can visit. Easy to find.

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone Před 14 dny

      @@441rider Camp Kandalore? I salute you, sir! That had a reputation as a serious canoe-tripping camp! Kurt Whipper was the man's name, wasn't it?

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 14 dny

      Thank you for that info!

  • @strider112575
    @strider112575 Před 11 dny

    Isn't there a stone henge in NH in the US?

  • @JohnSeaward
    @JohnSeaward Před 9 dny +1

    And another place to go visit with hiking trails if they are still maintained which is called mount chiminis now you want to talk about huuuuuuge sweet blue berries ! Lol it looks similar to another American famous mountain that appeared in a movie back in the late 80's and u don't need 4 wheel drive to get to lol, there are many many beautiful hidden gems up there !

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 9 dny

      Yes, I actually hiked Mount Chiminis, it is incredible!

  • @john543
    @john543 Před 14 dny

    They are called erratics, glacier-transported rock fragment that differs from the local bedrock. The glacier stalled there roughly 10,000 to 14,000 years ago. The sun did the rest of the work.

  • @Freeontheland2030
    @Freeontheland2030 Před 21 dnem +3

    Thanks for the video, very cool site that experts are attempting to figure out, many anomalies that confound . They could just check here in the comments from all the armchair geologists if they're stumped. lol

    • @skyportal
      @skyportal Před 15 dny

      i live in northern ontario........you see glacial rocks all over, giant rocks in the middle of nowhere.....and beautiful lakes all carved by glaciers. its wild what moving ice sheets will do!

    • @Freeontheland2030
      @Freeontheland2030 Před 15 dny +1

      @@skyportal yes I am aware of erratic's left behind by glaciers and the lakes carved out by glaciers, this is common knowledge. There are anomalies associated with this particular array of erratic's that have peaked the interest of some geologists and this is what makes it an interesting site. fyi , Ontario born and raised , I have travelled the Province extensively and I currently own 150 acres of property in Northern Ontario.

  • @shanerajotte
    @shanerajotte Před 13 dny

    could the advancing and receding ice sheets from previous ice ages caused this strange phenomena?

  • @gearyclouthier9008
    @gearyclouthier9008 Před 22 dny +1

    I believe they were left by glaciers.

  • @andilem2068
    @andilem2068 Před 8 měsíci +2

    It s just natural

  • @Fredrok37
    @Fredrok37 Před 21 dnem

    The largest erratic at the 5;28 mark looks like caliche. Sort of natural concrete formed by glacial granite mixing with limestone and reforming after glaciation only to be torn up in a following glacial period. I know the form or type of rock is irrelevant to the positions of the rocks. I just find it interesting finding lava or caliche in the north when I haven’t seen these during my youth in Ontario

    • @bparcej6233
      @bparcej6233 Před 20 dny

      Appears to be a conglomerate, likely a glacial deposit…some human effort likely due to alignment ( critical for northern survival)

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      I have found lava rock on the shores of Larder Lake.

    • @bparcej6233
      @bparcej6233 Před 11 dny

      @@Fredrok37 it’s definitely a conglomerate

  • @4manda
    @4manda Před 10 dny +1

    Check out Majorville Medicine wheel in Alberta ❤❤

  • @owensspace
    @owensspace Před 15 dny +1

    How do all 18 line up with one thing, but just 4 also line up with a different thing.
    Also summer and winter solstice are different so I’m not sure how it’s lining up perfectly with them. Suppose it could line up with the difference between the two, but I believe that would be the same as lining up with latitude lines/ north and south, so why not say that if that’s the case.

    • @teeesen
      @teeesen Před 15 dny

      Sunset at the winter solstice is 180 degrees from sunrise at the summer solstice at sunrise at the winter solstice is 180 degrees from sunset at the summer solstice.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 13 dny

      Please read the pinned comment above.

  • @JxH
    @JxH Před 13 dny

    Erratics, dropped there by glaciers. Everything may be true, but is merely coincidental.
    For everything that's magically aligned, there are others elsewhere that aren't. *
    (* i.e. It's very unlikely that you'll win the lottery, but someone somewhere wins. Same thing.)

  • @wesblood3620
    @wesblood3620 Před 14 dny

    Should be shown Mainstreet news.

  • @daviau7884
    @daviau7884 Před měsícem +3

    Been there many times. Never mentionned that it seems to form a point towards cheminis mountain. It’s at the other end of the lake close to the Quebec border.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před měsícem +2

      Yes, I hiked Cheminis mountain, and at the top is an altar carved into the rock that is in line with the stones. But I saw this after I made the video.

    • @daviau7884
      @daviau7884 Před měsícem +1

      @@bentroyoutdoors wasn’t judging. Just mentioning it. I actually grew up in Virginiatown.

    • @skyportal
      @skyportal Před 15 dny +1

      cheminis mountain is a beautiful outcrop. that site is a true wonder!

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      ​@@bentroyoutdoors czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @Clover12346
    @Clover12346 Před 13 dny

    LiDAR ?

  • @bevgordon7619
    @bevgordon7619 Před 13 dny

    Why didn’t he get a gps gadget to get the co-ordinates then and so for now? Like many others I felt the same way- glacier deposits. The ice age proceeds, pushing huge boulders ahead of its path, ice age recedes and voila here are the souvenirs. Millions of years since the ice age and i’m fairly sure constellations would have been aligned not the way he surmises. I don’t believe he’s got any geological smarts and is hoping for humans to be involved and ‘brought them here’. (p.s. for excellent geologic episodes I highly recommend Myron Cook here on YT. I’m a fan not a sponsor)

  • @user-fi2rw9kv9u
    @user-fi2rw9kv9u Před 17 dny

    Erratic block carried by glaciers.

  • @why67152
    @why67152 Před 10 dny

    Giants put em thar!!

  • @normdickson2438
    @normdickson2438 Před 21 dnem

    There actually a cave with ancient carvings in the rock in Ontario that nobody has found but me I’ve never told anyone what I have found I did not want it discovered I was just a young man when I found this and I no it’s still hidden I checked just a few years ago

    • @davyc2193
      @davyc2193 Před 14 dny +1

      why don't you take pictures of everything? you still don't have to tell anyone where it is

  • @Imightberiding
    @Imightberiding Před 17 dny +1

    Thanks for the video but I'm sorry your video does not show these stones to be anything other than a naturally displaced rock formation on the CDN Shield. Perhaps an overhead shot from the air to show the alignment of these stones or closer inspection for tool marks would convince me. Coincidence & seemingly oddly placed or out of place stones does not a Stonehenge make.
    These could very well be vestiges of glacial movement. There are many examples of similar large stones left behind from the glaciers that once covered the northern part of North America both in the eastern part of Canada & all the way to the west coast.

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 13 dny

      Please read the pinned comment above.

    • @steadfast4837
      @steadfast4837 Před 11 dny

      czcams.com/play/PL7fmEZA9-o9K3RD25t8V7fpUCs4orb-w0.html&si=XhaL3RlPBzC5l5pv

  • @erickort1987
    @erickort1987 Před 6 dny

    GLACIERS moved them

  • @puntonone
    @puntonone Před 11 dny

    Yes, those big boulders did come from other areas. They are called 'glacial erratics' and were left behind by a retreating glacier. Are these stones laid out in any particular pattern? No proof of this claim that I can find.

  • @user-pe5mm2ye8m
    @user-pe5mm2ye8m Před 12 dny

    Lidar baby.

  • @Tobi_Jones
    @Tobi_Jones Před 16 dny

    likely dropped by a glacier,

  • @avtspies
    @avtspies Před 14 dny

    ahem!...did anyone say Glacial Moraine?

  • @elainehales3119
    @elainehales3119 Před 4 dny

    Stonehenge is arranged together. This is just a bunch of rocks all over the place. I've seen these in Northwestern Ontario too. Nothing mystical. Just rocks moved by glaciers.

  • @menotyou1234
    @menotyou1234 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Could it be that the flat stone on the ground in this area was also placed there..?

    • @bentroyoutdoors
      @bentroyoutdoors  Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's not actually movable stone, this entire region of Canada is referred to as the Canadian shield, its basically millions of acres of solid granite. Sometimes there is enough topsoil on top for trees to grow, but most of it is Barron and exposed.
      That's why these boulders are so fascinating, they are made from a completely different type of rock that is not found anywhere in this area!

    • @heavenboundtoourlord
      @heavenboundtoourlord Před 23 dny +1

      @@bentroyoutdoors He was goading you...

  • @timothyhume3741
    @timothyhume3741 Před 18 dny +6

    They were dropped there and carried by the ice. I doubt it is man-made. Cheers

  • @freedomfreedom9523
    @freedomfreedom9523 Před 10 dny

    Strange the only one is in Canada

  • @johnmoore1344
    @johnmoore1344 Před 16 dny

    Ya. Looks like glacial erratics to me. Possibly lined up along a terminal moraine. Any astronomical alignment is surely a coincidence. Probably the position of Polaris in the night sky is different today than 12 thousand years ago. In other words, if it lines up today it probably didn’t at the time of deposition. Cool in that it may represent the furthest advanced position of a glacier. Just my guess.

  • @edwardphillips8460
    @edwardphillips8460 Před 21 dnem +4

    Looks like a glacier drop sight to me.

  • @gryph01
    @gryph01 Před 12 dny

    If the rocks are in a straight line, it's not a henge.

  • @davidbowman271
    @davidbowman271 Před 12 dny

    The article you posted this needs to have a study done by archaeologists and peer reviewed. For now this is just conjecture.