Nan Madol: The Megalithic Island City of the Pacific
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- čas přidán 10. 02. 2024
- One day later than our usual Saturday release, sorry about that we're trying to work while filming in Crete and the infrastructure of my hotel choice is leaving much to be desired. Outside of the wifi uploading issues they shut off our water so I haven't been able to poop all day, and as you might imagine this has affected the editing process.
But as it turns out this might be fortuitous next week's video is all about feces. So perhaps this will just be an inspirational experience.
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Thanks for watching! You're clearly one of the good ones.
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Hey I see you're into lost civilizations... I got something in the woods I think I should show you.
I’m really curious when you visited, I booked a trip here a few months ago to visit from Hawaii (using the famous Island Hopper route). Was surprised not many people know about this place.
I think this one is very interesting, especialy because is the only existing document I know that is real, a real factual case in the field, very very simple maths, no magic czcams.com/video/O9ZRXC95qMs/video.html
Every time you said "Sau Deleur," I thought you were going to say "Sardukar" as well.
I saw this on history channel and they said that locals were granted telekinesis by aliens to build it
This was on that Graham Hancock Netflix show too, he claimed a lost advanced civilization of Atlateans built it during the last ice age. 😂
@@microcomputermaster heh yeah they built it up on a mountain and when the sea levels rose after the ice age it just so happen to land right at its doorstep.
😂🤣
@@microcomputermaster
Going by the simplistic tie in, Handcock is eminently more believable in ways than Stitchin or Zsukalos; because usually Handcock at least believes that even if more ancients humans were involved, that they were human.
Where as the other two only ever appear to think '...Aliens did it ! ..because aliens !
@@microcomputermaster I don't think Hancock has said anything about aliens, but his hypothesis does suggest and conclude with lost civilizations. That's one deep rabbit hole which wasn't done much justice on the rather poorly executed Netflix show.
Man launching your coconuts via coconut tree is legendary
Who would've thought ? ? ? LOL
Quite literally legendary
The quickest way to 'transition'
This is something out of that kids game Fortnite
I read this before watching the video and assumed you were talking about launching actual coconuts as a defensive weapon. I could not have been further off. Edit: "This is the Reverse Coconut Harvest. I'm Isokelekel and welcome to Jackass!"
Post credits shot: he found where it landed.
Any speculations on what happened next ? ;)
@@ShawnRitchhe put de lime in it
@@vapormissile lol
thanks for the....uhh....tip
so that's where robin hood got the idea!
Its crazy to think that these people managed to travel across such vast stretches of ocean and settle in so many placed without even having metal tools, let alone iron. Even crazier is that they settled in islands without any stones that are used for making edged tools- flint, chert, obsidian. Working wood becomes so much more difficult without metal, and then even more difficult without flint, or at the very least some quartzite. I guess Basalt could still be used to make some sharp enough edges, but it must have taken an incredible amount of time and effort to make anything.
This a good comment^
You can make azde blades out of basalt, which are all of those black rocks in the video.
We don’t really know what they had. We don’t really know how this all happened. 😊
@LookAtYoSelf they borrowed lasers from space aliens
The biggest feat is engineering an ocean worthy ship with no nails. NO NAILS. For Polynesians specifically, crossing the pacific must have required massive ships to not be capsized with plenty of live pigs and chickens.
In hawaii they replicated a polynesian ship and sailed it across the world. It is called the Hōkūleʻa.
I love how the Pacific is like a microcosm for the rest of the world. Empires rise and fall, ecological collapse ruins societies, explorers discover and colonize new worlds, new crops are developed, except its all in miniature. Such a fascinating, and quite frankly, underrated (I mean everything except for maybe Hawaii and Tahiti) region of the world that really deserves more deep dives into its history.
Me, sick in bed sipping tea: "Oh a new Rare Earth vid!"
Evan, immediately: "So this guy ripped his f****n balls off and it kinda made sense!"
Thanks Evan. There's tea everywhere.
This is Rare Earth.
😂
basalt not granite, but good work as usual
I say basalt at one point, no idea how I slipped granite in there
It's easy to take vast stone slabs for granite.
@@BobisOnlyBob -- Got a chuckle out of me on that one.
Looking at the temple, I like the look of the columnar basalt used like logs. It's a great log cabin/temple made of stone. 😀
Once you recognize basalt's hexagonal columns it's hard to miss @@BobisOnlyBob
I’ve been there. It’s even more amazing than you imagine. The effort it took to build that complex is monumental, and that means the societal organization that made it possible is far beyond what the Western World commonly thinks of “pre-historic” civilizations.
This is the episode I have been waiting for…for over 20 years since I first became aware of Nan Madol. Thank you!
"And within a hundred years that great temple city that had ruled this island for longer than the empire of Rome existed, would be all but deserted." This line gives me chills. Excellent video!
Roman Empire existed for 1500 years, nearly a 1000 longer than Nan Madol.
I saw the National Geographic documentary they made here a while ago. Interesting to see what they found using Lidar. The stories told by Rare Earth are just as important!
It was funny to see how annoyed everyone I met in Pohnpei was with the host and his 'theories'. He certainly didn't pass through here unnoticed.
Commenting to suport the great gods of youtube algorithm. A true marvel as always Evan. It is really meshmerising to see that how much we the people have no idea about. Civilizations popping up and thriving thousands of year, yet not even noticed by the great western powers and getting forgotten almost compleatly. Only the stones of the temples remember. I wonder how long will it take for the for us to be forgotten and turn into legends.
🔥Sacrificeth my comment to the algo-gods 🔥
The main thing I know about Pohnpei is the the football team and it's attempt to be recognized by UEFA. Micronesia still aren't recognized by UEFA. They deserve that football money as much as any nation.
You might mean FIFA? UEFA is the Union of European Football Associations. The FSM's regional equivalent would be OFC - Oceania Football Confederation.
Wrong try better next time you go get it right now I'm ready to go back home
"Magical octopus"?
Lä lä Cthulhu pfntagen
I'm trying to stop watching youtube, and your channel is one of 9 that I bookmarked to check from time to time
Good luck! I feel ya
Certainly a good pick.
What are the other 8?
@@yasmeencatoline9561 Thomas Flight - movie reviews/essays, Jared Henderson - philosophy, Phil Edvards - ex producer from vox, Mac Adress - videos about apple, Steezy Kane - ex prank youtuber, Van Neistat - brother of Casey Neistat, Drew Joiner - fashion, Frugal Aesthetic - zoomers fashion
They said if you levied its military you got an achievement and the favor of Cthulhu
Clearly the Civ devs heard the “giant octopus points the way” story. Impressive depth of research by them.
What the actual fuck was that, dude? I’m absolutely blown away. The tone you set for this video and the way you held it to the very end was captivating. What a story. Also banger outro card, these kinds of things fuel my creative fire🔥🤝🏻
What a nice comment, thanks dude.
As a lover of stories and experiences. It always hurts my soul to have so much of our history be long lost. Forgetting history is the most unforgiveable thing to me. So vastly many cultures have been lost, some totally forgotten. I really hope we figure out time travel, to be able to go back and find out all the long forgotten things from all over the world.
This is 1 of very, very few non-stupid channels on this infernal device & I thank you....
"foreignness equating to great importance"
yup that's a "stranger king" dynasty alright
I'd never heard of this concept and I thank you for giving me something to look into deeper
@@RareEarthSeries _On Kings_ by Graeber and Sahlins is from where I learned it, and it's a solid recommendation if you can track it down
@@RareEarthSeries Xenophilic biases can be extremely beneficial to isolated communities where inbreeding is a continuous peril. Consider the case, as analyzed by Claude Levi-Strauss, of a Pacific Northwest indigenous tribe that worshipped a triune salmon-man-heavenly-spirit god. According to their myth, their tribal god would spend part of the year with his heavenly divine family, then transform into either a salmon or a stranger (I don't remember which "direction" their myth spun), then either be caught by his tribe in their big autumnal salmon harvest (which they relied on to survive the winter), or assist in that harvest as a stranger visiting the tribe from afar. The tribe welcomed strange men to assist them with their salmon catch and preservation (salting, drying, & smoking, maybe not in that order), in the belief that at least one of these guys was their god in human form. Accordingly, they allowed [encouraged?] the stranger[s] to have sex with at least some of the tribe's women [unmarried only? I don't know.] To wrap up the mythic cycle, after the harvest festival season had concluded, the stranger would leave, presumably to make his way to a river or the ocean shore (I'm not sure which; not sure the myth specified either) and turn into a salmon [fry?], to continue the cycle of life.
Consider the benefits of this belief system: 1) intermittent injections of unrelated DNA in their gene pool; 2) likely improved relationships with other tribes in the region, as this was clearly a friendly, unthreatening people offering the males of their entire region a fun time once a year; 3) some helpful free labor during their critical harvest; 4) some flesh-and-blood affirmation of their religious creeds that every member of their society could witness play out with their own eyes every year.
Re. the source: this was one of CL-S's writings that I read for a one-off elective class as an undergrad. Sadly, I don't remember the title, the name of the native nation, or anything useful like that. I thought it was "Kwakiutl", but I've already tried to find L-S's analysis of this myth using that term and failed. Perhaps you're well familiar with this text? Given your peripatetic interests and travels, I would guess that you are; certainly more so than I! Lastly, I know that L-S's reputation has been, um, re-evaluated in light of evolving and improving standards and ethics for cultural anthropologists, academics and writers, and men and adults generally; your opinion of CLS's worth as a source and analyst of myths may well be much lower than mine.
been waiting for you to upload, you have no idea how much i like these vids man.
Supporting you on Patreon - thank you for sharing your work!
That they deliberately seeded the island makes so much sense. I have done a lot of Jungle Survival training in Asia and my eyes bulged when I first saw that forest. Most of the vegetation you see is edible or useful. It's like living in a Costco.
Another great vid! Happy to be a supporter of your story telling!
Another facinating story, thanks! I cant imagine how much time you must spend on these, but it really shows in the quality of the storytelling and filming. Keep up the great work :D
Incredible stuff. You really bring a place to life in a way that mainstream history content doesn't anymore. Keep up the good work!
Thanks for uploading! Glad to see you always.
I subscribed to this channel a while ago, and every single episode confirms my descision, it is truly a crown jewel!
I've dreammed all my life to visit this place .. !! thanks for your review !!
Before going any further… That INTRO man!!! Had me hooked I don’t care bout the rest of your stuff yet, that into gained a sub👏👏👏
Kiitos paljon; thank you so much for continuing to bring us amazing Rare Earth stories~ ❤
So happy this channel is a thing. Binged a bunch of your vids years ago, and idfk for the life of me why I didn’t subscribe. I’m like 96% sure I did, I’d think about the channel from time to time. Just had to re-sub/subscribe, but I honestly love your stuff
As a native Pohnpeian, thank you @RareEarthSeries
I love your brand of storytelling. Thanks for sharing.
Fascinating stuff, as always! Cheers
Thx for doing this, filming it and sharing it it with us. 👍👍👍👍👍
Another excellent offering, thank you!
Fantastic short doco. Thank you.
Fantastic. I wanted to see the ruins and you showed a variety of shots and meandering clips that gave more perspective than most videos I've seen. It was interesting hearing a mixture of their myths, too.
Congratulations on what I believe is a very unique and serious attempt to grasp the history behind the people behind the incredible structures of Nan Madol . Thank you for that !
You are genuinely an excellent storyteller. I hope you don't stop your work on telling niche stories from even nicher places!
Evan, this script is excellent. I could watch this for days.
I can’t imagine the effort it took. Never doubt yourself in these matters.
Thank you so much for this video - I nurture the fairly unrealistic dream of one day visiting Nan Madol, so this was a feast to my eyes.
Thank you for this video, i love it👍
That was amazing dude, thank you
What a beautiful story. Thanks for sharing it
Yessss, as someone who grew up on pohnpei I was waiting for this episodeee ❤
What were you told as to how Nan Madol was built? I lived in Pohnpei for nearly three years and was told by Pohpeians that their ancestors knrw how to levitate the huge basalt columns and float them through the air from the other side of the island (Sokehs). Sounds good to me as I don't see how the relatively few Pohnpeians could have manually carried those thousands of huge rock columns across the island.
Always good to see a rare earth story pop up.
this is so cool man thank you
12:15 I got shivers. "...but from the East. Like the sun." What an awesome story, and you did a great job telling it.
Excellent video! Thanks!
That is so absolutely cool. Definitely one of the most awesome places one can visit on earth
as usual, just magical
Thanks for coming back
Maaan.... this channel is so amazing and I'm so grateful I'm almost managing to get over you saying "stepped foot" instead of "set foot" at 4:17 🤬😵🤬🤬🤬🤦♂️💚💚💚
Language isn't static.
So much world, so much hidden history (or mythology) , and here's hoping for so many more videos.
Another great video
Like everyone else, I don't know how much of that is true. However, it would make for an amazing movie.
Thank you for sharing this video with all of us. I am now going to look for books on this information. 😊
A wonderful story that I'd never have otherwise heard.
I appreciate the inclusion of all the perspectives you heard. What a beautiful and mysterious place
Love your videos
That means a lot thank you
Called it months ago! Nice seeing you there
Bro literally took the phrase "The Man, the Myth, the Legend" and decided "I am That Guy". It might just be a story, but man if that shows how timeless these ideas were.
Great video!
That was excellent. Gratitude
We are so lucky to have such a great storyteller.
Nice to have some real life visuals for Merritt's fictional novel The Moon Pool. Also very interesting to have thunderbirds and divine twins in the middle of the Pacific....
This pacific series has been incredible
Beautiful video
Hey it's OK Evan, I was mentally hearing Sardukar every time you said it
Thanks for that.
Outstanding.
Rare Earth never disappoints.
This is the one location/build that needs more investigation
Thank you
Think lower sea levels, love to see what it looks like then. Love your video! Thank you! ❤
There are some images available online of what it looked like with the slight lowering of sea levels during construction, if you're interested.
@@RareEarthSeries am I! I sure am, thanks for the tip! 😃❤️❤️❤️
Wow, that is one heck of a story.
5000 years in the Region Atleast From 1908 Onwards..
1500 Onset From Site At Enche Monastery and Paddy Fields Of Trumpeting Bull Pups..
God I love being subscribed to this channel
Hey Evan! You should do a video with Stefan Milo!
He's an extremely talented dude who I respect deeply and I don't think he has much need for my collaboration tbh. But if he had a need I'd certainly hold his camera or send him footage to use.
Yap has its own famous Micronesian Modern Stone Age feature: Is 'stone money' a thing we "moderns" might re-consider?' This one, like all your vids, is worthy of two/three-viewings. THANKS.
And the value reflects the difficulty of transport...
Stone block(chain)
would make a fun method of storing value
@@ringsystemmusic people call it blockchain coz the stones are often large enough that they change ownership without moving out of their original spot. Everyone just agrees and remember the transactions involving the stones. One rather large stone sunk into the sea during transport and people still used it for trading anyway.
Nan Madol is such a deeply cool and endlessly fascinating place, and it bums me out that most of the time it gets brought up it's by people trying to argue that aliens built it. And even if you want to stick to supernatural explanations, the actual stories from Pohnpei's oral history about it being built by demigods are so much cooler!
Very cool!
Wow, what a story
the whole thing about kings having to be foreigners sounds a lot like they had to prove themselves in some way going abroad. many cultures (think of ancient Rome or China, Japan or the Vikings) had traditions which expected martial leaders to first go and earn their keep, so to say, before they could become legitimate rulers. I wonder if those traditions would line up here as well
15:11
This might sound random but since the man is a Chief, is there a meaning why he's sitting on 2 chairs stacked on each other or did he just randomly sit there?
The chairs were already stacked and he sat on them, there's no deeper meaning to it
@@RareEarthSeries Aw. I was half hoping for a "throne" sort of vibe. ☹️
What an amazing place.
Any video about the Austronesian Expansion is nice.
I'll take your word for it.
This is what I like about You Tube. This Chanel is jewel.
The best storyteller on CZcams is king
That sure do look like a walled city. Amazingly.😮
oh snap did this channel start up again?
pretty sure you just described the fever dream I had the other day
Incredible story, but good grief, the mythology of some places can be pretty intense!
Fantastic.
Been there and climbed it. A true enigma.
Jus Wow!
that story is nuts