- 156
- 128 337
Kentucky Uncharted
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 15 ก.พ. 2020
Adventurer, explorer, hiker, historian, and cave explorer. I also hunt for Native American artifacts and relics from the past.
I Discovered An Old Oil Well Site Dating Back to 1829
Last time, I found oil seeping up from underground in a steep hollow 2 years ago. 2 years later today, I found an old oil well site that was dug by pioneers on March 11, 1829 who were drilling for brine and that being a salt well. They discovered oil when it was gushing up and it created a spectacular "River of Fire" mentioning from the historical marker sign and the oil flowed into the Cumberland River. The well casing is now gone and there is a tree growing out of it.
มุมมอง: 932
วีดีโอ
Found a Shortcut to the Beach & Hiked the Shoreline Back to Camp
มุมมอง 372 หลายเดือนก่อน
It's now fall and I'm out hiking in the cooler weather! I'm currently camping with my friends and I found a trail that leads to the beach and it is 1.3 miles long and one part of the trail has a briars and thickets making it nearly impossible to get through but I managed through it and made it to the beach.
On the Road to Horse Cave
มุมมอง 873 หลายเดือนก่อน
I'm on the road going from Summer Shade to Horse Cave through highway 90 into Glasgow and then the parkway to the bypass to get on U.S. route 31E that goes through an open land what I call "the barrens" since it is flat and has beautiful scenery.
Tompkinsville Annual Fly-In 2019
มุมมอง 604 หลายเดือนก่อน
This is the annual fly-in from September 2019 and I take to the skies on a small plane filming from above.
Exploring Hidden Cemeteries
มุมมอง 1508 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I found some hidden cemeteries close together one being hidden on a creek bank and the other on a 640' hill with only one grave. These go back to the early 1800's at the time when pioneers came through migrating to the west.
I Discovered a Native American Burial Mound
มุมมอง 9K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I went some friends to investigate an ancient Native American mound and we see rock piles lined up in the shape of a U facing southeast. The mound is 660 feet elevation above sea level and this is the first time I filmed a burial mound. The first half of the video I will narrate because of the strong gusty winds blowing making it hard to hear and the other half is normal with no ...
Exploring a Hidden Cave and Waterfalls
มุมมอง 95010 หลายเดือนก่อน
I discovered a hidden cave in a rocky bluff in the woods and started to traverse through it and there are some parts where you have to crouch a little and go through and some parts sideways. The inside gets incredibly huge and a natural spring runs through it with a cold draft coming from the other side which is the back entrance leading through it. There are two waterfalls in the area and the ...
Driving to Burkesville, KY Through The Back Roads
มุมมอง 7K10 หลายเดือนก่อน
I'm heading to Burkesville for a group singing with our guitars and along the way we drive through the community of Meshack and then cross into Cumberland County and go through Mud Camp and end up at Waterview where Kentucky highway 100 ends. And now we have made it to Burkesville which is a river town with the Cumberland River setting close to it.
How Deep is the Blue Hole? Let's Find Out
มุมมอง 3.1K11 หลายเดือนก่อน
The last time I filmed the blue hole was back in August 2020 during the Pandemic with my GoPro Hero 8, now 4 years later I have a GoPro Hero 12 and testing it's limits on filming and I went back to the blue hole in the woods to see how deep it is and it is 6.5 to 8 feet deep.
Cumberland River Adventures
มุมมอง 11111 หลายเดือนก่อน
This is a full length of my adventures around the Cumberland River from July 2020 to July 2023. The first part is where I ride the ferry across the river to find an old settlement called Coe Ridge that dates back to the early 1800's and the others is where I discover the Pinnacle Bluff and the Monkey Bluffs that overlooks the river and also the site where an old ferry used to be.
Barren River Lake: An Old Highway & Community Underwater
มุมมอง 247ปีที่แล้ว
Barren River Lake: An Old Highway & Community Underwater
Natural Bridge Trail | Pickett State Park
มุมมอง 31ปีที่แล้ว
Natural Bridge Trail | Pickett State Park
Exploring Pinnacle Bluff (1990's VHS Effect)
มุมมอง 37ปีที่แล้ว
Exploring Pinnacle Bluff (1990's VHS Effect)
The Monkey Bluffs Above the Cumberland River
มุมมอง 54ปีที่แล้ว
The Monkey Bluffs Above the Cumberland River
First Start of the Year 2023 of Arrowhead Hunting
มุมมอง 510ปีที่แล้ว
First Start of the Year 2023 of Arrowhead Hunting
Buttons I Have Found From Metal Detecting
มุมมอง 342 ปีที่แล้ว
Buttons I Have Found From Metal Detecting
I was there on confederate side
Were you in the reenactment?
@ yes with the 5th kentucky
Me too! Fell in with you lot since the 46th didn't show up. Great being with y'all!
@@MichaelSollmanni remember you i was right in front of you. that other michael !!!
@@Rooski-420Skirmish buddies!!! Most confusing group out there name-wise.
The kin folk said Jed? move away from there.
Yooo I’m from there
I didn’t notice that. I’ve been around there since December 2008 and studying that area
@ u know John rush? I’m related to him
@@FlashyRL. I never heard of him but I know some Rush family in Monroe County that neighbors Cumberland County
that doesn't look to be a sea nettle with how short its arms are. did it have any thinner tentacles that showed up in the video? it reminds me of a tiny barrel jelly. my best guess is that it's a kind of cabbage head/cannonball jelly.
That could be a barrel jelly, I’m just new to learning different types of jellyfish
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 sorry, I wasn't saying it was a barrel jelly, just that it sorta looks like one, but much smaller. barrel jellies are BIG boys. they are pretty cool though around 16 inches in diameter is typical, and they usually live around Britain. as a tip, atlantic sea nettles tend to be white, sometimes with dark markings, and have have three big and long arms in the middle with a lot of small and long tentacles around the bell. usually they are about 5 inches wide have 7 inch long tentacles.
The sheer volume of ignorance on display in some of these comments is astounding. Very cool spot, near me. Lived here for years before I found out about this astrobleme.
HE never say whare is this place
Location?
This guy is full of it, lol, and knows absolutely nothing about geological features, lolol. Anything for views I reckon.
People just dont know how to read. The area was impacted by a meteor and this is one of 3 sites in the state of TN.
No meteors... just evidence of a biblical worldwide flood !
Knock knock
If it is on your private property. You can excavate it on your time to find out if a 6 fingerd giant was layed to rest.
@@stevesarvis5464 That’s not my property and the place has been surveyed in the late 1800’s by a guy named F.W. Putnam and mentioned by Bennett Young according to a book I read called “Prehistoric Men of Kentucky”.
Ejem ejem llegue manden localización
You should run the United States Army is now after you
Where?
Uh oh 😰
@AutobotLeader299 Uh oh what?
Hard to hear you sometimes. lol . dry out there or are you eating tator chips!
Mannnnn what the hell all mountains and hills are giant petrified tree stumps wich means the whole earth was once organic it grew and that looks like a collapsed tree that is not a an asteroid it would have desintegrated ... just because some one claims to be a geologist dont mean they have any knoladge idiots what a bunxh of idiots
Looks like a good ride
where is this at in ky
😎
Interesting to hear little dab o' Tommy Gold here in the hills, in the first minute. Those deep in The Know, will know what I mean.
In Western ky alot backroads have a mound on the corner at stop signs and some have a house or a cemetary on it.. The indians built the roads we still use today and there are far more earthworks than anyone could ever imagine. Alot of the ditches in the woods are actually earthworks that have been built up on both sides and im thinking they pitched rocks in these ditches and small creekbeds like we do coins at a fountain. Tons and tons of effigy rocks are laying in these ditches but people just assume they are weathered rocks. Most of the mounds and earthworks were built as designs and made there homes terrotory easier to travel on.
Most of the ones I know that are in the western Kentucky are the shell midden mounds on the Green River, Backusburg Mounds in Calloway County, and the Wickliffe Mounds also. The western Kentucky is really close to the Mississippi River which has been a huge Native territory for over thousands of years.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 The shell middens and the actual burial mounds are all documented mounds. I have learned that all of the old roads sides have been earthworked. Closer to rivers and big creeks you will notice alot of houses built on mounds. The reason is that Europeans used them for cabins and homes because it was already prepared. Over the years rebuilding has occured and now people do not realize its mounds and earthworks. I can clearly see the mound edges but most people never even think about it so they dont know. I think the government at some point in history tried to make that information disappear so that real estate wouldnt look like a graveyard
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 mclean ohio and muhlenberg co is full of them
0:10 The earth is less than 7,000 years old. The whole earth was destroyed by Flood around 4,000 Years ago. The asteroid impact is most likely in the past 4,000 years.
You have any proof to back up that claim? I mean any factual evidence, not what is written in your magic book of zombie worship.
@@derekwebb7577 Read Genesis, and Study the Earth, and things of Nature. It has Never been wrong. Definitely better than taking the Word of People teaching 100s of Thousands of Years, or Millions of Years, and They Definitely Don’t have anything for proof. They say it because they have No Proof. The Bible is Historical Facts, From Our Creator GOD. The Living GOD, Not made from the hands or imagination of man.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
How do you know it’s an Indian barrel mound? So, far haven’t seen anything that relates to Indians but rocks. Gonna have to dig to confirm this. Good luck
I’ve read about it in a book called Prehistoric Men of Kentucky and one part mentions Indian graves are made of rock piles or cairns.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 you might want to look around the area surrounding the rocks. Look around for chirp pieces of rock and anything potentially related to the natives working tools and of course arrowheads. This will give you a better understanding of this site. Good luck
He found Native American barrels there. 🙄
And you worry about climate change
If you want to start that, go somewhere else 😒
yer almost in my mushroom patch
😂😂😂😂
Be careful. Timber rattlesnakes like to hang out in rock crevices like that.
I know, luckily I went in late November when it was cold.
What do you use for the aerial view?
Historic Aerials, it’s a website that shows aerial views from the present days to the early 1900’s www.historicaerials.com
I have a mid to late 1800s mill on my property and i have been trying to get some coins out the ground lol. I am new to metal detecting
I don't see any crater . All of that rock you're looking at is petrified wood. That's a petrified log .
The whole area is an impact site. That rock is just uplifted from the ground for over 360 million years.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 That's a petrified log
I wish it was! cliffish rock formations are all over the cumberland plateau but I don't know of any that are historically labeled as an impact site.
There’s one impact site in Stewart County in western Tennessee called the Wells Creek Crater that formed in between 100 to 200 million years ago and the Cumberland Plateau is about 285 million years old.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 thank you! It blows my mind when I find petrified coral and crinoids on the cumberland plateau. What a beautiful place!!
Curious....my brother has the same thing on his property in Lincoln county. I shred this video with him. He just wondering what county this was filmed in?
Monroe County, they’re very rare to find oil seeps in certain places.
A impact crater is normally circular in shape especially if it was a massive , or very large asteroid . You can believe the atheist evolutionist theory that the earth is millions of years old . However, my belief is that the earth is at least five days older than Adam which would mark the age of the earth at roughly 6,460.00 years old . What I see in this video is bedrock , a creek , and plant life . Tired of the lies .
It was a large asteroid that struck 360 million years ago
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 It is the 360 millions of years that are the lies .
Do you have any factual evidence or is that just what your zombie worship handbook told you?
The scientists must have performed carbon dating on certain minerals to get a guessimate date..
Carbon dating is something I’m trying to learn how to do since I found some bone tools around a cave back in 2020.
If that's a crater then there's atleast a million more crater's scattered across Tennessee
Wells crater is in Cumberland City, Tennessee and dates between the Triassic and Mesozoic period from 100 to 200 million years ago.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674lol incorrect sir
how do ya know who did it? or that it is burial? you don't
It would have been ocean then.
True, but 360 million years ago everything was a shallow sea starting to form into a swamp.
U won't see much fossils from that time it would have sterilized the ground
Possible common ancestor John Hutchens Birth: 16 October 1764 Henry, Virginia, United States Death: 16 October 1855 Barren, Kentucky, United States
There is another John Hutchens buried in Monroe, Kentucky around the Cumberland River. Born in 1820, died in 1876
Our branch of the Hutchens family came from the same county, Cumberland, in Kentucky and came to Texas in the mid 1800s. George M Hutchens was my ancestor there. He is buried in Cooke, County, Texas
The two here in my county in Kentucky are Nancy Hutchens born on January 15, 1791 and died on April 1, 1841 and her son Hudspith Hutchens born in 1824 and died in an unknown year. My guessing is how they passed away was probably from typhoid fever since it was an epidemic in the early days.
Love the drone / satellite overview at 2:10! Proof positive of human earthwork!
I snapshot the aerial view from Google Maps, my drone is tore up because the back-right propeller quit working.
These rock do not look like they were place in any pattern. Unless you have evidence otherwise it could be that original farmers used horses or oxen to tow field rock to the least usable part of their land. High ground has less soil moisture and crops are more likely to blow down; so those big rocks went there. Total speculation on my part, but the fact the rocks are not in a pattern makes me wonder. Nice video!
Didn't you catch the drone / satellite overview at 2:10! Proof positive of human earthwork.
I snapshot the aerial view from Google Earth
It is a NATIVE BURIAL GROUND.
Or not.
Awesome
Probably just unknown to you.. Most “points of interest” are mapped and documented with USGS, using GPS coordinates
Fortunately the "federal elites" (USGS, et al,) aren't quite as "omniscient", omnipotent" and "omnipresent" as they would have us think... Yes: "They are free of the burdens others carry; they are not afflicted like other men. "Therefore pride is their necklace; a garment of violence covers them. "From their prosperity proceeds iniquity; the imaginations of their hearts run wild. "They mock and speak with malice; with arrogance they threaten oppression. "They set their mouths against the heavens, and their tongues strut across the earth." ...But "Surely You set them on slick ground; You cast them down into ruin. "How suddenly they are laid waste, completely swept away by terrors! "Like one waking from a dream, so You, O Lord, awaken and despise their form." Their abusive rule will pass away, and they will perish from "God's Green Earth" as the worthless thieves and trespassers they are...
That's not true. My whole property it's full of old Indian mounds. It's literally all Indian mounds with a bayou that used to be part of a river system until they built the reservoir. I've found so much stuff and called everyone I could think of. Nobody cares lol. So I just keep it all.
Its difficult to convey how sensual those rocks feel. (How to get past the assumption they are "just" rocks after all???) The way scorpions are oddly soft and warm. Definitely divides sensual from sexy though.
How do you know that they were native "Americans"? People born in the Americas, during certain years? American "Indians" weren't legally US citizens until 1924, if that's who you meant. 😖😋 Nice video. 👍🏽
I’ve been studying archaeology and knowing that rock piles on top of a mound could possibly indicate burial sites.
@kentuckyuncharted2674 True. I trust from the video that you are respectful. Please be. Leave things that you may find. Cover them, if able. The ancestors aren't gone, and, the land never forgets.
@jarodcrazyindian I never take anything from protected mound sites, I just film and document about them.
@@kentuckyuncharted2674 Thank you.
?2
It took me a while to get part 2 uploaded, I did upload it back in January last year. Here’s the link for it. th-cam.com/video/ceM9uYKRUjA/w-d-xo.htmlsi=TEdOdOFKFqMilcLF
I found a bunch of those when i rode my bicycle through Kentucky i didn't know what they were called thanks for the info
If you didn’t notice, the Brachiopod is Kentucky’s state fossil because it was a shallow sea over 350 to 500 million years dating from the Cambrian to Silurian period.
Nice Find