Ancient Humans Melted Stone

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ธ.ค. 2023
  • ⏰ 00:20 Skip The Introduction
    The Earth has many monolithic marvels, which makes us question how they were made during the distant past. While I traveled through South America over the past 6 years, I researched the multiple building methods and construction techniques from the ancient stone builders that built their marvels. There are many ancient stone structures which were created using primitive methods sophisticatedly but there are some places in South America where ancient humans melted stone to create them.
    How do you think ancient humans created these monolithic stone marvels?
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    #melting #ancient #stone
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  • @catsfive
    @catsfive 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    I am a super huge "Ancient High Technology" person and this video is nothing short of a revelation. AHT doesn't mean "aliens" it means "We dont' know, yet." There is SO much stuff here that stretches and challenges my mind. This is nuts. Dammit. They did this, and yet this is still only scratching the surface

    • @spacedaddy5517
      @spacedaddy5517 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Revelation in what ?.

    • @spacedaddy5517
      @spacedaddy5517 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Concrete would explain literally nothing, about hoisting 10's of tons in the air, how can it be a "revelation" ?. This is a joke. I couldn't even watch the whole thing, so inaccurate.

    • @catsfive
      @catsfive 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@spacedaddy5517 I spent 9 months living in Egypt studying the ancient sites and I didn't see ANY evidence of what you show here, over there, is what I mean, sorry

    • @spacedaddy5517
      @spacedaddy5517 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@catsfive What I show here ?

    • @tommyfred6180
      @tommyfred6180 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      mate the idea is bull and has been debunked repeatedly.

  • @deanlipska549
    @deanlipska549 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +142

    I always thought that the stones looked like cement. If they pulverized the stone, then it could be carried to the place they wanted and pored into forms. This would eliminate the need to move multi ton blocks of stone.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      Perhaps both large stones and pulverized stone were transported to the site. The large stones were shaped and chiseled into their basic shape, and then a geopolymer outside finish was placed onto the stone. This could explain why all H-shaped blocks are very similar, but the dimensions are all different as if they were handmade and not by a cast.

    • @frankedgar6694
      @frankedgar6694 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Why would you create so many different shaped “forms?” Any society who uses or has used forms have created a universal design.

    • @somewhereinhawaii3663
      @somewhereinhawaii3663 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ​@@frankedgar6694because it's stronger.

    • @frankedgar6694
      @frankedgar6694 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      @@somewhereinhawaii3663 Yeah. Sure. You nailed it. Look at the shapes. Those shapes are obtained because of existing stone shapes. You peck away at the surface on both stones to create seamless interfacing of the stone. It is impossible to crush stone, put it on a mold and come out with solid stone afterwards.
      Presume you’re correct though. How do you create exact molds to fit existing stone surfaces? Think it through.

    • @petepeterson4540
      @petepeterson4540 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      they are volcanic or appear to be so andersite is a very hard rock comes from deep in the earth has a lot of gas at times in it

  • @joeanderson8839
    @joeanderson8839 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +120

    If they did have the ability to make stone like cement, then they probably would have used a mold to pour the mixture into. In this case all the stones would be the same size.

    • @somewhereinhawaii3663
      @somewhereinhawaii3663 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      Not true. The different sizes and shapes make it stronger. Our ancestors understood the volatility of earth and built to last.

    • @joeanderson8839
      @joeanderson8839 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@somewhereinhawaii3663 It's 3:00.in the morning here. I guess it is afternoon in Hawaii.

    • @xXturbo86Xx
      @xXturbo86Xx 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      There was no need for uniformity. I'm sure many of their buildings were uniformly built but not of them still stand except from the BASE of the non-uniform megalithic ones. Which obviously means they did this on purpose, in order to last. It's also much easier and faster to just place random sized pieces on top of eachother. The previous pieces have already hardened and the next ones will simply sit on top of them and take their shape. Easy. No need for alignment or proper fitment.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      The exterior side we see could have been make of cloth or tightly woven matt used in the molds. That would account for the bulged out appearance. The flat joins part of the mold could have been made of wood or stone.

    • @DrewWithington
      @DrewWithington 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Yes it would be common sense to repeatedly use the same mould size. It would be a lot less work.

  • @banatibor83
    @banatibor83 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Archeologists have found homo sapiens remains in France which are almost 300.000 yo, that means that the modern human have been around for at least that long. Our civilization is only 8000 yo. What humans did 290.000 years? It is totally reasonable to imagine that multiple civilizations have risen and fall before us.

    • @hamonryehd
      @hamonryehd วันที่ผ่านมา

      the planet is old enough for multiple races to have evolved, build things, die off have the remains turn to dust, be swallowed by oceans and magma.

    • @user-cy2lm1bj9r
      @user-cy2lm1bj9r 12 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      It's only logical. 🖖

    • @boogyboogyboogy
      @boogyboogyboogy 11 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      I'm not sure where you found that homo sapiens have existed in Europe 300,000 years ago, could you point to a source? I found only that a population of homo sapiens may have been around southern France for only a roughly 40 year period around 80,000 years ago. These remains of homo sapiens found in Europe only prove that they had *once* existed there, not that they had *continuously* existed there.
      Homo sapiens as a species, if I'm not mistaken, are only 300k yo themselves. I'm sure plenty that is lost to history has happened over the full breadth of human existence, but much of that existence was that of a hunter-gatherer. I'm not asserting this was your implication, but they certainly didn't waste 290,000 years of history; they had their own cultures and histories, and left us some wonderful remnants of both! Could there be crazier stuff we haven't scratched the surface of? Sure! But what was left behind as we understand it is itself incredible.

  • @MichaelMcFearin
    @MichaelMcFearin 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    So nice to hear explanations that don’t involve Aliens, thank you.

    • @stevemckennon5995
      @stevemckennon5995 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Some of the ancient pyramids were blocks with pieces of sea shells. A type of cement we are beginning to understand.

    • @SRWill64
      @SRWill64 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Where do you think we got the tech from and if they had all that knowledge back then, why didn't have it a century ago and why did we 'forget' so much knowledge? These are things people don't question. If it was ancient people, what happened to the tech? It was taken from us, forgotten by later generations, and now they hide the truth from us. Yes, true evil does exist in human form. They want to keep us dumbed down and in the dark about everything they know. Don't believe in non-terrestrial beings...see only what THEY want you to see. That's just what they want. We aren't alone, never will be, and will never be. There's too much evidence to the contrary that says there are non-terrestrials and they have visited this world and taught many cultures about many things. Start the research. It WILL change your mind.

    • @spacedaddy5517
      @spacedaddy5517 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@stevemckennon5995 No, it's not concrete we don't understand, lol. Sea shells exist inside of rock.

    • @spacedaddy5517
      @spacedaddy5517 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      No good explanations are lacking some aliens, or some other type of technology.

    • @jamy8575
      @jamy8575 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Project Blue Beam

  • @redneckhippy2020
    @redneckhippy2020 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

    The oxalate observation I've made myself a few years ago.
    While reducing birch sap to make beer I noticed that when I skimmed the top with a spoon the material I banged out on a rock had a caustic reaction with the stone. Chaga, which grows only on birch trees, has the highest oxalate count of any other living organism. It was very satisfying to me to hear of this observation from others.

    • @will7its
      @will7its 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Sweet, hows the beer?

    • @stevescuba1978
      @stevescuba1978 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Is this similar to the chemical etchings that native tribes in the American southwest used to leave petroglyphs?

    • @jthepickle7
      @jthepickle7 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      So....how did the beer turn out?

    • @redneckhippy2020
      @redneckhippy2020 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      very earthy, lol. I reduced about 100 gallons of sap down to 5 gallons of syrup and added yeast. Birch sap has a rather violent fermentation.@@jthepickle7

    • @dukeofthedance8062
      @dukeofthedance8062 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@jthepickle7 I hate beer but even I'm curious now.

  • @JPMerolla001
    @JPMerolla001 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    A very comprehensive collection of theorys. Ive been interested in ancient peruvian stonework for years now. And love hearing new ideas to how this could have been done.
    One phrase i always try to keep in my head. Is an awnser to a simple question: "why did they take the time and expend so much effort to create this stonework?" Well ... its only logical to assume it was not such a monumental task for them.
    Its a problem when we view ancient civilizations... while looking through a pinhole sized keyhole. So to speak. There is so much we can not see.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Very well said. Thank you for your insight.

    • @gregorydahl
      @gregorydahl 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You said " even after trying to polish with a softer stone " .
      You need a harder stone to scrape , shape or polish a softer stone .
      Like 911 they used cutting charges behind a pyrotechnic fireball and had to add in an image of 3D grapics of a softer metal and plastic passenger airplane because aluminum and plastic cannot even scratch the huge steel pilkars made from steel as thick as the front door of a house . Steel plates that were approximately 40mm or one and a half inches thick . But the principle is the same . Butterknife cuts butter , but butter does not cut butterknife .

    • @jeffvw1994
      @jeffvw1994 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      So much of the work shows real art, which only comes from advanced civilizations and really no one knows how long ago.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's not true about cutting the stone. You can 100% scrape down a stone with a softer stone, it just takes time and extra softer stones when it degrades.

  • @Joe-xj2tb
    @Joe-xj2tb 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Yeah i got beat for telling my teachers stuff like this when i was a kid - And now to see more people have finally been working on this publicly fkn love it

    • @ChezMclegend
      @ChezMclegend 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Because school isn’t meant to educate you. It was always designed to keep people in line.

  • @victorvelasquez3719
    @victorvelasquez3719 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Congratulations 👏🏼
    Although there are many mysteries still to unveil it's an amazing research you have done 👍🏼

  • @Proto-Sapien
    @Proto-Sapien 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I absolutely applaud the depth you have gone into researching these hanan pacha sites and the knowledge you have shared is incredible. For every 10 videos on these ancient sites there's 1 that puts forth truly useful and insightful information. We only build on the shoulders of giants and you are a giant whose work has brought us closer to a clear image of what capabilities these cultures were able to create. I have never heard anyone state the chupa towers could equate to industrial furnaces and from your analysis seems so obvious. Just outstanding communication of the Inca history and compelling arguments overall. 👏 👏👏👏👏👏 after seeing this, I believe the mushroom courtyard could have been a workshop for creating curved metalworks on large scale and for a variety of curvatures eg. Shields, headware, ornaments. I'm honestly blown away. Another piece of the puzzle strongly set in place. 🙏

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you tairynngatai7095, your comment was incredibly thoughtful. This video was a collection from most of the knowledge that I've learned while traveling to these ancient places over the years. I've toured with local guides and have talked to their elders about the stories & legends they hold about these places. I've also toured with people from the History & Discovery Channel. I have also read the book The Travels of Pedro de Cieza de León who was a conquistador who traveled to Peru 500 years ago and documented any knowledge of these places & the Inca civilization as well. From all of this, these stones tell a much bigger story.
      I believe our ancient ancestors were much smarter than what we perceive they are today. They have also created monuments and structures that either are in ruins, are still buried, or have been destroyed throughout time.

    • @Proto-Sapien
      @Proto-Sapien 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheVoyagerTV I can't state how critical it is for people with such a strongly invested interest such as yourself to put forth this significant information so the true history of these sites are brought to light, as there is still such a small community around the world that see the importance of these sites and the knowledge they hold. You are helping change the perception of the ancient past and the inconsistencies that we have been taught in so many conventional formats. I hope to visit some of these sites and build on this knowledge as well and thank you for the book reference I will find a copy so I can be further enlightened on this subject.

  • @anthonybaransky137
    @anthonybaransky137 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +112

    Maybe it was softened not melted and just maybe it was an organic recipe that softened stone

    • @mattematsson554
      @mattematsson554 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Too bad that the technique is lost in time.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      00:14:58 Yes that is one theory regarding on how some of the stones from Sacsayhuaman. At that one part in the video, I describe one theory that people think the chemical reaction would "combust" or heat the stone. Although, it seems more plausible that it's a chemical reaction to soften the stone using the acidic pyrite. I do want to state that this was all done after they initially chiseled the stone and perhaps polished or shaved off the bumps. I believe they multiple sophisticated methods. I mention that areas of certain blocks have a certain stained color around the creases which could have been the area of where it could have been applied and leaked down from. The opposing theory of that stain is from water and "rusting" the iron compounds in the andesite stone but there have been different colored stains (not orange/brown) which is not a sign of rust.

    • @itwillbe-itwillnotbe-itis
      @itwillbe-itwillnotbe-itis 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      You can use a wide spectrum of vibrations to destabilize molecular bonds and cause even granite to become maliable- however if you cant fit paper in-between the rocks they were cast from geopolymer (rock slurry that sets similar to roman concrete where natural polymers are added and it is poured into forma)

    • @danwilson1040
      @danwilson1040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Softened by the application of acid rendering the face to be worked more workable ,maybe not the H blocks shown but certainly the multi jointed blocks could be worked this way

    • @danwilson1040
      @danwilson1040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Highly focused sunshine ?

  • @orangpendejo156
    @orangpendejo156 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    TLDR The "melted stone" in this video is actually a reference to obsidian. You're welcome.

  • @jerrybuckles5481
    @jerrybuckles5481 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    the inca have always said the didnt build any of that the inca did stack small rough stones in some areas..

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I've heard this claim made before and it could be true. During 00:23:20 in this video, you can see the difference between the ancient stonework and the Inca stonework off to the side. If you'd like to learn more about this mysterious cave, I created a video about it which I included right below.
      th-cam.com/video/O2JUiMbiOuA/w-d-xo.html

  • @travismosier4936
    @travismosier4936 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Love the content and length of this video you posted! So interesting and hope to see more like this! I subscribed and hope to see more videos!!!!!

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you Travismosier4936!!! I appreciate you watching this video, your comment, and I'm grateful for your subscription! Thank you for watching!

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheVoyagerTV
      Has anyone contemporary tried to soften stone ?

  • @Apophlegmatis
    @Apophlegmatis 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    When your most complex material available is silicon/precious metals, you make processors that are capable of billions of calculations per second.
    When it's bronze, you craft impressive weapons and art.
    When it's stone, you do all the things in the video
    That's just my theory, anyhow

  • @snarkcharming
    @snarkcharming 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    21:20 that shot of the valley i was like… “i knew it. super 😊saiyens.”

  • @MB-gz3zl
    @MB-gz3zl 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Great job with your videos bro! Love that edit in the beginning where you are standing in the window lol. Where is the opening scene shot, Sacsayhuaman? The GLOBAL polygonal stone builders are easily one of the most fascinating mysteries of all time. I totally agree with you about your perspective on precision, Ben over at UnchartedX also focuses on the precision aspect because it is truly remarkable. Once you've worked with stone yourself, you see structures like these and finally understand the actual gravity and astonishing awe of what they accomplished. Thanks for making these and getting more great shots of these important historical sites! Rock on dude ~

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thank you so much for your comment and the opinion on my work, it means a lot to hear. Yes the introduction is from Sacsayhuaman in Cusco, Peru. I know it seems like I could've just filmed and created that scene but that one section was currently blocked off.
      Yes I completely agree that the global polygonal stone builders are incredibly fascinating. You can find all different types of polygonal stone walls and the quality of the construction method ranges.
      Ben at UnchartedX has done an incredible amount of research and I find his videos to be very compelling by challenging the type of technology used during the ancient past. I would love to see his research done on other ancient artifacts from around the world as his work is unique to this field of research.
      As always, thank you for the view and it's a passion of mine to show everyone and to talk about these ancient achievements during antiquity.
      🗿🤘!

    • @MB-gz3zl
      @MB-gz3zl 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You're doing a great job bro. Because you're going against the grain, lots of haters will come at you. Like those guys picking on your use of the digital microscope in a previous video's comments. I think that kind of thing you are doing is awesome, of course it's not some kind of lab grade thing, but at least it's something! At least you showed up, and took it! Never let them get to your head dude. Keep on keeping on and be yourself! Questions guide us closer to the truth. If no one had ever questioned the status quo, we'd still think the Earth is the center of the solar system, and the list goes on and on. Sometimes it can even cost you your life! Asking questions is never wrong, no matter if the answers end up being no. Even knowing that moves you closer to the truth. Rock on!@@TheVoyagerTV​

  • @ancientexplorer1865
    @ancientexplorer1865 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Scientists have analyzed the blocks of Sacsaywaman and they discovered they have the same chemical composition as limestone, but the structure was different from limestone. One of the scientist that took part in the test, said the blocks in Sacsaywaman came from a limestone quarry, but was crushed to fine powder, then it was made into a mixture and molded into blocks. Natural limestone consists of organic material like shells. In the blocks of Sacsaywaman they could see it was pulverized. This is not the case un the natural limestone.

    • @ivankaleoniefuchs333
      @ivankaleoniefuchs333 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      haha...They must have used a gazillion "different" molds then, because almost all ancient stone-work sites (all over Earth) used "different" sized stones. You would suffer much difficulty finding even 2 stones of das exact same proportions und size at any ancient site. Even das sites that look like they used same size stones? When you measure them every stone ist much different, so they were not made from a same mold. Auf Wiedersehen :-)

    • @ancientexplorer1865
      @ancientexplorer1865 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@ivankaleoniefuchs333 I am referring to what a scientific analysis in a scientific report shows regarding blocks in Sacsaywanan, not the entire world. How they moulded the blocks, was not part of the analasys. The analysis showed that the particles in the Sacsaywaman blocks were much smaller than what they measured in the limestone quarry. According to the scientist, the limestone would have had to be crushed to powder form in order for the particles to be so small.

    • @phillipbox7957
      @phillipbox7957 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Seashells are calcium carbonate and not organic. The stones are limestone and worked by hand that’s why they are all different. If the stones were poured they would have needed moulds that were each the final shape you see today. As beautiful as they are this just exhibits a low technology level not high. This is product of immense physical effort and skill at shaping and working each stone as they built. What’s far more impressive are the flat granite stones with 90 degree corners and angles. Even there no hidden aliens are magic involved just enormous levels of skill and effort.

    • @phillipbox7957
      @phillipbox7957 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What scientist.

    • @ancientexplorer1865
      @ancientexplorer1865 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@phillipbox7957 I am referring to Geophysicist Andrey Verianov. He was interviewed on the youtube channel of Giacomo Longato. I also made a video on my channel where I read threw the report out load, with all the details.

  • @vperez4796
    @vperez4796 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Excellent video. The enigma of the blue obsidian on the stones deserves some XRay fluoresce analysis. The blue color of the melted obsidian (a glass silicate) could arise from a copper silicate. Isn't that suggesting you they used some natural CuFeS2 ore during the thermal process? SiO2 (obsidian) is not so difficult to melt.

  • @hilarysimpson3725
    @hilarysimpson3725 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The function of dome of the ancient quarry type sites with cuts may have been where apprentices honed their skills before working on monuments.

  • @polygonalmasonary
    @polygonalmasonary 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Stone (Granite, Diorite, Feldspar etc.) cannot be 'melted' unless kept in a temperature controlled vacuum, why?
    When certain types of rocks or minerals are heated to a high temperature and then rapidly cooled, they can turn into a non-crystalline, amorphous solid known as glass. This process is called vitrification. The rapid cooling prevents the atoms in the material from arranging themselves into a crystalline structure, resulting in the formation of a non-crystalline, transparent or translucent material. This is how volcanic obsidian, for example, is formed when molten rock cools rapidly.
    Also because the other component minerals in the stone react with available Oxygen in the air causing Oxidation.
    Try making an autoclave, a Vacuum Chamber, big enough to hold a 100 ton block of granite, it would be absolutely HUGE!!

    • @jaymancini5292
      @jaymancini5292 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I believe at 00:38:45 and further into the video, it's mentioned that the Sillustani towers in Peru may have been primitive autoclaves for this process.

    • @camojoe83
      @camojoe83 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Shhh.. stop noticing.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Do you really want to bring science into this?

  • @zirko789
    @zirko789 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    it is quite a step forward, but leaves mäny questions open. Would be interesting to find out how the "scoop marks" had been produced (as they can be found all over the world). This must have been done with a kind of "normed" tool (as they all look the same) and by smoothening the stone, so they could just remove it like butter. But we should be able to find some chemical traces on the surface of the stone. Until now I know nobody who came up with a plausible explication. You are the first - kind of

    • @johnhough7738
      @johnhough7738 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      To me they look like scoop marks, yes.
      They also look like where someone has pounded out a hollow, then moved along a bit and pounded out another; and another.
      But why, how, who, and when I leave to (a) educated experts (b) opinionated guessers, or (c) religious fruitcakes (any brand).
      Surely this chicken could be laid to roost simply enough? (Yes, I know ...economics, and the funding thereof.)

    • @johnhough7738
      @johnhough7738 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      There's a very interesting 'throwaway' mention in the book "Exploration Fawcett" you might find relevant. (If you can find a copy, a wee bit out of print now, I'd say.) Good luck ...

    • @dukeofthedance8062
      @dukeofthedance8062 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@johnhough7738 I have no clue but would pay to find out for certain, but what did they use the scoop holes for? My guess was that wooden devices or maybe a wooden claw or crane type device grabbed them, used leverage and weight etc to make them near weightless. Being universally made of wood, and such a _common_ thing to exist where they figured it didn't need any depictions or explanation at all for anyone except things went south and the tech was lost lost like they would have never dreamed of.
      Those pock marks, or those holes I feel is really the answer to all of this, including ceasing the lies that there wasn't a world wide trading event, or kingdoms larger than famed Atlantis at the time that are just all gone now because as humans, in our blood, we always build new things on top of old things both for the ULTIMATE insult, and to also say, "truly, they are a people no more" etc. What an incredible mystery though. I don't believe the magnetism thing.
      I watched this video, the part 3x and each time the guy changes position when placing the compass inside the H block so of course it's going to move. When he removes it, he turns directly to the right and right on cue, the needle moves. It's because his body moved. So not sure about that, I don't have way to verify or any sources (at the moment) but this is all a crock except there just simply used to be a different way that's gone. Move on people, move on. They want Greek Fire so bad. Well how about filling up a tanker with modern liquid napalm? Isn't that Greek Fire? Mystery solved. Scientists not even needed for that one. Those scoop holes were just for lifting and moving. Show is crazy suggesting anything otherwise.

  • @maryannmancini30
    @maryannmancini30 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Super interesting! Keep it coming!

  • @timothycook4589
    @timothycook4589 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It is well known how the ancient Peruvians shaped stones. They scrubbed them with harder stone. No melting needed.

  • @georgeho5369
    @georgeho5369 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I think the ancients had a special cement formula mix with volcanic Ash or soil and used wood boxes to make mould to allow it to set. The tool marks are there to finish off some imperfections. Also the large bolders that seem to have perfect melted joints are just irregular cement blocks that is placed on site with no mold required. 😅

  • @Soul_Watcher
    @Soul_Watcher 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    There are definitely missing pieces to this puzzle. But what a beautiful puzzle it is!Cheers

  • @DustKingArchives
    @DustKingArchives 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I like that he poses questions rather than getting crazy with it.

  • @michaelbotha9500
    @michaelbotha9500 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    06:37 - Does anyone know what the bright yellow substance is on the left of the hole? In between the 2 meteorites?

  • @bosautomotiveservice
    @bosautomotiveservice 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    You're close.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    The answers to all ancient mysteries could have been found in the Library of Alexandria. Sad that barbarians burned it all up.

    • @AristotlePlato-bi9fb
      @AristotlePlato-bi9fb 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Barbarians or humanitarians who knows what evil could have been. Just imagine the power to unlock the atom during an early archaic age.

    • @geoffhunter7704
      @geoffhunter7704 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The Alexandria Library was burned by Fundamentalist Christians allegedly,A problem that is very apparant now with islam.

    • @christopherpardell4418
      @christopherpardell4418 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

      Romans could hardly be considered barbarians. It was burned accidentally when Caesar burned the Egyptian fleet in the harbor. And most of the books were not entirely lost, they were copies. Most of the books were lost due to purges of pre-christian literature by Christians.

    • @martinwayne8245
      @martinwayne8245 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Heard vatican got a lot a it. Peter Peterson had an interview where he described the vatican library with a ton of different type of tablets and book made out of fabrics while working on sumerian writing

    • @Joe-xj2tb
      @Joe-xj2tb 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      The catholics burned it.

  • @mjrusch7954
    @mjrusch7954 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Good job ,lots of insight. Keep it up!

  • @myparadiseonbantayanisland9030
    @myparadiseonbantayanisland9030 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Why doesn't someone try these theories to see if they work?

  • @tomemody6685
    @tomemody6685 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    24:56 Perhaps these walls once had a beautiful obsidian coating that is mostly worn away now? Or maybe it was applied in certain areas for a certain effect, weather cosmetic, or cosmic?

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      With the amount of ancient places throughout the region that have this obsidian coating on the stones, I believe so. If it did have a purpose besides it being aesthetic, it would have been very creative and useful.

    • @tomemody6685
      @tomemody6685 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@TheVoyagerTV it’s pretty amazing that it’s there at all, and in so many places…what a strange idea! Unless it was easy to do, they probably wouldn’t have done it. It probably was a sight to see in original times.

    • @shaneculkin7124
      @shaneculkin7124 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@tomemody6685: I disagree with the part where you suggest that only if it is easy to wpuld they have done it.
      Because these were done out of purpose, seeming really rather important to these people.
      .....And time? What else did they have???? Generations of only time and caring labor.
      Other than that though, I completely agree with ya! And if I misread what you meant then I am sorry.

    • @tomemody6685
      @tomemody6685 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@shaneculkin7124feel free to share more idea’s whenever you want. I enjoy that you are a deep thinker.

    • @totobeni
      @totobeni 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      or maby it was a big lego monster that made a popi

  • @JasonPruett
    @JasonPruett 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    why would they make a false door? because its not false. if they knew how to do this then they knew how to do other things. if anyone was found doing this irl they would vanish. Our owners dont want us using such things. Gold is very dense it is non reactive chemically so it resists corrosion its rare its pretty it conducts electricity its dielectric (moves away from magnetic fields) i agree it must have some quality we are not aware of perhaps. great video btw you sound as good as preveen mohan and he has over a million subs. you sound great and have good insights.

  • @robertwynn3453
    @robertwynn3453 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is it true that the by product of melting gold is slag a form of molten glass that could have been poured onto the stone.

  • @4trahasis
    @4trahasis หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Top notch video.
    Been curious about so many of these details, and here you brought science, geology, geographical exploration and more.
    Instant sub.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you 4trahasis! I greatly appreciate your comment, your time watching the video, and all of the viewers of my channel. You and the viewers are the true heroes giving me motivation to create these videos.

  • @coreymurphy3784
    @coreymurphy3784 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Our ancient ancestors where alchemists. An art that is practically lost in modern times.

  • @seelenschlucht
    @seelenschlucht 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Could they have used obsidian powder, or glas powder in general, as a mold release agent to prevent the molten rock from sticking to the form? I remember that glas powder was used as a release agent in continuous casting in the metal industry.

  • @Delta19G
    @Delta19G 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Truly the best time to be alive. Live, seek knowledge, human mind is most powerful tool at our disposal

  • @macdmacd7896
    @macdmacd7896 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    maybe its a mixed of chemical processes - saperation, softening, melting, expansion (like bread), etc. but the chem elements (ponds, plants or animals) are gone now. the main chem producer could be the land of chemmet, kemet, that ancient kingdom before paraoh egypt. the chemmet exports many type of industrial chem.

  • @dustinpotter8312
    @dustinpotter8312 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Maybe it wasn't melted. There is a clay in England that was discovered that had insect dropping in it that had turned the clay into stone. During regular daily excavation of the clay the clay stayed soft. When the crew/s stopped for winter to return in the spring they expected to resume work but they found that the clay had hardened into stone. The discovery was the now exposed clay had been infested by some form of insect and through the insect droppings the clay was hardened. Apparently the chemicals in the insect droppings were a catalyst that caused the clay to harden just like rock. I seems to me the article was posted about 8 years ago. I wouldn't know where to find it.

    • @NextWorldVR
      @NextWorldVR 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Like the Guano in this stone! Ammonia...

    • @dustinpotter8312
      @dustinpotter8312 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@NextWorldVR If people of today's age can accidentally find a way to convert clay to stone... exactly. Scientists finally found the Romans built "better concrete than we normally use.Their secret ingredient was salt. Lime (a key in some concrete) gets warm with just the right amount of water. If the lime is heated enough to become what is called "quick lime" it can become reactive meaning if held under pressure it will get hot enough to rupture/explode. I recently found out that powdered magnesium, a health supplement, which is mixed with water for consumption, will get hot if it isn't mixed with enough water. There was a warning on the bottle of the powdered magnesium. Why can't today's builders make structures like the did in the past? Probably because we haven't learned what chemistry the ancients were using. Imagine pouring a stone house on top of a stone basement one bucket at a time. Except for the windows and doors it would be practically tornado or hurricane proof.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      theres millions of tons of stone walls.. i dont think insects were resposible for this.. keep guesing..

    • @dustinpotter8312
      @dustinpotter8312 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@harrywalker968 There were hundreds of tons that had to be moved yet as ;you say it is a guess. there were thousands of people who built those walls and if they knew the chemistry which their shape indicates was not natural. Iron and lime were in the walls as well showing man made construction indicating engineering not chiseling. A catalyst is a reasonable approach. yes that is another poke at a guess. What are a couple of yours?

    • @SRWill64
      @SRWill64 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@dustinpotter8312 Engineering...that takes advanced geometric and mathematical skills. These people weren't using chisels and stone mallets to carve these things. That takes advanced knowledge. So who stole all that knowledge away and set us back into the stone age? We've been trying to crawl up the tech scale ever since and now we're at a point the military industrial complex is hiding knowledge from us yet again.

  • @vperez4796
    @vperez4796 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very intersting your research. You showed us some dishes (gold face like dishes). They could be used to concentrate sun light on crucibles containing obsidian with Copper-Hidroxy-Carbonate (Malaquite). Incas are well known to worship the sun and follow the path of the sun.

  • @johnwick-ii6il
    @johnwick-ii6il 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The musical stone pillars of India are identical in all aspects. Except that each one has a different molecular density than the others. They were not just discovered that way from natural stone. It was done thru an unknown intelligent manipulation. at a molecular level.

  • @cristianpopescu78
    @cristianpopescu78 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    You can pour melted cooper on stone which carve in stone instantly.That was my bad idea to pour melded aluminium in front of the house.A combination of fire and water can be also used.

    • @7KidsSpanoMan
      @7KidsSpanoMan 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What the fuck does that even mean??

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      theres millions of tones of stone work world wide,, try again..

    • @cristianpopescu78
      @cristianpopescu78 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@harrywalker968 Try again what? ! What is your point? Aliens?

  • @randy-tzu1624
    @randy-tzu1624 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    They look pressed into place, meaning they were semi-soft, and then maybe vitrified after or during placement. Molds and finishing I think took place. The H blocks look pre-molded and fired or cured.

    • @methylene5
      @methylene5 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Then surely, given their weight, the bottom of the rock would protrude out from all that pressure.

  • @donnamarie9593
    @donnamarie9593 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Loved the video! New subscriber 🎉

  • @lovejoydk838
    @lovejoydk838 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have had the theory for a long time, that the main power source, back before our known history, was vibrations. Or maybe rather sound.
    To me it looks like they stacked the stone like stone fences, some cultures later used around fields. And after stacking, they then vibrated the stones, making them fit tight together. The knobs on some stones could be used as points to apply the vibrations, as well as help with handling.
    I would like to know, if the stones with knobs, have knobs on the other side. If not there main function probably was not for lifting the stone.
    One hole in my theory is the finish on the visible/outside of the wall. However, to me it looks' much like what a Polishing/Sanding machine could do. The base of a Sanding machine, (the rotating part) could still produce an effect if, it vibrated rather than rotated.
    Vibrations also go for the "scoping" marks, found all over the world. Something vibrating and moved again and again, over a area of a stone, could leave the same marks.No idea what that "something" would be. But if it was another stone, it would wear out, and then changed with another stone.
    Has anyone ever looked into if the wide of those scope marks varies? If the wide is uniform around the world it gets really interesting.
    I have no idea how they would generate the vibrations, But a lot of cultures have "ceremonies" with "chanting".
    Like where we find use of OM sound, we also find legends about levitation.
    That legend could be about, how vibrations makes it more easy to push/move things. For onlookers it could look like things floated , and later exaggerated, by telling items was over the ground.
    Basically, sounds are possible to make without electricity. Vibrations can be made by sound, as well as other means. Even the Bible have a story about a horn making walls fall. (Battle of Jericho). As so many things in the bible this story is not confirmed as historical fact. But it's still a legend about sound.

  • @saveriomastrianni1726
    @saveriomastrianni1726 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Its great to see quality work like this catch on. This video was very well made and narrated. A lot of thoughtful observations.

    • @chrisguess4344
      @chrisguess4344 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      would have been better if he didnt claim this was his footage when, in fact, none of it is

    • @saveriomastrianni1726
      @saveriomastrianni1726 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@chrisguess4344 a lot of it is his footage from his trips

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@chrisguess4344 All of the footage (videos and photographs) of these ancient sites are taken by me during my expeditions there.

  • @walterhynson2898
    @walterhynson2898 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I have some friends from Mexico and from what they told me the rock that you are looking at was formed in a molten state like concrete today but very thick and heavy,it was carved like woodcarving . The stuf in between was to make it harden up fast like salt in concret during the winter.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      any plans, written records, drawings, of this.. no.. man did not build this. like the pyramids, if man built them as they say, they still wouldnt be finished..

    • @Ralphjons
      @Ralphjons 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Kind of makes sense. This is why bronze ties were used. They would be not be needed to hold magaton stone together but would help to hold clay-like bricks together while drying. Drying clay-like composites would have shrinkage and so open up joints.

  • @donfillinger3571
    @donfillinger3571 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    You can't create andesite, you can't create granite. geopolymer and igneous rocks are very easily distinguished from eachother.

  • @gregoryballestero4369
    @gregoryballestero4369 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The subject around the 8:30 -ish, i wonder if they could have had concave/convex glass that could have been used to magnifiy the sun and melt the stone before pouring into molds? Or found a way(now lost) to make sure the stone broke how they wanted when hitting it with the beam of light

  • @tobyjessup6483
    @tobyjessup6483 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    They used thick red clay mined from acidic hot springs applied between the stones and left for some weeks, repeatedly lifted and refitted with incremental chiseling of the softened layer each time.

  • @danielgrove7782
    @danielgrove7782 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I suspect the "sun disk" was a parabolic lens that would heat stone...then the rock was left to cool quickly,frascturing the rock...if the heat was left to cool slowly it would show the melt. I would love to see this tested

  • @rogerg4916
    @rogerg4916 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Doesn't simple iron deflect a compass needle whether magnetized or not?

  • @johnathonmullis4234
    @johnathonmullis4234 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Sakrete! They filled cloth sacks with their geopolymer mix and braced the outside to form the shape they wanted. The glaze on the outside is easily attained today by using smooth plastic sacks. I would think the same glazing can be achieved by oiling/greasing the sacks smooth before pouring them with the geopolymer.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ???... so,, where are the remains of the sacks,??,, this means, you fill the sack, place it, wait till it dries, remove it, take the sack off, then re place it,, fkn bs..

    • @maudvanderkloet8305
      @maudvanderkloet8305 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Jonathon you are correct, read in the bible the making of the tower of bable, the used mudbrick and they found something in the area, this something was oil, with wich they made the bricks waterproof, it became to be this glazing layer

    • @jamesmoran7511
      @jamesmoran7511 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Unlikely

  • @tomemody6685
    @tomemody6685 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    If you can vibrate stone fast enough, it will melt. That’s how heat works. I’m guessing that long ago, vibration was well understood. ….Tom

    • @cisvaughan6937
      @cisvaughan6937 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @tomemody6685
      Yep. Heat & speed both = moving molecules. As when they spin steel cylinders so they can turn the tops in to make gas bottles, like spinning clay to make pots. No "heat" on the steel needed, just a fast spin...

    • @tomemody6685
      @tomemody6685 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@cisvaughan6937 it’s amazing to watch friction welding.
      But how to melt stones efficiently?

    • @cisvaughan6937
      @cisvaughan6937 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @tomemody6685
      Glad you find welding fascinating! I'm sometimes afraid I'm a nerdy welding bore!
      ...Maybe by using the same principle? Getting the molecules to momentarily separate, then let them re-fuse? You know how when you heat granite all the grains separate out, because the differently coloured ones expand at different rates, & you end up with something like a heap of demerara sugar on the floor. They won't stick back together. But other substances do ... Water after its been boiled, metal after its been forged, lava after its been heated and cooled (with or without resultant vitrification.)
      Supposing something was used to oscillate the molecules of this stone till they began to separate, after sprinkling the surface with monatomic gold to make it weightless, the resulting loose stone~cloud could be pushed or blown through the air to where it's wanted then the monatomic gold layer scooped off & the stone let settle back into shape, in place.
      This would also explain why the stones have a "poured" quality, as they'd have the opportunity to settle & sag into spaces, leaving no gaps.
      (Although if old enough, non-crystalline stone will sag anyway, as does other unlikely materials --- see sags in glass after a few hundred years.)
      There could of course be simpler metaphysical explanations, such as someone using telekinesis to move and meld the stone.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      viper tv sumerian tablets. . they hold a cone, & have a bag for it.. was this a weapon,,or tool.. seeing there the aliens that made man,, . some dick, said, '' if they were so advanced, why did they use gigantic stone for everything''.. i said. ITS STILL THERE.... .

  • @kennykimbler9816
    @kennykimbler9816 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This video was put together very nicely. Great video brother 👍 👌

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you Kennykimber9816! I appreciate the view and the comment!!!

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was going to say the stones were rubbed (lapped) together with an abrasive paste. But that doesn’t explain the rounded foundation at start of video. The surface obsidian suggests the stones were heated and dropped into place while hot and soft.
    We’re they perhaps roughly cut to fit, then placed over a fire until the surface softened. This would deliver a tight fit when lifted into place.

  • @jimspear3033
    @jimspear3033 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Magnetic molds like in aluminum casting would work for iron rich material. Do the magnetic fields of these stone blocks align?

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      AL is only weakly magnetic. Try again.

  • @iluminumfalcon8619
    @iluminumfalcon8619 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I have never seen pictures or heard of these sites on any Discovery,History channel not even on Ancient Aliens dude you earned a subscriber am intrigued.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you iluminumfalcon8619 for the comment and the subscribe!! It's surprising how many other ancient sites are out there that are still uncovered. Take a look at a video I made called "The Mysterious Cave" about the ancient cave called Naupa Iglesia.
      th-cam.com/video/O2JUiMbiOuA/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared

  • @Katarzyna_S_89
    @Katarzyna_S_89 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank You for expanding people awareness in this topic :) very important. Nice presented 👍🙂

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you, it's my pleasure to make these videos. Thank you for watching and dropping a comment!

    • @Katarzyna_S_89
      @Katarzyna_S_89 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TheVoyagerTV always watching with pleasure 🙂 great inwestigation, topic is fascinating - it adds so much new questions to our today history narrative 🙂 please keep going with Your work❤️❤️

  • @Celler2
    @Celler2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    that box, was a part of a coil, and the box was the outer casing as insulation to prevent the the discharge taking place too early.

  • @SamtheIrishexan
    @SamtheIrishexan 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Well done, I have always given this theory a good amount of weight and this is highly compelling. No pun intended.

  • @AltonMoore
    @AltonMoore 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I've always figured that the stones (world-wide) were melted into place. The consistently-found beveled edges should be a clue for us. Your idea that it was somewhat chemical in nature is not quite what I was thinking, but it's interesting at least.

    • @pyotrberia9741
      @pyotrberia9741 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Melted rock becomes glassy, like obsidian. How would they turn this back into natural stone?

    • @AltonMoore
      @AltonMoore 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@pyotrberia9741 I don't believe this is necessarily true. Perhaps for very high temperatures it is, but I assume that if someone could melt large quantities of stone, they could control the temperature fairly carefully. All of this being said, I am hardly an expert on the behavior of various rocks at high temperatures.

    • @user-en9qd5nx8w
      @user-en9qd5nx8w 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@AltonMoore If you can melt and then form rock into whatever shapes you want, why bother with all these odd shapes, and dont tell me its for earth quake prevention because the shapes are random. Also if they melted the rock, why are some of the sides rough. On top of this the amount of energy to melt stone into basically lava would be incredible. A lot of these locations do not have the energy source. Unless aliens of course, but why would freaking aliens travel the vastness of space just to come build some crappy stone structures. This is all just more bullshit theories, people just need to recognize that we don't know for sure how these things were built but instead our ancestors were very ingenious people.

  • @JuhaPihla-on3sq
    @JuhaPihla-on3sq 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Observstory Torcal, Spain. Surroundins can find similar "drilling" grooves and "melting" traces. I have seen them in 2019 trip to spain. Have pictures too.

  • @motsy15
    @motsy15 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’ve always felt it was some sort of strong acid or base that made the stones “ dissolve “ just enough to fit together perfectly.

    • @NextWorldVR
      @NextWorldVR 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Or they were rough then painted on 'stuff at the seams then pulled AWAY softened stone leaving what we see today.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      regardless,, you try to manouver a 30 tone block of liquid.. not happening..

  • @orpheuscreativeco9236
    @orpheuscreativeco9236 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    If you got the faces hot enough before setting the stone in place it would press into the proper shape and tolerance without needing precision cuts. 🤔 Those "H" blocks though, geopoolymer makes more sense.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      wrong.. go try it, fkng around with 50t melted crap, have fun....

    • @orpheuscreativeco9236
      @orpheuscreativeco9236 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@harrywalker968 Have a think about it before you naysay my friend ✌️ One simple solution would be to ignite thermite between the two surfaces before setting them. It was merely a thought experiment. 👍

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      stone isn't butter, they don't necessarily simply soften from heat.
      some just get brittle.
      ¿and thermite in a time before metallurgy? good luck refining the bauxite into aluminum to begin with.

  • @xXturbo86Xx
    @xXturbo86Xx 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The obsidian is a nice find. What you found is what's left of what they originally looked it. Yes we're talking about hundreds of thousands of years of normal weathering, or thousands of years of INTENSE weathering. Take your pick. Either way, all these megaliths are heavily weathered. All of them. I also strongly believe that especially those scattered and irregular pieces that make no sense, are leftovers from VERY old structures that got destroyed. And anything you see that has indentations on it, be certain that something was fitted in it. Something that's long gone. Probably machinery.

  • @ronskancke1489
    @ronskancke1489 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What you are showing here with the stick and plumb bob is similar to a ticking stick which has been described on another u tube video. .

  • @Nocturnal2010
    @Nocturnal2010 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    @20:51 it looks like a training area. Maybe thats why it looks chaotic and tecnics randomly spread out. 🤷🏾‍♂️ thats what popped in my head from that view. Multiple teachers and even more students. They had to learn somewhere right?

  • @lenny.r
    @lenny.r 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    These stone towers shown in this video appear to match the technology used in the area near Suffern and Monroe, New York to extract iron from ore from Colonial times to after the Civil War. Iron ore and charcoal were put in through the top of the tower. Openings at the bottom similar to those shown in the video were used to inject air from water powered bellows on three sides. The opening on the fourth side was where the iron flowed out into channels and molds in sand that was placed there to create iron ingots. There was nothing there that required anything of modern technology to work.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wouldn't using those towers as smelters have left a coating on the inside? Why are there no chunks and blobs of iron and vitrified stone on the floor and walls? Just questions I have.
      Update: after a iron smelting rabbit hole journey I got some answers to my questions. Photos taken inside old iron stacks show that the wall stones at the hottest zone had vitrified surfaces. The hearths had a common look, there was a horseshoe shaped mound in the center made of cooled molten material with a smooth floor around it. The Incas were smelting copper to make bronze so lower temps were involved. It's possible that they had a dedicated crucible inside to hold the ore instead of just letting it pool on the hearth. But, you're right. It resembles a furnace stack.

    • @broyster
      @broyster 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't see that at Sterling Forest where they smelted the chain across the Hudson at West Point.

    • @lenny.r
      @lenny.r 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The smelters I saw located near the south end of Monroe Road and at the entrance to the offices of the Harriman Estate off old route 17 had been allowed to burn out while filled with stuff. I never stopped to look at the one in Sterling Forest that they covered with that silly Greek looking cover.@@2degucitas

  • @zandanforth1326
    @zandanforth1326 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    As I am an artist , I have been working with cement, /concrete lately. Then I began to wonder….. what if monolithic stones were created by melting or making a more sophisticated concrete structures. I’m not buying the Ancient alien hypothesis., on megalithic stones.
    , it’s an easy out for those that wish to cover up a faults historical storyline. I have wondered about many of the same details you have focused in the video. The human race has a far more technological history than those that have written history would want us to believe. I believe we are what was left of the beginning. Something catastrophic happened 13-10,000 years ago which drove us back into a “Stone Age” and much information was lost. If we were to know the truth we would question everything we in western society believe to be true. The Bible would be a book of fables, as would the Koran. Then those that have power would no longer have power over hearts and souls.

    • @cisvaughan6937
      @cisvaughan6937 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @zandanforth1326
      Yeps

  • @EdgarHyke-cs4id
    @EdgarHyke-cs4id 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Okay how and in what containers mightbthey make molten the bronze

  • @arcadebuilder533
    @arcadebuilder533 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Mold holes in cement mixture?

  • @mralowen
    @mralowen 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Its a fact that they knew something we dont.

    • @miller2675
      @miller2675 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What a vague and useless point.

  • @IamL.I.S.A
    @IamL.I.S.A 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Been saying this for years. It's how they made the blocks for the pyramids as well.

  • @haroldgardiner1966
    @haroldgardiner1966 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Odd shaped stones, fitting nicely while also being odd shaped, and maybe for the purpose of surviving earthquakes, is much like making log cabins and fitting the corner logs together rather tightly!

    • @BKDenied
      @BKDenied 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Except on a complete other level. The foundation blocks for the great pyramid are a 3d puzzle just like this that locks the pyramid directly into the bedrock. They did this on most of the large scale monuments across the globe. A wall with 50 3d puzzle pieces weighing 4 to 50 tons with up to 24 interlocking surfaces on single stones. Then make these multi ton blocks fit within half a human hair minimum 6k years later. I think this masonry survived the younger dryas cataclysm. I think it's 15k years old.
      A log cabin is tough fucking work. I've chopped trees b handaxe. It's tough work. This is a team of master architects spending 3 months just on the blueprints of the stone cuts.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      how, did they know,,this method was earthquake proof.. or the magnetic nth, or how many planets in the solar system, or what length precession was, . this is world wide knowledge, ignored by mainstream ,excuse makers.. like the big bang,,it never happened, its an excuse, convenient answer to sht they dont know..

  • @drivenmad7676
    @drivenmad7676 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Where'd they get the logs?

  • @dennisburt4614
    @dennisburt4614 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I often wonder if stone was more like putty somehow and hardened up after time

    • @jaredharris1940
      @jaredharris1940 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Likely fabricated,i.e. made up!

    • @laurah1020
      @laurah1020 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That's what it looks like, right?
      I have always wondered if they vibrated the stone (maybe with sound?) until it got soft and puffed up into something like a marshmallow, and then sliced it up to specs...? Doesn't look, to me, like "heat" mediated the creation of funky shaped blocks for megalithic polygonal walls....and it seems WAY TOO labor intensive to think they hand chiseled every face of every block to fit so perfectly in them...but that's just me...

  • @Akya2120
    @Akya2120 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This is the most reasonable proposal for the construction method. A solvent welding mortar, or a melted obsidian layer between stacked rocks. Along with decent masonry and or geopolymers, that would make sense.

    • @rexyoshimoto4278
      @rexyoshimoto4278 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Take forever to do but o.k.

    • @Akya2120
      @Akya2120 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@rexyoshimoto4278 I mean, it would take a long time, but if you could do a layer every day or five it wouldn't be absurd.

  • @SenorTucano
    @SenorTucano 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    20:04 those marks are just like the cut marks left from torching through metal.
    It seems a type of primitive thermite may have been used.

  • @ibmibm691
    @ibmibm691 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ...if fresh felsic magmas are poured directly into a 10 x 10 x 10 metre cube shape hole in the ground and covered with soil, will the magmas solidify into a granite block?

  • @anthonybaransky137
    @anthonybaransky137 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I hope you get a billion subs🙂🤞👍 I'm famalier with Sacsay Huaman. Never been there but explored through Google earth, it's unbelievable

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you Anthonybaransky137!! I wish the billions of people on Earth can also see these interesting ancient places in the world and so they can learn about the past. My friend and colleague @megalithicevidence hosts tours to these ancient sites in Peru, Bolivia, and also in Mexico to explore the Teotihuacan pyramid and the Chichen Itza pyramid. You can currently find his upcoming tours on his Facebook page. You can find it using the same name "megalithic evidence"
      @anthonybaransky137 If you're ever interested in going, my friend and colleague does research and hosts tours to these locations. The next tour is in May 2024. The link below has all the information for this tour. He's bilingual English & Spanish.
      th-cam.com/video/ngXJD0s_Oz8/w-d-xo.html&ab

  • @paulmacfarlane207
    @paulmacfarlane207 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Do you know how long it would take to build using these junk tools. They would still be working on them today.They had something else .

    • @miller2675
      @miller2675 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I do. I build ponds and stone walls just like this.
      You do not know what you are talking about.

    • @paulmacfarlane207
      @paulmacfarlane207 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@miller2675 I am a contractor and i build walls with hammers and other tools .But you do not do it with 100 or 1000 ton stones you can't and you don't know what you are talking about.

    • @killerfromabove187
      @killerfromabove187 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Clearly!💯

    • @darthcrybaby410
      @darthcrybaby410 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      For sure, they wouldn't have had time to watch TV or play playstation

    • @drcurioustube
      @drcurioustube 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you, professor

  • @woodchip2782
    @woodchip2782 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I really love your video. I wanted to be an archeologist as a kid but changed my mind when I was shown forbidden pictures of objects from
    the South American past that went against the history created by religious intelligence of that time.
    How do you manipulate melted stone?
    What mould can you use to contain melted stone?
    Show me ONE mould.
    How many moulds have they used to make that giant wall you show?
    That simple tool you show will work only in one dimension or face. You cannot use that method in 3D. I’m a woodworker, carver for 42 years. I’ve tried.
    I have used CNC machines for a living. Even with those it is very difficult to create perfect adjoining parts. Those machines are huge. Where are they?
    Don’t get me wrong, I really appreciate your insight, curiosity and positivity and truly wish that you find the solution!😊

  • @anthonyhudson3136
    @anthonyhudson3136 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    some elders in peru say that their ancestors were able to melt stone using a mix of certain plants.. the scoop marks found at all ancient sites imo are the top layer of stone melted then scooped of like you would an ice cream.

  • @patrickgreen7308
    @patrickgreen7308 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Very good documentation
    Very thought provoking
    I believe those before us made more intense observations on natual means and ways
    Our civilization tends to use more machine type applications to obtain a result

  • @dwightc3080
    @dwightc3080 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The protrusions on some of the stone blocks are caused by the heating the stone block. They are pushed out by the weight of the block when the stone gets soft from intense heating.

    • @jessewilliams102
      @jessewilliams102 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      This is my guess too. They could make a fresnel lens and let the sun do the work.

    • @daveharden5929
      @daveharden5929 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Bingo Jesse..... The Fresnel Lense angle has been tried on TH-cam, check it out. It's disappointing. A Fresnel Lense can generate temperatures high enough, but it turns granite into a black (obsidian like) mess nothing like the stones of Inca constructions. We'd know if they applied a Fresnel just by looking at them....

    • @jessewilliams102
      @jessewilliams102 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@daveharden5929 true. It would have a different texture. my first thought was that they just carved a giant massive stone, like stucco just to mess with us in the future. Lol but I believe it must’ve been some kind of chemical heat reaction that makes it swell like marshmallows in a microwave. I hear all of the sources say we can’t re-create it but if it was done once it can be done again unless it has something to do with the pressure of the atmosphere. This has me wanting to experiment until I find it out now.

  • @robertamurphy1124
    @robertamurphy1124 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Noahs Ark in Turkey has Aluminum and Titanium bolts!! Modern man just figured out this century how to make aluminum. Also found was the Sarcophagus of either Noah or his wife. They were 18 feet tall.

    • @lovemotherearth3805
      @lovemotherearth3805 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      David and golioth are also in the bible. giants go with dinosaurs 🦕

    • @lovemotherearth3805
      @lovemotherearth3805 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They had more tech back then we are still catching up they had batteries in Egypt ... I think they used the sun's energy to melt stone... like dew weponary

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are full of more IT than a Christmas Turkey!!!

  • @sepperD3
    @sepperD3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    " Holland Europe", perfect

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Salud amigos! I hope the jungle (la selva) was good to you 🙏

  • @ddiver2200
    @ddiver2200 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think more in the direction of: building mud material becomes stone with chemical reactions from minerals and the passage of time like cement, the question is how it is made, what type of mud is it?

  • @dextermorgan1
    @dextermorgan1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Think of how much heat they would have needed to "melt" stone. It's difficult today, with our modern technology. They didn't have to industrial furnaces or facilities to get stone hot enough to melt. I fully believe all of these stones were were somehow melted and made into their current shapes. I just don't think good ol fashion heat was capeable of doing it.

    • @carlferry8992
      @carlferry8992 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You don't know what they had, what they did is evidence they were far more advanced than we.

    • @dextermorgan1
      @dextermorgan1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@carlferry8992 I know they didn't have industrial heaters.

    • @cisvaughan6937
      @cisvaughan6937 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @carlferry8992
      Oscillation?

  • @brothermaleuspraetor9505
    @brothermaleuspraetor9505 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    If you create a frequency wave of sound waves from a speaker or other form of emitter and introduce another emitter, there will be a point where the two frequency waves overlap. This point has double the intensity of power than the surrounding wave forms. If you keep adding more emitters, you increase the number of amplifications and locations of amplification.
    Having mastered this concept, now what you can do is you can focus the waves to converge all at one point. This will amplify the intensity of frequency, so much so that it can, rather destructively, interact with matter. This also is the case for another electromagnetic spectral wave; Light.
    Now that this has been understood, the next interesting thing about this subject is that in nature and all of the Universe, there is a harmonic resonance between energy and matter. If you experiment with the two, you will discover some very interesting applications. One way of being able to explain this to you, to allow a glimpse behind the curtain, as it were... is to think back to 1940, Tacoma suspension bridge. Harmonic resonance brought the bridge down. The interaction of energy and matter can be harnessed not just for destructive purposes, but also for creative purposes if harnessed in the right way. THAT understanding is lost to common knowledge- in fact, our civilisation never possessed it, but others preceeding ours DID. They did not need to burn fossil fuels. They did not need to put a 'price' on anything. They lived very free and prosperous, un-dominated lives.
    There is very little to go on, of this technology, at present, since it has some controversial implications that interfere with the mainstream and the elite, in that pursuing it's development will bring about the end of monopolization of energy and resource.- The ruling elite just can't let their demise happen, and further development of exotic technology is to be shut down, buried, ERASED FROM KNOWLEDGE...FORBIDDEN.... which is what happened to Nikola Tesla, sadly. He got too close...
    However, let's just pretend that there is no sinister plot to rule over humanity, to enslave it in never-ending servitude to a 1% few... Ho!- what nonsense!, right? Well, there were studies done into applications such as cancer treatment, harnessing abundant energy and providing communications, infrastructure, health treatment and public services such that no Human anywhere in the world, need ever go homeless, hungry or ill ever again....
    Funny how we're all suffering, languishing in a never-ending life of servitude, toil, highly in-efficient labour, consumerism.. VOTING.. (WTF is that all about?? There is no such thing as Democracy in this world.) Capitalism.. fossil-fuel-burning energy consumption... monetized commodity economy... when life could be so much easier, prosperous and free.... Funny why that is the way it is huh?

    • @philippadowney549
      @philippadowney549 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      See radio frequency welding...

  • @susanwangari3753
    @susanwangari3753 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A rope wetting with paraffin and tie on a glass and put on fire, cut a glass straight without measuring, l wonder which technique they use to cut those heavily stones in Egypt. 🤔

  • @Alcoa122
    @Alcoa122 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video, lots of fantastic evidence.
    So much we don’t know. Thanks.

  • @brianpartridge5654
    @brianpartridge5654 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    They ground the stone added a polymer and molded them (they've tested samples and found organics INSIDE THE STONE.) the crystaline structure of the stone has been ground to unnaturally small bits so there NOT natural stone they were not melted they were essentialy poured (think playdoh or clay) thats why they "bulge out (from gravity and viscosity) again not melted heat is not necessary

    • @tomasneel1980
      @tomasneel1980 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I kindly disagree, every stone block was different, so you every casted or make a mould ? Why go through that trouble of making moulds? Why not just make your piece?

  • @user-jr6we6sl5k
    @user-jr6we6sl5k 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    If they would have treated the natives with dignity and respect instead of contempt and disrespect then Europeans would have discovered all these secrets that now battle us.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      🙏☮️ I completely agree

  • @ChristopherLecky
    @ChristopherLecky 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    A reduction in complexity sacrifices information to become stable.

  • @northlondonmasons107
    @northlondonmasons107 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I have a bone to pick with this.
    1. The Andesite blocks are real they have been tested and proved to be real.
    2. You can’t cast igneous rock
    3. A acid like substance from a tree in the Amazon ain’t gonna soften andesite stone, never !
    4. The quarries for these andesite blocks are here for us to see with our own eyes.
    5. Rapid cooling weakens materials by the atoms coming apart and getting confused and not being able to re-attach for some time, glass is weak and the reason why igneous rocks are hard is because they have been allowed to cool for a very long time.
    6. With all due respect your observance needs to be worked on as you can see very accurate cuts into the side of mountains,quarries etc like the door to another world for example, so I doubt you would cast a mountain.
    The blocks are real they are not cast.

    • @TheVoyagerTV
      @TheVoyagerTV  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      1. I agree with you 00:04:59 That was a theory from researchers and I do not believe the Puma Punku H shaped blocks or other stone structures were molds but have an outside geopolymer layer. If you measure the H shaped blocks, they all have very similar measurements, but each H shaped block's measurement is different. I understand the animation at 46 seconds represents a mold but it was just to go along with questioning that idea. I believe they were hand made but somehow with a geopolymer method which was proven by the Geopolymer Institute of France and the by a university in San Pablo, Arequipa, Peru. I should have stated this more clearly in the video.
      2. It's known today that stone cannot be casted unless with some extremely costly method. If it was attempted, pouring the "cast" into a cold mold could make pieces of it explode and create multiple holes in the stone. The theory is that with the evidence of the mixed compounds found in the H shaped blocks in Puma Punku, it appears they somehow used a geopolymer process with possibly using chemicals.
      3. It was fruits and certain plants mixed in with acidic pyrite mud, not from trees. I never mentioned a tree from the Amazon jungle. 00:15:15 This was mentioned while talking about the theory of combusting and then polishing the andesite and limestone stones at the ancient site of Sacsayhuaman in Peru. Then further from that point in the video, I talk about it being Sulfuric acid.
      4. Yes the Quarries are there. When I created this video, I wanted to state my findings on these theories and possibly my own. I made a grave mistake by not mentioning that I believe the initial shape was andesite and that I don't believe the entire block was a geopolymer. They could have extracted a similar shaped stone from the quarry, and then shaped it to the block that they needed it to be using their geopolymer method. During 00:05:34 I depict that it's possible to chisel away at blocks but the image on the right shows it as a layer on top of the chiseled block. Again, I should have been more clear on this specific point.
      5. Yes I agree. If I'm not mistaken, the name of the video "melting stone" could have conflicted with this part of the video while you were viewing the initial part of the video. Throughout the video, I talk about the black obsidian found on certain stones 00:07:57 , 00:22:42 , and during 00:23:48.
      6. I never stated they would cast anything equivalent to a mountain. I don't know which point in the video you were referring to but if it's at 00:17:09 showing a quarry with the knob for leveraging the stone, yeah they are right there. If you're mentioning the part at 00:17:37 where I talk about that square cut out, I talk about how I don't believe the initial reason for that was praying, or that picture was part of a quarry, but the area and certain cut outs in the rock were stone inserts for other stones to create structures. These structures were destroyed and what remains is the base inserts.
      The andesite block's have an outside layer of a geopolymer cast. Not the entire block. Thank you for the well thought out and detailed response to the video. I appreciate the positive debate!

  • @JerresYouTubular
    @JerresYouTubular 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The problems with this hypothesis is that I'm sure some geo polymer stones were produced, but many of the ancient quarrying sites are known and documented, and it still doesn't explain how stones upwards of 100 tons were moved and placed before the wheel was invented. I'm pretty sure they are much older than Academia wants to date them because it would destroy their evolutionary theories. It is more likely that these stone megaliths world wide were created many thousands of years ago by an advanced pre dilluvian civilization with advanced technology. For God's sake they even cut the tops of mountains off near the Nasca lines...and the pyramids cannot have been built without the aid of a computer. Did I say CAN NOT? Correct. No matter how much you want to protest that idea.