This place is awesome, have no clue how you showed up in my feed but glad ya did , new sub here great coverage of this place first hand. I'm envious but glad to you posted I will never be able to get there and this almost as good . Thanks again
Yea, I’m a pretty small channel so it’s surprising to me too. Thanks for watching and yea it was an awesome place to visit! The amount we don’t know about this civilization is mind blowing
We've known about sites like Jericho since the 1950s. So it fits in with what archeologists already thought. Civilization started in the fertile crescent. And yeah it's not the oldest, there's been so many found since the 1990s. The thought that archeologists had trouble fitting this in is a silly trope. But yeah, it's an amazing site. They used stones like flint. They know where the quarry was.
@@travelersmemoire Well grandiose is a subjective question. Jericho didn't really peak until a couple thousand years after Göbekli Tepe. The interesting thing about Jericho isn't it's wall (walls of Jericho) but the tower. From an engineering standpoint a tower is far more impressive than standing pillars. Speaking of towers another site is even more amazing, imo, than either. Tell Qaramel not only predates Göbekli Tepe but also had up to five towers! That's pretty impressive for the time.
@@travelersmemoire This channel is fantastic! th-cam.com/video/0l5kjE2JJRg/w-d-xo.html Hes good because he pushes back against pseudoarcheologists like Graham Hancock for example. Pros and cons of pseudoscience: Pro: gets people interested in history. Con: they popularize misinformation, half truths and outright nonsense.
Awesome that the "carvings", or actual Bas Reliefs, have recently been realized to associate with astrological charts, which may pinpoint specific dates or times. The fact that this site, with 25 of these circular enclosures, and other sites that are similar, were all specifically covered and filled in with dirt, is not understood at all. What I love the most is that it has opened the eyes of the said educated and blown apart the assumptions, and false history we've all been taught.
Yea, it’s crazy how much of what we thought we knew is proven wrong by this one site! Very cool to hear about the astrological association! I didn’t know about that, thanks!
Wow, such an awesome place! Thanks for posting this video
Thanks for watching 😊
This place is awesome, have no clue how you showed up in my feed but glad ya did , new sub here great coverage of this place first hand. I'm envious but glad to you posted I will never be able to get there and this almost as good . Thanks again
Yea, I’m a pretty small channel so it’s surprising to me too. Thanks for watching and yea it was an awesome place to visit! The amount we don’t know about this civilization is mind blowing
Interesting.
I believe that Gobekli Tepe is the lost 'Hall of Records"
We've known about sites like Jericho since the 1950s. So it fits in with what archeologists already thought. Civilization started in the fertile crescent. And yeah it's not the oldest, there's been so many found since the 1990s. The thought that archeologists had trouble fitting this in is a silly trope. But yeah, it's an amazing site. They used stones like flint. They know where the quarry was.
Very interesting, I didn’t know about Jericho. Do you know if it was as grandiose as this back then or was it more tents and temporary structures?
@@travelersmemoire Well grandiose is a subjective question. Jericho didn't really peak until a couple thousand years after Göbekli Tepe. The interesting thing about Jericho isn't it's wall (walls of Jericho) but the tower. From an engineering standpoint a tower is far more impressive than standing pillars. Speaking of towers another site is even more amazing, imo, than either. Tell Qaramel not only predates Göbekli Tepe but also had up to five towers! That's pretty impressive for the time.
@@travelersmemoire
This channel is fantastic!
th-cam.com/video/0l5kjE2JJRg/w-d-xo.html
Hes good because he pushes back against pseudoarcheologists like Graham Hancock for example. Pros and cons of pseudoscience: Pro: gets people interested in history. Con: they popularize misinformation, half truths and outright nonsense.
I’ll check it out. Thanks for the information!
@@travelersmemoire for sure!
Awesome that the "carvings", or actual Bas Reliefs, have recently been realized to associate with astrological charts, which may pinpoint specific dates or times. The fact that this site, with 25 of these circular enclosures, and other sites that are similar, were all specifically covered and filled in with dirt, is not understood at all. What I love the most is that it has opened the eyes of the said educated and blown apart the assumptions, and false history we've all been taught.
Yea, it’s crazy how much of what we thought we knew is proven wrong by this one site! Very cool to hear about the astrological association! I didn’t know about that, thanks!