Ive lived here all my life and just now discovering these cool places right under my nose. Yes they are aligned from Cline Creek ruins to an unnamed fort between Cline and Elephant
Hello. The hill is sometimes called 'Pepsi Cap' because of its flat top and slender sides. I suspect that the stone is a 'spindle whorl', especially if it's made of fired clay, which was too humble a material to be used as jewelry. It would be an indication of women both living and working at the top as well as cotton being grown or at least available for spinning. There's also a faint ruin along the creek below as well.
You're right, a friend saw the same thing in a museum in Cave Creek. It is a Spindle whorl which is very exciting especially since big horn sheep were drawn in petroglyphs down from the site along the creek. they must have roamed the Table Mesa cliffs close by. Thanks for watching!
Your videos would be awesome if you stop with the music. We don't need that, not ever. especially when you are talking. I was forced to mute you and use closed captioning. If your videos become watchable AND listenable, I will subscribe. There is nothing more annoying that trying to listen to you and having music playing at the same time. Too bad, you could have good videos.
This does not look like India. What are you trying to pull? India is the only place on earth where there are an abundance of Indians, beside those traveling or working abroad. The liberals in America have decided that there are no Indians here. Now, they shoukd be called Native Americans for political reasons. But that's fallacious as well and insulting to their populations that live in this country. There can't be native americans because their peoples occupied these lands way before there was an America. Their are over 300 reservations in the U.S. of disparate peoples with their own cultures, languages, and history. Since both convenient references are irresponsibly inaccurate, why not call them by the name they call themselves. For instance, the people we call Navajos, call themselves Diné speaking the Na-Dené language.
Out of touch are we? Political correctness would be calling these peoples either Indian or Native American when they are neither. I am just pointing that out...
@@larryrobertson4099 maybe you should go up and talk to the puyallup tribe. the ones with puyallup tribe of indians on their tax free casino. tell them the indians on their billboard offends you
Puyaləpabš in their ancestral language is what they call themselves. They have their own history, language, and culture disparate from all the other the other peoples called Indian by tradition. In Canada, they are getting away from the term Indian reservations and calling them 'First Nation' reserves. Anti-American liberals offend me, these peoples do not. These peoples deserve better than a complacent acceptance of the traditional term 'Indian'. You know slavery was a tradition as well. Tell me Zarb, did the Puyallup's use the term 'Indian' on their billboard?
I think that would be a good place to look out a be able to see what was or who was coming.. great vantage sites
It's amazing how aligned all these forts are from Pepsi Cap all the way down to Elephant Mountain.
Ive lived here all my life and just now discovering these cool places right under my nose. Yes they are aligned from Cline Creek ruins to an unnamed fort between Cline and Elephant
Hello. The hill is sometimes called 'Pepsi Cap' because of its flat top and slender sides.
I suspect that the stone is a 'spindle whorl', especially if it's made of fired clay, which was too humble a material to be used as jewelry. It would be an indication of women both living and working at the top as well as cotton being grown or at least available for spinning.
There's also a faint ruin along the creek below as well.
You're right, a friend saw the same thing in a museum in Cave Creek. It is a Spindle whorl which is very exciting especially since big horn sheep were drawn in petroglyphs down from the site along the creek. they must have roamed the Table Mesa cliffs close by. Thanks for watching!
Hi guys, thank you for the opportunity to experience this beautiful place (almost) firsthand. Is the curved structure on top a Kiva?
Did you leave it there??
You really should avoid walking on the walls!
Did you find the big one too?
Not sure, which one was that?
Do an experiment. Ditch the music, and just be yourself. Then look at how many views you get where people watch from beginning to end.
Your videos would be awesome if you stop with the music. We don't need that, not ever. especially when you are talking. I was forced to mute you and use closed captioning. If your videos become watchable AND listenable, I will subscribe. There is nothing more annoying that trying to listen to you and having music playing at the same time. Too bad, you could have good videos.
This does not look like India. What are you trying to pull? India is the only place on earth where there are an abundance of Indians, beside those traveling or working abroad. The liberals in America have decided that there are no Indians here. Now, they shoukd be called Native Americans for political reasons. But that's fallacious as well and insulting to their populations that live in this country. There can't be native americans because their peoples occupied these lands way before there was an America. Their are over 300 reservations in the U.S. of disparate peoples with their own cultures, languages, and history. Since both convenient references are irresponsibly inaccurate, why not call them by the name they call themselves. For instance, the people we call Navajos, call themselves Diné speaking the Na-Dené language.
why not keep your political correctness to yourself?
Out of touch are we? Political correctness would be calling these peoples either Indian or Native American when they are neither. I am just pointing that out...
@@larryrobertson4099 maybe you should go up and talk to the puyallup tribe. the ones with puyallup tribe of indians on their tax free casino. tell them the indians on their billboard offends you
Puyaləpabš in their ancestral language is what they call themselves. They have their own history, language, and culture disparate from all the other the other peoples called Indian by tradition. In Canada, they are getting away from the term Indian reservations and calling them 'First Nation' reserves.
Anti-American liberals offend me, these peoples do not. These peoples deserve better than a complacent acceptance of the traditional term 'Indian'. You know slavery was a tradition as well.
Tell me Zarb, did the Puyallup's use the term 'Indian' on their billboard?
@@larryrobertson4099 Tell us Larry , do you see any Polyps up tRumps ?