Ancient Native American Village! Huge Ancestral Puebloan Dwelling!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 ก.ย. 2024
- Ancient village or fortress found on Google Earth! #ancientdiscoveries #exploration #backpacking #hiking #adventure #ancienthistory #ancientarchitects I wanted to explore it and share it with you! I had to drive my Polaris RZR into the Arizona desert more than 25 miles to find this! Alone! You will not believe this place!
Here are some Amazon links to the equipment I use while out on my adventures. I get a few pennies if you buy something using my link... Thanks in advance.
This is an 12 room Hilltop Fort or Ruins probably left by the Ancestral Puebloan people! I found pottery sherds and chert chips from tool and arrowhead making. This structure was 115 feet long and 100 feet wide and had at least 12 rooms inside the walls and at least 5 structures outside the walls. You could see at least 100 miles!
Thank you @Desert.Drifter , @the_pov_channel and @TheTrekPlanner for showing me a lot of people love this type of content!
I enjoy searching for ancient dwellings and going deep into the desert to find them. These dwellings are from 700 to several thousand years old! Anasazi... Hohokam... Basket People... Older?!? Who knows! I use @googleearth and @onXHunt to find these ruins. Cliff Dwellings!
TAGS: anasazi hohokam pueblo puebloan ancient southwest google earth discovery arrowhead sherd pottery desert drifter hilltop fort fortress arrow clovis folsom knap knapping chert spear indian ruin petroglyph pictograph rockart rock art knife native house aztec arizona utah new mexico mexico prescott coconino flagstaff sedona pov trek planner explore find discover hike remote wall canyon mountain ruins alone solo kiva metate mano apache hill hopi mesa shard flint az nm colorado co arrow point indian
YOUR ON FIRE BROTHER, LOVE YOUR WORK,...I have my own theories about why they built these, would love to share it with you.
Thanks for the feedback! You can contact me by using my email link on my channel or you can share your theories here. Thanks for joining my adventure!
Thank you for the excellent Videos. I'm recuperating from an injury and just getting to walking again. thank you for the inspiration.
One of my favorite past times is exploring new areas and hiking .
I’m hoping for a speedy recovery for you! Thanks for joining my adventure!
Is this in Arizona or another state? Thank you for taking the time to show us this interesting place. The drone helped get the layout!
Arizona! And thanks for joining my adventure!
Thank you for highlighting the structures. It really helps!
Thanks for the feedback! Also thanks for joining my adventure!
Isn’t the Drone the most cool tool you’ve ever seen? With videos like these they are so helpful in seeing the overall view of your discoveries.
It is a great tool! Some use it as a scouting tool to find ruins. I’m not that good with it yet! Thanks for joining the adventure!
@@-JoinMyAdventures Thank you for your reply!.. I watch many videos on U-tube and one of my favorites is off road 4D videos. The Wyoming Jeepers use their drone for scouting ahead to see if the road is blocked or the condition of the roads..so many great applications. But an Eagle attacked and destroyed his drone (3rd time)..
These are old ruins - wow!
Yes these are certainly very old!
Man those walls had to stand at least 2 to 3 stories tall huh?
The main walls were huge! The village must have been thriving at one time!
@@-JoinMyAdventures beautiful footage man
Nice video
Thanks for joining my adventure!
It realy seems a andinous contruction, im bolivian-brazilian with aymara decendence.
Do you mean the structures I show in this video look like ones in the bolivia/brazil area? That is an interesting observation! Thanks for the comment and joining my adventure!
Very interesting makes me curious about the usage of this structure. Again, water source near, and or food. seasonal, storage, protection? Is there any ancestor of the indigenous people who have stores of this place? My thoughts the structures are permanent assuming for protection, the food source may have been fruits and berries, roots, nuts. But without water nothing makes sense, a spring or river that went dry long ago. Looking at the terrain a spring looks to be more likely, I would think all these year later some sign of a springs exists. If you believe or not a water witching, the area my show something. thank you, ALL stay safe but what do I know
The water source would be paramount in any environment but particularly the desert or high desert. A permanent village would require a permanent water source. This particular site sits prominently above a large flat natural pass through very rough mountains. There is also a creek that always flows. I believe this flat ground below was farmed and irrigated by the people that lived in this village. Thanks for joining this adventure! I’ll try to put more of this type of information in my upcoming videos if I can fit it in without giving away too much information about exact locations!
@@-JoinMyAdventures thank you, I think water or lack of it is why the places are abandoned
It seems like it's common to see areas that contain a large amount of pottery shards, as if they had been purposely broken. Why would that be?
I’m not sure, but I do know a lot of ruins I find have cow tracks and flaps in them. I think they like to rub up against the walls. I am always surprised to see the tracks! With them stepping everywhere they just grind the pottery into smaller and smaller pieces. Thanks for the deep question! Also thanks for joining the adventure!