Cusco archaeological tour: Qorikancha, Saqsaywaman, and more.

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 13

  • @mindymoto1
    @mindymoto1 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Always fascinates me. Lucky you being there!

    • @SeanSeesAdventure
      @SeanSeesAdventure  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, thank you. Cusco has so many of these sites. I haven't even seen all of them yet.

  • @nikaberuashvili2773
    @nikaberuashvili2773 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Megaliths of such polygonal construction are also found in Ancient Argos in Greece, Alacahöyük in Turkey, and Easter Island in Rapanui. It is as if they are from the same school of traditions And how other and other civilizations were able to repeat the same complex technique

    • @SeanSeesAdventure
      @SeanSeesAdventure  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's fascinating, isn't it? I'd like to go back to Greece and Turkey to see some of those other sites.

  • @ronpizur2627
    @ronpizur2627 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I came upon some research a few weeks ago that postulates that those huge megalithic stones were actually man-made and were poued in place by some sort of geopolymer method long lost to us. They postulate that this was done all over the world by different ancient cultures. It will be interesting to follow this research to see what comes of it. But it sort of makes sense when you see the odd shapes of those huge stones in the walls and how closely they fit together.

    • @SeanSeesAdventure
      @SeanSeesAdventure  หลายเดือนก่อน

      The mystery is enjoyable, but it's also frustrating that the technology was lost. It would be a struggle (though still possible) for today's society to create these types of structures.

  • @hansnelsen3960
    @hansnelsen3960 หลายเดือนก่อน

    notice that the photography concentrates on the perfect and marvelous, but in reality the perfect fades into the crude, not like in the video, but with the perfect becoming cruder and the cruder work becoming more refined. And vast areas are made completely of crude masonry, much more of that than the perfect, but then a very fine piece will creep in. There is much evidence against the ideas of advanced civilizations, aliens, lazars, diamond tools, polymers. Where is the evidence of the infrastructure to create polymers? Where are the molds? Where is the evidence on the stones of molds? Molds always leave evidence. Where is the evidence for the making of powerful lazars and power tools? The shops or factories? The precursors like iron, steel, alloys, energy production. It ain't there, pal.

    • @SeanSeesAdventure
      @SeanSeesAdventure  หลายเดือนก่อน

      My focus is not on advanced civilizations, but on the fact that 100 years is a short window of time to get it all done. So it was more likely built by a few different cultures over a longer period of time.

    • @nikaberuashvili2773
      @nikaberuashvili2773 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think this is due to the skill of the Inca stonemasons and nothing else, and they only carved it with flint axes. 😊

    • @SeanSeesAdventure
      @SeanSeesAdventure  หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@nikaberuashvili2773 Maybe so. but there are still 2 separate building techniques. So why did they change so dramatically?

    • @nikaberuashvili2773
      @nikaberuashvili2773 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@SeanSeesAdventure It has two explanations that the Spanish occupation destroyed the stone masters and the traditional construction school was lost And the next generation could no longer build like the old masters And the second explanation They simply became economically weaker and could no longer pay the stone masters accordingly, so the interest disappeared in a few generations and thereafter they built primitively at a very cheap price.