The Petroglyphs of Georgia - Part 1

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 21

  • @Dimitri-Jordania
    @Dimitri-Jordania ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Where have you been the last 5 yrs since I moved down here!!!
    So i moved to Chatt area handful of yrs ago, have been obsessed w/ancient America/global ancient history/moundbuilders/megalithic stone work etc 4 a while, but as soon as I moved here I realized just by looking around/later many confirmations, that this was an insanely important ancient citadel, a hub, going even back to mysterious mississipian/archaic/neolithic times, & built on successively for thousands of yrs.
    I have found MANY mounds & earthworks either forgotten or hidden or never recognized or at least not acknowledged, in fact Chattanooga itself used to have one of the largest platform mound/earthworks in the country, only close confirmed-mound runner up would probably be Shell mound in MS.
    I've looked at the landscape allll around and have found many things you mention in your vids, but just from looking at the landscape/knowing what to look for/making educated guesses. Apparently I'm pretty good at this, because all of my guesses/hunches keep being more right than I even imagined at first.
    But whats even more, I've found megalithic building, Ive also found areas in the woods that remind me more of pre-rediscovery Matchu Pichu (only much older) than Appalachia.
    I've found so much stuff here and so much evidence, for instance just on my relatives property, ive found numerous Quetzlcoatl (yes, plainly visibly/unmistakably feathered serpent stone tools) some w/red ochre pigment paint on it which is so old that its shiny & part of the lithified surface. I've found alot more too, the whole neighborhood I'm certain was terraces & ancient settlement, like 100% w/out a doubt.
    And I've been obsessed w/Etowah too, you go see some of the original artifacts they excavated, and tell me its not Mayan. Also 'Etowah' etymologically is related to 'Towah' or 'Tula', aka Teotihuacan.
    When I heard you confirming my hypothesis about Peru, even down to a specific tribe name, my jaw dropped. I came to this conclusion over these past 4-5 yrs from an entirely diff perspective, from an entirely diff reasoning, & from entirely diff evidence than I have heard anyone mention atall yet.
    You are literally *the* person i have been looking for to share this with. Is there any way I could reach you via email/tell you about this/collaborate somehow?

    • @peopleofonefire9643
      @peopleofonefire9643  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hey! The thing about Peru is not a theory. Eastern Creeks carry significant Panoan DNA. Most of the core traditions of the Creek People - like Yaupon tea, Stomp Dance, Creek-Seminole clothing, etc. are straight from the Panoans - including the words. The Appalachian stone structures are much older than Machu Picchu. Macchu Picchu was pretty much contemporary with the Spanish Conquest. You can contact me on The Americas Revealed website - Https:ApalacheResearch.com It contains over 500 essays on the Southeastern and Mesoamerican indigenous peoples. Good to hear from you.

  • @MeetTheMuse
    @MeetTheMuse 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    So happy and pleased to see People of One Fire here on TH-cam! Thank you!!!

  • @averagejay5287
    @averagejay5287 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    These vids are outta sight. I love em. Cheers!

  • @KarlaAkins1
    @KarlaAkins1 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Researchers act as if people long ago didn't have any curiosity or hankerin' to explore. People have been riding the currents to faraway places since time immemorial. Glad you're sharing this info hither and yon!

  • @rcks998
    @rcks998 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Sounds like this lines up somewhat with the Answers in Genisis folks really interesting

  • @MandiRae
    @MandiRae 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am so happy about this. Thank you thank you!

  • @bohemianrover7787
    @bohemianrover7787 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    My mentor told me of a forgotten petroglyph. Yesterday I went out and found it. Scratched graffiti threatens this 300 yr old piece of art. It was amazing to be one of only a handful to know about this carving and its story.

    • @peopleofonefire9643
      @peopleofonefire9643  5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hold on to it. Many people throw such things away, thinking that they have no value. My step-father threw away a slate I had found which had a man throwing a spear with a new moon in the background

    • @bohemianrover7787
      @bohemianrover7787 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@peopleofonefire9643 oh no it aint moving trust me on that

    • @bohemianrover7787
      @bohemianrover7787 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@peopleofonefire9643 *hours later* hold up he said what got thrown where.. If you are ever in Georgia and feel like a small hike I will show you this boulder.

  • @MrPh30
    @MrPh30 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Well as Ingstad found out on Nova Scotia that there had been viking travels furthet south. There is not entirely proven yet that Vinland was so far up north as some say it was.
    A lot is hidden ,and Heyerdahl is one that were in on who it and where the Bearded Gods could have come from.
    ( And the Redhaired ladies who is a Steak Restauran's favorite customer base also he must have been øooking into as part of the same. I read your page about the Frencg hippie girls)

    • @peopleofonefire9643
      @peopleofonefire9643  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yvette's hair was a color red that I have never seen anywhere else. Of course, back then I had no knowledge of genetics or coneheads . . . mainly because no one else knew anything about it either. I now know that the Marquis de Lafayette was born in that same part of France and had the same shaped skull that she did. Take a look at some of the paintings and sculptures of him.

  • @loquat44-40
    @loquat44-40 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Interesting. For many years there have been aa few classical references to Walrus hunters pursuing ivory and as they exterminated the walrus populations, going north and west to find north america. The ivory was destined by traders to the Mediterranean and the middle east. There was also an ancient not well known red sea people culture on coastal canada and northeastern coastal new england. They seemed to be hunters of pelagic seagoing marine life.
    Not my profession, but I have an open mind and the mesoamerican connection does seem to be quite clear as confirmed by genetics.

  • @BrianWilkesMedia
    @BrianWilkesMedia 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Is the opening music from Mari Boine? Sounds like her.

    • @peopleofonefire9643
      @peopleofonefire9643  4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's Eivør Pálsdóttir - She also sang several songs for the Vikings TV series. I think her voice has a clearer sound than Boine.

  • @mightymite3958
    @mightymite3958 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Us historians will always find away to discredit native history to fit their own story and grab at straws

  • @larrycall7266
    @larrycall7266 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    consume me as a friend who you will morn forever if in remembrance over me because if you enemies enemies over take me you will need a friend and if you value a enemy more than a friend my enemies will overtake you from beneath if not above, I will do the same for you 5:05

  • @jamesking1495
    @jamesking1495 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    So you're saying Swedish Vikings built those mounds, but they use Irish words....great 👍😐

    • @peopleofonefire9643
      @peopleofonefire9643  3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      by the way . . . Jag talar och förstår svenska! Vikinger means "pirates." We are talking about the Bronze Age, 2500 years before the Vikings and about 1500 years before the people now living in Sweden, were living in Sweden or the people now living in Ireland, were living in Ireland. I did not say Swedish Vikings built the mounds. I did not say Irish people built the mounds. Look at the video again. I said that most PETROGLYPHS in the Georgia Gold Belt are identical to those made during the Bronze Age in either southern Sweden or southwestern Ireland. It depends on the Georgia river valley, which type of petroglyph is seen.