The EASTER ISLAND - GOBEKLI TEPE LINK?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 ก.ย. 2024
  • Hey Hunters,
    This week I came across the work of 'Atlantis Confirmed' as his new theories linking the carvings and art work of Easter Island back to Gobekli Tepe??!!!!
    His video can be found here - • #GobekliTepe and #East...
    Have a look and see what you think for yourself.
    Also Ben at ‪@UnchartedX‬ has a great video on The Gosford Glypths you must check out to see again another link from the ancient middle east to ancient Australia.
    His vid is here - • The Gosford Glyphs - A...
    I'll be hanging out in the comments and on the live chat at the premiere.
    JJ xx
    #easterisland #gobeklitepe #ancienttech

ความคิดเห็น • 1.5K

  • @avlisk
    @avlisk 3 ปีที่แล้ว +131

    Never knew about the carvings on their backs, either. We were always told about the "carved heads" on Easter Island. Only learned they are full bodies and not just heads about 10 years ago. We just don't know what we don't know!

    • @SOLIDSNAKE.
      @SOLIDSNAKE. 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yea that's crazy I didn't even know they were full bodies till a few years ago

    • @Knossos22
      @Knossos22 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@SOLIDSNAKE. I'm curious why there are a bunch of the Moai that are half or two thirds buried in the ground... Was that done intentionally? If it was a natural process, then are they much, much older than we think??? There are some pretty questionable assumptions involved in dating megalithic structures and carvings...

    • @joshmarden9933
      @joshmarden9933 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Knossos22 they're much older. we've been lied to by those who hold power, they gained power pushing dogmatic fear to the masses. the truth of our history would tear them down from their golden thrones.

    • @shanedavison7473
      @shanedavison7473 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Knossos22The Moai are anywhere from 15,000 to 50,000 years old. At least the original ones are that old

  • @UnchartedX
    @UnchartedX 3 ปีที่แล้ว +108

    thanks so much for the shoutout Jahannah! great video, there definitely seems to be a link between Easter Island and GT.... Gotta get there in the next couple years!

    • @goatee21
      @goatee21 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Interesting although scorpion on the left just looks like the top of the buttcrack and thong to me lol. And who has time to carve down down constellations the day everyone died. Seems like they'd be not dying.

    • @alihuleisy1976
      @alihuleisy1976 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I love that you guys show love to each other! I watch all your channels and have learned of others making great content from the shout outs. Keep up the great work!

    • @Dave-op4jh
      @Dave-op4jh 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Dear all,
      There's a link between Easter Island scriptures and Harappa Mohenjo-Daro Indus valley civilization scriptures, please check it out. Thanks 🙏

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Dave-op4jh any more info on that ? Any links or direction would be much appreciated !
      Thanks !!!

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 ปีที่แล้ว

      Do you organise any tour groups of these sites ? If so how do I get in on it and if not let’s do this !!!

  • @MajorKaoss
    @MajorKaoss 3 ปีที่แล้ว +228

    For over fifty years I have been drawn to ancient history. This is the first time I have seen the back of the Moai - I'm blown away.

    • @midimike88
      @midimike88 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Yes, blown away as well.

    • @tbmdd
      @tbmdd 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I'm only 24 lol but I've never known about this as well!

    • @MrMrl69
      @MrMrl69 3 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@DionHewson kind of odd huh? The more I learn about the remnants of our ancestors the more I feel that some how, somebody has purposely hidden the historical truth from us. Main stream ancient history as taught in our schools is a farse.

    • @jessesalazar1989
      @jessesalazar1989 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I never knew

    • @ruthiematteson6827
      @ruthiematteson6827 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I saw it last year for the first time. I was mortified that it wasn't included in the teachings by our so called educational system. I distinctly remember them being called "primitive carvings". Just another reminder that the ruling class is hellbent on keeping the general population dumbed down... and without curiosity.

  • @Tomzo711
    @Tomzo711 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    On the "Hand Bag", in Native American lore there were Medicine Bags that the Shaman or medecine man would carry. Essentially they would contain items of significance to the carrier that were believed to give them spiritual healing and protective qualities. Could be old knowledge and concepts passed down through thousands of generations that connect to the original meaning of these bags. And with time and tradition became a item of reverance, even though the the original concept/meaning had been lost to time.

    • @JCMcGee
      @JCMcGee ปีที่แล้ว

      Robert Johnstone: Come Home In My Kitchen :
      Ah ah, she's gone, I know she won't come back
      I've taken the last nickel out of her nation sack
      You better come on in my kitchen
      Hey, it's goin' to be rainin' outdoors

  • @jimbo1836
    @jimbo1836 3 ปีที่แล้ว +61

    What would be even more interesting is the possibility that both locations were buried to cover up those carvings! 👀😱

    • @TheFox2450
      @TheFox2450 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Jim Wilson, Why or how did you get it into your head that ancient people went to the trouble of burying things they had meant for all to see? Every Archaeological dig world wide is just that, a dig, through sediment deposited by water. If you cannot imagine the amount of water we are talking about, go get I Velikovskys' Earth in Upheaval, & learn the truth.

    • @vladislawr1594
      @vladislawr1594 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@TheFox2450 Humans have been burying things forever.. the tells .. or mounds in the middle east are one layer buried over the next layer buried. when building with materials that are easy to knock down, flatten and build on top that is what you do .. rather than cart it away... just pave over it and build a new layer. We still do this today.

    • @Greg042869
      @Greg042869 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Gobekli Tepe was buried so that it wouldn't be destroyed by the... visitors.

    • @duderoony
      @duderoony 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All these ‘things’ being buried to hide them from us is kind of the wrong tack. Instead, think of it as meant to deny us given knowledge until we’re ready for it to be seen.....

    • @Greg042869
      @Greg042869 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@duderoony Mmm yes, the knowledge of carved lizards.

  • @TheEarl777
    @TheEarl777 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I never knew the Easter island statues had glyphs on their backs.
    And the similarity to gobekli tepi is striking.
    And your presentation is wonderful.
    Cheers Jahannah

  • @OnlyAFoolsHope
    @OnlyAFoolsHope 3 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    If you dig up the statues their hands are wrapped around their stomach just like at Gobekli Tepe. I wonder if this was some ancient form of global greetings.

    • @zuzannavee9558
      @zuzannavee9558 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      or designation of what type of info is found on the structure.....?

    • @MrPoilleke
      @MrPoilleke 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      People from the middle east and gobekli tepe area, have been travelling around the world, similar dna with new zealand original inhabitants, found also in south america, and easter island...l think brien foerster talked about it

    • @lucasdiamond5058
      @lucasdiamond5058 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      the hands and belts are mind blowingly similar, kinda odd she didn't mention it. Maybe she hasn't seen them?
      That being said this was really interesting! I've never seen the back of that Moai statue, just beautiful and clearly meaningful.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hardly surprising, people do this all the time when standing still for photographs.

    • @tonyclifton2172
      @tonyclifton2172 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      When people do this posture today, it means they are listening and observing

  • @Purple.mind...Honored.one.
    @Purple.mind...Honored.one. 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    It's not an Eagle it's The bird that everyone respected back in the day expressional in those arid regions, The vulture

    • @crow1066
      @crow1066 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yep. Vultures. Eaters of the dead. At Çatalhöyük there are friezes on the plastered walls with distinctly Vultures 'airing' their wings in the Vulture manner.

  • @polygonalmasonary
    @polygonalmasonary 3 ปีที่แล้ว +75

    If 'Botanists' found two species of plants with so many 'similarities',
    Regardless of 'location' they would be placed in the same grouping of fauna.
    It is interesting that main stream 'Academia' is still resisting acknowledging a 'link'
    Between any of these international sites even in the mounting wealth of material evidence
    'Shouting out, Look we belong to the same civilization and we were made at the same time'.

    • @FreeSpeechXtremist
      @FreeSpeechXtremist 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      This cannot be made at the same time as the Easter island statues would have erroded far more over the years.

    • @IPAsAndSunshine
      @IPAsAndSunshine 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I chalk a portion of it up to controlling the masses. Not trying to be all conspiratory but doesn’t it seem convenient how some of the most important questions get unanswered or under-answered. How mysterious and obvious sites are left unscavenged? Just seems weird for people looking for the answers to the mysteries of the past to act this way, especially in Egypt and Iraq.
      I once stumbled upon a book when researching that face direct and well know directions to the gravesite of Jesus. It was well travelled by people and was even a rite for some for centuries to visit in a pilgrimage fashion. What’s peculiar is in all this time not a single person modernly has went to this place to look, or excavate that grave. You’d think Christian archeology would be all over this long ago, but no, not them nor the Vatican ever humored looking. Like the doubt a person exists is more relevant that just getting the body. At first I assumed maybe a respect thing. What I found was more devious for sure. The village where he is buried is a well known place, it’s in Galilee, but it’s a farming community, the entire place. There wasn’t many trades outside farming. Which makes sense, Jesus anointed people and would have to have access to mass quantities of some very lucrative items, namely olives. Also the village was 100% Canaanite, which would either make people refute Jesus as a messiah, and the rules associated with the Christian moral system, or have to accept the fact perhaps Jesus was not Jewish, nor Christian, which most certainly explains a lot of his words, actions, observations, and dilemmas. Especially why the Jews wanted him dead so bad.
      So you see some things are “better left buried and forgotten” for certain groups who control the population. I assume this is why the secrecy inside Egypt, they probably have found something very revealing and don’t want anyone to know because it may either strike at their claim to power, or show us something like perhaps the world once was operated on faith and trust in each other, not a government. That idea also explains why governments have such a deep hold on archeology of their respective countries.
      A lot of people are not aware but before the war in Iraq, literally one week before, archeologists in Iraq exhumed the tomb of “Gilgamesh” from the epic. They did so with satellite maps of the ancient Euphrates, they located an ancient site where the rice had been diverted, assumed this could be where the river was done so in the epic whil they built the tomb under it then resumed its flow. They hit gold, quite literally, exhuming a body and a ton of gold trinkets, jewelry, a crown and armlets. The smithsonian and American archeological groups were blocked abd a week later we started an invasion in Iraq. Few people note the fact when we took Baghdad we first before securing people or government in the country went directly to art museums, banks, and specifically the central Iraqi bank where the artifacts were stored. We recovered them, televised their recovery, and the artifacts then disappeared. Why? Nobody knows to this day.

    • @78thandSynth
      @78thandSynth 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@IPAsAndSunshine that’s a very polite way of saying many things. Truth is…once Jesus shows up - credibility hauls ass. Silly stuff.
      But she rules.

    • @bozoerectus3207
      @bozoerectus3207 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, they're in the same grouping, and there's a very strong and undeniable link: these were all made by human beings.

    • @tabithadebolt1708
      @tabithadebolt1708 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@IPAsAndSunshine Interesting "theory" about Jesus but where is your PROOF.

  • @BradGryphonn
    @BradGryphonn 3 ปีที่แล้ว +47

    Fascinating. I remember (I'm Aussie) hearing about the Gosford Glyphs being written off as a hoax many years ago. Your video and UnchartedX's video and now, the videos from the experts have got me fascinated. Thank you for enlightening me on this once again. It amuses me the way regular historians from Western culture are quick to write off discoveries that don't fit inside their historical and educational experience views.

    • @debralucas2224
      @debralucas2224 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Me too! I've just presumed they are fake because they were "soundly discredited", now my right eyebrow has risen lol.

    • @taxat10n1sth3ft
      @taxat10n1sth3ft 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@debralucas2224 lol. Pretty much every time I hear of something being soundly discredited, my right eyebrow rises 😄

    • @DilbertMuc
      @DilbertMuc 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      But don't forget that "archeologists" are straight forward people. Everything old they see, they see as a temple and/or sacrificial holy place. Even functional ancient buildings without any inscription etc... always temples or tombs. Just like the pyramids...

    • @taxat10n1sth3ft
      @taxat10n1sth3ft 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@DilbertMuc by "straight forward," do you mean they're somewhat unimaginative, resulting in that default assumption of tombs and temples? That's how it seems to me, at any rate.

    • @DilbertMuc
      @DilbertMuc 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@taxat10n1sth3ft Exactly. The ancient people seemed to spend all day building temples and giving sacrifices. That's why there are only temples and tombs left. According the archaeologists. Weird, isn't it? But folks at that time were like us today. The needed to construct, farm, produce, engineer and build things for daily life.

  • @BootleggerPhil
    @BootleggerPhil 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Dear Jahannah, Gosford is not in the Outback. It's a 30mins car trip, north of Sydney.

    • @LuiBas
      @LuiBas 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      yeah.. was going to say.. i've been there. it's pretty cool. easy to get to.

  • @michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304
    @michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304 3 ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Highly entertaining and courageous, and while some of the matches are a bit strained, the global connections among the survivors were clearly also under great stress. It has always been amazing what lengths the ancients went to to record cryptic information for future generation. My early archaeology at Yale was inspired by Biblical threads introduced by Velikovsky, and I have been a catastrophist ever since, now convinced of both a solar disaster and various cyclical related disasters from the heavens as explanations for the demise of Mu, Atlantis, and ante-deluge civilization globally. Baby-bags is a great contribution to the iconography of diving Gods and genetic-engineering of the tree of life seemingly everywhere: everyone was engaged in preserving the remnants of technology and knowledge with broken tools. Something we may have to imagine for ourselves if ever everything gets interrupted again.

    • @MrMrl69
      @MrMrl69 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Whether its from the heavens, mother earth or humans there will be another interuption. What do you mean by "diving gods and genetic engineering of the tree of life seemingly evrywhere"? Thanks.

    • @jaimealfaro200
      @jaimealfaro200 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Michael, yours is a very good comment. I concord with you 100% and everyone should.

    • @tamara8908
      @tamara8908 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Michael Calmeyer Hentshchel You lost me at "highly entertaining".

    • @michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304
      @michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      tracing catastrophism in archaeology is like that... easy to get lost. Because we have lost most of our knowledge of the past. Add "Suspicious Observers" to your travels for a modern explanation of some of the cyclical catastrophism (the Sun) that we can add to all the foolishness we do to ourselves. I should perhaps find it less entertaining than dire, but I prefer to think of discovery as a quest.

    • @tamara8908
      @tamara8908 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304 I been an Observer for four years, yes connecting the dots.

  • @pritpalsingh44
    @pritpalsingh44 3 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Hey Jahannah could you find the Terracotta warriors next I’m so interested in them thanks

    • @Infyra
      @Infyra 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      There is not much of a mystery about the terracotta army though.

    • @NBC_NCO
      @NBC_NCO 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Micronova.

  • @BBCNorinWebCenters
    @BBCNorinWebCenters 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    The "man bag" carving always reminded me of a doctors little black bag. The one they take with them to house calls.

  • @ApacheMagic
    @ApacheMagic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    My understanding is there are two distinct types of Moai on Rapanui; and that the older ones are made of much harder material to carve than the newer ones. I would be interested to know how many of these moai have the back carvings, and if they are exclusive to one version or the other. Also I am interested by the way they were buried. What’s their burial also deliberate? If not, then they must surely be very old. Rapanui is a volcanic island- I’m interested to know if the material they are buried into is volcanic or sedimentary from ocean events/floods.

    • @jonathanking9246
      @jonathanking9246 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      that is a good question as they have stated that the reason they stopped carving and moving the moai is because there were no more trees to move them, but then why did they car so many and only moved them only so far and then stop. it would be the way of people they usually do one at a time so there is a lot that does not make sense here

    • @midimike88
      @midimike88 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Makes you wonder if the Moai were purposely buried similarly to GOBEKLI TEPE being buried. Almost like they were purposely hiding away so humanity would discover at a later time when they could finish telling their story and humanity would be ready to listen.

    • @bluefish4999
      @bluefish4999 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      They're volcanic, both made of the same material, there are legends of "long ears" people verses the "short ears" where the short ears won and killed the long ears maybe signifying a change in the statues, there are different stories that maybe the long ears were there first and the short ears came along or maybe a class warfare, also maybe the first inhabitants came back from the Americas. Dna evidence has put both groups more likely being Polynesian though.

    • @Throku
      @Throku 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@bluefish4999 The one the brittish took with them is made of basalt, most on the island are made of volcanic tuff.

    • @salonohana3089
      @salonohana3089 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@midimike88 grahm hancock says they are silted over like from flooding thousands of years ago

  • @deanervik
    @deanervik 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    You should look up the origins of the boomerang. Hint: The Egyptians have murals showing them throwing “snake shaped hunting sticks” not unlike boomerangs. Gliphtastic!

    • @mattjack6518
      @mattjack6518 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      They are actually examples in the Cairo museum th-cam.com/video/iONze4YMTUo/w-d-xo.html

  • @mlbreel
    @mlbreel 3 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    Regarding the snap shot of the apocalypse event, a photo or any “modern” style recording would not have lasted the ages as these storms carving have. Data retention for humans is one serious issue. We are not very good at it now. Ive been to Easter Island and everything the main stream claims to “know” about it is incorrect. I really enjoyed this presentation and appreciate your enthusiasm. :)

    • @2pi628
      @2pi628 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Easter Island Question: Are MOST of the statues Buried so deep as to only expose the heads or is that just a few of them?

    • @ancientexplorer1865
      @ancientexplorer1865 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@2pi628 Most are buried to their chest, neck or even nose. There are others standing in ahus (platforms) near the coastline, that are fully exposed.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      "Data retention for humans is one serious issue. We are not very good at it now."
      Ignorance is bliss I guess.
      There are methods of data preservation we have now that could literally last millions of years without degradation if they were buried in the present - methods that can preserve gigabytes of information instead of basic pictograms.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ancientexplorer1865 Even then the burial is only from the natural build up of soil detritus layers over time that comes from a repeating cycle of plants growing, rotting and then growing again over centuries.

    • @ahuramazda32
      @ahuramazda32 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I’ll take it a step further and postulate that our ancient religious beliefs tell tales of people and civilization. So perhaps what we see as ancient religion, was really just good timekeeping, navigation, and the preservation of societal bonds

  • @guyrandom8518
    @guyrandom8518 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I love the connection back to the Australian indigenous culture. Interesting that it’s the oldest living ancient culture. I’ve always thought there needs to be more research and documentation of this culture as their stories are a direct link to our past. They also have stories of the sky people and a flood story…. Love your perspective, keep them coming

  • @martinhertsius9282
    @martinhertsius9282 3 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Not sure I approve of the similarities of the carvings, but not dismissing either. But, there are _very_ clear connections between Easter Island, Egypt and Peru. The knobs on the megalithic walls. There is no chance in hell that they just happened to do those unknowingly about each other. ZERO chance.
    And with that in mind, of course there are also other connections. :-)

    • @jamesstephens7111
      @jamesstephens7111 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Exactly my thoughts. The knobs are just so strange and unlikely for them to be random coincedences.

    • @moonknight4053
      @moonknight4053 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Wonder what means, Rapa Nui inhabitants are related to the ppl of New Zealand, Tahiti, Hawaii, etc. and those cultures have no connection to Egypt, (from what I know)

  • @Mr3DBob
    @Mr3DBob 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    16:00 Great tattoo design. My late wife named our place Dragonfly Realm, because dragonflies eat black flies and mosquitoes, making life tolerable for mid-May to mid-June. The dragonflies use us as live bait. We accidentally observed four stages of dragonfly reproduction, one of which was the females dipping up and down in a creek, depositing eggs. Those eggs develop into larvae which resemble blobs of sawdust bobbing up and down in the water. Later, those turn into beetle-like water bugs, which eventually crawl up onto the land, climb a sprig of grass and sit in the sun, while their back unzips, and a mature dragonfly unfolds from the beetle, dries in the sun and then flies away on rattly twin pairs of wings. Dragonfly was definitely her totem animal, and one is on her gravestone. I'm thrilled to know that our self-made religion is based upon ancient traditions.

  • @Eat_31415
    @Eat_31415 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Interestingly your tattoo dragonfly also appears to resemble a Key, [Looking at the tail] Maybe this is the KEY, everyone was looking for, also this would make a great movie plot,

    • @jeffhenderson934
      @jeffhenderson934 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      The dragonfly tattoo part of the video pretty freaky. (Not the tattoo itself. A girl I grew up with and lost touch after college mentioned in a group post she had gotten 3 tattoos- dolphin, butterfly, dragonfly. And none of us “guys” would be allowed to see them without at least dinner, a movie and drinks afterwards) But for Jahannah to get a tattoo with all the Egyptian style symbolism and not yet be into what the combination dragonfly, triangle and circle represent, certainly makes you wonder about the subconscious, foreshadowing, seeing into the future vs “I want a tattoo on my thigh.” Or in the case of Pamela- “I want 3 tattoos that nobody will ever see, unless marry me, or at a minimum buy me food, entertainment and alcohol.”

  • @jaredcarrier9015
    @jaredcarrier9015 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The biggest thing for me is that both styles used 3D images. Rather than cutting into the stone, they both cut around the stone to make the images.

    • @josue1996jc
      @josue1996jc ปีที่แล้ว

      you know, there is something about that fact that i found amazing, the most ancient geropliphics i saw in venezuela (my natal country) are that way too, i've wamte to go back a give them a closer look since no one over there cares on that area, but yeah, it's kinda hard with the current situacion

  • @bradfregger2561
    @bradfregger2561 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Jahannah,
    You suggested that the stone carvings might have been their photography, the best choice they had. I have another hypothesis:
    They were well aware that humanity had suffered numerous catastrophes and wanted to send a message to the future that they believed would survive any civilization-ending event (CEE).

    • @Throku
      @Throku 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Exactly, if you want to leave a message that survives flood, fire and brimstone, then there really only is stone to go to. Some would suggest metal, forgetting that most of those oxidize and the ones that dont are teh first things to be recycled. Stone is more durable and worthless.

    • @DilbertMuc
      @DilbertMuc 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      and to protect the stone carving from withering and the elements you better bury them carefully... oh wait!

    • @bradfregger2561
      @bradfregger2561 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DilbertMuc I’m not sure what your getting at, nor that they needed burying, nature probably took care of that, but they were buried and real deep, over 10 -12 feet deep.

    • @DilbertMuc
      @DilbertMuc 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@bradfregger2561 No. Nature is very slow at burying unless there is a flood with sediments or a sand storm. To save stone building for eons they were buried intentionally. Maybe against looting hordes of foreign warrios or weathering of the elements.

    • @bradfregger2561
      @bradfregger2561 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DilbertMuc you need to check your history, there were massive worldwide floods 12,000 years ago that buried most of the prehistory artifacts that they’ve been digging up for the past decade. The floods were probably caused by a comet that had broken into pieces and hit Earth multiple times.

  • @lisamatosevic
    @lisamatosevic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The Gosford Glyphs aren’t in the outback they’re approximately 19 minutes from the ocean

    • @dijdave8584
      @dijdave8584 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Less if you count Woy Woy Bay as part of the ocean....

  • @jovanjohnson453
    @jovanjohnson453 3 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    The goddess yingana theory is interesting! It immediately made me start thinking of the Stork. It's a long necked bird with a sack that flew around and delivered babys to people. I'm definitely thinking that fairy tale is directly influenced by the goddess!

    • @jnickence
      @jnickence 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Brilliant deduction!!!

    • @funnythat777
      @funnythat777 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wow mind blown 🤯 . Thanks 👍

    • @robvarn
      @robvarn 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Came here to post the same thought!!! The stork of western mythology has to be Yingana!

    • @profitnadeem
      @profitnadeem 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      That is a brilliant connection!

    • @RGC-gn2nm
      @RGC-gn2nm 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      This sounds very plausible

  • @chadsmith2281
    @chadsmith2281 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can you look into the tomb that was found in Jordan with treasure greater than king Tut's tomb. Some say it's Alexander the Great idk🤷🏻‍♂️. It's definitely somebody important that the Jordan government is covering it up😱😢😢.

  • @TheMajorActual
    @TheMajorActual 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Didn't know about the carvings on the backs of the Moai, but as soon as I saw the hands on the statues at Gobekli Tepe, I knew the two sites were hard-linked.

  • @nozzlegoblin1
    @nozzlegoblin1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I did a report on Easter Island in elementary school, I've watched many documentaries and nobody ever mentioned the intricate carvings on the backside. Dang, they just wobbled down the hill with ropes. Thanks , I appreciate your research.

  • @CDMood
    @CDMood 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I've read an idea where the bags represent knowledge being passed from an older civilization to a newer civilization

  • @faith-here
    @faith-here 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hey!!! Loved this ❤ I have a theory about the "handbags" could the be a small basket with a snake? Since Horus sealed the "eye" Venus ? Supposedly that's what those "egyption lightbulbs" are...they represent the comets coming down to earth..cause they said its like a snake wrapped in fire?? @NohannaJames 🙏 just my thoughts on it

  • @pritpalsingh44
    @pritpalsingh44 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I love to go to theses places i just need a travel buddy

    • @Yves95128
      @Yves95128 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Not really, I traveled alone when I was young. The good thing is that you are free and not distracted.

    • @anthonymotture
      @anthonymotture 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      When you go on your own you meet people. I did

    • @kellypg
      @kellypg 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You paying? I'll quit my job and bail on my life to travel to these places.

  • @Valkyrie_71
    @Valkyrie_71 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @1:07 into the vid.. where you describe and show the back of the statues are carved? You dont even have to say it. My first thought is, I can already see the images are the SAME style as the ones at Gobleki. I just got chills.. kk I'm going to keep watching :)
    End of vid update: yeah, i mean more brilliant insight. Thank you Jahannah :) I think we are getting more of a sense of what went down with every new discovery and connection we are making. The last month I have been researching and reading like crazy into the Sumerian texts about the Annunaki myths. The whole YD catacalysm was not the only flood, it was the first to be noted, but there were others in the following ages (Burckle impact, Impact in southern Iraq, South America with the advent of lidar tech, etc), and other impact sites are being discovered all the time. I believe (and I think Graham or Randall coined the term) that the floods "book-end'ed" the megalith building period. It was both in response to, and in knowledge of, the catastrophies by those who held advanced understanding of the cosmos. They knew it comes around in cycles. This corresponds to much of Randalls teachings about the Taurids. Its pretty mind blowing, and things like this connection you just made just confirm the fact that the symbols made in ancients times just goes to show that they knew recording it in stone would preserve it. Why bother doing that? So the future would know what happened to them.. or be warned.

  • @oscarl.3563
    @oscarl.3563 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I like the idea that these sites tell the story of the cataclysm. I'm quite sure they do. As for the handbags being babies... maybe some traditions have told the story of the restart of civilization that way but when you consider all the men with their handbags at least those images seem to tell a slightly different story.
    I could buy into yingana? carrying babies but not the men, that just doesn't seem right. Maybe the sumerian images of men carrying buckets signified they had some work to be done, or some work being delegated. That here came the gods and told the humans how-where to build pyramids etc. Conjecture, but manbags seem work-related to me.
    Since the images don't show us what they contain but merely that they hold something-containing-something I assume that the important thing is that they carry something, not what they carry. So what does carrying something signify? It could be work related, almost like going with a briefcase to work. Or maybe that the Gods came holding knowledge on how to build civilizations with them.

    • @Mortismors
      @Mortismors 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Holding knowledge and tools. I think they look like tool bags.

    • @Mortismors
      @Mortismors 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @mr Sandman yep they brought their science with them.

    • @patrickbuick5459
      @patrickbuick5459 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I first thought environmental, like respirators. Perhaps monitoring for after effects of the cataclysm like a radiation monitor? Many seem to have wrist adornment like a watch, so a power source?

    • @joshmarden9933
      @joshmarden9933 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I also always believed the bag was a representation of their tools and knowledge. In many depictions the other hand held up a seed, and in some the male wore a fish garb. Combined with the orb and bird, the sun flying through the sky, signifying a date.
      "we travel the world by sea, we gifted knowledge, tools and agriculture, our time is ending"

  • @Astrologyguy2976
    @Astrologyguy2976 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    There was Kharen TePe found which is older than Gobekli Teoe Easter Island had another race of people before Polynesians which were fair skinned and I believe Blonde and red haired and very likely Egyptians on Australia also in America had a city in Grand Canyon. Statues in Easter island buried up to head which proves they are much older then currents inhabitants.

  • @whiteeaglehodges45
    @whiteeaglehodges45 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    What if the dragon fly is how they described high tech craft

  • @bugstomper4670
    @bugstomper4670 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @15:59 'Why is it always fish?' The dominant constellation in the night sky at the time was Pisces, the two fish. Look up, 'prescession of the equinoxes'.

  • @alanfaulkner6329
    @alanfaulkner6329 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Watch more Graham Hancock. He has dealt with the similarities not just between these two but many other sites around the world. Edit. Read more Hancock. Fingerprints and magicians are stunning! Just saying.

  • @Ringgo733
    @Ringgo733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    South Lake Michigan under 💧 water is a place your looking for. I thought a lot about the hand bag for years, I was wondering if it was for breathing like the astronauts used?

  • @michaelbarnhart8479
    @michaelbarnhart8479 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Don’t stop what you’re doing girl…learned so much from you over the past few days since I’ve discovered your channel. You ask questions I’ve never heard anyone ask and point things out that I’ve never heard anyone mention. Super cool…hope my daughter grows up to be as intelligent and passionate as you are.

  • @stratorunner1
    @stratorunner1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thankiuu. The man bags were refered in ancient mesopotamy as a supreme gods items ! It suposidly contaning tha water of life, and i dont ever eard what it is suppose to mean ! :O

  • @siekensou77
    @siekensou77 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    suppose the land was closer together, how much time must pass for the island to be where it is now compared to gobekli?

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Land drift takes literally millions of years and is measured by continents, not small islands.
      You might get an island formed in only centuries from volcanic deposition, but moved?
      Nope, not even close.
      The thing people so easily miss in these kind of videos is the Occam's Razor perspective while they blaze a path down the road to the most fantastical possible explanation.
      The simplest explanation is that the Rapa Nui people were (and still are) human and so were the people who created Gobekli Tepe in archaic Anatolia.
      They had experienced somewhat similar wildlife too.
      This gives rise to very similar pictographic motifs in their artworks.
      Simple explanations come from simple evidence.
      Fantastical explanations require a little more proof than selectively taking a few bits out of the context of the rest and declaring it to be exactly the same as something else.

  • @knarlyknuckles9078
    @knarlyknuckles9078 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Sorry... but the first thing I saw was the Harry Potter symbol when I saw your tattoo.

  • @johanschulmaijer5976
    @johanschulmaijer5976 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great video Jahannah, i am still looking for the explanation why the statues of Eastern island are for two/third underground. Did that happen gradually or were the statues burried suddenly by some sort of enormous mud/sand cataclysmic tsunami? i heard the gobekli tepe monument was deliberately covered with sand, is that true? The enigma's are getting more enigmatic.Continue the good hunting work, you are an excelent detective.....

    • @grahamapples2567
      @grahamapples2567 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Go TH-cam look up ancient Egyptian tomb found with $1 billion worth of gold

  • @marvinmartian6516
    @marvinmartian6516 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just wait til you realize there’s pyramids and structures all over Mars 🤯

  • @benjaminjamz608
    @benjaminjamz608 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    steve strong (not the muscian if you look for him) from australia and his son describe the old epytians glyphs on youtube. takes al little searching, worth a watch

    • @brettAnichols
      @brettAnichols 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      th-cam.com/video/GXGsYFblCqQ/w-d-xo.html what I found, thank you!

  • @btk1213
    @btk1213 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You may have hit on the origin group in the Ukraine. That's the area near the Caucasus.

  • @IPAsAndSunshine
    @IPAsAndSunshine 3 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    I’m not gonna lie, my fiancé and the mother of my kids is named Johannah. It’s what initially drew my attention to your channel. But after watching that first video I realized your content is every bit as much important as some of the other people I follow! So here I am. Can’t wait to see this!

  • @nickdavies1066
    @nickdavies1066 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hey Jahannah, love your stuff... keep it up!

  • @redpanda9367
    @redpanda9367 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    When I learn new stuff like this (which is often) it blows my mind because most people will see this stuff and maintain that there’s “no credible proof” of previous advanced civilizations. Intentionally ignoring evidence is about as ignorant as it gets. Keep up the awesome work!

    • @steve-o6413
      @steve-o6413 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      A great observation, wish more were observant as you...

    • @redpanda9367
      @redpanda9367 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@steve-o6413 well thank you! I hope this inspires everyone to inquire a little more closely across their lives…we all know knowledge is power!

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It depends entirely what you mean by advanced.
      These type of videos bastardize the term the same way they bastardize archaeology in general.
      Advanced can mean a whole raft of things.
      Even if it took the ancient Egyptians several hundred years to build the Giza pyramids they would still be regarded as high advanced simply because of the feat of engineering and effort required.
      For these channels advanced has to mean something between vibroblade saws and spaceships.....
      Needless to say I regard such as closer to religious beliefs than science.
      Why?
      Because religion doesn't require you to question why there is no evidence either.
      As to academia ignoring evidence.....
      Well, actually Jahanna does it continually in the video while comparing the Gobekli Tepe monument to the Moai statue.
      If you have to intentionally ignore part of something to connect it to something else then you are not presenting new evidence - you are simply IGNORING old evidence to fit it into your theory.
      This is why people laugh at the likes of Hancock and rightly call him a con man/fraud - he cherry picks evidence that suits his theories and disregards whole reams of other evidence that doesn't.
      Take for instance everytime he talks of Atlantis - he mentions only the highly popularized account of the Critias dialogue.
      Not the entire thing which in no uncertain terms presents evidence that it is not intended as a factual account.
      For one it is not a direct account of Solon having spoken to 'Sonchis of Sais' as so often is repeated.
      It is an account of a character called Critias (not yet properly identified) talking to Socrates and recounting something that Critias says his grandfather told him he had learned when Critias was only a boy....
      Needless to say, leaving out such vital information puts giant holes in the authenticity of the dialogue as a source of information is you assume it to be a direct transcription of these Critias -> Socrates conversations (ie dialogues).
      Critias also mentions that ALL names and places are Hellenized (aka changed to suit a Greek audience), and that even before Solon was told the tale that the Egyptians had changed the names/places to correspond to a Egyptian audience.
      So nothing that mentions names or places can be taken without a whole mound of salt.
      Which basically means Atlantis, Poseidon, Athens and Herakles mentions are completely useless.
      THIS is why people like Hancock are base frauds misleading people to sell their shit fantasy novels that they dress up as suppressed real history to get sympathy money.

    • @redpanda9367
      @redpanda9367 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mnomadvfx woah! That’s a long comment and I will read the whole thing and reply, but when I say “advanced” I mean people who made it past the cave man stage. I don’t think there were flying cars zipping around the pyramids which powered the world. I agree that the term gets bastardized…I guess I really mean a civilization that was self aware, like what separates us from primates. (I think that’s a decent analogy, hopefully?)

    • @redpanda9367
      @redpanda9367 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Actually that’s not really a good analogy, primates and other animals are very intelligent and have society’s of their own…I meant more of a civilization that existed beyond eating and procreating as the only staples of their cognitive abilities.

  • @bocameron4507
    @bocameron4507 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In Maori (New Zealand) we also have the three baskets of knowledge and we are closely related to Rapanui, they are depicted everywhere spoken about all the time kete Tuauri Kete Tuatea Kete Aronui.

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    About five years ago someone said to me "When you think about it, the entire human race came from six women."
    That's deep. And when you consider that there was a need to re-populate the planet after the Younger Dryas event, how would you do it? In vitro fertilization. Consider it.

    • @Mortismors
      @Mortismors 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The story of Isis having her head cut off and Thoth preserved it and her body until he could reattach it and bring her back to life. If they have heads in jars science like Futurama. I bet they had all kinds of genetic engineering.

  • @kevinwaite6725
    @kevinwaite6725 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    No I did NOT know this about the Easter Island statues, I wonder why they always only show the front view? You are right Jahannah, it's easy to see the similarities and I believe those birds are not Emu, they are bald headed vultures ,another widely used ancient motif. Amazing! And more amazing is that you got a tat of Yingaana on your leg 5 years prior, or is it? Woo woo universal connections.

    • @kevinwaite6725
      @kevinwaite6725 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks jahannah! You always are making me smile and laugh as well as sharing learning. Your still the biggest nutshell i know though hehe !

  • @tmastersat
    @tmastersat 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I find it strange that for years they talked about strange heads but no one ever said those are beards not strange shaped heads. They hid all these photos from us for years

    • @BennysGamingAttic
      @BennysGamingAttic 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I've seen may youtubers who hate the mainstream that visited, and THEY never showed the backs! What gives? lol

  • @vaticinus
    @vaticinus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think this one is a bit of a stretch. The Hieroglyphs in the outback are interesting though.

  • @whomee2
    @whomee2 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    those aren't man-bags, they are buckets. Being able to carry one's water is a universal truth. water also gives life.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Or grain, but yes mostly water.

    • @MRosati5000
      @MRosati5000 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Symbolic of knowledge..

  • @rifz42
    @rifz42 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    have there been any breakthroughs in dating rock? how come CERN can detect fundamental particles but we can't tell when rock was cut..

  • @isaacheywood3202
    @isaacheywood3202 3 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    Easter Island is such a mysterious place

    • @unitedspacepirates9075
      @unitedspacepirates9075 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Best place to hide Easter eggs.
      Kids will never find them there.

    • @Grimerpr2016
      @Grimerpr2016 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Biggest mystery of easter Islandia has to be the rongorongo

  • @Goldbay
    @Goldbay 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    That's pretty cool about your tattoo. I have a similar story. My first tattoo was a gold miner with a pickaxe inside a gold mine. I will never ever ever going to own a hard rock gold mine but what do you know 15 years later :-)

  • @solarmicronovae
    @solarmicronovae 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Try studying the Dacians it may add up another part of the world.

  • @TwinsDad51.55
    @TwinsDad51.55 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I haven’t heard of the carving on the backs of the Easter island statues, fascinating the similarities between them and the carvings in Turkey!

    • @Rubin_Schmidt
      @Rubin_Schmidt 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      *Easter Island: Who was There Before The Polynesians?*
      th-cam.com/video/ln5V8pfZrOU/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=BrienFoersterBrienFoerster

  • @RuailleBuaille
    @RuailleBuaille 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I think you might find Robert Sepehr's videos - he's done a lot in Denisovans and many topics potentially related to the research you're doing :)

    • @debralucas2224
      @debralucas2224 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Robert is very racist. His latest video is just Nazism.

    • @odinseyepatch9637
      @odinseyepatch9637 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@debralucas2224 if a racist or a nazi says something that is true, does it stop being true?

    • @debralucas2224
      @debralucas2224 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@odinseyepatch9637 not at all. But the second they ramble off the rails, and you find out their theories have more holes than swiss cheese, I'm done.

    • @odinseyepatch9637
      @odinseyepatch9637 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@debralucas2224 I'm curious where you think Robert went 'off the rails'?
      I've seen the video you are referring to, what did he say that wasn't true?

    • @debralucas2224
      @debralucas2224 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@odinseyepatch9637 I'd have to rewatch the videos and take notes and type out answers and I'm just not doing that lol. He's PROMOTING NAZI IDEOLOGY FFS!

  • @Bananenbennie
    @Bananenbennie 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Read the book "Alien Interview" by lawrence Spencer to learn more about the handbags all over the world. According to this story it basicly were aliens trying to recover souls that were lost/trapped here on earth. Im really curious what you think about this explanation. If you are open to this theory it all suddenly makes a lot of sense.

  • @ainsleystevenson9198
    @ainsleystevenson9198 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    The answers to all the questions are found in the myths. Even the bible says that after the worldwide flood catastrophe the survivors began building towers (pyramids) but after the fall of the Tower of Babel and the confusion of languages, they spread out across the world, taking their symbology with them. The myths were written by our eye witness ancestors, perhaps it’s time to stop rejecting their stories.

    • @Grimerpr2016
      @Grimerpr2016 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Agreed

    • @Mads-hl8xj
      @Mads-hl8xj 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Bible ? You mean the book which tells stories about talking snakes, goats, man walking on water.... Their Myths, Stories. Not Facts... Facts are to be proven by evidence and there is no evidence of this ever happen, not even this flood.

    • @ainsleystevenson9198
      @ainsleystevenson9198 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Mads-hl8xj Ha! The bible has the story of Jonah who was swallowed and spat out by a whale…and this week on the news an American man was swallowed and spat out by a whale.

    • @Grimerpr2016
      @Grimerpr2016 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Mads-hl8xj think of those stories as myths, theres always a bit of truth in myths, you've just got to know the anatomy of one and how they're made.. im sure for a few thousand years when there wasnt a form of writing the truth was told and retold, and with each retelling there was a bit of embellishment until it got to where it is today, plus back then im sure technologically speaking we were no where near as advanced as we are now, so description of certain technologies would be god like to them..

    • @Mads-hl8xj
      @Mads-hl8xj 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ainsleystevenson9198 Rofl, oh wow.. but, isn't this story alittle different from Jonah ? hmm.. tell me when you see talking snakes or goats.

  • @Kraden26
    @Kraden26 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I've known of the Moai for many years, this is the first I've heard of the back carvings. Very cool! Not only do I see similar symbology, but the artistic style is extremely similar.

  • @robgable2426
    @robgable2426 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I think those hand bags held the technology they used like cones that could move massive objects using sound frequencies.

    • @I_am_Spartacus
      @I_am_Spartacus 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      hahahahahahahahhahhahahahhaa

    • @robgable2426
      @robgable2426 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@I_am_Spartacus oh. You got a better theory, Jack Ass!!!!

    • @I_am_Spartacus
      @I_am_Spartacus 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@robgable2426 There's only one jack ass here mate and thats the guy talking about cones moving stone with sound frequencies,,but hey, sounds like you solved something no one else could,,so well done you!

    • @robgable2426
      @robgable2426 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@I_am_Spartacus ok Genius!! What are the cones depicted in so many stone carvings and what did they keep them in?!! Jack Ass!!

  • @MyHealingShelf
    @MyHealingShelf 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for this amazing topic, it's beautiful and I have another rabbit hole to check out! 🤗🤗🤗

  • @bozoerectus3207
    @bozoerectus3207 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Here's one basic fundamental fact that you aren't taking into account: humans everywhere are, well, human. There are many symbols that are found all over the world, created by different people, at vastly different time periods. Like for instance, the spiral pattern. If I'm 10 years old and doodling in my notebook and draw a spiral, does that mean I'm a reincarnated Atlantean? No, it just means I'm human. That's why you yourself created those symbols for your tattoo, which you later discovered were already out there in the world and had been for thousands of years. Human minds are very similar, no matter where or when you find them. We 'see' the same things, in the world and in our heads. And when we don't see them in the world, we find a suitable rock and pound them into the world. Or tattoo them.

    • @randomcomment1105
      @randomcomment1105 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Also, our brains are hardwired to find patterns and similarities to make sense of our reality. We can dismiss 100,000 details in our surroundings a day, and still think we're onto something familiar because our brains suddenly found a piece that it felt was overlapping something else. Especially when there's nothing there, then our brain starts working extra hard to find at least something to go on, filling in the blanks. Like when looking into a mirror in a pitch black room and you see your reflection slowly turning into something else. All of a sudden you're hideous and your family will disavow you.

    • @petejung3122
      @petejung3122 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hi Bozo, you have a point... But there are to many simularities accros the world of ancient traditons, stories, sculptures, architecture and so on an so on.
      Some can be explained bij coincidences, but not all can be coincidences, there are just to many coincidences to scribe them of as coincidences.
      Like Randall Carson says " maybe it's trough, I'm just playing with numbers, but the fact is, the numbers ARE there, and there are to many exact numbers to dismiss them as pure coincidences."

    • @midimike88
      @midimike88 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      So, if I'm going to carve onto the back of a stone, likely I would carve something significant; something 'greater' than just a spiral. Not negating the point you are making about how humans can randomly produce similar images, just because we are all humans, but that there could be a correlation between Easter Island and the rest of the world. So, in essence, not an island, but another place where similar expressions of a similar message occur.

    • @BurningZa
      @BurningZa 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Drawing vs carving ... A 10 year old won't sit still long enough.

    • @bozoerectus3207
      @bozoerectus3207 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@petejung3122 I'm not calling them coincidences at all, quite the opposite. Within the realm of the subconscious, there's nothing at all different between an Australian Aborigine 50,000 years, a Florentine during the Renaissance, and and us today. The collective human unconscious is where we're all the same and speak the same symbolic, dream-like language. That language emerges and rises to the surface all the time in dreams, visions and our creativity. That's why, as she said in the video, she came up with eerily similar symbology for her tattoo. Jahannah is alive right now, right? So, we know for a fact she isn't part of a long lost and forgotten global civilization! That would seem to strongly support what I'm putting forth here, wouldn't it?

  • @chelisue
    @chelisue 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Symbolism? Yes. I’m either an asshole or have ocd. Or both
    Holy crap. I have yingana on my back just over the earth Honu

  • @tobystewart4403
    @tobystewart4403 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The correlation of images seems a bit of a stretch. It's like looking at clouds. If you stare long enough, you see what you want to see.
    The indisputable mystery of Gobekli Tepe is food. How did the people who built it acquire sufficient food to sustain the artisans required in the project?
    For many, many years, it was understood that "hunter gatherer" societies did not create more than temporary dwellings or personal craft items because they could never gather sufficient food resources to allow a caste stratified society to emerge. A caste stratified society is one where food surplus is retained by a ruling elite, and distributed to specialists, such as stone masons, painters, weapons smiths and other such trained artisans. The theory had always been very clear, and easy to understand.
    Without agriculture, no such surplus could exist, and so no such stratified society could exist, and so no artisans could exist, and so no grand monumental architecture could exist.
    Gobekli Tepe smashes this theory into pieces, if you wish to believe that agriculture did not exist at the end of the last ice age. Either those people had artisans because they had food surplus through agriculture, or else hunter gatherers somehow had a unique abundance of food for many generations, sufficient to evolve caste stratified society.
    If they had agricultural knowledge, then how, and why did it not spread far and wide very quickly?
    If they were hunter gatherers who made monumental architecture, why have no other hunter gatherers ever pulled off the same trick?
    One possible explanation is that they did have agriculture, but that there were so few human beings alive on earth that it took thousands of years for them to spread far and wide. This may have been the case after a stupendous cataclysm, assuming the knowledge of agriculture (represented perhaps by the handbags) was somehow retained by the mere handful of survivors.

    • @douginorlando6260
      @douginorlando6260 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think food is the key ... and instead of following the seasonal food sources by nomadic traveling, Gobeckli Tepe People must have found food sources that allowed them to settle down. Pre-farming, my guess is tree food (apples, dates, figs, nuts)+river fish+penned animals+ local hunting. Also a means of preserving food to get through lean seasons. Once a food solution exists, settling down has huge advantages in permanent dwellings, safety and stability. Imagine the difference of only have what you can carry versus a whole house full of useful stuff. Even the classic junk drawer is a godsend when you need a particular doo dad thingie.
      And I’m impressed with Golbeckli Tepe’s stone carved lizard artwork. Imagine ... the earliest known community already had top notch art.

    • @tobystewart4403
      @tobystewart4403 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@douginorlando6260 Well fair enough, you suggest that hunter gatherers, in this unique instance, had sufficient wild food to organize a caste system.
      The thing is, my background is linguistics. When we look at language, you find whole "sets" of words that go along with social levels of complexity. There are lots of words that are specific to hunter gather groups, of less than 50 people. Just so, there are sets of words that only exist when you have a city. So "mayor", "treasurer", "traffic department", and so on.
      It is the same with technology. In order to learn how to do the art at Gobekli Tepe, whole sets of words would need to exist amongst the artisans. It the same with the labour required to erect the megalithic stone structures. Just to organize the carving and movement of those stones requires a whole set of words that are not found in small communities of hunter gatherers.
      The thing about sets of words is that they don't spontaneously spring into being. These sets of words evolve slowly, over many generations. We can see this in modern universities, as medical terminology evolves in lockstep with research. Chemistry is the same, as are most engineering and hard science fields.
      That is the big, big problem with the theory that hunter gatherers just so happened to find a Garden of Eden, with hugely abundant local food resources. Even if the food was there in abundance, the words required to organize the labour and develop the artisan skills would have taken a great deal of time to evolve. So the food must have existed for a very long period of time.
      That is a big problem, because nature doesn't abide a surplus of food. When any organism that is food for other organisms is hugely abundant, then the organisms which eat that organism multiply exceedingly and eat the abundance. This is hard rule of natural ecosystems. Any organism that becomes abundant is kept down by the rapid expansion of its predator organisms. Nature will not tolerate abundant food supplies for large mammals over time. Or for any other animal, for that matter.
      Agriculture is all about fighting this force of nature. Birds need to be killed, to stop them eating seed that is sown. Fences need to be erected, to stop wild animals eating young crops.
      This is why I cannot get behind the idea that food just so happened to be in huge abundance in that location, at that time, for hunter gatherers to claim. Nature does not work this way. Had the food been there, in the wild, every species of large mammal would have been at it, and destroyed the abundance. So would insects. And birds, and so on and so forth.
      That is why hunter gatherers follow seasonal abundance, constantly moving around to take advantage of emerging life in fresh locations. All large mammals do this.
      So, the organization of the artisans in the society at Gobekli Tepe is a profound mystery. It defies any simple explanation, for biological reasons, for linguistic reasons, and for sociological reasons. Manifestly, agriculture must have been present. Ergo, those people had evolved agriculture, somehow, somewhere, over many generations previously. That implies a lost civilization, and a big one, existing for many thousands of years before the younger dryas.
      Or they were taught, by agents unknown.
      Or both. So it seems to me, anyway.

    • @douginorlando6260
      @douginorlando6260 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Toby Stewart ... I definitely believe there was significant technology predating 10,800 BC. Not pottery but woven baskets, clothing, fishing seines, boats and more. In S Africa an extremely old arrow was discovered made with the arrow head hafted with twine & beeswax and ricin poison from caster beans. The earliest ancient Egyptian stone work was obviously more advanced than the dynasties that followed (I’d love if they measured the geometry and texture cut marks with interferometry based precision. The 1 micron measurement accuracy would prove to everyone how advanced the lost ancient technology was). Apparently in south France, from about 40,000 years ago, multi-stranded twine was found in a Neanderthal cave.
      The origin of language is fascinating and how written language is the result of necessity in large social structures. In small, pre-farming groups, there was no need for written language (nor money, nor a separate legal code different from a moral code). Imagine the well developed stories and beliefs they passed down 100 generations before Sumerian Gilgamesh. Gilgamesh may have incorporated stories passed down for many generations and thousands of years earlier (at least since the beginning of farming when large population groups developed).

    • @tobystewart4403
      @tobystewart4403 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @UCOvHnOC6opLIYp7Bph4OVMQ The thing is, I'm not sure nature will tolerate such a thing as a "food abundant region". If such a place comes to exist, momentarily, the abundance of food facilitates the rapid growth of food consuming organisms, and so it becomes a food depleted region once more.
      This is not limited to human overpopulation. Insects, birds and wild mammals and so on, they all conspire to eradicate any abundance of edible biomass. The very idea of a natural abundance of edible biomass begs the question, why are not all the various critters multiplying to eat it?
      Plants generally evolve thorns, hard shells and toxins to prevent their annihilation by grazing animals and insects. As such, wild apples are small, hard and toxic. So is wild corn, and wild wheat. All the precursors of farmed vegetation is small, hard and toxic. That is natures way.
      It is interesting to me that our word "paradise" comes from the Greek word meaning "walled garden". Now the greeks borrowed this word, and its meaning, from very ancient Persian, suggesting linguistic evidence for agriculture being first developed in the near east, before Europe. However, note the concept of a "walled garden".
      How do you make a paradise, from nature? Well, first of all you build a wall to keep out the big critters. Then you build a garden, meaning you drain the swamp land, so that disease is not rife, and irrigate the desert from reservoirs of stored water.
      The message here is pretty clear. The world, the natural world, is not our friend. It is not a paradise, a walled garden. It is rather a swamp and a desert, a place full of pestilence and starvation, beset by the cruel cycle of boom and bust that represents endemic overpopulation followed by mass starvation.
      Everyone who has ever had to live in the real wilderness for any length of time can attest that nature is not your friend. It's bleak, and cruel. Folks from cities, who have never experienced the misery of swamps and deserts, they generally like to celebrate "nature" as some kind of bountiful garden, as if the natural world provides a happy and easy place for humankind. Indeed, it is not so. If there is ever found a pleasing patch of earth, you can be sure it has been long cultivated and improved by people, drained of festering swamps and protected from marauding beasts.
      It is not clear to me that agriculture is something that can evolve easily, or indeed at all. Agriculture is complex. It requires a huge lexicon of technical terminology, and a deep understanding of biological systems. Building a paradise seems to me a very great leap forward, from the world of hunter gatherers.
      I find it curious that most every culture, from Sumerian to Aztec, have myths that tell of the secrets of Agriculture being given to humanity by "gods". Even Dionysus is held to have known how to farm grapes due to divine wisdom.
      I am hesitant to dismiss such myths as completely contrived, simply because agriculture is so complex, so difficult, and therefore so unlikely to have evolved so rapidly in so many different parts of the globe.
      Isn't it curious that nobody knows when, exactly, the pig, the ox, the goat, the sheep and the ass were domesticated? They were all tamed and bred for domestication many thousands of years ago, before the written language evolved. More curious still, since then we have domesticated about nothing else. We still can't repeat the trick. Nobody can domesticate a Zebra, or a Lion. It is beyond us.
      Humanity is exceedingly peculiar, compared to the natural suite of animals which run themselves ragged in swamps and deserts, all over the earth. Just so, our domesticated animals and crops are equally unusual and mysterious.
      I can accept that a miracle such as the eyeball evolved on earth through natural selection. I follow the reasoning of men like Richard Dawkins, who suggest that "that which is most useful to life evolves most often, due to natural selection". And so we understand that the eyeball, an incredibly complex piece of biology, evolved many times, quite independently across many hundreds of millions of years. That which is most useful evolves most often, after all, due to natural selection.
      Why then, did language and agriculture evolve so incredibly suddenly, and only the once, over the same span of billions of years of life on earth? They are evidently exceedingly useful, yet they have never evolved but the once, in the very recent past.
      Why is this?
      Possibly because they are alien to this world. They are contrary to the fundamental (and ghastly) rules of this world, and they disrupt the stable equilibrium of dear mother nature. That cruel mistress, who would have us cycle from famine to famine, plagued by disease and starvation evermore, in a perpetual frenzy of balancing biological consumption.
      Natural selection surely explains a great deal, yet it surely cannot explain all things.

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      The similarities in images might have something there, but it could just as easily not. Whatever links they have are conjectural at this point, and the same goes for the baby transporting dragonfly lady. I mean, if there was ever a perfect example as to how two entirely isolated peoples coming up with the same thing is believable, look no further than her dragonfly tattoo and the story of how she got it. She was entirely isolated from those people, yet she came up with the same thing.

  • @philwhatever3903
    @philwhatever3903 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I disagree they are a link and i dont think you have looked at the argument against it properly. First off they dont look alike. There is just a sun and birds. I mean you give a child a piece of paper and one of the first things they paint is the sun and birds. second i dont see any handbags on the statue. No scorpion on the statue. Just a strange shape. Lets be honest a scorpion is not hard to draw or carve. The time difference is also massive. There is many many statues but only one has anything similar and what is shown is the first diagram any child starts to paint.
    No i dont buy it.

    • @Ed-safeyeh
      @Ed-safeyeh 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Blame the guy whose video she plagiarised I guess?

  • @kevinmark2146
    @kevinmark2146 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    “There is something fishy in there… and it’s not fish”
    - J James
    😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @2pi628
      @2pi628 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ...There is a T-SHirt in there somewhere,.

  • @darinfisher989
    @darinfisher989 ปีที่แล้ว

    The real answer about what the bags are.. They are bags of seeds... What would you want most after a disaster.... Food !!! Hence SEEDS..... THINK ABOUT IT DINGBAT....CUTE DINGBAT ....

  • @kenn743
    @kenn743 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    put your hand on the screen and feel her energy absolutely incredible and what a knowledge

  • @DavidMcNeal-fg9bd
    @DavidMcNeal-fg9bd 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great video. I didn't know about the carving on their back... wow. Keep up the great work.

  • @bluefish4999
    @bluefish4999 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I took an interest in Rapa Nui when I saw the statues as a kid in a book, for some reason I was drawn to them, look up the legends of the Long Ears verses the Short Ears. Another thing about Gobekli tepe and the Moai is the hands are the same on the pillars and statues, coming down wrapped around with long fingers, this is seen in a lot of Tiki carvings in Polynesia and Melanesia. You may want to take a good look at the Atlantean statues in Mexico and Peru, I've seen the ones in Mexico, stunning, I so hope to make it to Rapa Nui(Easter Island) one day.

  • @luckyme7611
    @luckyme7611 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow Jahannah this was new information to me again! I never knew about the images behind the Easter island 🗿 statues. And your tattoo.. 🤯
    Just wow! Thank you for another great video.

  • @adyday1656
    @adyday1656 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hidden Inca tours....!...brien...puma punku..in Peru 🇵🇪..👍...I was into this subject quite a lot..a few years ago...it led me to Nicola Tesla...by starting at Antarctica 🇦🇶....WoW....that doesn’t make sense...however..!...it certainly makes today’s leaders...seem like snowflakes ❄️

  • @vectorforce5748
    @vectorforce5748 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    So just to add to the dragon fly woman thing, it is a scientific fact that in everyone's DNA there is evidence that we all come from one African woman and maybe this African woman is this dragon fly woman thing that is depicted.

  • @howardphillips7333
    @howardphillips7333 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thor Heyerdahl's expeditions books are amazing. Aku Aku, Ra, Tigris, and of course Kon Tiki.

  • @mimusic676
    @mimusic676 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I heard pollen was in the bags, dunno

  • @dieterschonefeld7428
    @dieterschonefeld7428 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    ....so You found out how "things come into being". That is something always realized suddenly, but having begun some time before the realizing moment. It grows inside until it reveals itself as "something on its way out" - like a child to be born - becoming a part of all people`s timeline. You will do that "teaching how that works" rest of Your life - that`s what You`re here for - and Your self-reflection confirms! Perfect! 👍🍀

  • @mikewalters
    @mikewalters 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    👍🏻

  • @jeffhenderson934
    @jeffhenderson934 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This was a mind blower. (It’s up there when my dad told me Paul McCartney was in another band before Wings)
    Somebody, somehow was getting around the world easily, then spending time carving or molding some of the hardest natural substances on earth. For what reason? Wouldn’t have been easier just to leave a note- “The earth blew up, a few of us made it, we’ll start over.”

  • @AyeTeeJay91
    @AyeTeeJay91 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    They are pretty much the same because they were built by pretty much the same people. Both were post noahs flood and post Babel dispersion. Once they were dispersed, they took with them their architectural knowledge and memories of the flood. That's why you have all these diluted versions of Noah's flood worldwide with many different cultures.

  • @SedonaConnections
    @SedonaConnections 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great job Jahannah pointing out these symbols. I've been to Rapa Nui Easter Island very interesting other stories I discovered while there and going to the quarry. Psychedelics. What about Mali the Dogons.... check out Laird Scranton and the connections between Dogons Egypt and Tibet

  • @SOLIDSNAKE.
    @SOLIDSNAKE. 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    ❤️😍
    The man bags are trippy

  • @robertholland6012
    @robertholland6012 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi JJ, I've been looking into this myself and there is with out a doubt some connection between the ancients ,oddly enough it seems to be around the time of the ice age ,symbolic of the rebirth of mankind.
    PS I've not been receiving your notifications xx

  • @PhsykoOmen
    @PhsykoOmen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It’s not a simplified scorpion,it’s literally their pants.

    • @jimg9820
      @jimg9820 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes I thought that - it's not a scorpion simplified into a thong shape, it is a thong!

  • @dantyler6907
    @dantyler6907 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    moai back carving is news to me!

  • @groverc.loweiv8987
    @groverc.loweiv8987 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    LmWizardAo... Add 1200 to 1948 Ophiuchus aka Archangel Michael the serpent bear and Archangel Gabriel who blows the trumpet! Mirror image, the two pillars, chimney rift... #LBS Your stuck in a cube!

  • @Klusterfk10
    @Klusterfk10 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The Easter Island statue back & Gobekli Tepe Henge's Vulture Stone (42-Deep Thought) are both depicting the SAME event, but from their individual viewpoints. Hence, different constellations represented on each stone, but the same characters on the ground and the same crafts flying away above the constellations.
    The Day the Earth changed.
    Gobekli Tepe Henge only says one word. "God."
    Then a Great Flood.

  • @ivangreen7591
    @ivangreen7591 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The Egyptians could have sailed to Australia. If a ship started in the red sea and sailed past India to Indonesia and then over to New Guinea it;s only a short hop to Australia. It's a long trip but they would never be far from land, food and water. The man bags turn up in central America is mind blowing! They also built Pyramids and were advanced in astronomy. We have a lot to learn. Thanks Jahannah look forward to more mind blowing videos.

  • @MudfossilGaia
    @MudfossilGaia 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Here in America they give this deity many names, one of the most popular is Kokopelli, and is sometimes depicted with a female... they carry all the seeds for humanity in a pouch on their backs 😉
    I am new here and I am just loving your work! Bang on SiStar! As I am catching up with some of your earlier work you will probably be hearing more from me, lol 😆

  • @LordEagle
    @LordEagle 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    You should be making babies,,,,,you'd be a GREAT mom,,,,👍👍👍😎

  • @ritacsenyi745
    @ritacsenyi745 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    No way I NEVER heard of their back is carved!!! Its really crazy… 😱🙏 Why?? Nobody nowhere ever showed a picture of the moai back…Wow. Thanks Jahannah!! 😍 Huge fan of the moais btw 🗿

  • @muscularbrainiac1713
    @muscularbrainiac1713 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    That isn't a scorpion. They have 6 legs and 2 pincers - an Arachnid. A CRUSTACEAN has 8 legs and 2 pincers. It's something like a lobster. Also, the bird is a bird of prey, probably a vulture ... like they worshipped in Ancient Egypt.

  • @TientifyT
    @TientifyT 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    All of a sudden I had this thought:
    I'm sure the word you are looking for is symbolism? What's the ssssssybolism.
    /watch?v=lG_OezlTZ1A
    Thanks for the vid, indeed I never knew about the backside of these moai! :)

  • @BennysGamingAttic
    @BennysGamingAttic 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I found one crappy image online about the back of the Moai, and it's not much.
    WHY AM I JUST SEEING THIS?

  • @Amash796
    @Amash796 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I couldn’t watch past 6-7 minutes if Steven Fitzgerald’s Atlantis Confirmed. Complete bonkers! You owe me Jahanna! You owe us all! 😂

  • @nwchrista
    @nwchrista 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice legs...great tats!
    It's NOT at all surprising that you have this 6th sense moment. I've got a list of over 300 such events that I've been logging since I was in my early 20s (over 30 years). This is proof of your healthy pineal gland. Stay off the fluoridated water and you'll have many more wonderful such moments to enjoy throughout your life.