It was cool until the end of the video seeing all the strip mining going on. That made me sick, and I envision that place the hiker visited will end up like what the mining operation today. They'll just move on to the next plot of land. Kinda like what they do with logging. However, society benefits one way or another from the mining. We can't manufacture land.. Thank you for picking up the garbage.
Sir, you have the eye of the artist, the ear of a musician/pro. soundman, the mind of the adventurer, the heart of a mystic and the soul of an ancient spirit. I love watching your adventures. Thank you for this amazing post.
So stunning! The end really made me quite sad. I hope the sacred spaces can be held from our avarice and greed. Love your adventures, man... keep it up. Awesome!
The copper mine at Morenci is the largest mine in Arizona, and one of the largest in the world. All of the companies operating mines in Arizona own large tracts of land around the mines. The laws and regulations governing water use are such that they buy up land with water on it in order to secure the right to pump ground water for use by the mine. The mine has no use for the canyon other than for its water rights but, ironically, the fact the mine owns the canyon is likely the reason it has not been developed. Go figure. What makes me angry is the way people leave trash in a place like that. I have camped in the Arizona desert for 50 years now and I am proud to say I have never left trash behind. At the same time, I don't often pick up trash when I see it. The way you hauled that trash out is inspiring. Good on you, young man!
That's an oven, probably used to make charcoal or cook large pieces of meat. That's why there is so much soot. Miners took over after the Indigenous People. Definitely a nice place to live.
Me as well, I hiked all over the woods as a young kid and young adult, I used to ride horses too and even though the woods of Virginia are beautiful, nothing like the desert and the mesas in the southwest.
I LOVE being able to enjoy such incredible sights, despite being too old & feeble to get there in person. As much as my stomach is usually in a knot worrying that you or the pup might slip, I'm still addicted to watching!
What a beautiful hike to some cool historic and prehistoric places. The area the mine has decimated looks oddly like how some cancers grow. Thank you for sharing and picking up the trash left behind ❤️
@@wout123100No one said don't use the resources. It's common knowledge resources can easily be extracted without doing so much damage. It's about the profit margin.
17:38 I paused and took a look at the interior wall, and it looks like a coating has partially remained. This is a spectacular discovery, the grind stones were honestly unbelievable. This video is a GEM and your respect for the terrain, and beautiful footage are a great look into a world I’ve never seen. Best wishes from Rhode Island.
When your camera first showed that red, curling tail at 10:35 - my mind went 'wtf!? I didn't know there were monkey's in the Southwest!' I honestly had never heard of a "coatimundi" aka "coati" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coati - I swear, ya learn something new every day!* Once again, Nolan has created an amazing work of art, rekindling our sense of awe. An up-close as if you were there along with him record of his fascination and wonder for a rarely seen canyon in the vast Southwest. In Part 1 he (more-or-less) happily endures mosquito swarms to record the sight of 10s of thousands of bats doing what they have been doing nightly for 100s of thousands, if not millions of years: Swarming out of a cave to devour a percentage of the swarms of bugs that would otherwise have long ago devoured all of us! Now here, in Part 2, he treks into a world with no name. His drone flies around and over geological formations that are awesome, strange, yet somehow familiar. As if we know such places from within the depths of our dreams-here real and made of stone. He also discovers remnants of habitation, some relatively recent, others dating back to an archaic culture that managed to live amidst these natural wonders for who knows how long without spoiling it-reminding us we should do the same. I agree, but can we without feeling the reverence they had for a world they knew was that of the spirits of their ancestors going so far back as to be the beginning of time, as is said, immemorial? That is, to the edge of our species' memory? Thanks so much for this, Nolan, excellent work and a tremendous gift to us all! Now that UnchardedX has revealed literally granite-hard and undeniable evidence for a highly advanced technological civilization-one capable of producing granite vessels with such complex geometries and precise symmetries with tolerances so fine (within 1/1000 of an inch) that our civilization has only within my lifetime developed the means to even measure, let alone explicate-a civilization that (apparently) pre-dates what we call "history," that the ancient Egyptians regarded as 'the time of the gods,' and about which we know absolutely nothing-we're having to ask not only "who were these people?" but, indeed, "who are we?!" (Cf: th-cam.com/video/WAyQQRNoQaE/w-d-xo.html and th-cam.com/video/PrhFnai2TGs/w-d-xo.html to start) How is it possible that we had forgotten them? And what does it mean that we're now remembering through discovering this previously missing piece of the puzzle we thought we'd already assembled? Wonders never cease, my friends, so long as you continue to wonder. *(If you're like me, by the time you get to be my age, you'll know so much you can no longer remember, you'll realize just how stupid you really are. But that's ok. In my lifetime I've read more books on everything from art history to quantum mechanics, archeology to zoology-all totaled more books than everyone in my genealogy all the way back to Adam-yet, I'm happy to say, I remain the awe-struck fascinated child I've always been and endeavored always to remain.)
@michaelwells6075 I really appreciate Nolan's adventures and explorations as well. They are fantastic documents of our planet and of its inhabitant's past. But instead of watching Ben's sensationalized and wildly unsubstantiated claims in Uncharted X (he only ''seems'' to substantiate his claims and theories), you might want to try the ''History for GRANITE''' channel. He has a video dedicated to the granite vessels, as well as many unique specifics about the history and design and construction of the pyramids and other sites in Egypt. Also take a gander at geologist Myron Cook's channel to explain some of the geology and geologic processes that you might see in places that Nolan explores. And ''Andy Ward's Ancient Pottery'' takes you back in time describing the great variety of native American tribes and peoples and their traditions and culture based on the fascinating variety and specific design and techniques used in their pottery. ;)
This little canyon, with grass, trees, a beautiful river, animals, is like a lost dream world. Continue your aventures, man. That's so cool to see such places. Greetings from Paris, France.
I love and greatly appreciate your respect while exploring those culturally significant sites! Awesome video, I too spend the nights scrolling around google earth searching for canyons.
You’ve inspired me to get out and explore man I appreciate it. Just turnt 21 and on the journey to explore the world. Keep up the hard work and I admire the dedication man 🙌🏼
First beehive structure is probably a charcoal making kiln. The cabin has primitive cement/mortar which may also have been produced on site using the nearby kiln.
Check out the 4 massive beehive Charcoal Kilns in remote Cave Valley, NV near what was once Parker (Stagecoach) Station and the Riordan Ranch. Ely, NV is the closest town. Each of the 4 rock beehive kilns were large enough to fit a mule team. My father spent his summers as a teen cowboy working on the Riordan Ranch cattle ranch (Dan & Elda Riordan) in Cave Valley in the early 1940's. Elda's was my father's great aunt. Parker Station was formerly an important stop on the Toano-Pioche Stagecoach Line (transporting and delivering mail, goods & supplies) before the advent of the railroad and automobile. My father lived in the lower "lean-to" side addition of the Parker Station log building which became the main Riordan Ranch house when Dan & Elda Riordon purchased the ranch and buildings in 1917. On the upper floor and loft of the log building, there were multiple small 8" square holes cut into the perimeter walls around the building to ward off Indian or bandit attacks with rifles such as the lever-action Winchester Model 30-30. There was/is a natural spring nearby the ranch house with a windmill pump, and to this day wild horses, pigs, coyotes, water foul, and escaped cattle use it as a watering hole. There were many Native American artifacts found in the Indian caves in the foothills across the valley. Most are in Native American museums in NV. Cave Valley was so remote and vast that the valley was at one time being considered in the 1980's by the U.S. government as the site for the new at the time LGM-118 Peacekeeper/MX ICBM missile defense system, but luckily other sites were chosen. As a child, I spent a very spooky night camping inside one of these massive rock beehive charcoal kilns when my family visited the site. It was a natural horn-shaped echo-chamber, and the sound of the bats and birds fluttering about above us in complete darkness was nerve-racking, in addition to the potential for rattlesnakes. Needless to say, I wasn't able to sleep until exhaustion took over, and it's a night I'll never forget, LOL.
"Awe factor filled to capacity", is an understatement for what you have given me. When you put your hand on that grindstone, it was like a jolt of electricity went thru me & I felt the stone in my hand as well as the history locked within it...I don't know how or why, & I know it sounds crazy, but THANK YOU. Please be safe...belly scratch for your pup. 🖤🔥🖤🔥🖤
I am continuously amazed at the ruins you guys explore I watch you ,Trek planner and desert drifter never before have I seen such beauty let alone knew it existed Thank you and I truly enjoy Chewy
Me too sister! Desert Drifter and POV are my favorites. They lift my heart and I'm so grateful to see beauty I would never be able to get to anymore. Such a blessing! BTW, the dog's name is Toowie.....no idea how to spell it. Aren't they a pair?
Love your POV Channel, love your drone work and the fact you don't use music in your videos but rather you use the natural sounds of the places you visit. Thank You for taking these trips into the outback and your sharing. And, I love your faith companion Dog. Thank You both for taking us along.
Powerful video. I’ve watched mining across the west since the 1960’s. Entire mountains destroyed. The mining companies don’t give at flying shit. It’s all about money. Keep up the good work. There are millions of us who love the Earth.
@TheAlex8675309 There might be millions of you who love the earth, but you don't love the one who created it. If you did, the world would not be in the shape it is in. Individually, it's not your fault; you have been blinded and deceived by those who came before you.
What’s your point? If you’re talking about your personal concept of god!, You’re talking to the wrong guy. I am talking about mining companies who don’t care about the planet or their employees. It’s all about money for them. As for creation, I have been gifted with direct experience of universal being, this is just not about that.🤠@@JimofTheLionKings
It is so stunning beautiful there. We have nothing even remote similar to this in Germany. I have to admit, i'm a little jealous, but at least some of us have the privilege to enjoy it
@@the_pov_channel Yes, that is true, France has indeed some amazing canyons. But i didn't like the french people enough and vice versa, to make much use of that and as long as you keep running your channel, i'm totally fine with that
You inspired me to spontaneously take a backpacking trip yesterday. super glad I went, keep making great stuff man! I love your videos so much. I really want to go on the same kind of adventures that you do someday
Amazing u found an untouched ancient indigenous site! Grain stones IN the holes no less. Where nearby was the grain grown...u think? And also there was likely MUCH more water in the canyons way back when..right? Love your channel. I geek out on one a day : )
It's absolutely incredible: your approach is really interesting, touching the artifacts without disturbing them and keeping the site in place.... Thank you very much.
Very cool...thanks for sharing all of your adventures...unfortunately, when it comes to the mine, and the resources, we all benefit from them to make our lives easier...it is government regulations that attempt to preserve, exactly what you experienced today, but there's a cost to pay
Indeed. And I am very aware I use resources extracted from mines every day, and as I leave this comment. Cobalt mines, specifically, are heartbreaking. It’s a very tough conundrum.
Excellent, thank you brother. Sharing these vids to my son . Great adventure and discoveries. You do have an eye for the terrain, beautiful country 🤝 Great work cleaning up, I love . Edit again, hopefully not mined at all back in there . But doesn't look good does it. Tya
Miners do what miners do! And that's destroy, strip and pilfer valuables from the earth. I was so SAD to hear that the entire canyon you were in is owned by the mine.. ☹
Im 70 now. I am healthy. It is so good to see young dudes like this who want to improve his environment he walks across. Thank you brother for giving me hope. Keep exposing these companies that rape & pilliage. Peace be with you. P.j.- Carpinteria Calif.
Love your gimbal/drone footage, it makes your channel look like the BBC compared to all the others 👍 I wasn't expecting to see modern red bricks in the oven. 06:50 That large alcove looked HUGE ! Are beaver locally extinct now ? I can't believe you saw a Coatimundi ! They're such a rare animal !! I saw that tail and I'm like "A Lemur ? WTF ?" 😂 You can easily tell them little shack is European built, because it looks like crap compared to the Native buildings... LoL This video was so wonderful to watch, thank you very much from South Australia mate 👍🍻 PS : That open cut mine is a goddamn crime against humanity 🤬
Starting at 8:00... The striking difference in the color of the sedimentary layer is mind boggling and beautiful all at once.. What happened?? What went on in the ancient past of this beautiful tiny gift of a grain of sand in this universe that caused such a striking color difference in the sediment layer.. Just cannot help try to wrap my mind around the amount of time it must have taken and the unfathomable extrwme changes that have happened, and it happened relatively fast for there to be such a contrast in color.. I wish i knew.. Love this channel.. I am 50 now and have leukemia. Thank you soooo much for gifting me the joy of experiencing vicariously through your youth and your want to record and share the experiences you have.. Means more than you could ever know.. And you dont cloud it with unnecessary music or narration. Just the sound of the birds, water, and wind are what compliments these videos perfectly.. Again Thank you!!!
Hundreds of years IS modern. These dwellings are like survival bunkers made in the rubble of the ancient (tens of thousands not hundreds of years) civilizations who built here. You’re looking at these thru the perspective of mainstream government public school narratives. The real history is far more incredible. No such Native Americans or Ancient Puebloans.😅
You like to drive your car to these places? you like to fly your drone at these places? you have all this equipment you carry? Where does it come from? The resources are mined somewhere... Imagine what China is doing to mine lithium for the batteries in your DJI drone! The duality of Man
I beg to differ as far as building the houses like the Native Americans Europeans built houses just like that from stacked stone all over Ireland were my people come from😀. The piece of wood or stone across the top of the window is called the lintel🎉 thanks for sharing I thoroughly enjoy this stuff. Have a great day🎉
No. Think about it. If they were grinding grain, how would they get the grain out of the hole? Grain is ground with a broad stone in a very shallow depression. That had to be something else. But I'm clueless.
You already know if it is owned by a mining company they will destroy it. Sad and i hope not but i have no faith in these big business nor our government... Thank you for sharing this video.
idk if im going crazy but when i look into so much of that it looks like giant trees and destruction of some type of housing possibly then i start to wonder what happened to the people that just left all their tools in place? something happened to those people i can only assume, then i wonder where is all the corn and grain they were eating now if its even able to grow?
Hunch: you visited ancient melted giant castles. And yes the goal is to destroy the evidence, hence the mining permits. First thing now, is to remove the access.
Loved your video ❤❤ so beautiful. Thank you also for caring so much to keep it all clean from human littering. It's beyond me how callous people can be. Your the greatest❤❤
Amazing location and wonderful drone footage. It's so inspiring to see a young person take such a meaningful interest in ancient history, as well as the environment. Bless you, safe travels and thank you for sharing. You're one special young man.
Your channel is definitely my favourite of the group of people who are doing what you do,it could be your awesome dog,but,your vibe is really great to just live vicariously through. In Oman,after the rain for a few weeks,sometimes a month,it would be a green as it was on thus trip. And though rare there was a type of hawk moth,that was active during daylight hours, which looked exactly like a hummingbird. I know I'm just superimposing my old memories, but,the terrain is remarkably similar, as is the chance of finding pictogram or glyphs as well as evidence of people who were there for the last 6-8,000 + years. This I know firca fact,because my parents lived there fir 30 years & my mother would take use on digs. Particularly along waddi walls,like your canyons and when you reached the sea,that was where you'd find the burial sights,the skeletons curled into a foetal position,nearly always with evidence of red ochre, skell necklaces & tools. To set up camp & watch bats set off fir their night time hunting makes it feel like where you were & I was were only separated by a couple of bluffs,not,oceans & continents. Wishing you&yours the very best,safe journeys until,next time.
Oh yeah… where you mentioned is high on my list. Someday in the future I will be taking off for a long while to explore there and nearby. Thanks for your comment
I rarly comment on your videos, as I see them on TV, where they belong (definitely better than 90% of streaming contents that are out there). Can't put to words how exactly this one made me feel, but it's pretty darn especial. The message at the end was so nuance, yet so truthfully profound. Really feel like if more people watched your contet the world would be a better place.
thank you for showing off such beautiful places in my home state! i've always lived in the capital or big cities in the valley and it's so easy to forget just how amazing the surrounding nature is. i'm a super indoorsy person but you've inspired me to do some hiking this year for my birthday instead of staying in and moping like i usually would lol 🫶🏼
Thank you for this amazing journey, you did magnificent work during your exploration of this gorgeous area. I am 70 years old and have hiked and back packed in the High Sierras, and the Sonoran Desert as a photographer, so I truly appreciate nature. But I realized long ago people are ignorant, willfully stupid, arrogantly dismissive, cruel, and corrupt. Beauty, nature, rarity, reverence, respect for all living things, and past civilizations pale in comparison to short term profits to these imbeciles. Please know this, I respect your work, explorations, and wisdom which makes you rare. Take Care, and know you have my deep respect, and damn you partner in crime is simply amazing. That my friend is "One Hell Of A Dog."
If you watch channels like pantson theground in st.paul , you will ever after have doubts about what is geology and what is building . I ridiculed meltology until it was well proven to me , and it was
Totally awesome. I don't see where I can donate to your channel. Usually there's a dollar sign icon. Don't see it. Anyway. Great find on your grinding stone. Love it. I'm 66 year old retired Ironworker from Seattle. You are all over it. Love the drone action.
Man I love Aussies. Such a great companion to have, yours seems like the PERFECT adventure dog. That shot at 6:05 was too cute. Also, love your channel man. You genuinely capture the rawness of the nature you're exploring, you record ambience from the settings you're in. No stupid music soundtracks in the background. Really deserve more views than you get.
Good catch! I zoomed and watched it from different angles. At first I thought it was a shadow, but the it looks like a tree. At 4:19 if you zoom in close and pause it looks like a paper coffee cup on its side. lol
Thanks for another GREAT VIDEO !! APPRECIATE the fact you grabbed all the garbage !! Raised my kids the same way. It's sad but so much of what you've seen your children might not get to see it. Keep your videos with locations, if you have kids they can find where you have been.
The communal area with all the grinding stones in place is a treasure.. glad you photographed it!!
Can't you imagine the women sitting there together grinding and chatting with the beautiful sounds of birds in the background?
Yes! Those stone still in the grounder!! Amazing...they left and never back
@@sharonh9239 wow. you can imagine their hands grinding away still. so cool.
Perfect choice. No music during your videos...just the natural sounds of the place... magical!
I totally agree!
It blows my mind how many people disrespect our planet and litter it with trash. Thanks for the vlogs, man. Love your channel. It’s growing fast! 👊🏻
Ever noticed how the further you get from human settlements, the more beautiful nature becomes.
I wonder why that is
It was cool until the end of the video seeing all the strip mining going on. That made me sick, and I envision that place the hiker visited will end up like what the mining operation today. They'll just move on to the next plot of land. Kinda like what they do with logging. However, society benefits one way or another from the mining. We can't manufacture land.. Thank you for picking up the garbage.
Yep, the pursuit of $ is in stark contrast to giving an F towards Nature. Nolan is a gem, Twoey too!
And the rarer the animals, I mean a Coatimundi !! WOW
Of course it’s nice there are no stupid self centered people who don’t care disrespecting nature
Sir, you have the eye of the artist, the ear of a musician/pro. soundman, the mind of the adventurer, the heart of a mystic and the soul of an ancient spirit. I love watching your adventures. Thank you for this amazing post.
Many thanks
❤❤❤❤
Sad to see the land being treated like this. Really bothers me how people can go into these areas and leave crap around, thanks for carrying bags out.
I am 85 years old and just got inspired by this young man.
Thank you. that means a lot
So stunning! The end really made me quite sad. I hope the sacred spaces can be held from our avarice and greed. Love your adventures, man... keep it up. Awesome!
This comment should be pinned, by the comments I’m not sure how many people watched until the end
The copper mine at Morenci is the largest mine in Arizona, and one of the largest in the world. All of the companies operating mines in Arizona own large tracts of land around the mines. The laws and regulations governing water use are such that they buy up land with water on it in order to secure the right to pump ground water for use by the mine. The mine has no use for the canyon other than for its water rights but, ironically, the fact the mine owns the canyon is likely the reason it has not been developed. Go figure. What makes me angry is the way people leave trash in a place like that. I have camped in the Arizona desert for 50 years now and I am proud to say I have never left trash behind. At the same time, I don't often pick up trash when I see it. The way you hauled that trash out is inspiring. Good on you, young man!
That's an oven, probably used to make charcoal or cook large pieces of meat. That's why there is so much soot. Miners took over after the Indigenous People. Definitely a nice place to live.
Very very cool. That would make sense due to its size.
What was it called. In the video something like “check out that keeba” but I wasn’t sure of I heard the last word right.
@@gjames7798 He said kiva, as in a Hopi/Zuni sacred ritual room, but it's definitely just an oven.
When I was kid I imagined doing this kind of adventure. Congratulations for yours discovered👏👏👏
Me as well, I hiked all over the woods as a young kid and young adult, I used to ride horses too and even though the woods of Virginia are beautiful, nothing like the desert and the mesas in the southwest.
I LOVE being able to enjoy such incredible sights, despite being too old & feeble to get there in person. As much as my stomach is usually in a knot worrying that you or the pup might slip, I'm still addicted to watching!
Me tambien
I feel the same way about him and his dog safety.
That beautiful white stripe at @16:42 may be quartz crystal. Fantastic place !! You continue to outdo yourself !!
or marble
Yes my guess too
Very cool
That is so sad to see such a beautiful place get destroyed.
What a beautiful hike to some cool historic and prehistoric places. The area the mine has decimated looks oddly like how some cancers grow.
Thank you for sharing and picking up the trash left behind ❤️
but you benefit from it too. most people do not want to go back to a simpler lifestyle, easier on the environment.
ol but here you are using the copper pulled from it
@@wout123100No one said don't use the resources. It's common knowledge resources can easily be extracted without doing so much damage. It's about the profit margin.
My thoughts exactly watching that Timelapse
It's like a little slice of heaven in places. Just beautiful footage, the sound of nature adds volumes.
You do great videos and deserve way more subs.
The ending is gold the destruction of the mine most people need to see that
It’s horrible to see the destruction grow as the Mine expands like that.
10:30 brick wall ^?^
I know you feel deeply about something. If you could express your feelings in sentence form, I might understand what you are thinking also.
You had me optimistic for second. The mine is being destroyed ?! Oh great ! Then I re-watched the end. Nope. The mine is destroying things.
Earth...the most beautiful planet in the universe!
Yes it is
There are many other planets FAR more beautiful than our own lovely Earth. 😊
Plane!
with the least intelligent species ever.
According to humans
17:38 I paused and took a look at the interior wall, and it looks like a coating has partially remained. This is a spectacular discovery, the grind stones were honestly unbelievable. This video is a GEM and your respect for the terrain, and beautiful footage are a great look into a world I’ve never seen. Best wishes from Rhode Island.
Cheers and thanks!
@@the_pov_channel ever think about doing a episode of your favorite gear, or what you bring on certain trips?
Great beauty, awesome finds, as well as great wisdom. Thank you for sharing!
When your camera first showed that red, curling tail at 10:35 - my mind went 'wtf!? I didn't know there were monkey's in the Southwest!' I honestly had never heard of a "coatimundi" aka "coati" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coati - I swear, ya learn something new every day!*
Once again, Nolan has created an amazing work of art, rekindling our sense of awe. An up-close as if you were there along with him record of his fascination and wonder for a rarely seen canyon in the vast Southwest. In Part 1 he (more-or-less) happily endures mosquito swarms to record the sight of 10s of thousands of bats doing what they have been doing nightly for 100s of thousands, if not millions of years: Swarming out of a cave to devour a percentage of the swarms of bugs that would otherwise have long ago devoured all of us!
Now here, in Part 2, he treks into a world with no name. His drone flies around and over geological formations that are awesome, strange, yet somehow familiar. As if we know such places from within the depths of our dreams-here real and made of stone. He also discovers remnants of habitation, some relatively recent, others dating back to an archaic culture that managed to live amidst these natural wonders for who knows how long without spoiling it-reminding us we should do the same. I agree, but can we without feeling the reverence they had for a world they knew was that of the spirits of their ancestors going so far back as to be the beginning of time, as is said, immemorial? That is, to the edge of our species' memory?
Thanks so much for this, Nolan, excellent work and a tremendous gift to us all!
Now that UnchardedX has revealed literally granite-hard and undeniable evidence for a highly advanced technological civilization-one capable of producing granite vessels with such complex geometries and precise symmetries with tolerances so fine (within 1/1000 of an inch) that our civilization has only within my lifetime developed the means to even measure, let alone explicate-a civilization that (apparently) pre-dates what we call "history," that the ancient Egyptians regarded as 'the time of the gods,' and about which we know absolutely nothing-we're having to ask not only "who were these people?" but, indeed, "who are we?!" (Cf: th-cam.com/video/WAyQQRNoQaE/w-d-xo.html and th-cam.com/video/PrhFnai2TGs/w-d-xo.html to start) How is it possible that we had forgotten them? And what does it mean that we're now remembering through discovering this previously missing piece of the puzzle we thought we'd already assembled?
Wonders never cease, my friends, so long as you continue to wonder.
*(If you're like me, by the time you get to be my age, you'll know so much you can no longer remember, you'll realize just how stupid you really are. But that's ok. In my lifetime I've read more books on everything from art history to quantum mechanics, archeology to zoology-all totaled more books than everyone in my genealogy all the way back to Adam-yet, I'm happy to say, I remain the awe-struck fascinated child I've always been and endeavored always to remain.)
@michaelwells6075
I really appreciate Nolan's adventures and explorations as well. They are fantastic documents of our planet and of its inhabitant's past. But instead of watching Ben's sensationalized and wildly unsubstantiated claims in Uncharted X (he only ''seems'' to substantiate his claims and theories), you might want to try the ''History for GRANITE''' channel. He has a video dedicated to the granite vessels, as well as many unique specifics about the history and design and construction of the pyramids and other sites in Egypt.
Also take a gander at geologist Myron Cook's channel to explain some of the geology and geologic processes that you might see in places that Nolan explores.
And ''Andy Ward's Ancient Pottery'' takes you back in time describing the great variety of native American tribes and peoples and their traditions and culture based on the fascinating variety and specific design and techniques used in their pottery. ;)
You are a heck of a drone pilot. Tremendous shots without too many unnecessary chances. You're teaching me 🙂
Ohhh but the risky shots are the best. Gotta send it every once in a while
This little canyon, with grass, trees, a beautiful river, animals, is like a lost dream world. Continue your aventures, man. That's so cool to see such places. Greetings from Paris, France.
Do you check your dog for ticks? And wassup with those pigs and your dog….would they attack your heeler? Sick spot for sure. Have fun.
Epic. Thanks for taking the time to share and treating the place with such respect.
I love and greatly appreciate your respect while exploring those culturally significant sites! Awesome video, I too spend the nights scrolling around google earth searching for canyons.
You’ve inspired me to get out and explore man I appreciate it. Just turnt 21 and on the journey to explore the world. Keep up the hard work and I admire the dedication man 🙌🏼
Love to hear that. That’s great. Nature is healing just make sure to take good care of it wherever you go!
See America first! (Then the rest of the 🌎)
Nolan, you are a poet. And a warrior in your own way. And, I love you for all that you bring to us.
Yes he is indeed.
Thanks to you
First beehive structure is probably a charcoal making kiln. The cabin has primitive cement/mortar which may also have been produced on site using the nearby kiln.
Check out the 4 massive beehive Charcoal Kilns in remote Cave Valley, NV near what was once Parker (Stagecoach) Station and the Riordan Ranch. Ely, NV is the closest town. Each of the 4 rock beehive kilns were large enough to fit a mule team.
My father spent his summers as a teen cowboy working on the Riordan Ranch cattle ranch (Dan & Elda Riordan) in Cave Valley in the early 1940's. Elda's was my father's great aunt.
Parker Station was formerly an important stop on the Toano-Pioche Stagecoach Line (transporting and delivering mail, goods & supplies) before the advent of the railroad and automobile.
My father lived in the lower "lean-to" side addition of the Parker Station log building which became the main Riordan Ranch house when Dan & Elda Riordon purchased the ranch and buildings in 1917.
On the upper floor and loft of the log building, there were multiple small 8" square holes cut into the perimeter walls around the building to ward off Indian or bandit attacks with rifles such as the lever-action Winchester Model 30-30. There was/is a natural spring nearby the ranch house with a windmill pump, and to this day wild horses, pigs, coyotes, water foul, and escaped cattle use it as a watering hole.
There were many Native American artifacts found in the Indian caves in the foothills across the valley. Most are in Native American museums in NV. Cave Valley was so remote and vast that the valley was at one time being considered in the 1980's by the U.S. government as the site for the new at the time LGM-118 Peacekeeper/MX ICBM missile defense system, but luckily other sites were chosen.
As a child, I spent a very spooky night camping inside one of these massive rock beehive charcoal kilns when my family visited the site. It was a natural horn-shaped echo-chamber, and the sound of the bats and birds fluttering about above us in complete darkness was nerve-racking, in addition to the potential for rattlesnakes. Needless to say, I wasn't able to sleep until exhaustion took over, and it's a night I'll never forget, LOL.
Neat. Love learning about the places I have visit from people like you
That is a great story and information!!@@bbfoto7248
"Awe factor filled to capacity", is an understatement for what you have given me. When you put your hand on that grindstone, it was like a jolt of electricity went thru me & I felt the stone in my hand as well as the history locked within it...I don't know how or why, & I know it sounds crazy, but THANK YOU. Please be safe...belly scratch for your pup.
🖤🔥🖤🔥🖤
Don't give your coordinates keep your secret. Keep up the good work I really like your stuff
Great dog, great video. Keep up the great work. You are great. 👍🏻
I am continuously amazed at the ruins you guys explore I watch you ,Trek planner and desert drifter never before have I seen such beauty let alone knew it existed Thank you and I truly enjoy Chewy
Me too sister! Desert Drifter and POV are my favorites. They lift my heart and I'm so grateful to see beauty I would never be able to get to anymore. Such a blessing! BTW, the dog's name is Toowie.....no idea how to spell it. Aren't they a pair?
Toohey is his name. Thanks !!
Love your POV Channel, love your drone work and the fact you don't use music in your videos but rather you use the natural sounds of the places you visit. Thank You for taking these trips into the outback and your sharing. And, I love your faith companion Dog. Thank You both for taking us along.
Powerful video. I’ve watched mining across the west since the 1960’s. Entire mountains destroyed. The mining companies don’t give at flying shit. It’s all about money. Keep up the good work. There are millions of us who love the Earth.
@TheAlex8675309 There might be millions of you who love the earth, but you don't love the one who created it. If you did, the world would not be in the shape it is in. Individually, it's not your fault; you have been blinded and deceived by those who came before you.
What’s your point? If you’re talking about your personal concept of god!, You’re talking to the wrong guy. I am talking about mining companies who don’t care about the planet or their employees. It’s all about money for them. As for creation, I have been gifted with direct experience of universal being, this is just not about that.🤠@@JimofTheLionKings
Thanks. We need more people like you. Lots to be optimistic about, and I think the young people will not repeat the mistakes of those before
About 3:40 in the background....pyramid?
Mine.
It is so stunning beautiful there. We have nothing even remote similar to this in Germany. I have to admit, i'm a little jealous, but at least some of us have the privilege to enjoy it
Yes it is beautiful here in the States
On a trip to Germany and Europe, I was amazed by some of the canyons in France. Plenty to see out where you are!!
@@the_pov_channel Yes, that is true, France has indeed some amazing canyons. But i didn't like the french people enough and vice versa, to make much use of that and as long as you keep running your channel, i'm totally fine with that
I love it that your dog gets to go on the adventures!!!
in my next life, I want to come back as his dog.
The dog is awesome.
The dog needs special boots for hiking. Those sharp rocks do a number on their feet.
🤣🤣
@@the_pov_channel Can I ask what's funny considering they do make doggy boots but whatever
Great video, Thanks for taking us along and thanks for picking up all that shit on the way out. Shame on those who leave garbage in these places.
Thanks. It’s the least I can do
You inspired me to spontaneously take a backpacking trip yesterday. super glad I went, keep making great stuff man! I love your videos so much. I really want to go on the same kind of adventures that you do someday
Really glad to hear that. Hope it went well. Just make sure to take good care of the places you visit. And stay safe
Amazing u found an untouched ancient indigenous site! Grain stones IN the holes no less. Where nearby was the grain grown...u think? And also there was likely MUCH more water in the canyons way back when..right? Love your channel. I geek out on one a day : )
It's absolutely incredible: your approach is really interesting, touching the artifacts without disturbing them and keeping the site in place....
Thank you very much.
What a horrible ending 😢
Necessary.
@@the_pov_channel Absolutely
Very cool...thanks for sharing all of your adventures...unfortunately, when it comes to the mine, and the resources, we all benefit from them to make our lives easier...it is government regulations that attempt to preserve, exactly what you experienced today, but there's a cost to pay
Indeed. And I am very aware I use resources extracted from mines every day, and as I leave this comment. Cobalt mines, specifically, are heartbreaking. It’s a very tough conundrum.
Cottonwood snow...
Yes! Those stone still in the grounder!! Amazing...they left and never back
The time lapse at the end 😢
That oven looks like a "coke oven", that miners used to process iron ore or make coal .
Wow such an incredible video thanks! So much beauty and knowledge packed in to less than 30mins. It was awesome!
Wow,those grindstones in their holes blew my mind!!
Same
The videography and editing brings the ultimate adventure. This is my favorite channel of this type of content! Thank you. Enjoy your Point of View!
Excellent, thank you brother. Sharing these vids to my son .
Great adventure and discoveries. You do have an eye for the terrain, beautiful country 🤝
Great work cleaning up, I love . Edit again, hopefully not mined at all back in there . But doesn't look good does it. Tya
Stoked to hear that. Thank you
@@the_pov_channel he really liked them 🤝 I'm sure he subscribed
What is that flat area at 3:38 ? 😅 it looks like a landing pad…
Miners do what miners do! And that's destroy, strip and pilfer valuables from the earth. I was so SAD to hear that the entire canyon you were in is owned by the mine.. ☹
Hi. I really enjoy your channel! Thanks for the great content!
Im 70 now. I am healthy.
It is so good to see young dudes like this who want to improve his environment he walks across.
Thank you brother for giving me hope.
Keep exposing these companies that rape & pilliage.
Peace be with you.
P.j.-
Carpinteria Calif.
Love your gimbal/drone footage, it makes your channel look like the BBC compared to all the others 👍
I wasn't expecting to see modern red bricks in the oven.
06:50 That large alcove looked HUGE !
Are beaver locally extinct now ?
I can't believe you saw a Coatimundi ! They're such a rare animal !!
I saw that tail and I'm like "A Lemur ? WTF ?" 😂
You can easily tell them little shack is European built, because it looks like crap compared to the Native buildings... LoL
This video was so wonderful to watch, thank you very much from South Australia mate 👍🍻
PS : That open cut mine is a goddamn crime against humanity 🤬
Dude your videos are my absolute favorite. I get STOKED when i see a new video notification. You're so cool
Haha amazing. Thanks for watching just filmed a ton over the last couple months I’m excited to share with ya
Starting at 8:00... The striking difference in the color of the sedimentary layer is mind boggling and beautiful all at once.. What happened?? What went on in the ancient past of this beautiful tiny gift of a grain of sand in this universe that caused such a striking color difference in the sediment layer.. Just cannot help try to wrap my mind around the amount of time it must have taken and the unfathomable extrwme changes that have happened, and it happened relatively fast for there to be such a contrast in color.. I wish i knew..
Love this channel.. I am 50 now and have leukemia. Thank you soooo much for gifting me the joy of experiencing vicariously through your youth and your want to record and share the experiences you have.. Means more than you could ever know.. And you dont cloud it with unnecessary music or narration. Just the sound of the birds, water, and wind are what compliments these videos perfectly.. Again Thank you!!!
Hundreds of years IS modern.
These dwellings are like survival bunkers made in the rubble of the ancient (tens of thousands not hundreds of years) civilizations who built here.
You’re looking at these thru the perspective of mainstream government public school narratives.
The real history is far more incredible.
No such Native Americans or Ancient Puebloans.😅
You like to drive your car to these places? you like to fly your drone at these places? you have all this equipment you carry?
Where does it come from? The resources are mined somewhere...
Imagine what China is doing to mine lithium for the batteries in your DJI drone!
The duality of Man
I beg to differ as far as building the houses like the Native Americans Europeans built houses just like that from stacked stone all over Ireland were my people come from😀. The piece of wood or stone across the top of the window is called the lintel🎉 thanks for sharing I thoroughly enjoy this stuff. Have a great day🎉
Lintel*
@@avrilmiles thank you I used the voice function didn't notice the misspelled
No. Think about it. If they were grinding grain, how would they get the grain out of the hole? Grain is ground with a broad stone in a very shallow depression. That had to be something else. But I'm clueless.
Great Video 👍. Did you hear another human being I suppose yelp out in (TS)13:09. It wasn't your dog.
You already know if it is owned by a mining company they will destroy it. Sad and i hope not but i have no faith in these big business nor our government... Thank you for sharing this video.
idk if im going crazy but when i look into so much of that it looks like giant trees and destruction of some type of housing possibly then i start to wonder what happened to the people that just left all their tools in place? something happened to those people i can only assume, then i wonder where is all the corn and grain they were eating now if its even able to grow?
Those cliffs were carved and shaped long long ago by ancient miners and quarriers
unless there are protections on those sites the mine will likely claim them.
Thankyou for being such a good person everyone can learn from you
Hunch: you visited ancient melted giant castles. And yes the goal is to destroy the evidence, hence the mining permits. First thing now, is to remove the access.
3:38 at the top looks like a grown over pyramid dude... great vids btw, big fan
What model drone do you use? Would you recommend it or another one. I do the same thing and was thinking of getting a scouting drone.
Loved your video ❤❤ so beautiful. Thank you also for caring so much to keep it all clean from human littering. It's beyond me how callous people can be. Your the greatest❤❤
I really enjoy your content. Makes me want to get back into hiking.
Amazing
How do you manage to make your drone follow you? Does it have some kind of mode where it follows any human form it sees?
A cool feature if it is! I want a drone that can do that too!
Some do have that function
Your dog looks just like Jon Levi's dog! Love the content.
Very cool! Does your pup have booties so he doesn't hurt his paws on the rocks?
Amazing location and wonderful drone footage. It's so inspiring to see a young person take such a meaningful interest in ancient history, as well as the environment. Bless you, safe travels and thank you for sharing. You're one special young man.
Cheers and thank you
Good job makes me so angry people just don't care.
Thanks!
Wow. This is really generous. Thank you so much man
Your channel is definitely my favourite of the group of people who are doing what you do,it could be your awesome dog,but,your vibe is really great to just live vicariously through. In Oman,after the rain for a few weeks,sometimes a month,it would be a green as it was on thus trip. And though rare there was a type of hawk moth,that was active during daylight hours, which looked exactly like a hummingbird. I know I'm just superimposing my old memories, but,the terrain is remarkably similar, as is the chance of finding pictogram or glyphs as well as evidence of people who were there for the last 6-8,000 + years. This I know firca fact,because my parents lived there fir 30 years & my mother would take use on digs. Particularly along waddi walls,like your canyons and when you reached the sea,that was where you'd find the burial sights,the skeletons curled into a foetal position,nearly always with evidence of red ochre, skell necklaces & tools. To set up camp & watch bats set off fir their night time hunting makes it feel like where you were & I was were only separated by a couple of bluffs,not,oceans & continents.
Wishing you&yours the very best,safe journeys until,next time.
Oh yeah… where you mentioned is high on my list. Someday in the future I will be taking off for a long while to explore there and nearby. Thanks for your comment
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hummingbird_hawk-moth ? I had them growing up as well.
I rarly comment on your videos, as I see them on TV, where they belong (definitely better than 90% of streaming contents that are out there). Can't put to words how exactly this one made me feel, but it's pretty darn especial. The message at the end was so nuance, yet so truthfully profound. Really feel like if more people watched your contet the world would be a better place.
Perfect. Thanks so much
thank you for showing off such beautiful places in my home state! i've always lived in the capital or big cities in the valley and it's so easy to forget just how amazing the surrounding nature is. i'm a super indoorsy person but you've inspired me to do some hiking this year for my birthday instead of staying in and moping like i usually would lol 🫶🏼
Hey hope you see this response. I saw your comment and it made my day. Hope you had a great birthday and thanks for watching
The simple answer for why living there is predators in the night while you are sleeping.
Thank you for this amazing journey, you did magnificent work during your exploration of this gorgeous area. I am 70 years old and have hiked and back packed in the High Sierras, and the Sonoran Desert as a photographer, so I truly appreciate nature. But I realized long ago people are ignorant, willfully stupid, arrogantly dismissive, cruel, and corrupt. Beauty, nature, rarity, reverence, respect for all living things, and past civilizations pale in comparison to short term profits to these imbeciles. Please know this, I respect your work, explorations, and wisdom which makes you rare. Take Care, and know you have my deep respect, and damn you partner in crime is simply amazing. That my friend is "One Hell Of A Dog."
This amazing content an coming from New Zealand Wich is also pretty cool ,there is so questions,thanks
So cool! NZ is indeed amazing
If you watch channels like pantson theground in st.paul , you will ever after have doubts about what is geology and what is building . I ridiculed meltology until it was well proven to me , and it was
MyLunchBreak and Jon Levi (he also has a dog) are my top fave channels to follow along with this one 🥰
thank you for giving us the chance to live the experience through you.
Totally awesome. I don't see where I can donate to your channel. Usually there's a dollar sign icon. Don't see it.
Anyway. Great find on your grinding stone. Love it.
I'm 66 year old retired Ironworker from Seattle.
You are all over it. Love the drone action.
Hey, thanks for this. I just changed it to allow donations. Thanks for watching and tons more headed your way
Great video and thanks for taking the time to hike there to bring us the wonderful scenery. Be safe In your future adventures.
Man I love Aussies. Such a great companion to have, yours seems like the PERFECT adventure dog. That shot at 6:05 was too cute.
Also, love your channel man. You genuinely capture the rawness of the nature you're exploring, you record ambience from the settings you're in. No stupid music soundtracks in the background. Really deserve more views than you get.
Thanks a ton. I can’t believe how many I get tbh
Удивительные структуры, спасибо Бро!
That sure looks like a pyramid....
I had to stop the video and go back to 4:15. What’s the vertical thing/stick/pole on the flat rock sticking out ?
Good catch! I zoomed and watched it from different angles. At first I thought it was a shadow, but the it looks like a tree. At 4:19 if you zoom in close and pause it looks like a paper coffee cup on its side. lol
I’m from Utah and immediately recognized the white “snow.”
Me too
I wonder where that stream originates
Wonder what they're mining ?
When you found those traces of people that used to live there…wow! So cool. Your videos are a blessing . Thank you!!🙏🏻 😊
Thanks for another GREAT VIDEO !!
APPRECIATE the fact you grabbed all the garbage !! Raised my kids the same way. It's sad but so much of what you've seen your children might not get to see it.
Keep your videos with locations, if you have kids they can find where you have been.