The Mystery of the Mima Mounds

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 62

  • @2007cgarza
    @2007cgarza 3 года назад +2

    The charts at 29:00 were very good visuals! Waiting for someone to "discover" you and get you on TV somewhere!

  • @lewisgordon1490
    @lewisgordon1490 7 месяцев назад

    A news report from San Diego said it was from gophers when the dirt is wet they carry it uphill. A scientist had tested it w/ colored dirt, then multiply that by hundreds of years of gophers and you get a large series of mounds.
    Sort of makes sense, if the area gets really damp or even slightly flooded, the gopher can still dig out a dry little home up in the mound.

    • @odisy64
      @odisy64 2 месяца назад

      the issue with that theory is that gophers have no reason to do this, its just energy intensive and odd that all the mounds happen to be the same size and found in patches, ive seen these mounds on hill sides in the desert.

  • @raynameadows2152
    @raynameadows2152 3 года назад +2

    Aw great to see u again you are a character, enjoying the info my friend.

  • @budgreen7764
    @budgreen7764 2 года назад +1

    When the ice cap receded , the out-flow might have caused these bumps (mounds)

  • @mariaoharra3024
    @mariaoharra3024 2 месяца назад +1

    But not like that in areas in east coast and mid west

  • @riccooper5689
    @riccooper5689 Год назад

    I’m in Tacoma. My best childhood friend’s parents owned a large ranch in the middle of the mounds. We rode horses all over them.

  • @cannpdx781
    @cannpdx781 3 года назад +4

    Hi Pretty Gritty Tours
    I discovered your channel yesterday, started out watching the Washington ghost town tour.
    Wow, now bingeing your other videos. Great work! Sharing as more people who appreciate this type of channel need to see your content.
    Great Narrative and so Informative. Thanks for a very interesting and entertaining channel😸

  • @evilladollyz7602
    @evilladollyz7602 3 года назад +2

    Just found your channel and I love it. Thank you for all this history!

  • @aliceleder172
    @aliceleder172 3 года назад +1

    I am a Washintonian and have some suggestion if welcome there is a flaming guiser I think I spelled that right somewhere in Washington not quite sure where but you do well enough with your research I'm sure you could figure it out ... also my hometown Centralia is very rich in Washington history it would be great to see it mensioned

  • @Quentin217
    @Quentin217 3 года назад +2

    There are numerous Mima mounds wherever the land is unplowed near Medical Lake in Spokane County. In June,, one can commonly find a species of wild orange poppies growing out of the tops of the mounds. The soil of the mounds is fine and soft whilst the mounds are bordered along the bottoms by basaltic rock.

  • @alanschwamberger7398
    @alanschwamberger7398 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting information about the state of Washington. I moved here about 2 years ago, from Ohio, and because I like to travel, especially around my new state, I find all the videos on youtube quite informative and hoping that after this virus stuff gets better under control that I can take some trips to see my new state. I am in a good location, the Moses Lake area, very central... but I have noted you have talked about your live feeds, I would really like to know how to join the live feeds. Thank you very much for the education about various sites in the state of Washington. Also as a side note I am 54 and retired, so many of your shows do give me things to see in this state.

    • @PrettyGrittyTours
      @PrettyGrittyTours  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for tuning in. We schedule our live shows usually for Thursdays or Fridays at 8pm. We keep a calendar of them up on our RUclips. All you have to do to join us is open the RUclips channel then at watch live.

  • @michaellause3437
    @michaellause3437 2 года назад

    They look like garden mounds. Like garden beds with out borders.

  • @faaqcee7896
    @faaqcee7896 3 года назад +4

    Watch a video about cymatics and the effects of frequency on sand.
    Various frequencies produce distinctable patterns.
    One of the frequency's patterns looks most similar to that of Mima Mounds from the above view you have provided.
    Thanks for the video!

  • @aunum
    @aunum 3 года назад

    love your cat

  • @joshbaker4448
    @joshbaker4448 Год назад

    It’s most likely from the world ending tsunami that Graham Hancock speaks about. Like the wavy landscape in eastern wa

    • @odisy64
      @odisy64 2 месяца назад

      the floods in eastern Washington happened over 50 times at the end of the last ice age and was not the only flood period in Washington.

  • @brandyjean7015
    @brandyjean7015 3 года назад

    Checked Amazon & eBay, but didn't find a Chehalis Legends. I did find a:
    Honne, the Spirit of the Chehalis: the Indian interpretation of the Origin of the People & Animals. Narrated by George Sanders. Could that be it?

    • @PrettyGrittyTours
      @PrettyGrittyTours  3 года назад +1

      It might be. They might have pulled the original from publication too. Last time I saw it was early 2020

  • @911elijah
    @911elijah 2 года назад

    Have you looked into the handprints at Goose Lake Wa?

  • @davydiver
    @davydiver 2 года назад

    Native Habitat/Foraging and Hunting enhancements...

  • @nataliej82
    @nataliej82 3 года назад +1

    You should meet up with John Larson, the curator of the Polson Museum in Hoquiam, WA. Grays Harbor has a storied past and was once on the "no go" list for our navy because of the dangers. The history of John Tornow or Old Camp Grisdale, or the Dead Forest are all interesting topics and places to explore.

  • @auspiciouscloud8786
    @auspiciouscloud8786 8 месяцев назад

    We should start a petition to bring back the pocket gopher to the mima mounds. Anyone with me?

  • @2007cgarza
    @2007cgarza 3 года назад +1

    Side note...Northern State Hospital in Sedro Woolley, abandoned buildings with so much history and the cemetary with numbered gravestones, many of which have been farmed by locals for their own needs...Also Roslyn off I-90 (Northern Exposure fame) which has a cemetery that is divided by lodge membership and ethnicity...

  • @martihetrick609
    @martihetrick609 3 года назад

    Quilcene wa

  • @kyebean
    @kyebean 3 года назад +1

    Gophers.. wtf. Why then are they virtually ALL the same size and spacing and in very specific geological areas?

  • @midnightcaller200
    @midnightcaller200 3 года назад +1

    There is a legend on the Malty Cemetary (SP) 1 tomb has 13 steps that you go down and it is is a gate way to the underworld

    • @PrettyGrittyTours
      @PrettyGrittyTours  3 года назад

      I had heard of that but I haven’t had the opportunity to go out and try it myself yet

  • @dbcooper206
    @dbcooper206 3 года назад +2

    Always thought it was pronounced “mee-ma” mounds…learn something new everyday!

  • @bitofbrownshuga3061
    @bitofbrownshuga3061 3 года назад +1

    I drive by these mounds with cattle grazing on top almost daily. Wondering what could be under the mounds? I remember hearing something about them growing up in Alaska and now I live near them in Washington State. Lol! Thank you for sharing.

  • @yayhew10086
    @yayhew10086 3 года назад

    I think that ancient people found a flood plain, raked up the gravel and built a bon fire on top. When the fire cooled they collected the melted metals.

  • @angelmage99
    @angelmage99 3 года назад +1

    I work with the East Benton County Historical Society, currently on "mysteries" of the region project for not this coming, but next Halloween. If you want to discuss or get ideas about it please feel free to to message me.

  • @robertsnyder5149
    @robertsnyder5149 3 года назад

    Brady, Wash. here

  • @odisy64
    @odisy64 2 месяца назад

    ive seen these on the hills around yakima, gophers and water does not make much sense for the area.

  • @markrufener4172
    @markrufener4172 3 года назад +1

    I grew up in Olympia, spent a couple of years in Yakima, and have been in the Greater Seattle area since 1983. One serious curiosity of mine is a place called Fort Borst Park in Fords Prairie next to I-5 in Centralia. What do you know about this place I passed by hundreds of times going to visit my cousin in Chehalis only a half hour south of Olympia? Thanks

    • @PrettyGrittyTours
      @PrettyGrittyTours  3 года назад

      The Borst Blockhouse was built in the 1850’s as a guarded supply station during the Washington Indian wars and was meant to provide defense forces the Chehalis River. The structure was purchased from the US government and turned into a private granary in the 1920s if I’m not mistaken and then moved to its current location which became the area for the park. Since that time the area surrounding the “fort” has become a recreation spot and the most significant park in the area.

  • @kyebean
    @kyebean 3 года назад

    Why NO gopher tunnels and NO unfinished gopher mounds????

  • @patriciamattocks7641
    @patriciamattocks7641 2 года назад

    Walla Walla Area

  • @shawnkiesel5349
    @shawnkiesel5349 3 года назад

    It's most likely burial mounds but the state won't allow anybody to excavate...

  • @doggonervn211
    @doggonervn211 3 года назад

    I was told Prehistoric Gophers made them! LOL!

  • @daveeaton6723
    @daveeaton6723 2 года назад

    left over from prehistoric moles and gophers??😁

  • @JennHawk
    @JennHawk 3 года назад +1

    It had to be the aliens!😄

  • @Katey2012able
    @Katey2012able 3 года назад +1

    Where are these North American pocket gophers now?

    • @PrettyGrittyTours
      @PrettyGrittyTours  3 года назад

      Still in the area. Several mounds still have burrows.

    • @quietstormshawn2858
      @quietstormshawn2858 2 года назад

      Its just some bs satire to hide indigenous people accomplishments. Its always aliens when it comes to what my people have done.

    • @quietstormshawn2858
      @quietstormshawn2858 2 года назад

      Just like the Mississippi Nile delta. All pyramids older than africa’s and all the indigenous Americans inventions. So called african america is the Indian and always was. 💯

  • @auspiciouscloud8786
    @auspiciouscloud8786 8 месяцев назад

    Maybe pocket gophers like to eat camis?

  • @hawaiiguykailua6928
    @hawaiiguykailua6928 8 месяцев назад

    It's electrical, happened in the last realm wide reset, so last 500yrs it appears?? But who knows what's real in this AI realm eh? 😏🤔

  • @nicholasfrair1772
    @nicholasfrair1772 2 года назад

    anyone else forced to watch this by school

  • @seansimons7043
    @seansimons7043 3 года назад +1

    Haha! Dad jokes! Lol

  • @danyellerobinson5940
    @danyellerobinson5940 3 года назад

    One would think there were drier places for Gophers to build. Also, there should be some evidence of gopher colonies. The theory simply shows that pocket gophers could synthesize this phenomena over several generations. (Are there pocket gophers around the world in association with these mounds or just in North America? If this theory were valid then the mounds should still have gophers and should still be growing.)