It's very cool that he named the finds after the daughters/family that did it. He could easily claim all finds, but sharing credit like that is a great trait.
Archaeologist Tom Demerey of the San Diego Natural History Museum has found very similar marrow-seeking sawed bone joints 130,000 years old. See for yourself: Look at the word "up" on the photo 17:08ish of: ruclips.net/video/NUmMaGX7GcU/видео.htmlm05s
In the vast majority of human beings who have ever entered this earth and left it, we as a collective conscious forget their existence. They as individuals, blood flesh and soul have gone extinct. Understanding that, I don’t think it’s a huge leap to wonder if that’s how civilizations and societies through time and space work as well…
@@BigShaneGillisIronically the way you said it makes me remember his existencie even more: John Reeves of Alaskan Boneyard. May his existence get carbondated by celestial being🌿 for contents of Mammoth and Moose meat in him and his family. Damn he is interesting to me, seems very shrewd here, but I bet he is kind on the inside😇🦣🕊
Joe, I love these guests. I have completely changed my mindset because of your show and guests like this! Randall, Graham, and plenty others make a 99.9% argument that what we were “taught” was not accurate.
this guys a hero as far as i'm concerned what he's doing is absolutely amazing and i'm truly thankful for him and men & women like him what he's doing is important and the reason no one will reach out is because there afraid it will change things they claim to be right or true there worried about him and what he might end up finding
@MattChewycat33 Yeah, they also sadly "lost the knowledge to go to the moon and it's a painful process to build it back up again" - that was the answer to why we haven't been to the moon again 😂 i watch the clip when I'm a lil down, sometimes, because it never fails to make me laugh or put things in perspective.
Seems to me like you're missing the point though. The industrial revolution began around 1760 & this site being in Alaska, was not highly populated. It's possible you're aware of something I'm not or I could be overthinking things, idk.
The gwitchin Athabaskan people have lived in interior Alaska for hundreds of years and relied heavily on moose and caribou marrow for its high fat content. 200 yrs back(1820’s) they would have been in contact with Russian traders and/or coastal tribes who had made contact with Russians to get steel tools to make a clean cut in the bone like that one. It’s also possible that those cuts were made from stone tools. There’s many online videos showing almost that exact sized bone being cut and sanded with primitive stone tools.
200 years is essentially 4.25 people ago. With the timeframe of civilizational and cultural perspectives in mind, such "mystery" could easily be elaborated upon with a majority opinion that would resolve such infantile ponderances. Occums razor glides through the dead weight of futile inquiry, rendering any and all unsubstantial vein naiveties void of merit requiring no further engagement.
@@PseudoPhlegm Seriously I don’t understand why finding 200 yr old bones is that crazy. Maybe that’s why he has to reach and say “probably a candle holder”, but even then I don’t understand what makes it a big deal. I’m also a dumbass though
yea im sure the natives or running around looking for that bone man i bet there are struggling right now looking for there artifacts??? what the f . r you talking about @@markplott4820
When I was in elementary school our class went on an all-day fieldtrip to the desert in southern Utah with an archaeologist and a geologist to look at old native dig sites, look for geode's arrowheads fossils and ancient cave art or petroglyphs. Something about breaking a rock in half and finding beautiful crystals or fossils inside was just so interesting and fun. As a child it felt like finding treasure. I'll never forget that fieldtrip. I wonder if this guy could contact a historian in Russia to find out more about the area where the bones were found in Alaska?
Alot points to all these bones coming from other areas, and was all washed there during the younger-dryus(sp?) event. Which makes total sense why 100s of thousands of bones in one pile. So if true , who's knows how far they traveled before being deposited. imo and 2cents...
@@jmparsons7331 I was referring to the pieces of bone that have been fashioned into tools and jewelry that he found but yeah, I agree that the bones could have been brought there that way.
I'm am living in Alaska and here on the Kenai Peninsula we beach comb daily and the amount of unknown artifacts that are found is amazing the rocks he mentions "skinning rocks" are found on our beaches everywhere , along with what they call spirit rocks just a treasure trove of history, that tells a different story then what we are told,Alaska holds many secrets most will never be heard because knowledge is the real weapon to win the war and why its controlled and hidden.
@@hijinks21 Oh boy! You mean to say there is NO mystery at all?? Cause there IS.. At least that's something TO sell people... However you don't bat an eyelash for the Multi-Billion Dollar Corp. that wants to sell you a new iphone every 6 months for $800... Take your BS hate somewhere, where it matters, cause here, it does not.
@@aceboogie50 Argumentative? no joke you kids heads are all broke. You dont know the basic art of communication. Your generations heads have been ruined by social media, its bizzare how far the human race has fell.
The reason this is not being discussed is because history is not what people think it is. It is created and controlled, and if the majority of the people actually knew who and what is doing this, it would be game over. Control of vibration, frequency, and sound..keys to the universe. Enjoy the rest of your day, and have a great Happy New Year !!
This man should be on the pod every six months, he is just so interesting. Wanted to suggest to Mr. John, maybe try and contact some historians in Russia to learn about what historical knowledge they have about your land.🤷♂️ Shockingly id bet they would be more helpful than the idiots in charge of our universities.
@fabioenchilada581, I absolutely agree. An appearance very six months sounds good. He'd have new stories and updates on his findings constantly. I love it.
That could be (used to hold a "candle"). One thing we've forgotten is that before electricity, and even before candles or if you ran out of candles in your little hut, what was used were slivers of "lighter wood". Lighter Wood is pieces of Pine saturated with crystalized Pine Sap. Basically kerosene, and it smells like it. When a pine tree dies the sap falls downward in the tree and collects in the joints where branches intersect and down lower in the trunk and into the roots. You can have a rotted, fallen Pine, but as soon as you chop into lower areas and into the roots, or maybe at the "knuckles" where branches join the trunk you hit clear white pine glistening with solidified sap that stinks of kerosene. Every household that could get any, and accounts suggest most did because people actually worked in those days, every day, foraging, would have a stockpile of lighter wood they'd cut into slender pieces (don't know exact dimensions of course, so imagine a thick chop-stick I guess). You touch the end of that to a flame, and it instantly lights up like a candle. I've done this, so I have a new appreciation for how savage a forest fire can be if there are Pines in there. Relative to the idea in this video: Our ancestors had special little Lighter Wood Holders, typically made out of metal as I recall, Earlier than metalworking I'm assuming clay, stone, or bone would work. You'd lay the strip of lighter wood in that. This was so important that someone(s) in the family were given the duty to continually swap out new slivers of lighter wood when the old one was almost burned out. Lighter Wood "candles" burned faster than wick and wax candles, so this was an oft repeated duty every night before people went to sleep. In those days cabins were dark/dim even in daytime because they had no, or few windows, and any they did have were small. So, maybe that thing was used to hold the earliest form of candles we had, "Lighter Wood" pieces.
Whether or not you believe in intelligent design, I highly recommend that everyone watch the "Expelled" documentary by Ben Stein. It explains why discoveries in science & archeology get buried. Public institutions are no longer light bearers of truth.
@@markplott4820 That produced 1.1 volt with no record of what they were used for, which tells us they had nothing to do with lighting. Historical guesswork suggests they were used for electroplating, like gold onto silver.
YES ! another great guest Gonna have to delete some old episodes I got like 5 from the past week now downloaded ready to listen to haha But guests like this are almost always a home run
I love listening to your talk shows Mr. Joe. I listen to them so that I can learn something new. Thanks for always keeping me entertained. From Matthew
Didn’t realize how cool “200 years ago” was..I’m use to hearing about thousands of years ago kind of stuff…and as you keep listening you begin to think there must be more to this! I appreciate that immensely. Thanks Rogan for having this gentleman on the podcast!
Interesting talk about AMS49K I suggest anyone to listen to the guy talking about it in the video. Personally I didnt think they would really do that but seems like the launch just happened and there are enough slots available, could be worth huh
He's in my top 5 favorite guest on the show. Hands down! When I see him, Graham Hancock, Bob Lazar, Jeremy Corbell, Tim Dillion etc. I click instantly. I would like to see Travis Taylor (Skinwalker Ranch) next on the show. 🤷♂️
@@chris4814b well all I mean is that the guy in this video and then all the other names on his list other than tim Dillion of course are all intellectuals and researchers, Tim Dillon is a comedian.
I am mesmerized by this man’s voice. He’s so interesting glad you had them back Joe. I looked up the w boneyard videos after he was on the first time, I’m fascinated with it.
I have Russian/Ukrainian parents and eating bone marrow is definitely a thing, it's usually done when you boil the bones with the meat in a soup. It is usually done with bigger animals like cows but I imagine you can definitely do it with a mammoth. Bone marrow is delicious and has an interesting texture to it. I would consider it somewhat of a delicacy.
@@diogenes. my bad but even from a moose I imagine it would be pretty good too. But mammoths wouldn't surprise me either because I've seen different stuff floating around from World War 1 where people saw mammoths in a vast unpopulated Forest like Siberia and other places. Maybe not all of them went extinct at once and some survived.
@@generalv2170 darling, they went extinct some 5000 years ago ,you can't be evasive this long ,someone got to see you at some point, my family they prepare and eat marrow ,me never touched it , they enjoyed it ,however have a nice evening and a happy new year full of health and joy ❤️🤚
Guys / I’ve also got some skinning stones from Xolobeni in South Africa - Eastern Cape. Still 52 Tribes, but the stones are from the Sangoan Tribes or “Strandloopers - Beach Walkers” which derived from Khoi Khoi. Fossil Beds also exist. The erosion is starting to reveal these stones. Mining threatens the area. These mysteries are precious and worth research documenting. Let’s Go!!!
I love these clips. I don’t have time to watch every single podcast, so these clips are a great litmus test for me to see which ones are really worth my time. I have a three hour car ride tomorrow, best believe I’ll be having this on.
Love the man. Dude tells stories like my grandpa used to. I'm Asian. He has the cadence and nuances down like an oldie. They tell the best stories. You can't help but be STUCK
Why does this clip feel like Joe is telling this guy that what he found is just a frozen chunk of poopy, and the guy says that he found a space peanut? Dude! You were eating off it!
Imagine the museum that Joe could get together if every guest brought something to add to a collection, no matter big or small, just something random to contribute. It would be fascinating to see what each guest brought in.
im from the eastside of Akron OH and its so crazy to think there could be some bones or even a whole skeleton of some ancient animal in my backyard that is still undiscovered, could really be possible in all of our backyards honestly
this is by far one of the greatest archeological finds lately. It's impressive what weekend scientists are doing. It's not so impressive on the academic front.
@@Simon-talks I’m dumb (just FYI) but I really don’t get what’s so amazing about finding _200_ yr old bones, or them being sawed off, or that they “might be used to hold candles”
0:15: 🦴 A discovery of 190-year-old saw bones is discussed in the podcast, with a story of how they were found. 3:01: 🦴 Discussion about the utility of a bone found, possibly from a moose leg, dating back 200 years. 6:03: 🌍 The video discusses the lack of recorded history for people living in remote areas, like Siberia, and the potential impact on future understanding of their existence. 9:12: 🏛 The speaker is discussing the issue of museums withholding information and the need for transparency. 12:07: 🦴 Discussion about a fascinating archaeological find and the potential for scientific research.
Randall Carlson really ought to visit this guy. Thr collection of all those bones in one place, clearly speaks to a huge flood event with the skeletons being collected in a depression as the waters receed.
Very interesting collab for sure, n even if they don’t find anything they would have a great convo n maybe end up fkin after so someone’s gotta make these guys an OF, same with graham n Randall they already did one where they were fkin in a Viking ship n like lickin they bald spots 😂😂 weird pause jokes aside tho they’re smart af n it would be interesting to have all 3 of em on a podcast or interview 💯💯💯
I watched hundreds of JRE videos. I say for the first time that I am a fan of Joe Rogan. I really haven't say it for any other famous person. He couldn't find a way to success for years and then he did it. Stand up comedy, podcaster, knows martial arts,super fit, can have the optimum testosterone for life, has a humble family, does exactly what he loves and I'm jealous as an introvert and a lonely person that he has all these lengthy conversations with numerous numerous interesting guests for many years. I think he is well known not only in the US,but also in Europe. I might be miserable about my life at 37 years old but i give him his flowers to show the world that we should appreciate what's good and valuable in this damned day and age.
There are a bunch of sites like this up here. Just a matter of finding them. My buddy found some old bones recently and he shut up quick about it. When i buy some land first thing I'm doing is digging. Its amazing to me that no one has started to buy up adjacent parcels. This looks like a wash where old bones got deposited coming round a river bend. Same sort of geology where my buddy found the fossils.
The boneyard was clearly the living site of a dragon who ate all those animals and left the bones laying in a big collection far from where it had scooped the prey that became the bones
@@Hip-Gnosis1134 A flood had piled up those animals bloated bodies against a bank were they collected and settled in a mass grave. A perfectly natural and more sane explination then some dragon shit.
What a good guy we need more people like Rogan and this guest who want to instil knowledge in people and help children learn and become curious for knowledge and experience and amazing experience.
Another guy wanting to spread knowledge is BruceSeesAll channel. Moon research, my favorite is, a pop up launch bay door on the horizon line. One in a billion catch, but he's got tons more😉
This why I truly enjoy and really appreciate Joe's podcast, and all the amazing people that come here and share their knowledge and experiences. Never thought that Joe Rogan would have such a huge impact on the knowledge from our passed, present, and future. From all the fossils this man has found to Gram and Randells amazing theories on lost civilizations thousands of years ago, and one of my favorites David Crush and David Fraver information on Alien's and UFOs really just opened up so much to think about. So thank you Joe and all your guests and can't wait for more information that I'm sure is coming soon.
I like this guy cuz when Joe asks him what something is and he doesn't know- HE JUST SAYS "I don't know" INSTEAD OF MAKING UP SOME CRAZY STORY ABOUT WHAT IT COULD BE!
If there were pictures of all of it online then far less people would pay to go see it in person. Museums are businesses at the end of the day and they help fund lots of great things in the scientific community. So yes there is a reason and a very valid one at that.
Nah mfka that stuff is all dragon property not no museum n definitely not some random non reptilian person monkey thing like tf mane you know it’s not yours but you want to steal from em just cos they’re chill creatures, but best believe they will be mad once they’re done skating around the craters of the moon 😂😂💯💯💯
The only problem I have with the sawed bones find is that he either doesn’t know or doesn’t tell us what strata it comes from. It’s quite possible that it was in the upper layer, recently deposited, and slid down the cliff face while being blasted with the water cannon.
Good point. I watched the old interview yesterday and i think he found the scraper tool under tree roots in a differant area when the airforce dropped a bomb. He prob started digging there too.
@@Pure-Luck447 I’ve heard him say he doesn’t sell the bones, then turn around and say he sells the bones. He also clearly stated on his first jre episode that there were no lithics or archaeological evidence anywhere in proximity to the site. Now on the second one he brings in bones and mentions scrapers but doesn’t offer any context for where he found them. So that makes me a bit suspicious. I don’t have Spotify and haven’t watched the whole interaction. It is possible that he provides information that clarifies the disparity. He is also pretty certain that humans were domesticating mammoths like livestock. I can probably provide some more examples if I think on it a bit.
Joe needs to see the documentary about Russian forrest firefighters. Those guys parachute out of a plane to fight forrest fires in remote locations. They only bring very basic equipment and make everything else they need on site. Cups and dishes out of wood/bones/stone etc... Very ingenious, practical people. I can see their ancestors using moose bones as cups or candle holders.
I've just got into JRE on Spotify. Only problem I've had is he has 100's of podcasts, which are the top 10 or 20 for newcomers to start with? Seen Jimmy Carr, Graham Hancock, Elon Musk and Mike Baker so far. Gonna watch this guy next.
Jewel interview is one of my favorites, depending on how old you are it might hit different, but for whatever reason its one of my top favorites and I only know Jewel from her radio songs.
This guys wrong. Im from Southeast Alaska and my daughter is Tlingit.. They found human remains and tools dating back 10,000 years ago on POW..There’s been people in South east Alaska for thousands of years from Ketchikan all the way up to mainland so yes people lived in fairbanks 200 years ago that’s nothing.
Prestigious academics want the glory. Plain and simple. I've experienced it in Ohio. I Have offered free samples of Ancient fire pits from 4000 to 6500 yrs ago for study and they weren't interested. I was shocked. But par for the course. Doctors, lawyers, scientists all talk about helping humanity but seem to serve themselves✌️😎
When your whole life is all about finding food , creating a community and preparing for weather you have very little time for gender confusion , political fighting or talking about feelings. It just proves that because our life is so easy today in cities that we have to invent a cause to feel important.
If there was ways without money and gov but functional life without modern problems ? Are you mad how else those elite pricks will get new penta house.
I hope he gets more to the point on this podcast vs last time. Very interesting guy with an amazing story, if only he would fast forward a few details to get to the point.
I don't know why everyone likes this guy. He's boring, adversarial and has very little to go on. He lacks theories and ideas and I just can't be arsed with that.
@@riktheyellowmonkey I think it's cause we assume he is a highly intelligent specialist in his field, when it's more like he stumbled over his findings and has done no real research with experts
This story is truly remarkable! So many cool things waiting to be discovered at this site. It's vital that these incredible finds do not get lost or forgotten, they hold recorded history and untold stories.
It’s pretty clear to me why. Come on Joe there are some very arrogant academics who think they’re above everyone else and they don’t care what’s right. They only care about their own ego. I hope he gets his bones back and they can study what this place is and why are there so many bones there.
Been following John since before he came on the first time! So happy to see more of these discussions with Joe!! We are hungry for the truth!!! Also, Fuck interest groups, get money out of government
It's very cool that he named the finds after the daughters/family that did it. He could easily claim all finds, but sharing credit like that is a great trait.
Well said. That is very cool. 🤙🏽
Archaeologist Tom Demerey of the San Diego Natural History Museum has found very similar marrow-seeking sawed bone joints 130,000 years old. See for yourself: Look at the word "up" on the photo 17:08ish of: ruclips.net/video/NUmMaGX7GcU/видео.htmlm05s
I thought so too and he let them come poke around
Dude seems class, generally.
Calm , collected , and carrying around bones in a Crown Royale bag.
This man has class…
he also keeps his FARTS in a Folgers coffee can.
Hes not calm or collected at all. Hes angry and mentally unwell.
I’m so glad he had this dude back, he’s soooo interesting and he has a great perspective on life in general
Diabetes perspective
Yes !
@@hunterxanglerhilaaarious
In the vast majority of human beings who have ever entered this earth and left it, we as a collective conscious forget their existence. They as individuals, blood flesh and soul have gone extinct. Understanding that, I don’t think it’s a huge leap to wonder if that’s how civilizations and societies through time and space work as well…
@@BigShaneGillisIronically the way you said it makes me remember his existencie even more: John Reeves of Alaskan Boneyard.
May his existence get carbondated by celestial being🌿 for contents of Mammoth and Moose meat in him and his family. Damn he is interesting to me, seems very shrewd here, but I bet he is kind on the inside😇🦣🕊
Joe, I love these guests. I have completely changed my mindset because of your show and guests like this! Randall, Graham, and plenty others make a 99.9% argument that what we were “taught” was not accurate.
this guys a hero as far as i'm concerned what he's doing is absolutely amazing and i'm truly thankful for him and men & women like him what he's doing is important and the reason no one will reach out is because there afraid it will change things they claim to be right or true there worried about him and what he might end up finding
He's not just a hero. He's a Boner.
Legendary guest. Like those crazy interesting JREs we all know and love.
He aight. I wouldn’t say legendary…
yea
Dont click the link
I’m way better than Joe Rogan 😁🚬🚬💀☠️⚡️⚡️
Yes! More of this and less of the comedians and MMA stuff. Just my opinion, I like laughing too but I also like learning!
If the museum says they "lost them", they should be shut down for mishandling and their pieces distributed to responsible hands.
@@wellard2kill905 No joke lol
A ton of cases of "lost" things. Smithsonian is the same.
@@wellard2kill905 the cia even lost buildings in afganistan, they just grew legs and walked away i guess....
Just like NASA 😊 the footage for the moon landing was "lost and or destroyed" 🤔
@MattChewycat33
Yeah, they also sadly "lost the knowledge to go to the moon and it's a painful process to build it back up again" - that was the answer to why we haven't been to the moon again 😂
i watch the clip when I'm a lil down, sometimes, because it never fails to make me laugh or put things in perspective.
Honestly 200 years ago is not that long ago
I am confused too, talking like it's 2000 or 20000.
Seems to me like you're missing the point though. The industrial revolution began around 1760 & this site being in Alaska, was not highly populated. It's possible you're aware of something I'm not or I could be overthinking things, idk.
Bruv shut up aye
@@TheBigBadLenit’s actually bruh not bruv. Get it right
200 years is still along time ago. They didn't even have television yet.😂😂
His calm demeanor, tone of voice, perfect use of swear words and determination with which he speaks is a joy to observe.
i could listen to this all day this is AMAZIN SO CRUCIAL
💪🧠
His voice is identical to the late William Bill Cooper R.I.P. . Search him
Perfect use of swear words? Perfectly cliché anyway.
I know John. Him and his family are such good people. 🙏
He is back. One of the best guests of all time.
Didn’t ask. I’m way better than Joe Rogan ☠️🤣😂😁👌🚬
No way
😐@@TRUMAN_THE_TRUE_MAN
This guy rules.
@@TRUMAN_THE_TRUE_MANu are nothing
I'm so glad jo brought him back on. It was one of the many hidden gems of his podcasts.
He seemed disappointed that Rogan didn’t see “a candlestick holder” in that bone 😂 it does seem like a reach
Joe*
@@CantTellYou ikr . what utility LOL
Yeah he almost had a new item to sale. Damn it Joe!
The gwitchin Athabaskan people have lived in interior Alaska for hundreds of years and relied heavily on moose and caribou marrow for its high fat content. 200 yrs back(1820’s) they would have been in contact with Russian traders and/or coastal tribes who had made contact with Russians to get steel tools to make a clean cut in the bone like that one. It’s also possible that those cuts were made from stone tools. There’s many online videos showing almost that exact sized bone being cut and sanded with primitive stone tools.
Think they are talking about 200k years but forgot to mention the k 😂
They specifically said 200 multiple times
200 years is essentially 4.25 people ago. With the timeframe of civilizational and cultural perspectives in mind, such "mystery" could easily be elaborated upon with a majority opinion that would resolve such infantile ponderances. Occums razor glides through the dead weight of futile inquiry, rendering any and all unsubstantial vein naiveties void of merit requiring no further engagement.
@@PseudoPhlegm Seriously I don’t understand why finding 200 yr old bones is that crazy. Maybe that’s why he has to reach and say “probably a candle holder”, but even then I don’t understand what makes it a big deal.
I’m also a dumbass though
@@PseudoPhlegm By the way you write like “Eugene” from The Walking Dead, and I appreciate that.
Love this guest. He has a very calm tone of speaking. He should narrate a nature documentary.
he is a THIEF of Native Alaskan artifacts.
yea im sure the natives or running around looking for that bone man i bet there are struggling right now looking for there artifacts??? what the f . r you talking about @@markplott4820
@@markplott4820Grow up 🤦🏻♂️😂
@@jackd9374 - how bout you GROW a pair , FIRST .
@@markplott4820Biologically impossible dude, sorry. That also made no sense or relevance to the subject… 😂
I love this guy. Love what he is about, sincerity and confidence in his voice. He is the real deal and would love to spend a week up there.
When I was in elementary school our class went on an all-day fieldtrip to the desert in southern Utah with an archaeologist and a geologist to look at old native dig sites, look for geode's arrowheads fossils and ancient cave art or petroglyphs. Something about breaking a rock in half and finding beautiful crystals or fossils inside was just so interesting and fun. As a child it felt like finding treasure. I'll never forget that fieldtrip. I wonder if this guy could contact a historian in Russia to find out more about the area where the bones were found in Alaska?
When?
Good idea. There werent very many Russians there, but I bet they made some records.
@@nathankisner8332there was less than a thousend russians at sone point
It was just hunters they made no records
Alot points to all these bones coming from other areas, and was all washed there during the younger-dryus(sp?) event. Which makes total sense why 100s of thousands of bones in one pile. So if true , who's knows how far they traveled before being deposited. imo and 2cents...
@@jmparsons7331 I was referring to the pieces of bone that have been fashioned into tools and jewelry that he found but yeah, I agree that the bones could have been brought there that way.
I cannot get enough of this Boneyard stuff! Absolutely amazing!
No wonder he's so happy.
He really digs his job.
HA.
That was deep 😁
Jopo dad jokes
I see what you did there...
Hole some joke W
I'm am living in Alaska and here on the Kenai Peninsula we beach comb daily and the amount of unknown artifacts that are found is amazing the rocks he mentions "skinning rocks" are found on our beaches everywhere , along with what they call spirit rocks just a treasure trove of history, that tells a different story then what we are told,Alaska holds many secrets most will never be heard because knowledge is the real weapon to win the war and why its controlled and hidden.
He's running a tourist business also basically. So he has to sell everything as this grand mystery to get people to pay their money
@@hijinks21 Oh boy! You mean to say there is NO mystery at all?? Cause there IS.. At least that's something TO sell people... However you don't bat an eyelash for the Multi-Billion Dollar Corp. that wants to sell you a new iphone every 6 months for $800... Take your BS hate somewhere, where it matters, cause here, it does not.
@@hijinks21people like you will always believe the narrative the big 'news' networks tell you, how sad
@@hijinks21 makes sense😏
I love this one. Joe is so easy to talk to. So down to earth
How he keeps being argumentative during this clip
@@aceboogie50asking questions isn’t “being argumentative”
@@aceboogie50 Argumentative? no joke you kids heads are all broke. You dont know the basic art of communication. Your generations heads have been ruined by social media, its bizzare how far the human race has fell.
Haha
is he really though ive seen him be a complete asshole to some ppl om the show for whatever reason
The reason this is not being discussed is because history is not what people think it is. It is created and controlled, and if the majority of the people actually knew who and what is doing this, it would be game over. Control of vibration, frequency, and sound..keys to the universe. Enjoy the rest of your day, and have a great Happy New Year !!
Give us a RUclips video/rabbit hole to go down!
@@bovice790why files..if you haven’t checked it out is really solid channel
Bollocks. Absolute bollocks.
Cool nerd
Everyone else is wrong....except you.
This man should be on the pod every six months, he is just so interesting. Wanted to suggest to Mr. John, maybe try and contact some historians in Russia to learn about what historical knowledge they have about your land.🤷♂️ Shockingly id bet they would be more helpful than the idiots in charge of our universities.
@fabioenchilada581, I absolutely agree. An appearance very six months sounds good. He'd have new stories and updates on his findings constantly. I love it.
If you actually listened to the podcast, you'd know he's going to be the last podcast every year on jre.
@@AerynSB relax buddy it’s only been out for a day smfh and when I wrote that it had only been out for a couple hours🤦♂️
This was one of the most interesting conversations of the last year. I'm glad Joe has decided to have Reeves on the show every year.
That could be (used to hold a "candle"). One thing we've forgotten is that before electricity, and even before candles or if you ran out of candles in your little hut, what was used were slivers of "lighter wood". Lighter Wood is pieces of Pine saturated with crystalized Pine Sap. Basically kerosene, and it smells like it.
When a pine tree dies the sap falls downward in the tree and collects in the joints where branches intersect and down lower in the trunk and into the roots. You can have a rotted, fallen Pine, but as soon as you chop into lower areas and into the roots, or maybe at the "knuckles" where branches join the trunk you hit clear white pine glistening with solidified sap that stinks of kerosene.
Every household that could get any, and accounts suggest most did because people actually worked in those days, every day, foraging, would have a stockpile of lighter wood they'd cut into slender pieces (don't know exact dimensions of course, so imagine a thick chop-stick I guess). You touch the end of that to a flame, and it instantly lights up like a candle. I've done this, so I have a new appreciation for how savage a forest fire can be if there are Pines in there.
Relative to the idea in this video: Our ancestors had special little Lighter Wood Holders, typically made out of metal as I recall, Earlier than metalworking I'm assuming clay, stone, or bone would work. You'd lay the strip of lighter wood in that.
This was so important that someone(s) in the family were given the duty to continually swap out new slivers of lighter wood when the old one was almost burned out. Lighter Wood "candles" burned faster than wick and wax candles, so this was an oft repeated duty every night before people went to sleep. In those days cabins were dark/dim even in daytime because they had no, or few windows, and any they did have were small.
So, maybe that thing was used to hold the earliest form of candles we had, "Lighter Wood" pieces.
Whether or not you believe in intelligent design, I highly recommend that everyone watch the "Expelled" documentary by Ben Stein. It explains why discoveries in science & archeology get buried. Public institutions are no longer light bearers of truth.
we had Batteries 300 years ago in Bagdad.
@@markplott4820 That produced 1.1 volt with no record of what they were used for, which tells us they had nothing to do with lighting. Historical guesswork suggests they were used for electroplating, like gold onto silver.
@@MRTOMBO - or Shortwave Radio
Also called lighter knot or lighted
Def my favorite JRE guest. The whole story is so interesting
having one of the preeminent experts in the field so confidently say "i dont know" is refreshing
He's not an expert, he's a gold miner that came across a bunch of fossils and bones.
@@Ole_CornPophe’s definitely more of an expert than the “experts” who have an agenda. Stfu
@@Ole_CornPop exactly
These guys know nothing
Yeah this guest knows nothing
Oh boy have I been looking forward to this chap coming back on after his last epic appearance!
Sarcasm?
Right. I was waiting to hear how it tasted.😂
@@mikespearwood3914 No.
YES ! another great guest
Gonna have to delete some old episodes I got like 5 from the past week now downloaded ready to listen to haha
But guests like this are almost always a home run
I love listening to your talk shows Mr. Joe. I listen to them so that I can learn something new. Thanks for always keeping me entertained. From Matthew
Didn’t realize how cool “200 years ago” was..I’m use to hearing about thousands of years ago kind of stuff…and as you keep listening you begin to think there must be more to this! I appreciate that immensely. Thanks Rogan for having this gentleman on the podcast!
Interesting talk about AMS49K I suggest anyone to listen to the guy talking about it in the video. Personally I didnt think they would really do that but seems like the launch just happened and there are enough slots available, could be worth huh
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flag this botz comment as trash anyone talking about AMS49k is bot fishing tactic. block and ban.
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Man I can't wait to listen to this episode. I have nothing else to listen to, and this hits just in time!
He's in my top 5 favorite guest on the show. Hands down! When I see him, Graham Hancock, Bob Lazar, Jeremy Corbell, Tim Dillion etc. I click instantly. I would like to see Travis Taylor (Skinwalker Ranch) next on the show. 🤷♂️
Tim Dillon? One of these names is not like the others.
Why?!?!?! The dude is not particularly bright and honestly a bit dull.
@@chris4814b well all I mean is that the guy in this video and then all the other names on his list other than tim Dillion of course are all intellectuals and researchers, Tim Dillon is a comedian.
come on man that whole skim walker shit is stupid.. no video footage or actual clear photos..
Would love to see Travis and Brandon on Rogies.
John Reeves is awesome. One of my favorite guests!
Always a great listen when Mr. Reeves pays a visit; thanks for your time J & J!
I am mesmerized by this man’s voice. He’s so interesting glad you had them back Joe. I looked up the w boneyard videos after he was on the first time, I’m fascinated with it.
He does have a very calming tone
wat
200 years ago is basically MODERN history
I'm trying to figure out what's so amazing about bones from 200 years ago
@@davidmatlock5075yeah I live near buildings older than this. Where’s the mystery in a 200 year old moose bone?
Brah probably some hunter from 200 years ago who went camping
It could have very well came from the top of the permafrost cliff
We have a president older than this.
Always enjoy hearing about all of the towns/cities/buildings that were founded (found).
Thats what also thought......found>ed past time...wtf
Post mud flood pre orphan trains mystery time period
Found or founded? Or foundeded?
Just finished watching this episode and it was so interesting! Looking forward to seeing where this goes next year!
I have Russian/Ukrainian parents and eating bone marrow is definitely a thing, it's usually done when you boil the bones with the meat in a soup.
It is usually done with bigger animals like cows but I imagine you can definitely do it with a mammoth.
Bone marrow is delicious and has an interesting texture to it.
I would consider it somewhat of a delicacy.
This is from a Moose ,not Mammoth ,he said .
And 200 years before there were no mammoth present
@@diogenes. my bad but even from a moose I imagine it would be pretty good too. But mammoths wouldn't surprise me either because I've seen different stuff floating around from World War 1 where people saw mammoths in a vast unpopulated Forest like Siberia and other places.
Maybe not all of them went extinct at once and some survived.
@@generalv2170 darling, they went extinct some 5000 years ago ,you can't be evasive this long ,someone got to see you at some point, my family they prepare and eat marrow ,me never touched it , they enjoyed it ,however have a nice evening and a happy new year full of health and joy ❤️🤚
I think you got the mammoth thing wrong or you're not that proficient in English, you say big animals like cow , do you know how big a mammoth is 👀
Great guest. I’m listening to Wendell Summers talk about his trip with Admiral Byrd over Antarctica right now. Wonder what’s over there really…
Didn’t ask. I’m far better than Joe Rogan 💀😆🔥☠️
There is an entire fleet dedicated to making sure no one gets there these days. Must be something big.
I forgot the name of that fleet, what is it again?
Other “plane-nets” ?
Atlantis wasn't buried under water, it was buried under FROZEN water
Guys / I’ve also got some skinning stones from Xolobeni in South Africa - Eastern Cape. Still 52 Tribes, but the stones are from the Sangoan Tribes or “Strandloopers - Beach Walkers” which derived from Khoi Khoi. Fossil Beds also exist. The erosion is starting to reveal these stones. Mining threatens the area.
These mysteries are precious and worth research documenting. Let’s Go!!!
Imagine being able to take your kids to dig up ancient bones.
Top tier.
While at the same time, some times in winter your eyelashes can freeze together. I spose that's the trade-off 😅
I love these clips. I don’t have time to watch every single podcast, so these clips are a great litmus test for me to see which ones are really worth my time. I have a three hour car ride tomorrow, best believe I’ll be having this on.
Love the man. Dude tells stories like my grandpa used to. I'm Asian. He has the cadence and nuances down like an oldie. They tell the best stories. You can't help but be STUCK
It's weird that other archeologists and geologists have a bone to pick with John.
Is it?
Ba dum tusssssk
I don't know the particulars but ripping ancient bones out of the dirt without proper recording would personally be high on my list of grievances
@@KingoftheLizardzbut, his methods arent their complaints though are they?
Pretty good pun here
Yes!! Been hoping to see this guy again!
I’m way better than Joe Rogan 💀☠️
That man lives on top of one of the most interesting spots in the entire world. Pure awesome. 💚♾️
There's a lot of them up here. He just found one. Alaska is HUGE.
I saw he was the guest and made sure I had time for the entire podcast. Love this guys story and what he does!
Probably my favorite guest
I love this guy! a man that sees value in history over gold. Awesome!
Why does this clip feel like Joe is telling this guy that what he found is just a frozen chunk of poopy, and the guy says that he found a space peanut? Dude! You were eating off it!
That is exactly what it's like. Joe is trying so hard to get some *interesting* conversation going. I watched the clip and it was boring as hell.
Love this dude. Absolute legend.
Imagine the museum that Joe could get together if every guest brought something to add to a collection, no matter big or small, just something random to contribute.
It would be fascinating to see what each guest brought in.
Yet another informative and interesting podcast, keep um coming Joe😊
YES! Thanks for this one JOE!
im from the eastside of Akron OH and its so crazy to think there could be some bones or even a whole skeleton of some ancient animal in my backyard that is still undiscovered, could really be possible in all of our backyards honestly
If u want bones I bet deep in the valley or over by Mary Campbell cave would turn up results
Thats it. Im excavating my front yard. Always had a feeling there was an ancient ostrich in there
I’ve found fossils in my backyard in Columbus
Did you check the soil for radon? I was surprised how radioactive the soil in Ohio is. In Dayton area and around
@@universe25.x I havnt but considering wright patts proximity I’d venture to say that’s why
this is by far one of the greatest archeological finds lately. It's impressive what weekend scientists are doing. It's not so impressive on the academic front.
yeah, nobody cut bones open earlier than 1989....🙄
@@Simon-talks I’m dumb (just FYI) but I really don’t get what’s so amazing about finding _200_ yr old bones, or them being sawed off, or that they “might be used to hold candles”
@@CantTellYou lol exactly
@CantTellYou I don't think you really listened much like the op or the other person (1989...really...)
Yeah, really. This guest and his info was really not profound in any way.
0:15: 🦴 A discovery of 190-year-old saw bones is discussed in the podcast, with a story of how they were found.
3:01: 🦴 Discussion about the utility of a bone found, possibly from a moose leg, dating back 200 years.
6:03: 🌍 The video discusses the lack of recorded history for people living in remote areas, like Siberia, and the potential impact on future understanding of their existence.
9:12: 🏛 The speaker is discussing the issue of museums withholding information and the need for transparency.
12:07: 🦴 Discussion about a fascinating archaeological find and the potential for scientific research.
Randall Carlson really ought to visit this guy. Thr collection of all those bones in one place, clearly speaks to a huge flood event with the skeletons being collected in a depression as the waters receed.
Very interesting collab for sure, n even if they don’t find anything they would have a great convo n maybe end up fkin after so someone’s gotta make these guys an OF, same with graham n Randall they already did one where they were fkin in a Viking ship n like lickin they bald spots 😂😂 weird pause jokes aside tho they’re smart af n it would be interesting to have all 3 of em on a podcast or interview 💯💯💯
@@ouroboroscartel8079what fuckin gay shit did I just read?
Yes Randall can show him how the aliens put the bones on the ley lines and levitated the dirt over them
Joe got excited when John mentioned Elk 🤣
Man this was a great podcast. Awesome guest and so much information 🤘😎🤘
I watched hundreds of JRE videos. I say for the first time that I am a fan of Joe Rogan. I really haven't say it for any other famous person. He couldn't find a way to success for years and then he did it. Stand up comedy, podcaster, knows martial arts,super fit, can have the optimum testosterone for life, has a humble family, does exactly what he loves and I'm jealous as an introvert and a lonely person that he has all these lengthy conversations with numerous numerous interesting guests for many years. I think he is well known not only in the US,but also in Europe. I might be miserable about my life at 37 years old but i give him his flowers to show the world that we should appreciate what's good and valuable in this damned day and age.
Joe Rogan is a millionaire that has lost touch with the regular folk, go and buy a friggin ranch and drive you Tesla truck into a tree.
There are a bunch of sites like this up here. Just a matter of finding them. My buddy found some old bones recently and he shut up quick about it. When i buy some land first thing I'm doing is digging. Its amazing to me that no one has started to buy up adjacent parcels. This looks like a wash where old bones got deposited coming round a river bend. Same sort of geology where my buddy found the fossils.
"History is a set of lies agreed upon". - Napoleon Bonaparte
Looking forward to a follow up episode with the boneyard
Who cares + my content is wya better than Joe Rogan 👌🚬😁😂🤣
@@TRUMAN_THE_TRUE_MAN lol, lmao even
The boneyard was clearly the living site of a dragon who ate all those animals and left the bones laying in a big collection far from where it had scooped the prey that became the bones
I agree.
Really the only thing that makes sense
C'mon now... don't be silly!
There's only one creature that could've done this....
*The Abominable Snowman.* ruclips.net/video/1nyR5Vu54w4/видео.html
@@Hip-Gnosis1134 A flood had piled up those animals bloated bodies against a bank were they collected and settled in a mass grave. A perfectly natural and more sane explination then some dragon shit.
Maybe that's where the stories of dragons come from. Asteroid impacts
What a good guy we need more people like Rogan and this guest who want to instil knowledge in people and help children learn and become curious for knowledge and experience and amazing experience.
Another guy wanting to spread knowledge is BruceSeesAll channel. Moon research, my favorite is, a pop up launch bay door on the horizon line. One in a billion catch, but he's got tons more😉
WOW! Old little custom Fondue pots for those special moments. Fine dine, fine wine! Who TF has any idea? I love these Boneyard episodes. Thanks again.
This why I truly enjoy and really appreciate Joe's podcast, and all the amazing people that come here and share their knowledge and experiences. Never thought that Joe Rogan would have such a huge impact on the knowledge from our passed, present, and future. From all the fossils this man has found to Gram and Randells amazing theories on lost civilizations thousands of years ago, and one of my favorites David Crush and David Fraver information on Alien's and UFOs really just opened up so much to think about. So thank you Joe and all your guests and can't wait for more information that I'm sure is coming soon.
Joe, I love when you have John Reeves on my favorite guest
Love this show
John Reeves Is a Hero.
Love this guy. He's chill & smart.
I like this guy cuz when Joe asks him what something is and he doesn't know- HE JUST SAYS "I don't know" INSTEAD OF MAKING UP SOME CRAZY STORY ABOUT WHAT IT COULD BE!
There is no reason that these museums don’t have their entire catalogs online for everyone to see and study. It belongs to all of us.
no
If there were pictures of all of it online then far less people would pay to go see it in person. Museums are businesses at the end of the day and they help fund lots of great things in the scientific community. So yes there is a reason and a very valid one at that.
That's why I will never turn any artifacts over to the Smithsonian, they will take it and not even give credit to the person who found it.
Nah mfka that stuff is all dragon property not no museum n definitely not some random non reptilian person monkey thing like tf mane you know it’s not yours but you want to steal from em just cos they’re chill creatures, but best believe they will be mad once they’re done skating around the craters of the moon 😂😂💯💯💯
@@johnd3233not so much in Britain. Most of the museums here are publicly funded and free to enter
The only problem I have with the sawed bones find is that he either doesn’t know or doesn’t tell us what strata it comes from. It’s quite possible that it was in the upper layer, recently deposited, and slid down the cliff face while being blasted with the water cannon.
Good point. I watched the old interview yesterday and i think he found the scraper tool under tree roots in a differant area when the airforce dropped a bomb. He prob started digging there too.
@@nathankisner8332 Yeah scrapers don’t impress me. I’ve found them before and a good flintknapper can probably bust you one out in five minutes or so.
This guy is known for lying and bullshitting just to be famous. So it would not surprise me him lying stuff
What bullshit ?
@@Pure-Luck447 I’ve heard him say he doesn’t sell the bones, then turn around and say he sells the bones. He also clearly stated on his first jre episode that there were no lithics or archaeological evidence anywhere in proximity to the site. Now on the second one he brings in bones and mentions scrapers but doesn’t offer any context for where he found them. So that makes me a bit suspicious.
I don’t have Spotify and haven’t watched the whole interaction. It is possible that he provides information that clarifies the disparity.
He is also pretty certain that humans were domesticating mammoths like livestock.
I can probably provide some more examples if I think on it a bit.
If I ever get to travel to Alaska I would love to go to this guys place, it sounds amazing!
This and Garret Reisman remain my favorite segments
Joe needs to see the documentary about Russian forrest firefighters. Those guys parachute out of a plane to fight forrest fires in remote locations. They only bring very basic equipment and make everything else they need on site. Cups and dishes out of wood/bones/stone etc... Very ingenious, practical people. I can see their ancestors using moose bones as cups or candle holders.
200 years doesn’t seem all that old that’s 1800. I’m sure they had saw’s back then I think he got a little excited over this one
I don’t get it.
I've just got into JRE on Spotify. Only problem I've had is he has 100's of podcasts, which are the top 10 or 20 for newcomers to start with? Seen Jimmy Carr, Graham Hancock, Elon Musk and Mike Baker so far. Gonna watch this guy next.
What topics interest you?
Just start with whatever interests you, there is far too many to try to watch them all or stay up to date.
Jewel interview is one of my favorites, depending on how old you are it might hit different, but for whatever reason its one of my top favorites and I only know Jewel from her radio songs.
@@ChrisTheLazyMystic conspiracy, comedy, influential person's and ideas, gaming, cinema, points of view from both sides of a coin etc.
@@Smokkedandslammed in my 40's and always start things way after they have started.
Probably my favorite guest.
“Important and worthwhile.” I agree please keep up the good fight! I love this stuff, even now it fills me with a sense of wonder and adventure.
This guy seems like he doesn’t let the truth get in the way of a good story
This guys great.
This guys wrong. Im from Southeast Alaska and my daughter is Tlingit.. They found human remains and tools dating back 10,000 years ago on POW..There’s been people in South east Alaska for thousands of years from Ketchikan all the way up to mainland so yes people lived in fairbanks 200 years ago that’s nothing.
This guy is the most interesting person in the world - according to him.
I'm so glad they post clips on RUclips still. Definitely fun to show up in the comments and see who's listening. Cheers y'all
I noticed the other day that spotify now has a comment section but could not get it to load.
Prestigious academics want the glory. Plain and simple. I've experienced it in Ohio. I Have offered free samples of Ancient fire pits from 4000 to 6500 yrs ago for study and they weren't interested. I was shocked. But par for the course. Doctors, lawyers, scientists all talk about helping humanity but seem to serve themselves✌️😎
When your whole life is all about finding food , creating a community and preparing for weather you have very little time for gender confusion , political fighting or talking about feelings.
It just proves that because our life is so easy today in cities that we have to invent a cause to feel important.
hence, "wokeness"
If there was ways without money and gov but functional life without modern problems ? Are you mad how else those elite pricks will get new penta house.
The romans already said that
When they had it too good they became degenerate and the empire fell
I hope he gets more to the point on this podcast vs last time. Very interesting guy with an amazing story, if only he would fast forward a few details to get to the point.
this guy really seems to be reaching pretty hard sometimes with his ideas why a bone is cut.
@@Jojo-o6o6w exactly!
I don't know why everyone likes this guy.
He's boring, adversarial and has very little to go on. He lacks theories and ideas and I just can't be arsed with that.
@@riktheyellowmonkey I think it's cause we assume he is a highly intelligent specialist in his field, when it's more like he stumbled over his findings and has done no real research with experts
Dang it! Another sleepless night! Headed to Spotify to watch another episode!
This story is truly remarkable! So many cool things waiting to be discovered at this site. It's vital that these incredible finds do not get lost or forgotten, they hold recorded history and untold stories.
If there was a huge flood, perhaps all these fossils were washed there and didn't actually occupy that part of the country
Don't bring fairy tales into reality.
@@Ole_CornPop Flooding is a fairy tale? Noah get the boat!
@@Ole_CornPopfloods happened all the time back then
And they still fucking do
Joe is awesome 👌 🇯🇲
Didn’t ask. My content is better than Joe Rogan 🤣⚡️😁😂
@@TRUMAN_THE_TRUE_MAN sure it is kid. Keep breathing through your mouth and smoking that copium. 🤣
@@TRUMAN_THE_TRUE_MAN I bet Joe Rogan is so jealous of your 180 subscriber's. 🤣👌
It’s pretty clear to me why. Come on Joe there are some very arrogant academics who think they’re above everyone else and they don’t care what’s right. They only care about their own ego. I hope he gets his bones back and they can study what this place is and why are there so many bones there.
It's about controlling the flow of information. They look dumb when others find answers to their questions and rewrite history.
If he hasn’t got *his* bones back then how can he walk and why isn’t he just a big puddle of flesh & organs
I think it’s an ancient canyon bottom filled it with bones and mud from a flood.
@@CantTellYou ok weirdo
This guy is an absolute legend
The look in his eyes when talking about getting the bones back... and that is a giant of a man.... he ain't playing!
Been following John since before he came on the first time! So happy to see more of these discussions with Joe!!
We are hungry for the truth!!!
Also,
Fuck interest groups, get money out of government
Interest groups are there to look out for certain interests to make sure it’s not overlooked. how does govt function without Any $?