NATURAL or MANMADE? Impossible Ancient Ruins Uncovered in North America? Sage Wall Montana Megaliths

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2023
  • Look and think for yourself...Is this bizarre wall found in the middle of nowhere in Montana natural, OR, lost ancient ruins (that are not supposed to exist)? The Sage Wall (also referred to as 'Montana Megaliths') is raising serious questions about what may be possible for lost ancient civilizations of North America.
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Комментарии • 4,6 тыс.

  • @BrightInsight
    @BrightInsight  Год назад +13

    *Follow and Support me!*
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    • @ronnymunther9748
      @ronnymunther9748 Год назад +1

      Seriously???? Does anyone think this could happen naturally? They are stacked on each other in a straight line!

    • @thinkforyourself2662
      @thinkforyourself2662 11 месяцев назад

      Need lydar to show what else is there

    • @EadTaes
      @EadTaes 11 месяцев назад

      Indeed at first look it looks manmade compared to the other stuff that is natural. But when you look at the cuts of the blocks on which one block rests atop an other and that those cut are not horizontal but oblique and curving it does look more like natural breaks in the rock rather than man made. But then you get some of the weird gashes and round circles. Circles look like something that could be formed if the rock was in flowing water but the gashes are hard to explain for me. The nubs are even more suspicious. So a combination of natural and man made looks somewhat plausible even as I find it farfetched, to me it kind of looks like a Natural formation was dismantled from a location and reassembled at this location, and that idea sound completely crazy too me! Lydar is absolutely required to find more answers

    • @johnmallette3143
      @johnmallette3143 11 месяцев назад +1

      sound is the key.,.,.does anyone ever play music or chant at these sites.,
      ??

    • @elchicharron9503
      @elchicharron9503 11 месяцев назад

      Please check the pronunciation of polygonal. Driving me mad over here!

  • @jacobmartin9446
    @jacobmartin9446 Год назад +312

    The reason as a former building inspector I always believed a lot of these stone structures are old footings for bigger structures. The reason we used stone for foundations because they last longer than wood(organic) or metal. And thats why we still uncover these foundations/footings/walls.

    • @chieferoni
      @chieferoni Год назад +42

      Completely agree. I think the nubs were used as braces for holders for wood. Imagine building a wood framed roof or pergola connected to the rock by sliding notched wood into rock. The wood will obviously rot away but the rock will remain

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Год назад

      That really feels like a big part of it. These people wanted their monuments to last. Maybe they were afraid of the encroaching ice of an Ice Age? Or they already knew giant works of megalithic stone were all that could survive? Or the general floods, earthquakes and chaos of the Younger Dryas.

    • @mikemcginnis1288
      @mikemcginnis1288 Год назад +23

      Even as we use cement as our main foundations , it does have a decay rate and will crumble and turn to dust over as little as a hundred years. Stone is the way to go , and they knew it.

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад +10

      Yep, I was just saying that the reason the nubs are still there is because they didn't seem to care about the fine details because they might have been under dirt foundations... I believe they are poured geopolymers as Professor Davidovits claims. The nubs are just there because they removed the concrete hose from the form and didn't care to make it perfect because it wasn't visible.

    • @thoomm
      @thoomm Год назад +7

      ❤this is for me an absolutely mindblowing idea, ive been aware of polygonal megalitich masonry for years now but this never crossed my mind, thank you for sharing this insight!!

  • @animoetprudentia2865
    @animoetprudentia2865 Год назад +160

    2 points I'd like to make.
    1 - the sage wall looks very similar to the megaliths in the Ural mountains, albeit on a smaller scale.
    2 - I noticed in Mike's videos that the trees in close proximity to the sage all seem to be young, small in diameter, and some even malnourished. This leads one to think the soil next to the wall is quite shallow, not allowing for a root ball to support large older trees.
    Ground penetrating radar or lidar would verify this, and perhaps reveal the greater extent of the structure beit natural or not.

    • @bri0013
      @bri0013 Год назад +14

      I have a theory may corroborate yours. Being as how I research biology and archeological matters.
      As you mentioned about the condition of the trees in proximity to the wall looking smaller and unhealthy. Well, moving all of the stones around...dragging, hoisting, and dropping. Many feet trampling the ground. That's a lot of compaction on presumably a very shallow layer of soil. Nothing will grow well around it.

    • @animoetprudentia2865
      @animoetprudentia2865 Год назад +11

      @@bri0013 agreed, activity around construction would have a compacting effect, and leftover debris from any stone masonry work; chips, chunks etc in the soil could be a limiting factor. It would depend somewhat on the age of the construction.
      Another possibility is a paved road like surface, buried by 10,000 years of layering. Like all those Mayan cities they found using lidar a few years ago. Hiding in plain sight under the jungle.

    • @nigelcrisp68
      @nigelcrisp68 Год назад +8

      My thoughts are that this place is crying out for some dating evidence, and I wondered about Thermoluminescence dating measures that some archeologists now use, say under some of the bigger flat rocks that aren't part of the wall itself but adjacent to it; That would be a good start surely. Has any academic research been done already & if not why not make contact with some of the bigger Universities with archeological departments, and flag your interest ?

    • @bri0013
      @bri0013 Год назад +2

      @Animo et Prudentia exactly. Can't remember the name but one of the tribes that settled upper and middle Mexico actually migrated through this very area in the video centuries before

    • @Ian-yf7uf
      @Ian-yf7uf Год назад +2

      I thought the same thing. Those structures in the Urals are wild too.

  • @tomcuddy
    @tomcuddy Год назад +112

    Hi Jimmy, theres another structure here in nz called the kaimanawa wall, i hope you can cover it sometime. the structure is made from ryalite which is a rock not local to the area and the stones were somehow transported some 16kms over hills and rugged terrain to perfectly align themselves into place.

    • @bm4751
      @bm4751 Год назад +3

      My thought exactly, though this appears larger and more exposed faces.

    • @olivermalcolm7076
      @olivermalcolm7076 11 месяцев назад +7

      I’m a kiwi and am incredibly interested in megalithic structures. I have never heard of this wall until now. Has there ever been a proper excavation of the site? The photos I find are all covered by dirt and a big ass tree. I’m going to visit this when I’m next in Taupo, thanks for introducing me to it!

    • @bm4751
      @bm4751 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@olivermalcolm7076 the renowned but now shunned NZ archeologist Barry Brailsford tried to bring forward this info and get an excavation underway, but was blocked as it didn't follow the narrative. Back then, people just accepted it, now though his view would be treated with respect that it deserves. Skepticism of the official narrative is at least healthy.

    • @olivermalcolm7076
      @olivermalcolm7076 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@bm4751 oh wow! When was this? I try to keep up with current events and history but I’m only 21 so I’ve got a lot to learn. Through researching this last night I also learned about the stone city in the waipoua forest. In my perspective, if you bar and information from public knowledge there’s obviously something to hide

    • @olivermalcolm7076
      @olivermalcolm7076 11 месяцев назад

      @@bm4751 holy shit! He thinks it’s a step pyramid! In my very own country! That is absolutely mind blowing. I’ll definitely visit it myself, pyramid or not. And no wonder I hadn’t heard of this, it’s before my time. Imagine if we found ANOTHER stepped pyramid in NZ of all places. Surely that would be enough for some serious investigation into a global civilisation? At least it would challenge the official narrative? One thing that’s purely my own speculation is that we were somehow connected to South American culture, we even eat yams over here which the apparently the Maori brought over with them, but yams are native to Peru and the Andes. I also like to look at the geographical similarities in our landscapes. If this Kaimanawa wall is legit then it would be of striking similarity to the megalithic blocks in Cusco (a bucket list location of mine to visit) I find it interesting that the way the DOC discredited Barry’s opinion was by saying that the blocks aren’t truly symmetrical, but why would that matter? There are dozens if not hundreds of global examples of unsymmetrical block structures. This is so fascinating. Thank you

  • @oldtownscouts3712
    @oldtownscouts3712 Год назад +18

    I wasn't that blown away by this till I saw the nubs. The nubs are one of the most mysterious motifs of ancient architecture that pop up all over the world, got goosebumps seeing them within these megaliths

  • @robertmoon9905
    @robertmoon9905 Год назад +168

    I watched an ancient wall like this be buried under hundreds of feet of water as a local power company built a lake from a ravine back in the 80s. I've walked along several others scattered in the Blue Ridge Mountains over the years and have always been told they were built by the local Indian tribes. I started talking to some of the Indian guides (Cherokee) whose families had lived there for many generations and learned that those walls had been there when they moved into the area. They have a very different history to tell about those monoliths. I have heard stories of many more of these but the terrain is so difficult up there that virtually no one ever even tries to look around. I have always wanted to fly over, to climb in those mountains and to learn if we have some unexcavated ruins like the Incans or Egyptians. I'm convinced they exist if only from the strange things I saw when I was a kid. Then some video like the "America Unearthed" one about Rockwall TX comes up and all my illusions about history are questioned. I still wonder if that is manmade and they had to hide the truth or if the episode was the truth and somehow that wall was a geologic anomaly. I hate getting old. So many truths I will never know.

    • @Googlencraptubesuckabandonship
      @Googlencraptubesuckabandonship Год назад +5

      Book of Mormon, as well as The Book of Moses, explain where these older than native American structures came from.

    • @AliceBowie
      @AliceBowie Год назад +27

      When developers stumble upon a historical site, they often rush to cover it up. If it becomes an archeological dig site, it can halt construction for decades. It's pretty horrible to hear about something historical being lost forever because it's at the bottom of a man made lake.

    • @strangetheology
      @strangetheology Год назад +14

      I have heard of several ancient sites that were destroyed in developments like the one you describe. There is one in TN that is now under a reservoir. Serpent Mound one I'd like to go see as well.

    • @robertmoon9905
      @robertmoon9905 Год назад +20

      @@strangetheology A friend of mine (Cherokee) has tried to collect and catalogue many ancient Cherokee sites and mounds since the 70s. I remember him standing waist deep as the water rose above a burial mound in NC when a reservoir was being filled. He saved thousands of pieces. These weren't any monolithic or ancient sites like Bright Insight is following but they are definitely a horrible destruction of history. It broke my heart and I was maybe 8 years old at the time.

    • @robertmoon9905
      @robertmoon9905 Год назад +11

      @@AliceBowie I know and I have been on both sides of it. Pressure to finish a project is insane, especially when it has something to do with power or water supply for thousands or even millions of people. I honestly feel like the advanced civilizations that Bright Insight is trying to uncover the truth of had learned to live in a much less destructive and harmonious way with nature. I feel like they had mastery of energy via the use of frequency and harmonics that we have tried to run over, roughshod as we are without ever even trying to understand. I fear it will be that disregard that may end humanity one day...lif maybe not for the first time it seems

  • @TheChuckFina
    @TheChuckFina Год назад +346

    I always wondered why the North America continent had no large, developed cities when the settlers first arrived, yet every other continent on earth had them. Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock's theories on the Younger-Dryas impact makes sense. They would have been the worst impacted, and thus, the longest to recover.

    • @AllFlimmits
      @AllFlimmits Год назад +18

      Not to discount hancock, but part of the reason there wasn't anything advanced in north America at the time of European exploration is the lack of practically tamable animals. It's the same with sub saharan Africa. Europe and Asia had cows and horses. Great for dairy, meat and transportation.

    • @__rm307
      @__rm307 Год назад +51

      @@AllFlimmits how did MesoAmericans / Central Americans build pyramids then? What would be their tamable animal before colonization? (Genuinely asking - would be curious to know!)

    • @shawnsk7447
      @shawnsk7447 Год назад +34

      Because North America was largely covered in ice until the transition from the Pleistocene to the Holocene. It’s not more complicated than that I think. As we find structures and civilizations in turkey dating to this timeframe, it seems more and more probable that our proposed timeline for civilizations like the Inca and the Egyptians is wildly off.

    • @bendy6626
      @bendy6626 Год назад +17

      ​@@__rm307 Llama, alpaca, and of course slaves.

    • @virgiliustancu9293
      @virgiliustancu9293 Год назад +35

      @@__rm307 North America was hit hard because it was near the glaciers that melted. This means that water waves hundreds of meters high swept away everything in their path.
      After that, 1000 years of bad climate, finished the business.
      That was not the case of Central America.

  • @valahnuk3593
    @valahnuk3593 Год назад +3

    Nice to have you back Jimmy, great video as always!

  • @usewhatyouhave6975
    @usewhatyouhave6975 Год назад

    Great to see a new video from you Jimmy!
    Thanks

  • @MrGrooveDoc
    @MrGrooveDoc Год назад +1299

    Dismantling mainstream history one video at a time. Thanks Jimmy!

    • @CatDaddy0327
      @CatDaddy0327 Год назад +20

      hes a shill

    • @thedaily30
      @thedaily30 Год назад +7

      @@CatDaddy0327 very possible

    • @ephgm
      @ephgm Год назад +23

      ​@@CatDaddy0327 who would he be a shill for?

    • @bobdickweed
      @bobdickweed Год назад +4

      @@ephgm The Jews and maybe money, its easy to make stuff up , and people give you money and you make up more stuff

    • @mclarenscca
      @mclarenscca Год назад +27

      ​@@CatDaddy0327 I disagree!

  • @eze8970
    @eze8970 Год назад +45

    North American Indian tribes have stories about giants & other tribes that were in America before them, so why not man made.
    Thanks Jimmy 🙏🙏

    • @Dumb-Comment
      @Dumb-Comment Год назад

      How big are the giants

    • @LadyFoxHound
      @LadyFoxHound Год назад +2

      yes! the story of lovelock cave for example.

    • @garyhall7867
      @garyhall7867 Год назад

      ​@@Dumb-Comment is this Wendigoon's alt account?

    • @BOBANDVEG
      @BOBANDVEG Год назад

      The famous "bag" .....is full of seeds . Teaching cultivation

    • @bradleywalsh9487
      @bradleywalsh9487 Год назад +2

      Now I can't get Isiah saying "GIANTS" and giggling out of my head

  • @XCraftllc
    @XCraftllc Год назад +4

    Jimmy, keep being you and doing your thing man. Your delivery of the information is perfect in its honesty and frankness, and just what we need to transition into a more open-minded future.

  • @rockandfound
    @rockandfound Год назад +1

    Did you think you’d ever get this far Jimmy. I’m so glad you have. Great job on everything and thank you.

  • @Thromaz
    @Thromaz Год назад +105

    There are so many of these type things all over the U.S.A. that people walk by and think nothing of... I remember being a child and coming across things and sites that deserve this kind of attention but not realizing it was unusual

    • @justanothercomment416
      @justanothercomment416 Год назад +15

      When the first settlers arrived here, they discovered stone and brick structures. Some of those stones were integrated into early American structures which still exist. Some of those stones have Egyptian, Welch, and or Hebrew on them (which are believed to all be related to the Aryan language family).

    • @natevilla985
      @natevilla985 Год назад +6

      @@justanothercomment416 examples please

    • @__rm307
      @__rm307 Год назад +2

      @@justanothercomment416 lol conveniently all of Aryan descent huh? Sounds more like nationalist / racist mythology. Like Hitler’s search for Atlantis.

    • @justanothercomment416
      @justanothercomment416 Год назад +17

      @@natevilla985 What do you mean? I did give examples. These are recorded in their settlement journals and are well documented by mainstream. This really isn't in dispute.
      Additionally, language research continues to find Hebrew, ancient Egyptian, and Welch likely all have a common origin and accordingly belong to the Aryan branch of languages.
      Another interesting tidbit is that the current Egyptian population has only been there 800-1000 years and have absolutely nothing to do with biblical nor ancient Egyptian history. Do a search for Mummy DNA of Ancient Egypt.
      The same is also true for much of the middle east. For example, Iran literally translates as "land of Aryan." Also, start learning about the Younger Dryas Event (The Great Flood).
      It's amazing how much history is taught (or not taught) which either directly contradicts well substantiated and documented history, or is completely ignored because of politcs.
      Do a search for: Legend of the Yellow Emperor, 6500 years blue eye israel, India's Genetic Ancestry, What were blue eyed people doing in Northern Israel 6,500 years ago? So on and so on.
      History is not what we have been taught. Much of what we are taught are known fabrications and revisions of history. Worse yet, people are now taught accurate, well documented history, supported by artifacts and genetics, is bad because of "racism." These people are terribly racist and hateful, and indoctrinated, and frequently don't even know it.
      edit: Notice the racist anamoisity in full support of hate based historical revisionism.

    • @Aknayelth
      @Aknayelth Год назад +4

      At California there is an enormous wall of burned white bricks in the coast, i forgot the exact location but the majority of people pass by without looking, also the channel John Levi and Mind Unveiled talk about this

  • @thunder8cat
    @thunder8cat Год назад +54

    Jimmy, I grew up in a town east of Dallas called Rockwall. There in Rockwall on the west side of town some farmers unearthed an ancient rock wall while digging a well in the late 1800s. It is all developed now and the rock wall section was reburied long ago; but there are some reports on it you can find. I would love to see what you make of it. It is where the County and town got its name. Take care brother.

    • @C_Aguirre84
      @C_Aguirre84 Год назад +4

      I saw a documentary on the History channel where this guy goes to "investigate" various sites. One of those was Rockwall, TX. He uncovered a portion of the wall and concluded it was "natural".

    • @redowlmoon7733
      @redowlmoon7733 Год назад +14

      And he concluded wrong

    • @robbyderosa8756
      @robbyderosa8756 Год назад +2

      Archivist with Analog goes over a bunch of old newspapers, it's mind blowing what was found in Texas

  • @mareesnowdon3800
    @mareesnowdon3800 Год назад

    Lovely to see you back . Hope all is well with you. Looking forward to more episodes

  • @jayhill5245
    @jayhill5245 Год назад

    Keep it up! Been loving your content years.

  • @TIPTOESMOOTH
    @TIPTOESMOOTH Год назад +56

    This is man made, no doubt. It's incredible !!!

    • @MarcusAurelius7777
      @MarcusAurelius7777 Год назад +3

      Uhh it could have been made by aliens, as the guy implies...

    • @smugfrog8111
      @smugfrog8111 Год назад +4

      @@MarcusAurelius7777 He never, ever said or even implied that.

    • @TIPTOESMOOTH
      @TIPTOESMOOTH Год назад

      @@MarcusAurelius7777 ?????

    • @MarcusAurelius7777
      @MarcusAurelius7777 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@TIPTOESMOOTH Aliens made this with tech unknown to us

  • @orbs1062
    @orbs1062 Год назад +61

    So intriguing.
    The "tooling" holes that you pointed out made me recall large granite stones I discovered in the woods near my first home about 40 years ago. The holes were almost perfectly round about 3" in diameter and about 2" deep. They always intrigued me. That was Cherokee territory. It was Civil War territory too. About 10 miles due west of Atlanta. I believe the area remains undeveloped. I may have to take a hike and get a few photos before it's destroyed by "progress."

  • @ahambrahmasmi108
    @ahambrahmasmi108 10 месяцев назад

    Wow, congratulations on such a prestigious speaking opportunity! I am quickly becoming a huge fan. I particularly appreciate how you speak in full paragraphs without editing every sentence. It really makes your vids more personable. I am truly looking forward to more on what lies beneath these amazing sites, particularly in North America. Peace to you from Cleveland)

  • @clivealmey3225
    @clivealmey3225 Год назад +12

    On the subject of nubs, I find it to look similar to building items in modeling and DIY. If you wish to add an attachment you have one to connect two items together with a pin and a hole, like putting cupboards or shelves together. Thousands of years ago these could have been larger in appearance to locate another item for any required accessories, shelves, ladders and more. Keep up the good work, Bright Insight is the best of the best.

    • @seriouslybro8664
      @seriouslybro8664 Год назад +1

      Looks like they are for scaffolding support, one side is supported with timber the other with those nubs. They probably grind them off after usage.

  • @FaridCG
    @FaridCG Год назад +79

    I am from Azerbaijan and my house is near Turkan where these cups are located, there are actually many interesting megaliths, dolmens and other strange artifacts that unfortunately were partly researched.

    • @tyca659
      @tyca659 Год назад +3

      Do you know of a resource we can check out to see pictures?

    • @Dimitri-Jordania
      @Dimitri-Jordania Год назад +2

      @@tyca659 the internet

  • @ericomfg
    @ericomfg Год назад +16

    Wooo! Right in our backyard, so cool!

  • @thekito4623
    @thekito4623 Год назад

    ooooh yess youre making videos again :D so happy to see

  • @JulesFox
    @JulesFox Год назад

    Great to see a new video from you, Jimmy. Love your channel

  • @jensherman2771
    @jensherman2771 Год назад +127

    Sure it’s natural ... stone. I love that you included actual naturally occurring rock walls in your presentation. The contrast is unquestionable. I think it’s a very exciting find. That’s a lotta history books needing to be changed! 💛💛

    • @anzacman5
      @anzacman5 Год назад +3

      The mountain range of Assumption will need to be overcome first

    • @GrmpaJA
      @GrmpaJA Год назад

      @@anzacman5 Yup. That also works both ways.

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад +1

      It's geopolymer, see Professor Joseph Davidovits. you can see where the geopolymer concrete is flaking...

    • @m.m.c.ustomfab3950
      @m.m.c.ustomfab3950 Год назад +1

      @@VenturaIT this ^, on the wandering wolf's youtube, one of the videos the stone was cracked/chipped and the inside composition of the stone had a lot more similarities to geopolymer than it did naturally formed stone

    • @joeconnolly89
      @joeconnolly89 Год назад

      its a natural feature

  • @FITforaKING777
    @FITforaKING777 Год назад +23

    Jimmy I'm almost two months sober. Your talk on depression helped me get motivated to make a change. Thank you fellow veteran.

    • @TheeeLisaMarie
      @TheeeLisaMarie Год назад +5

      Congratulations! It takes so much, and you are doing great! I'm not a veteran but hearing Jimmy that day helped me more than he could ever know. I'm at 823 days now. I don't know you but, for what it's worth, I'm proud of you!

  • @leewayde
    @leewayde 11 месяцев назад +10

    I live in Rolla Missouri. There are massive stonewalls, I mean- to me they look like severely eroded megalithic structures. That I can’t imagine how big they were in prehistory. OR, they are some very suspicious looking rocks. And I just don’t know enough about rocks to tell. And I desperately want your opinion on them. Or at least an experts opinion. They’re pretty in conveniently located, and hard to get good photos of.

    • @leewayde
      @leewayde 11 месяцев назад +4

      Edit- I’ve been trying to get good photos of these rocks. And every time I get close to a wall, and I wanna go higher up, because it seems like they are tiered. As in, the rock structure seem to go higher. On at least two occasions, I’ve seen a sign that says no trespassing. Video recording in full effect. I try to avoid the conspiratorial paranoid nature that comes with this stuff. But I do find it odd, that I see all of these incredibly fascinating rock structures. And all I wanna do is get clothes and take a picture. And there’s something in my way multiple times. It’s kind of frustrating, but I noticed in this video you said the sage wall in North America was on private property. I have a feeling that we are missing a lot of prehistory in North America.

    • @imperialsecuritybureau6037
      @imperialsecuritybureau6037 7 месяцев назад +1

      Would definitely be worth getting some videos or photos!

    • @davestillman9151
      @davestillman9151 3 месяца назад

      ​@@leewaydeI always get clothes for trespassing. way easier to blend in. upload those photos!!

  • @DrGyroProductions
    @DrGyroProductions Год назад +45

    I was very impressed by some videos made by an old dude named John Jensen. He thought he found evidence of a highly advanced ancient culture here in the US. Someone seems to have made massive structures along the coastlines in the remote past ! He called them The Ancient Canal Builders.

    • @philipthomas3938
      @philipthomas3938 Год назад

      What about the ancient now undersea coastlines.... gotta be plenty of things down there

  • @kerryblackburn7850
    @kerryblackburn7850 Год назад +70

    I’m just glad this is finally being brought to everyone’s attention. I’ve known about this for a while now because of Linda and her website, but she just couldn’t get the word out. Thanks for covering this Jimmy! Oh and my gut says this is one of the oldest versions of these polygonal walls.

    • @JGProspecting
      @JGProspecting Год назад

      Same here amazing stuff

    • @davesmith5656
      @davesmith5656 Год назад

      What gets me is that those "nubs" aren't pasted on like putty, the area all around them, over the entire surface of the block, was removed, leaving only the nub? Just being humorous, maybe they are an early form of Braille, and whoever put the stones there need something big to find their way around, but have since moved underground - where they still live?

    • @craigbramlett2933
      @craigbramlett2933 Год назад

      i dont think it is the oldest, it is def one of the poly walls it is jut exposed to more freeze and thaw cycles than the other polygonal walls, thus more erosion and separation between the stones themselves

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Год назад +1

      It does have a feel of being just tremendously old, doesn't it?

  • @braincloud9486
    @braincloud9486 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks Jimmy! Love your channel!

  • @williammosley8026
    @williammosley8026 Год назад

    Thank for making this . Been waiting

  • @bspenn
    @bspenn Год назад +352

    I have a PhD on the Igneous Petrology of the Spanish Peaks (1994) which is shown in this video. My thesis was to develop a petrogenetic (petro-rock, genesis-origin) for the range in compositions of the the Spanish Peaks. With that said, I have a lot of pictures of dikes and dike selvages (edges of dikes against the surrounding country rock.) There are some particularly interesting occurrences where a silica-poor igneous dike (lamprophyre ) intruded a sandstone and altered the selvages to quartzite. Quartzite is much more resistant to erosion than the lamprophyre. With time the dike eroded away leaving what appear to be two parallel dikes of quartzite. I would be curious about the composition of the Sage Wall and the rock where you stood facing the Sage Wall. It would be very instructive. First, everything you're looking at is an erosional remnant. It's what's left after erosion, so you have to figure out what has been removed. Second, thinking about the blocks, if it is a dike, there would be flow features in the rocks. If it is a selvage, then there wouldn't necessarily have flow structures. Lots of interesting stuff here.

    • @GiannisVeronis
      @GiannisVeronis Год назад +48

      Brian Penn go with Jimmy and discover what is up there in Montana, Jimmy we wait a first person coverage of this site with your awesome photos

    • @dEadERest
      @dEadERest Год назад +6

      this is just . . science stuff

    • @stevebridges1583
      @stevebridges1583 Год назад +56

      I have a degree in quantum mechanics from MIT. This is not natural....thanks for the CV.

    • @gualtergutierrez1166
      @gualtergutierrez1166 Год назад +1

      The way you think and the photos you take Will go good for RUclips

    • @Waynesification
      @Waynesification Год назад +15

      Yes, go with him, we need somebody to be shocked and admit it's man altered. The convenient "nobs" pretty much give it a way. Evolution is sometimes compared to blowing up a pile of building materials and forming a well made house. Just very extremely extremely unlikely that this is not touched by human hands with those knobs. Ask for permission to document, film and photograph the lifting of one test block to see if it's attached or stacked, and if attached by some sort of mortar, the nature of the mortar which can be tested. It's supposed to be geological after all, do they can't stop you on archeological grounds, and if they did, they admit it's archeological. However, the moment you lift one, it becomes archeological, and you are merely completing the geological verification process that it couldn't be geological. But everybody, please let Jimmy and co do it first (that includes you Randall) and don't hassle the poor people, otherwise they might just close everybody out! 🙂

  • @johannjohann6523
    @johannjohann6523 Год назад +56

    Other "enigmatic" archaeological finds in North America are located in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and Isle Royale in Lake Superior. There are mines in both locations that some believe to have been used for thousands of years. Some believe the Vikings navigated the great lakes and also used the mines and were the sources of the Viking made weapons that were superior to other weapons found in Europe. The mines produce especially pure Iron, Nickel, and Copper and those particular elements have been traced to weapons found in archaeological digs in Europe because they have a particular molecular signature. Naturally, most scientists say it is impossible for the Vikings to have had mining operations in North America, and this is all a hoax. Where have we heard that before? Though the Vikings timeline is more recent, if they were capable of such a feat then it lends to the notion other older cultures could have done so as well. Cool video, thanks!

    • @NatsuOsugosuHotaru
      @NatsuOsugosuHotaru Год назад +5

      Very true johann. Other theories include the Celts and the Phoenicians as the miners in Michigan and Canada since the Native North American tribes tended to use ore found on the surface almost exclusively, and Celtic bronze contains large percentages of Michigan copper and tin from Britain. Some archeologists believe (though not wholeheartedly) that both Phoenicians and Celts had established trade routes to North America. I would be interested to know if there is any astronomical alignment of these Montana sites.

    • @mortisnoctu
      @mortisnoctu Год назад +1

      Evidence indicates that copper from these Michigan mines was extracted by Minoans from Crete and fueled the Bronze Age in Europe

    • @mortisnoctu
      @mortisnoctu Год назад +2

      Check out “Bronze Age Part II: The Case of the Missing Copper”
      by Jeff Danner | Jun 18, 2012 |

    • @mortisnoctu
      @mortisnoctu Год назад +6

      “In his recent book, The Lost Empire of Atlantis, Gavin Menzies presents a very strong case that the Minoans were responsible for the extraction and export of the missing copper. The most compelling evidence from his book is listed below.
      The tools used for mining in both European mines known to be Minoan and the Lake Superior mines are identical.
      The pottery and utensils found in the Lake Superior mines are identical to those used in the Minoan civilization on Crete.
      The mines in Lake Superior are the only known Bronze Age mines to contain copper with a purity exceeding 99%. Many European artifacts from this time period contain copper of this purity.
      The mining of copper in Lake Superior ended abruptly and coincidently with the fall of the Minoan empire.”

    • @FumblsTheSniper
      @FumblsTheSniper Год назад

      Slaves that rowed boats back to Viking homelands would not all have been supportable by the Viking community. Not a long shot that they were collected to he used as part of a long train of slave ships rowing to-from the America’s. They would take ships and ships full of captive slaves, the records exist, but after those purchases there isn’t a record. It’s assumed they were made to row until they died and individual captains wouldn’t care.
      It’s just there aren’t any records to support a supply network of that size. I do think it would be possible (maybe easy) if you had near limitless disposable manpower and were as ruthless as the Vikings. How anyone would have kept it this hush-hush I don’t know but then again we didn’t even force the Japanese to open their imperial records after ww2 so it’s still unknown all of what they did.

  • @tobascoheat6582
    @tobascoheat6582 11 месяцев назад +5

    If, in fact, the Sage Wall Megalith with its precisely cut and stacked stones, perfectly plumb, and in a perfect straight line was formed by nature, then the buildings and temples cut into the stones at Petra were also cut and carved by wind and water. 😮

    • @rickybobby5153
      @rickybobby5153 11 месяцев назад

      A fracture would be perfectly plumb… and that isn’t even close to a “perfectly straight line”

  • @bryanshoemaker6120
    @bryanshoemaker6120 Год назад +63

    What's crazy to think about, it wasn't until the last couple years that we started hearing about this wall. Most Americans don't even know that it exists. Most Americans also don't know that we have a castle. Half of the castle really, the castle exploded at one point.

    • @RabidRaptor16
      @RabidRaptor16 Год назад +7

      Where's that castle located?/

    • @Brandon-dy8us
      @Brandon-dy8us Год назад +2

      Too bad the people who own the property are exploiting this POI for their own gain. The government should declare it a national park and reclaim it for the public.

    • @Yves95128
      @Yves95128 Год назад +27

      @@Brandon-dy8us I'm okay with that actually, the government would cover or destroy all type of evidence.

    • @bendy6626
      @bendy6626 Год назад +27

      @@Brandon-dy8us Absolutely NOT. The govt should have NO part of this whatsoever. Private holders have a stake in preserving the structures, and do a better job than govt (read a little history about what govts did to the thousands of mound structures once in N. Am.) The people who own this wall, preserving it and still allowing it to be studied, are the best preservationists!

    • @justinkennedy3004
      @justinkennedy3004 Год назад +20

      ​@@Brandon-dy8usyou don't like how the private owners are restricting access and maybe research... So you want the *government* to take ownership?!? Brother, you should do some more history reading on the govt and anomalies. The govt will straight up destroy artifacts that invalidate popular history.

  • @kevinblue1976
    @kevinblue1976 Год назад +59

    Whether it is man made or not it’s an incredible structure. Hard to believe that nature would create something like that but who knows. Would love to see a lidar scan of the area to see if there’s anything else

    • @meinvolkuberalles
      @meinvolkuberalles Год назад

      i have been there, there are odd trinkets and old stuff scattered around in the ground.

    • @meinvolkuberalles
      @meinvolkuberalles Год назад

      @@fpvx3922 its not area 51 bro, i live near by and its not guarded.

  • @kengrow3992
    @kengrow3992 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much bro for providing the link to allow us to explore the site with the owners permission. Very cool.

  • @phrixos2826
    @phrixos2826 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this video Jimmy, I have been eagerly awaiting your next video on Atlantis. This is a fascinating topic

  • @anthonyisom7793
    @anthonyisom7793 Год назад +14

    I live not far from the stage wall and yes it is man-made it is part of a large complex.
    In the early 1900s a giant skull was found on the banks of the Jefferson River not far from the stage wall.

  • @BaskingInObscurity
    @BaskingInObscurity Год назад +32

    The "cups" in rock are like mortars. One can pound and grind nuts, seeds, beans, fruit, and herbs into flours and pastes. They're very common all around the world. The "pestle" can be made of stone, wood, gourd, large bone, or even the item being processed, e.g. fruit from which the skin needs to be removed or separated. It's even a way of grinding/sanding the ends of logs and sticks or softer rocks or shells to a uniform shape that can insert into another object, for toolmaking or building structures.
    As far as the wall goes, I would say it is natural but likely manipulated, for some of those cleaves are indeed odd. That said, it still reminds me of the granite outcrops along the shore of the Monterey Peninsula, where I grew up, that frequently show amazing fracture patterns that sometimes seem impossible in nature. But they're entirely natural and make sense in the context. The Monterey Peninsula is a chunk of the southern Sierra Nevada batholith that sheared and migrated northwest, as the last of the central Farralon Plate subducted beneath the North American Plate, forming the boundary between North America and the Pacific Plate that would evolve into the San Andreas Fault as we know it. The outcrops, or rocks, as we call them, can be spectacular, especially given the weathering and erosion of a dramatic seashore and the sea life that make it home. I could see the Montana wall being entirely natural, but my meager geology knowledge can't explain some of the fracture patterns, therefore I want to explain it with what I do understand, which is human manipulation.
    As for the dolmens in this video, they all looked natural to me-fascinating, even, for the cool geological stories they illustrate. What a great variety or outcomes of roughly the same phenomenon, depending on the local climate, of a boulder crashing into the top of a greater rock, cleaving it and then being weathered or pushed apart over hundreds or thousands of years.
    While there's a lot of schlock and overstretch on the Intarwebz, I am a firm believer that there were numerous civilizations of varying technological advancement before our record, and not always would their technology would stand out to us, especially given how many useful materials weather or erode away completely within generations or a few thousand years, or are buried under layers of sediment or volcanic ash. Plus sea level rise has erased ocean margins. The Monterey Bay is rather shallow, save for the extraordinarily deep canyon, and most of it was above sea level very few millennia ago, probably more recently than we realize or could ever know, given the high erodibility of many of the rock strata (sandstone and limestone), as demonstrated by how much the shape of the coastline changes even within each person's lifespan.
    I don't always come to the same conclusions as you; but I really enjoy your channel for your exploratory nature and how much evidence you provide. It's by sharing open-mindedly that real (re)discoveries are made; and open minds are frequently lacking in academia. So thank you, Jimmy.

    • @goosegirl941
      @goosegirl941 Год назад

      We call the pestle “matate” in Texas, there’s lots here and the mortars look just like that. If they looked around the forest floor nearby they would probably find some of them.

  • @markrandy1000
    @markrandy1000 Год назад +1

    Very interesting Jimmy love your work 👍🇦🇺

  • @etchels85
    @etchels85 Год назад +1

    Jimmy, you and Graham at one point in the future will be remembered as two of the main forces to this movement. It’s definitely a movement you are helping create

    • @lawreence13
      @lawreence13 Год назад

      That would be a disservice to Brien Forester and Uncharted X who both do fantastic work. I'm sure there are others as well

  • @ZiggyDan
    @ZiggyDan Год назад +43

    Thanks to Michael for getting out there and bringing this to our attention. When I first saw the Nubs on Michael's video I was immediately intrigued. What caught my attention was how they appear equidistant. And Michael as confirmed that to be the case. I have been cataloguing and making videos on various ancient structures with Nubbed masonry around the globe for a few years now. Thank you, Jimmy for once again highlighting Nubbed structures.

    • @OspreyFlyer
      @OspreyFlyer Год назад +4

      👍

    • @Crosshatch1212
      @Crosshatch1212 Год назад +1

      There for putting sticks against on most walls you can see they have been stabilised by long planks off wood .or I think they cld be keys for pouring similar to how we would mould things to day only on a bigger scale.

    • @ZiggyDan
      @ZiggyDan Год назад

      @@Crosshatch1212 The trees around Cusco are useless. I used to work in the Moulding industry and yes there are certain anomalies that you find in the stone work that appear the same as rubber/plastic and concrete forms.

  • @inthemix
    @inthemix Год назад +22

    Cant wait to watch this after work, thanks for another video :)

  • @81dedhed
    @81dedhed Год назад

    Great fideo dude,very interesting stuff

  • @jenme7926
    @jenme7926 Год назад

    Oh my goodness! There is much to be learned and discovered. Thanks for sharing!

  • @mrdr8695
    @mrdr8695 Год назад +10

    Good to see you’re making videos again.

  • @carriesunshine5742
    @carriesunshine5742 Год назад +11

    I've always thought people were very naive about ancient cultures and their abilities. They uncovered in door plumbing (toilets) in Pompeii but modern plumbing was discovered in the late 1800s. People forget history is mostly war, whose to say the bright minds of their times were not killed when their towns cities were attacked or siege and the knowledge was just lost with those bright minds. Ive always thought ancient cultures were so much more intelligent than modern humans give them credit for.

    • @Bitchslapper316
      @Bitchslapper316 Год назад +1

      They found indoor plumbing on Knossos built by the Minoans that dates back to the time of the pyramids. The Minoans had written language, plumbing, art, pottery, a fleet of ships and trade all the way up to the Indus valley when mainland Greeks were still living in mud huts.
      It's a shame they get so little attention. Knossos was most likely where the story of Atlantis comes from but people would rather talk about a fictional island instead of one that is well studied and fits the description perfectly. It was even swallowed by the ocean.

  • @scottcrawford1104
    @scottcrawford1104 Год назад

    Loving the hair Jimmy! The GOAT of RUclips as the recounter of forgotten history. Great video as always

  • @andyfreek6664
    @andyfreek6664 Год назад

    Great to see you again

  • @HumanManPeopleGuy
    @HumanManPeopleGuy Год назад +11

    Dude!!!!! I've been waiting for another one of your videos for forever!!! Always love your content so informative and I love how you offer a different perspective on our ancient human history that actually gels together more than what the mainstream shoves down our throats

  • @JanRitt_IxI
    @JanRitt_IxI Год назад +14

    To the "Nubs" : In the case of Peruvian Megaliths (or everywhere, where the nubs are on the bottom part of the stones) I thought that these might be some sort of "relive" structure, bare with me:
    If you make giant sacks out of fiber and fill them with concrete, let it harden, until the concrete becomes less viscous, but not fully rock-hard, put the next sack on top of the ones half-hardened, they sink in a bit and to fully close all the gaps between the concrete sacks, you cut open the ones beneath on the lower portion of a sack, so it can give in even a bit more and seal the sacks perfectly.
    The protrusions therefor might be a genius mechanism to give in enough to let the next level sit perfectly on top of the lower rows and then harden and could be cut away.
    The "stones" in the case of the Peruvian Megaliths, are flat on their bottom and, in my mind, show signs of sinking in on their top.
    for the other nubs, i have no clue right now.
    Thanks for your work

    • @philipthomas3938
      @philipthomas3938 Год назад

      Flat sided blocks on other polygonal walls with nubs .. STYLE, artistry

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад +1

      my idea on the nubs is that is where the concrete (geopolymer) feeder hose attached to the forms, these might have been covered in dirt as foundations so when they removed the feeder hose they might not have cared enough to make them perfect... they are either the holes in the sack forms or the holes in the sacks and they didn't remove the feeder hose soon enough, or all the sacks were connected so one concrete hose could feed the whole structure from one or a few concrete (geopolymer concrete) hoses... so the sack forms would have had to have a hole between some of them perhaps, but I haven't seen evidence of that. I mostly just think they are because they were to be underground or covered with a more perfect stone, metal, wood, tile, or tech.

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад

      @@Broody58 Solid walls don't last very long... they crack and then need to be destroyed... using difference size areas will eliminate standing resonance and make the walls stronger and be able to actually move if the earth settles or there is an earthquake, while if you have a solid wall that cracks during and earthquake you have to destroy it... here you just pour a new segment if it's even needed... these look older than the ones in Peru even.

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад

      @@Broody58 You can see the workspaces all over the world. They used an alkaline caustic soda like lye (which melts the rock binding materials together in the mix) to make the geopolymers... if it's wet enough it will smooth itself out, and it can be shaped after it's poured, just like concrete can be worked after it's poured... but geopolymers are stronger than today's concrete because today's concrete make linear CSH (calcium - silica - hydrogen) bonds that lay down in a linear fasion, but the geopolymers have a more 3D bond matrix which makes them stronger, heat resistant, crack resistant compared to today's portland based concrete... but you can think of it just like pouring a super strong form of artificial rock concrete that actually makes natural rock because the use the same chemistry as rocks... so people think they are real stones, but you can see them flaking apart unlike real stones... they are geopolymers... you can see many videos of how to make geopolymers online and you can use chatgpt ai to advise you and ask questions about how it's done and how it differs from portland based concrete. it's not too big to mix before hardening, even concrete takes a long time and the time can be increased or decreased... concrete actually takes 30 days to harden and hours to set... why do you think these are too big? look at the German bunkers made in WW2, they have 18 foot thick concrete walls poured even thicker than this wall and they are still standing because they used a special unknown concrete formula that lasted longer... but these stones are nowhere near too big to pour... you realize that today they pour entire house foundations and 1 to 4 story (or more) walls in one pour that have more concrete than one or even multiples of these huge blocks with Portland concrete? they pour entire floors of high rises in one pour using concrete, so it's definitely not too big or it would harden. the other side got so precise because they pour right up to the last hardened stone, each stone is one part of the form for the next pour... that's obvious and you can see it in this video at the top of the wall and at the bottom parts where there are indentations where huge stones used to be but are no longer there...

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад

      @@Broody58 and it's not melted by heat, it's melted by chemistry... acid doesn't melt by heat, it melts because acids and bases dissolve other materials using chemical properties, yes sometimes heat is produced (exothermic chemical reaction) and sometimes the process is cooling (endothermic chemical reaction)... study more about chemistry... geopolymers are just a type of natural rock concrete, just concrete with a slightly different formula than today's concrete. nubs aren't handles, handles for what? nubs where where the concrete hose was put into the form... look at how concrete is pour today, a big machine has a a long tube about 12 inches in diameter and it is lowered over the form and then the liquid concrete is poured out of it... sometimes they hook the long pipe or hose or tube right into the forms... but the people who built these stones may have been more technically advanced than we are now so they probably had it all automated... the Ai would design the wall beforehand and the sacks (flexible forms) would be put up on top of the last block and then the geopolymer pipe/tube/hose was clicked into the form, then the machien turned on and pumped the geopolymer concrete into the form until it was full, then they would wait for it to harden and keep going, using the last stone as part of the form shape since the forms are flexible...this is the ONLY way to create such tight fitting mortarless seams between the huge stones we see all over the world: FLEXIBLE FORMS USING GEOPOLYMER LIQUID NATURAL STONE CONCRETE. The nubs are just where the concrete leaked out of the fill-hole in the flexible concrete form (sacks of concrete.) You can even do this today and people are doing it on a smaller scale, people buy bags of concrete mix, stack them on top of each other, the bags form fit to the bags below, left/right, and then the next back on top forms ot the bag below it... creating infinite variations in form shape within the constraints of about 65lb concrete mix bags that you can buy at your local hardware store... then they get their garden hose and spray down the concrete until it's saturated and then keep wetting it appropriately to the chemistry and eventually it will dry into a thick and solid concrete wall... it's on RUclips if you look it up... some of them put rebar strategically among the bags of concrete, but iron will rust away after not too long... it's not as complicated as people are making it... for these huge walls they essentially put bags of dry or wet concrete stacked on top and next to each other, the inside of the bags/sacks and gravity and water does the rest. Rain will even do it, we put some bags of extra concrete we had laying around on our basketball based in our driveway, we forgot about them, years later they turned into solid stone weights for the basketball rim from the rain...

  • @JoseTorres-dl3kh
    @JoseTorres-dl3kh Год назад

    I can't say enough how much I love your videos. Good to see the new content

  • @spiritofanu3112
    @spiritofanu3112 Год назад

    Thanks for the referral to the “Wandering Wolf” channel. I had been looking for a site that also includes Canadian megalithic sites.

  • @separator94
    @separator94 Год назад +56

    Glad to see you back. You put out great content.
    I'm leaning more towards man-made with this one but I think it could be natural. One thing that makes me think it might be natural is how a lot of the separations between the rocks are in line with each other, as if they cracked a very long time ago. This typically doesn't happen when building walls from stone. Even with ancient megalithic walls, the rocks are always staggered and offset from each other.
    This doesn't mean it wasn't built, though. It's just something to consider.
    We really need to be able to see the base of that structure. We need to know if the bottom stones are connected to the bedrock below, or if they're sitting on top of it and cut all the way around. If it's a natural formation, it should be connected at the bottom. Similar to other natural rock formations.

    • @EdwardOToole
      @EdwardOToole Год назад +7

      Yes, I wrote my response in the comments- the cuts do not go all the way through- they start from small cracks and then give way to fissures- you can see this evidence on the back side of the wall. I really was excited about the possibility of this being man-made but I can not justify that after visiting it and seeing they are not individual stones. Still an amazing and fantastic work of Mother Nature.

    • @garychynne1377
      @garychynne1377 Год назад +4

      @@EdwardOToole i agree again. it is deliberately deceptive to not show the backside of the wall.

    • @larrymotuz6600
      @larrymotuz6600 11 месяцев назад +1

      Well, he hasn't visited it yet so any deception is not his deception.

  • @sigliumantiqua.1002
    @sigliumantiqua.1002 Год назад +73

    When I was 13 (64 years ago) I spent many hours reading in our public library a book on Indian Legends written by Sir Richard Burton. They were science fiction pure. I was fascinated. Flying machines ,laser weapons and weapons that could hold an army in suspension. After a few sessions after school I took a look at the date the book was published, it was 1870. I was stunned. The only people who had been up in the air at this time were balloonists. The Indians were tearing around in the sky thousands of years ago and how can we doubt that these structures were not built by a super civilisation.The historians are tapping at history with a white stick. It seems impossible to heal the blind.

    • @davemi00
      @davemi00 Год назад +3

      When the Big International Corporations can make a Windfall in Profits from this. It will Happen, not before.

    • @kalyankumar1297
      @kalyankumar1297 Год назад +1

      what is the name of the book

    • @mimirhermestrismegistus4585
      @mimirhermestrismegistus4585 Год назад

      Airships and either/ electromagnetic energy. The true power of the atom.

    • @dlbstl
      @dlbstl Год назад +1

      ​@@kalyankumar1297he says it in his first sentence. FYI.

    • @sigliumantiqua.1002
      @sigliumantiqua.1002 Год назад

      @@nottoday8483 translated, not written

  • @cousinkyle4995
    @cousinkyle4995 Год назад +5

    As a Montanan I can say that it doesn't look naturally occurring, but stacked rocks

  • @mattferrigno9750
    @mattferrigno9750 Год назад

    I thought you disappeared... I thought I was never going to see another video. Made my Monday night!

  • @divinitydaley-killyourTV
    @divinitydaley-killyourTV Год назад +1

    Thank you for bringing this topic to light ❤

  • @Gt350_
    @Gt350_ Год назад +6

    Always love your videos Jimmy!! Thanks for doing what you do!!

  • @AlwaysCheckmateNeverStalemate
    @AlwaysCheckmateNeverStalemate Год назад +9

    This feels like Christmas! Not only is Jimmy reviewing an old structure in MT in this video, but Jon Levi uploaded a video today on a ghost town in UT with an old wall running through private. residences.

  • @crystalpoole1560
    @crystalpoole1560 Год назад

    You did it again Jimmie!!

  • @atlant1s
    @atlant1s Год назад

    the nub holding up the dolmen was enough proof for me good job jimmy, the whole site reminds me of cuzco.

  • @reallyright2431
    @reallyright2431 Год назад +11

    Agreed with you Jimmy, more study need to be done on the wall, along with the wall in Texas. I'm very in to before flood history.

    • @larrytinsley4247
      @larrytinsley4247 Год назад

      have you read Atlantis blueprint by Colin Wilson?

  • @CloudSephiroth
    @CloudSephiroth Год назад +95

    It’s definitely, 100%, beyond a shadow of a doubt, man-made. The bigger question is: What would necessitate such a large wall? Was this just an ancient military fort/city wall? If it was an ancient military fort- what/who were they fighting? If it was a city wall- where is the rest of the city and why would people live in that part of the world?

    • @RabidRaptor16
      @RabidRaptor16 Год назад +8

      Most likely they were fighting giants.

    • @Pictus_Invictus
      @Pictus_Invictus Год назад

      Gigantic wall to protect against megafauna, so old that nothing else has survived, the climate/geology/animals of the world was very different...

    • @homebrewedthoughts2033
      @homebrewedthoughts2033 Год назад +11

      Wtf do you mean why would they live there? 😂😅 like people will and do live anywhere they can reach

    • @GiasJulii
      @GiasJulii Год назад +1

      @@homebrewedthoughts2033 if you lived in that area you might want a wall that big to keep bears and big cats out though the size of the rocks seems to make it overkill.

    • @RippDrive
      @RippDrive Год назад +6

      Do you spend much time in the hills/mountains? I'd say it's almost certainly natural myself based on hundreds of similar features I've personally observed.

  • @davemayshow
    @davemayshow 8 месяцев назад

    Love your videos Jimmy

  • @jefftaylor8321
    @jefftaylor8321 Год назад

    Welcome back Jimmy

  • @hatuletoh
    @hatuletoh Год назад +50

    When you see a right angle, it could just be a random feature. But when you see multiple right angles on the same stone feature, well...that's much harder to pass off as entirely natural.

    • @marktyler3381
      @marktyler3381 Год назад +2

      Also terminating at the next block. 100% not a natural formation.

  • @ianlange8894
    @ianlange8894 Год назад +29

    absolutely fascinating! I've grown up in Bozeman and rock climbed and biked in the Boulder Batholith since I was in my teens. I've physically climbed, traversed, and explored a small fraction of this massive area, but never have I seen a formation so uniform and distinctly geometric as this one. In fact, I've gone searching for cracks like this to climb and rarely do I find a single one. To encounter so many in a single wall is certainly an anomaly. I'll have to explore the area more thoroughly myself this summer and see if there are any comparable formations elsewhere.
    Also: Look into the "ringing rocks" that are also in the area. Same stone type. When hit with a hammer, these rocks in a pile the size of a small pyramid make a musical note. While this is probably a rare geologic boulder pile I can't help wondering if there could be a connection after seeing this video.

  • @michaelpettitt8656
    @michaelpettitt8656 Год назад

    Nice to se you back, it's been a while, Loving the new look, very cool. Nubs? so much to thinks about from holding or guiding it with levels or ropes so now used to stop pieces from moving out of place as well, very interesting. The impression I get from the photos is that they could be leverage points, it would depend what else is close by. I have a weird theory that this could be some kind a code, either the great hidden message from the past or more likely some kind of a map. Yep deffo need the carbon dating done. This is one of the most incredible videos I have seen in ages. Thanks so much. Now going off to check out Wanderingwolf. Just remember what I always say, The map is in your head and your heart holds the key..

  • @j903850s
    @j903850s 9 месяцев назад

    Nice vid

  • @sboyer087
    @sboyer087 Год назад +3

    Welcome back! Waiting for your update on Atlantis!

  • @richardbaumeister466
    @richardbaumeister466 Год назад +6

    We are intentionally being lied to about everything, especially the subject of ancient high technology all around the world Jimmy is a breath of fresh air. This is soon to be revealed through the great awakening!

  • @12TribesUnite
    @12TribesUnite 5 месяцев назад

    Yesss! This wall is huge huge !!! wonderful video! Thanks again! Also see some of the findings over here. Peace!

  • @gigamaxextra
    @gigamaxextra Год назад

    LOVE THE WORK❤

  • @scottmansbridge7821
    @scottmansbridge7821 Год назад +41

    100% man made. Looks similar to all the many other incredible works from 1000s of years ago. Thank you the great work Jimmy!!

    • @VenturaIT
      @VenturaIT Год назад

      Geopolymers, see Professor Joseph Davidovits

    • @drhexagonapus
      @drhexagonapus Год назад +1

      I agree its probably man made, but its impossible to say with absolute certainty from a video of the site. You need to actually go there and investigate before you can come to such a definitive conclusion. Its also likely its a mix of both natural and man-made features. I for one would really love to see it in person, only costs $40 according to the website.

    • @phillipcummings3518
      @phillipcummings3518 Год назад +1

      ​@@drhexagonapusif it's a combination then it's man made...

    • @sidekickbob7227
      @sidekickbob7227 Год назад

      100% natural

    • @mtjensen5
      @mtjensen5 Год назад

      Giant made

  • @gerasimosmichalitsianos9684
    @gerasimosmichalitsianos9684 Год назад +13

    Incredible. In the summer of 2011 I spent 5-6 weeks in that area for geologic field training at the Indiana University Judson Mead Geologic Field station. Just south of Cardwell Montana. We would spend entire days out in the field, mapping the geology in this area. Then we'd hit the bars on weekends in Whitehall just to the west. No idea that this thing was nearby. Would love to know what my former field instructors think of this thing.

  • @MaranathaSoon
    @MaranathaSoon 9 месяцев назад

    I’m here from SO. I found out about this wall from Timothy Alberino and just visited it this month. Timothy thinks it’s natural but when I was there, I wasn’t so sure. The alignment is so perfect. It is an amazing spot and I encourage people to visit it for themselves.

  • @flatworm00
    @flatworm00 Год назад

    Amazing!

  • @poopshield
    @poopshield Год назад +3

    I knew nothing about this fascinating structure until today. That's why I love this channel.

  • @karljacobson1841
    @karljacobson1841 Год назад +17

    This looks like a wall constructed way back in the past, geology is always changing the ground around this area looking at the bolder field…..not much is left of the original site. Fill dirt and wooden structures have long disappeared now. Great find, no other culture moved in…it may have been destroyed during the younger dryas events…and abandoned. 😮 better take a closer look now. Very interesting area to explore! 😊

    • @murrijuana2842
      @murrijuana2842 Год назад

      "Way back in the past".
      Wow such a way with words!
      Are you a poet?

  • @judymiles1859
    @judymiles1859 6 месяцев назад

    Awesome 😊

  • @miztergray314
    @miztergray314 Год назад

    It’s been awhile. Finally, a video from you. This just reinforces that when the pyramids were built, the place wasn’t a desert.

  • @RaraAvis1138
    @RaraAvis1138 Год назад +14

    Unnatural. As usual, I had to go look it up on Google maps and there seems to be several angles that are not natural. We really need to stop thinking in modern dating methods - we have been here for many, many civilizations that will never be known to us. Our history is way more extensive than what is in text books. Thanks for another great video❤

    • @johannaholmgren8088
      @johannaholmgren8088 Год назад +4

      I think that's not a huge stretch. Not just the Bible (OT) but many many cultures talk about a great flood, and a very advanced pre-existing civilization (or civilizations, but my money's on a global one that definitely was able to communicate world wide somehow. Too many things that occur at the same time in various civilizations that can't be coincidental; it would require a massive grain of salt to swallow that!) Just the fact that there are pyramids all around the world is a huge anomaly: How could separate civilizations, not in communication with each other, have managed to ALL build pyramids?

    • @krono5el
      @krono5el Год назад +1

      @@johannaholmgren8088 did the bible ever mention the Americas, or tomatoes, potatoes, or even Maize, because those things have been around longer than anything in that book :D

    • @anzacman5
      @anzacman5 Год назад

      Yes. Modern scientific dating is just one tool for dating, but can often be used as the only one, by scientists, of course.
      Von Daniken, Hancock, et al, have brought back the value of myth, legend, etc, as other additional tools for dating for those whose minds aren't closed

    • @mikeyo1O1
      @mikeyo1O1 Год назад +3

      There are clear & concise measures to cover this stuff up, but I can't get my mind around the "why" of it. Is it simply to control the narrative, and keep people believing in religion, which is a well-constructed means of controlling people? That's the only thing I can think of.

    • @johannaholmgren8088
      @johannaholmgren8088 Год назад

      @@krono5el I'm pretty sure you have no idea what the point was that I am making.

  • @jamesshepherd6491
    @jamesshepherd6491 Год назад +14

    There are also massive megalithic walls found in the Ural Mountains in Russia, that look like they were created by intelligent beings. These are found in a very remote and not easily assessible area of the Urals. It is curious to find such structures in remote areas, like this find in Montana. Stone work will survive long after everything else that a civilization might have disappears.

    • @evagorasm
      @evagorasm Год назад

      Any links or photos to share?

    • @thomassallery989
      @thomassallery989 Год назад

      ​@@evagorasm Gornaya Shoria is worth looking into.

    • @bendy6626
      @bendy6626 Год назад +1

      It may not have been so remote when it was built. Landforms change and undulate over time, too, so it may even have been at a much lower elevation.

  • @krenzart7424
    @krenzart7424 Год назад +5

    Great, you're back. yeah! I really like to listen to you. Always something new to learn and discover. I see the idea, that this wall is 50:50 man:nature made. I keep thinking that for some of these megalithic walls, there was maybe a completely different way of building, that we just cannot imagine. Strangely, since we fly in space. In this case, I would think it is natural, because of the colors of the stones, running horizontally through big parts of the wall. It means each layer is made of the the same / similar stone. But how knows, maybe they built it in layers. For this one, I am team nature. Lets see what comes out. And I go to see the Wandering Wolf, what he says in his video.

  • @urfavwhtboy
    @urfavwhtboy Год назад

    Love the channel

  • @markcorsby6744
    @markcorsby6744 Год назад +13

    The cupping in the boulders highly resembles 'bedrock mortars' the cupping in those were created by many years (generations) of the processing of grains,seeds and other food stuffs i.e. dried meats through the use of handheld stone pestles.

    • @Guildguy457
      @Guildguy457 Год назад

      After watching more then a few "Primitive Technology" videos, I'd like to think the cup recesses may have been Fire Starting devices. If they became too deep for proper air flow, then they weren't used.

  • @konradchudy1491
    @konradchudy1491 Год назад +6

    Interesting. Similar rock formations are found in Siberia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gornaya_Shoria_megaliths

  • @mikefieselman
    @mikefieselman Год назад

    this is literally mind blowing!

  • @andrewaustin6020
    @andrewaustin6020 Год назад +1

    Love your videos man been watching you for about 3 years now one of the few people I know who go against the grain it’s crazy how much evidence that seems to be brushed under the table I would kill to have the chance to see places like this with my own eyes

  • @RabidRaptor16
    @RabidRaptor16 Год назад +3

    IT'S ABOUT DAMN TIME that the Montana Megaliths (and OTHER similar structures in North America) get some attention.

  • @nickadimouse1
    @nickadimouse1 Год назад +4

    I'm keeping an open mind , I live in Texas and there is something similar here , look up ancient Wall of Rockwall Texas . People have been going back and forth over it for ever now . .

  • @jerryplantbasedmonster2129
    @jerryplantbasedmonster2129 11 месяцев назад

    You never disappoint jimmy👍😁

  • @roly5573
    @roly5573 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @andrescorzo8812
    @andrescorzo8812 Год назад +4

    Missed your videos! I hope all is well!!

  • @LyfordRustic
    @LyfordRustic Год назад +4

    There is a similar structure on the North Island of New Zealand. It was surveyed a few years back. The records were sealed for 75 years.

  • @Anthraxb0mb
    @Anthraxb0mb 8 месяцев назад +1

    My first concern regarding a structure like this coming into the public eye is vandalism.

  • @seanveach950
    @seanveach950 Год назад

    Will get there someday for sure!