Great video Tina. I was in Petra for 5 days and that was barely enough time to give it a cursory examination of some of the anomalies at the site the place was so enormous. It was almost like being in the Grand Canyon but covered in facades. There are other strange features beyond the fine machine marks you posted. There is another tool they used where some of the rooms and walls were cut with a giant butter knife. I can't think of any other word to describe it. Almost perfectly smooth walls with only the sandstone texture as it's main feature. No tool marks at all. Sometimes giant cuts are made with an apparent non-sensical purpose. And by the way, that sandstone is HARD. I first tried breaking some with my hand and it was impossible. Then I tried hitting it with another rock and it barely did anything to the surface. It's not typical sandstone. National Geographic did a special on Petra and they had 2 experienced stone carvers attempt to make a simple 1/4 scale Petra facade in Malibu at a location where the sandstone is softer and they simply could not replicate them the way archeologist presumed. Their hands were becoming bloody stumps. They ended up resorting to power tools just to get it finished. It looked like crap compared to the ones in Petra. During my trip I befriended a Bedouin guide and he took me to various areas unfrequented by regular tourist. The facades go much farther out from the main road than most people realize. We also climbed to the top of the Monastary, a truly breathtaking structure in size and beauty. You don't put that much effort into carving something like that unless it had a very special purpose. Most likely it was intended for people of a much larger stature. Why would a human being today build something with an oversized scale? They wouldn't. The ergonomics just don't fit. It would be an enormous wasted effort. Petra is truly a strange, huge, mysterious place. I'm only scratching the surface of my experiences there. I just wished I could've stayed for a several months instead of just 5 days.
Wow that's great information! Thank you so much for sharing with me!. I really envy you being able to stay there for 5 days (and that's not even enough!) I would love to visit the amazing site someday and stay for a while. I agree that the magnificent structures at Petra were created for very special purposes. I see that many cave doors are very tall and oversized. Maybe they were made for larger people... Again, thank you a lot for sharing your insights! ♥
@@CuriousBeingbyTina and anyone else reading, I recommend 2 hotels. The Movenpick or the Petra Guest House. They're both right at the entrance to the park, the Movenpick being slightly farther up the street. The Petra Guest House builders actually used a real facade as part of the hotel. I stayed at the Movenpick. A gorgeous and fully accommodating place for your base of operations. The reason for these 2 recommendations? The Siq is a long walk. Everyday you go into the park you must walk a mile or so just to get to the Treasury, which is the first major structure you see. A truly spectacular experience but a long walk to get there. The Last Crusade barely gives it justice. The rest of the park goes for miles and miles past the Treasury. The Monastary is farther in and is another long climb up the mountain. Fortunately my Bedouin guide let me borrow his all-terrain donkey to get us there (for a price of course) but in the end it saved me a lot of energy to do other things. Save up and get in good shape folks. What an amazing place to visit and study! Oh and BTW, the Jordanians second language is English!
@@reugeot9058 Thank you very much for these tips! I'll keep them in mind when I plan the visit 🙂 Very nice to hear that Jordan's second language is English! Thank you!
Good luck with your channel! I hope it grows fast. We need more people like you and the other you tubers who will help people wake up realize our past is more complicated than we've been taught
Thank you for the video Tina, fascinating stuff! My feeling is that Petra predates the great Younger Dryas great flood. It strikes me that no one has gone into detail (or detailed speculation) regarding the visible flood markings on all outside walls in Petra. It is as if the lower 1/5 of the facade has been scraped off. This was no ordinary flooding.
Thank you Nat. I agree that Petra could be much older. The lower potions of the facade do look like heavily eroded, however the site is over 800 m above sea level and pretty hilly. I would assume even during flash floods water would have drained away quickly...
Something causes the oceans to wash over the continents about every 6k years or so, the evidence for this is all over the planet. We just don't know what causes it, but I have a feeling we are about to find out first hand. I also have a feeling it has something to do with our solar system.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina This actually makes sense with Earth's pole flips. That would have put Petra in a different latitude/longitude at one (or more) points in time depending on its actual age. You see the same erosion with the Great Sphinx in Egypt on its lower portion
My goodness Tina! You sure do your research. I think you have the best questions ( more than most ) of all alternative theories and research! Keep up the good work! I believe, by the way, that alternative archaeology and research is just as reliable and valid as our current text book “excepted history “ suggests. No one knows for sure. A lot of lost history. 😊👍
Another wonderful presentation thank you.. I hope you know how much your work is valued and will be valuable for many years to come.. I have learned much from you and for that I am truly grateful.
Great research and analysis. Your video seems to be the first to put Petra into its proper archaeological context. It does seem to fall into place with the other high-tech excavations you have documented world wide. Thank you!
I really enjoyed your video. Also you revealed the comparison to Hegra that I did not see before. Your video is sooo much more interesting that the respected Anchient Architects channel on RUclips that claimed Petra was mostly the work of the Romans!!! A while back when you made those videos about the ancient caves in China with the toolmarks I shared with you the image on a Brien Foerster video shot in "Little Petra". Here you could see these toolmarks ending their streak with a hump. You can see here that the rock was like mud or butter that was being scraped in shape. I wish you had included this in your video. These tools are the same as the ones in the Chinese caves and at some sites in Egypt. Once again thanks for your video. I wonder what will be next.
Thank you! I plan to do a separate Petra video on the tool marks you shared with me :-) I saved images from that Brien Foerster's video on Little Petra with tool marks look melted at the ends. I've been collecting images on close-up shots of Petra and a few other sites and I'm hoping to find similar "melted" details at various megalithic ruins. I'm still working on it. Thank you very much for sharing the video with me - I've been thinking about it all along!
It's too bad we couldn't have more intellectually curious, and smart people like you in the archeological field. Your work, and conclusions are solid, and logical.
@@orlandoblanco6969 I firmly believe that's true in a lot of cases. I hate to ascribe all this suppression to evil. The problem is I don't have another explanation that is worthwhile.
@Joseph Tutor she makes sense, but her evidence is outstanding, whereas a lot of the crackpot theories that say pyramids are tombs, or any number of other theories about ancient megalithic, etc, usually don't show proof, or even plausible logic trains to back up their theories.
Joseph tutor I have seen 100 year old hevey equipment that is completely rusted into nothing recognizable. In a 1,000 years 2,000 years 10,000 years? The equipment that Tina is suggesting might have been used would be gone and before that moved to a new site after a given job was finished.
You have enriched yourself and cultured yourself by your choice of resesrch and methods. Very smart focus. Truely awesome monuments of what must have an amazing culture of people. Thanx4sharing your richness with us. You are a very special angel, and I love your voice.
This is brilliant! Thanks for all the research. Petra is much higher quality than the rest. It's like Egypt, the oldest people had the most sophisticated architecture. When are you going to travel to some of these places and do some livestreams with closeups?
I always liked you doing the thumbs up while you asked for the thumbs up ✌🙃✌ And as usual, great video and you are correct.... Signed...... A consistent fan 💛
@@CuriousBeingbyTina I recently watched a video about the history of Mecca, and they showed an ancient split to which in times long past that Petra was the city where the mosques were originally aligned...and now obviously it is not. But from some still existing qibla walls can be traced on a map to Petra.
Tina, you ask the right questions, notice the unnoticed and bring it to light, never daring say what you're thinking and leading us to think. Wonderful !! "You can lead a horse to water, but can't make it drink." You drown out disbelievers with images, truth, following a soft spoken yet undeniable narrative. Congratulations on producing an "eye opener".!!
Glad to see your hard at work. It’s been awhile. Points to ponder. Everything with columns and Doric arches is called Hellenistic. Thus dating is largely by form in relation to historic Greece and what we think we know of that history. We see a very wide distribution of Hellenistic form geographically. Much wider than the Greeks were known to have traveled. Therefore this suggests an older culture which had archetypal designs adopted by the Greeks as well as these other cultures. The cut rock striations support this same conclusion as well. You discussed thermoluminesense dating in a previous video. It’s a good technique on fired pottery, not so good on sun exposed rock. One analytical technique we don’t often see is geomagnetic orientation applied to such sites. The usual application is in dating sedimentary or igneous rock formations by identifying the alignment of magnetic crystals to the earths magnetic field, which processes geographically on a know pattern. This technique is well defined. But it won’t tell you when a rock was cut. Only when it was formed. Now many sites like Petra have been found to contain small patches of plaster or mortar. Initially it was thought that these stone works were totally mortar-less. And to a large degree they are. However, recent close inspection reveals errors in cutting and fitting which appear to have been “fixed” with mortar, presumably by the initial builders. Testing of this mortar might very well yield magnetic orientation data on age. I know of only one case where this was done. By a Russian team working one of the Peruvian megalithic sites. The published age was dismissed by the majority. Mortar sampling is generally frowned upon due to the destructive nature of the sampling process. So. Here we sit in catch-22. We “feel” that these sites are older. But can’t prove it by existing technology, and we are not allowed to test a bit here and there for fear of diminishing the site. Or the accepted date upon which numerous professional reputations rest. So we can but speculate. Fox out.
Hi Tina. When I look at all of the stone structures in the world I wonder why. Why build like this. I think it was easy. I don't know how they did it, but it was easy. Your work with the machine marks is spot on. Keep being curious. Thank you for the great content.
You can see damage from the floods in Petra noticed the wear on the stones... In the lower areas the other thing I’ve been pondering is the Younger driest event..I believe the meteors/coment Musta hit 40 days later or in between that’s why it’s so significant 40 days and 40 nights 40 days 40 that it has some significant
I'm also more ancient than assumed! Good to see you back for another interesting history lesson! I've also just followed you on twitter. And gave your first tweet an RT.
I am suprised that no one to date has taken accurate measurements of some of the features of buildings. For example, how round and linear are the columns? What is the tolerance difference between similar columns etc. Also, how square are the corners in the caves? Such information would assist the debate about how they were made and with what tools.
Excellent and thought provoking video as always. Your description of the interior rooms of that one structure in Petra (three rooms and a main room) reminds me of the top of some South and Central American pyramids. I wonder if they served that same possible purposes?
Thank you Yeti! I didn't know that the American pyramids have similar interior plans with the Treasury. I'll look them up - thanks for the information :-)
Great Research Tina, you have brought forward many things in this video that all other pseudo-researchers have completely missed and I applaud you for it. From the many videos I have seen on Petra, I observe that many facades could easily be fake-chiseled render. The evidence is there, just as it is all over the world at other sites.. Creating those perfect parallel chisel marks is very easy to accomplish with a jagged toothed wooden trowel, this gives perfect flat surfaces and parallel markings. Archeaologists are not builders, that havent got a clue!
Hello Tina, whe have to listing less of the old masters of the arcelogia and more to the new masters of this time with modern tools tath we have now . Whe are now able to use te modern tools for beter results and compared the old marks whit today marks. Inside the rooms of petra the wals are 10 meters high, how is it possible to smooth the walls and selling of such high? There are always more questions than answer and that is what I like , there is always a space to questions.
Thank you Jan. I agree that we need to be more open minded and seriously consider the origin of these marks. Hand tools are just not fit to excavate these massive caves and facades.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina you are not only curious; you are a Beautiful Being. May all your endeavors be prosperous. I had no idea there is so much to discover UNDERground. How fascinating.
New subscriber here, and a bit of an art history/architecture nerd; I have never seen, at least in my research and meandering, the use of pediments as in Petra. At 1:37, top left pediment, it’s folded along its vertical axis, but in unfolding it, the design and architecture isn’t lost, and it maintains continuity and its geometry until reaching the stone on which its carved.
Thank you and Welcome 😊 Keen observation on Petra's pediments! I agree that the folded and continuous feature is quite unusual for broken pediments. I can't recall seeing another one outside Petra.
Tina thank You for tons of informations, everything about Hegra is new for me . Thanks, Good Work.This is IT . Amazing video, uses of photos, good choices. You are STAR! Tina Curious Being Jones ! :) / You know , Indiana :)/ Still Curious and looking for Hidden Ancient Machine ! Must be somewhere and waiting for You ! You will find it, fingers cross for You !:)
My favorite super beautiful anthropologist and archeologist ❤️ I hope you e been well sweetheart, glad to see an upload. Much love and respect to you: ❤️-Troy
@@CuriousBeingbyTina It's just such a beautiful site, the wonder it invokes....Tina there's just so much on this giant earth, and we, each so small, have been the hands that built forth all these creations. There's something so beautiful that's been lost- we've really came into a technological greatness of our own time period......but the ancients truly had something my heart yearns for so long.....it seems thou they had much more fullfilling life's and worked towards so thru all of their lasting things they've left us.
Given the cavernous interior spaces in Petra, it might be that these interiors were fitted out with interior constructions made of wood or other materials. These might provide multi level living spaces of more human sizes. Also, such interior structures might have been more solid and stable than a similar excavation of rock which could be prone to collapse.
Thank you for your insight, Olaf. I appreciate it. I agree that some of the big caves show evidence of being multi leveled and might have been finished with other materials.
I just discovered your page today. I can’t help but wonder if the books that Zecharia Sitchin wrote about the Anunnaki could answer some of the questions that you have. Good luck on your journey!
Have we tried using Sonar or some kinda rock penitrating equiptment to see if some of these fake doors inside doensn't lead into somewhere else like secret chambers that has been accessed from another area or cave hole that may have collapse. I know many say it's a belief they're to step into another demintion but has this been mistakin for ever and we just didn't think maybe it's a real door not finished but someone around that area accessed or dug a chamber to an area right behind that door and other hollow rooms exist?
Interesting - it would be nice if someone can do some kind of scanning or GPR in Petra to see if there are hidden chambers or openings. I read that there are underground "tombs" in Petra that haven't been excavated.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina This is what we need is a place everyone can throw out ideas or brainstorm in a group chat or voice chat like Discord or something. I think more things could and would be figured out or come to light then how everyone is doing it now typing in these boxes waiting for a reply not knowing if one is going to be coming in the next 15 minutes. I get frustrated easy because I get customers asking for help online they will message me and i will reply right away and get an answer 2 days later like dude not even 20 seconds passed and you got a reply instantly but I've never experienced it back. lol
@@dogcreek-customs5168 It'll be great for people to brainstorm and discuss together. We all have different things to be taken care of in life (and might in different time zones); so even though such discussions would be very interesting they might not be the no.1 priority. But the good thing is people in various countries can be in the same discussion.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina That would be the point of live chat & voice chat. as far a priority like I said you don't need help then ask for it then answer the person that's helping 2 days to 2 weeks later but the good thing about this even if they're in different timezones if there not in chat then there isn't a problem if they are in chat they will answer you just don't go into chat and ask a question then shut down the software for another time they do that on social media & youtube. Discord is an actual live chat if you're in there your either avaiable, DND, Idle, some even ghost using the offline feature but it's nothing like facebook, lubetube, twitter none of them. ;)
thank you for your info on this subject i too would like to go see the differences i wonder if weather wear be dated to see if they were of the same time period?
Thank you Roy. Most Petra's structures appear to be more eroded and damaged, which might indicate a much older age than Hegra. I will try to do some digging :-)
Great video. This place Petra has always stumped me a little more than other megalithic sites. Egypt,Gobekli Tepe, sites in South America all seem to have reliefs of animals or people or hybrids of both. Even the Sumerians had chariots. This place almost reminds me of those plain white clay figurines you get from an art store to decorate as your own but was never finished. I don't think there is even any evidence of paint anywhere. Seems like a lot of work not to personalize it.
Thank you. Like you, I haven't seen animal reliefs in Petra either though I received a message from some who stayed in Petra for 5 days - "There are many sculptures of birds, horses, and lions (in Petra). There are also people with wings. Most of them are broken or badly eroded. Many are in the Petra museum at the site." I'll try to find photos of these reliefs online.
@@cspencer3421 You are more than welcome. I found some photos of the animal and people themed artifacts in the Petra Museum. It seems that at least some of these items were made during the Roman time and may not represent the original Petra style.
You raise a very interesting questions, two resonate with me. First, why the scale dufference between them? Secondly, why the ' newer ' ones of less quality? In our current society, we have gone from log cabins to highrises and anyone can see the progression, not regression, of styles and teqniques to acomplish them. As to the question that undoubtedly arises, where is the rock from within, it may be as simple as literal sands of the deserts.
A remarkable water system in Petra is under reported in the media. The climate at Petra when it was built must have been cooler and wetter as agriculture to grow crops for the population occurred. I haven't seen any documentation about population density at Petra or information on burial practices of the general population.
Good points, William. Thank you for sharing with me. I agree that Petra's water system is under reported. I'll see if I can find some information on the population and burial practices in ancient Petra :-)
I'm disappointed. It took youtube a week to suggest the latest video from the Wonderful Tina? That's not right. I'm sure I'll get over it, I can listen to your beautiful voice any time!
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Very much so, Thank you. The thing that always gets me about the major works at Petra, is the huge door ways? Was it for a big person? I think not, the rooms are small, a giant wouldn't have much space. But what if it was for something big that didn't need to move around at all? The smaller constructions look like living spaces and merchant areas. But the big , grand spaces with elaborate facade? What could they have put in there that required a doorway of that size and what made it so important? Most important, where did it go and why is there no evidence of it. Did it fly away or something? Just my two cents. Be well Tina.
It's my opinion that the differences in the quality of the stone work, would be that the machinery and knowledge to operate it, was lost, buried, destroyed or repurposed between both sites over the eons. Of course the natural fracturing in the stone facades of the monuments, as well as weathering from centuries of environmental occurrences surely had a part in it's appearance today.
Hello my lovely, I've been away for a time. I read the essays of Montaigne and he describes an account of travellers who visited Bhagdad who were told by the priests that they had records going back 225000 years continuously, without any break in the timeline. - Stay lovely Tina!
That's Tina, on the right, at 12:15. 😂 Just kidding. Another excellent video about a subject I thought I knew. You give such extensive and compelling evidence, each time. All of your topics are ones I'm interested in, especially your channel's general theme of an earlier civilization. I hope I live long enough to learn of it's discovery, one day. 🤩🥰
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Perhaps a video on the Scythians and their expansion from the Eurasian steppes might help. 😋 I'd love to hear your theories on their influence they had over other cultures and their own origins.
Perhaps some old Nabatine legends about those who came before exists? Seems to be a common thread. Really good video with really good information. Thank you. =)
Good work. I very much agree and don't understand why no serious work is done on these sites. Apparently there was a group of giant humans living at the time where they built All these giant places. There is one carving of a camel the size of a whole mountain in a recent archaeology report.
I've been watching some of your videos, i love it so far as an ancient world and history enthusiast. I think we are all want to know the truth about the enigmatic of our ancestors, i believe i am not alone here :) love to see your reply and may i know about your educational background for the credibility? Hehe keep it great Mrs. Tina
@@CuriousBeingbyTina how cool... good for you, I mean it's really cool knowing there are a lot of us involved in this topic without an archeology degree
Thank you Steven. Naqsh-e Rostam is a very impressive site too with ancient reliefs and inscriptions. These rock cut tombs seem to be similar to Hegra's scale.
i find the stairs at the top of some of the sites rather curious. in my opinion the amount of recorded history of Hegra implies that Petra predates that location. you stated that Hegra was created in an adopted style, where i would suggest that it was created in an effort to mimic or copy that of Petra. ✌️🐝➕
I had never before seen the interiors of Petra, but then again, I never researched Petra. Thank you for the look inside. I am still convinced that a race of great stone masons lived on Earth, Eons ago and either bugged out just before the Younger Dryas or before then. Why they did what they did, only "they" know.
Thank you Pope. I, too, think there was an advanced culture with amazing stone-related skills a long long time ago... that's why we find these megalithic sites all over the world.
Great video Tina. I was in Petra for 5 days and that was barely enough time to give it a cursory examination of some of the anomalies at the site the place was so enormous. It was almost like being in the Grand Canyon but covered in facades. There are other strange features beyond the fine machine marks you posted. There is another tool they used where some of the rooms and walls were cut with a giant butter knife. I can't think of any other word to describe it. Almost perfectly smooth walls with only the sandstone texture as it's main feature. No tool marks at all. Sometimes giant cuts are made with an apparent non-sensical purpose. And by the way, that sandstone is HARD. I first tried breaking some with my hand and it was impossible. Then I tried hitting it with another rock and it barely did anything to the surface. It's not typical sandstone. National Geographic did a special on Petra and they had 2 experienced stone carvers attempt to make a simple 1/4 scale Petra facade in Malibu at a location where the sandstone is softer and they simply could not replicate them the way archeologist presumed. Their hands were becoming bloody stumps. They ended up resorting to power tools just to get it finished. It looked like crap compared to the ones in Petra.
During my trip I befriended a Bedouin guide and he took me to various areas unfrequented by regular tourist. The facades go much farther out from the main road than most people realize. We also climbed to the top of the Monastary, a truly breathtaking structure in size and beauty. You don't put that much effort into carving something like that unless it had a very special purpose. Most likely it was intended for people of a much larger stature. Why would a human being today build something with an oversized scale? They wouldn't. The ergonomics just don't fit. It would be an enormous wasted effort. Petra is truly a strange, huge, mysterious place. I'm only scratching the surface of my experiences there. I just wished I could've stayed for a several months instead of just 5 days.
Wow that's great information! Thank you so much for sharing with me!. I really envy you being able to stay there for 5 days (and that's not even enough!) I would love to visit the amazing site someday and stay for a while. I agree that the magnificent structures at Petra were created for very special purposes. I see that many cave doors are very tall and oversized. Maybe they were made for larger people... Again, thank you a lot for sharing your insights! ♥
@@CuriousBeingbyTina and anyone else reading, I recommend 2 hotels. The Movenpick or the Petra Guest House. They're both right at the entrance to the park, the Movenpick being slightly farther up the street. The Petra Guest House builders actually used a real facade as part of the hotel. I stayed at the Movenpick. A gorgeous and fully accommodating place for your base of operations. The reason for these 2 recommendations? The Siq is a long walk. Everyday you go into the park you must walk a mile or so just to get to the Treasury, which is the first major structure you see. A truly spectacular experience but a long walk to get there. The Last Crusade barely gives it justice. The rest of the park goes for miles and miles past the Treasury. The Monastary is farther in and is another long climb up the mountain. Fortunately my Bedouin guide let me borrow his all-terrain donkey to get us there (for a price of course) but in the end it saved me a lot of energy to do other things. Save up and get in good shape folks. What an amazing place to visit and study! Oh and BTW, the Jordanians second language is English!
@@reugeot9058 Thank you very much for these tips! I'll keep them in mind when I plan the visit 🙂 Very nice to hear that Jordan's second language is English! Thank you!
Wow I had no idea how big the monastery was until you pointed out the size comparison with people standing by or on it.
Good luck with your channel! I hope it grows fast. We need more people like you and the other you tubers who will help people wake up realize our past is more complicated than we've been taught
Thank you so much! I appreciate your support. Hope you will check out my other videos too :-)
Thank you for the video Tina, fascinating stuff! My feeling is that Petra predates the great Younger Dryas great flood. It strikes me that no one has gone into detail (or detailed speculation) regarding the visible flood markings on all outside walls in Petra. It is as if the lower 1/5 of the facade has been scraped off. This was no ordinary flooding.
Thank you Nat. I agree that Petra could be much older. The lower potions of the facade do look like heavily eroded, however the site is over 800 m above sea level and pretty hilly. I would assume even during flash floods water would have drained away quickly...
Indeed. The event/comet that led to Younger Dryus melted these massive buildings. Including those in the Grand Canyon.
Something causes the oceans to wash over the continents about every 6k years or so, the evidence for this is all over the planet. We just don't know what causes it, but I have a feeling we are about to find out first hand. I also have a feeling it has something to do with our solar system.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina This actually makes sense with Earth's pole flips. That would have put Petra in a different latitude/longitude at one (or more) points in time depending on its actual age. You see the same erosion with the Great Sphinx in Egypt on its lower portion
Except the flooding was up to a MILE deep. Far above the wear at the bases of these facades. I have no answers, but ...
Excellent subject. Looking forward to this. All the very best Phil aav
Thank you Phil! I appreciate the support.
This is my first visit to your channel.
Such a good presentation; thank you.
Welcome! Thank you for watching. Hope you will enjoy my other videos too :-)
Another great video, Tina! Great analysis. I wish I could visit these amazing sites for myself. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it! I would love to visit these sites as well :-)
I go there with Google earth.next best thing
My goodness Tina! You sure do your research. I think you have the best questions ( more than most ) of all alternative theories and research! Keep up the good work! I believe, by the way, that alternative archaeology and research is just as reliable and valid as our current text book “excepted history “ suggests. No one knows for sure. A lot of lost history. 😊👍
Thank you for the compliment, John! It means a lot to me. I will keep researching and I really appreciate your support 😊
Another wonderful presentation thank you.. I hope you know how much your work is valued and will be valuable for many years to come.. I have learned much from you and for that I am truly grateful.
Thank you so much Bill! Your words warm my heart. I deeply appreciate the support ♥
Great research and analysis. Your video seems to be the first to put Petra into its proper archaeological context. It does seem to fall into place with the other high-tech excavations you have documented world wide. Thank you!
Thank you for the support, Eric. I appreciate it!
Very good observations on your part that lead to logical conclusions. Excellent work, thank you for the post!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching :-)
Yes! This is my favorite channel.
Thank you Alan! ♥
I really enjoyed your video. Also you revealed the comparison to Hegra that I did not see before. Your video is sooo much more interesting that the respected Anchient Architects channel on RUclips that claimed Petra was mostly the work of the Romans!!! A while back when you made those videos about the ancient caves in China with the toolmarks I shared with you the image on a Brien Foerster video shot in "Little Petra". Here you could see these toolmarks ending their streak with a hump. You can see here that the rock was like mud or butter that was being scraped in shape. I wish you had included this in your video. These tools are the same as the ones in the Chinese caves and at some sites in Egypt. Once again thanks for your video. I wonder what will be next.
Thank you! I plan to do a separate Petra video on the tool marks you shared with me :-) I saved images from that Brien Foerster's video on Little Petra with tool marks look melted at the ends. I've been collecting images on close-up shots of Petra and a few other sites and I'm hoping to find similar "melted" details at various megalithic ruins. I'm still working on it. Thank you very much for sharing the video with me - I've been thinking about it all along!
Every episode is a gift. Thank you! Very nice.
You are too kind :-)
Great history lesson, and an incredible subject! As always thanks for the video, loved it! What a wonderful world.
Thank you so much for the support! Much appreciated ♥
It's too bad we couldn't have more intellectually curious, and smart people like you in the archeological field. Your work, and conclusions are solid, and logical.
Thank you very much, Michael. I'm grateful for your support.
there are, but they are suppressed and ostracized as they threaten the official narratives
@@orlandoblanco6969 I firmly believe that's true in a lot of cases. I hate to ascribe all this suppression to evil. The problem is I don't have another explanation that is worthwhile.
@Joseph Tutor she makes sense, but her evidence is outstanding, whereas a lot of the crackpot theories that say pyramids are tombs, or any number of other theories about ancient megalithic, etc, usually don't show proof, or even plausible logic trains to back up their theories.
Joseph tutor I have seen 100 year old hevey equipment that is completely rusted into nothing recognizable. In a 1,000 years 2,000 years 10,000 years? The equipment that Tina is suggesting might have been used would be gone and before that moved to a new site after a given job was finished.
You are awesome sauce Tina. Thank you for sharing such fascinating and excellent thought provoking videos. 🗿☕💙😊
You are so welcome! Thank you for the support 😊
Amazing video and info.
Thanks so much.
I wish you All the best.
Glad it was helpful :-) Thank you for your support!
Very interesting. So many examples of ancient stone workings that are difficult to explain!
Thank you! I made a series of videos on less-known megalithic sites and prehistoric civilizations - hope you will check a few out 🙂
The lady narrating this is absolutely beautiful! Good video on history also. Subscribed.
Welcome aboard! Thank you for the support :-)
You have enriched yourself and cultured yourself by your choice of resesrch and methods. Very smart focus. Truely awesome monuments of what must have an amazing culture of people. Thanx4sharing your richness with us. You are a very special angel, and I love your voice.
Thank you very much for the support and the kind words. Much appreciated :-)
Excellent analysis, as usual. I especially was impressed by the detailed analysis at 17:28 of Petra as a city for the living. Great job, Tina..
Thank you! I appreciate the support :-)
This is brilliant! Thanks for all the research. Petra is much higher quality than the rest. It's like Egypt, the oldest people had the most sophisticated architecture. When are you going to travel to some of these places and do some livestreams with closeups?
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you. I would love to travel to some of these sites and do live-streams with closeups. Hopefully soon...
Very thorough , thoughtful, well presented. What a gift!
Glad you enjoyed it. Thank you very much Rod!
I always liked you doing the thumbs up while you asked for the thumbs up ✌🙃✌
And as usual, great video and you are correct....
Signed......
A consistent fan 💛
Thank you! I really appreciate your continuous support 💛
@@CuriousBeingbyTina I recently watched a video about the history of Mecca, and they showed an ancient split to which in times long past that Petra was the city where the mosques were originally aligned...and now obviously it is not. But from some still existing qibla walls can be traced on a map to Petra.
Great video as usual! Always look forward to your content.
Glad to hear it! Thank you so much for the support!
Oh my, I love Petra and other ancient sites of Arabian peninsula, thank you so much.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching :-)
Tina, you ask the right questions, notice the unnoticed and bring it to light, never daring say what you're thinking and leading us to think. Wonderful !! "You can lead a horse to water, but can't make it drink." You drown out disbelievers with images, truth, following a soft spoken yet undeniable narrative. Congratulations on producing an "eye opener".!!
Thank you very much for the support and kind words! I truly appreciate it ♥
this is great today and knowledgeable thank u for the time u dedicate 👍🎶💕☀
You are so welcome. Thank you for the support 🙂
As usual, a great video! Thank you for sharing it with us.
My pleasure! Thank you for watching.
Listened for a few min and subscribed. Looking at your channel. I am very interested in watching more of your vids!
👏👏👏👍😎
Awesome, thank you! Welcome 🙂
Love all of the Petra shows, you certainly do the best research.
Thank you Stephen! I'm flattered :-)
She is very thorough and the questions she proposes are worth finding the answers too.
Thank you for the support :-)
I wouldnt call those stone caves "plain", that patterning in the stone is insane! 🤩🥰
The decoration is minimal but the natural stone color is truly beautiful 🙂
Your curiosity is only matched by your beauty Tina, and thank you for yet another insightful video
Wow, thank you! I really appreciate your support :-)
Another fabulous documentary, thank you Tina for your sharing your insights
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching 🙂
Super interesting Tina 🙂👍!!
Friday and a video from you, Perfect Day
You are amazing btw!!
Thank you Jeff! 😃 So glad to hear that!
Thanks for the wonderful content keep it up
Thank you, will do :-)
interestingly presented ........keeep up the good work..
Glad you liked it. Thank you! Hope you can check out my other videos too :-)
Glad to see your hard at work. It’s been awhile.
Points to ponder. Everything with columns and Doric arches is called Hellenistic. Thus dating is largely by form in relation to historic Greece and what we think we know of that history. We see a very wide distribution of Hellenistic form geographically. Much wider than the Greeks were known to have traveled. Therefore this suggests an older culture which had archetypal designs adopted by the Greeks as well as these other cultures. The cut rock striations support this same conclusion as well.
You discussed thermoluminesense dating in a previous video. It’s a good technique on fired pottery, not so good on sun exposed rock. One analytical technique we don’t often see is geomagnetic orientation applied to such sites. The usual application is in dating sedimentary or igneous rock formations by identifying the alignment of magnetic crystals to the earths magnetic field, which processes geographically on a know pattern. This technique is well defined. But it won’t tell you when a rock was cut. Only when it was formed.
Now many sites like Petra have been found to contain small patches of plaster or mortar. Initially it was thought that these stone works were totally mortar-less. And to a large degree they are. However, recent close inspection reveals errors in cutting and fitting which appear to have been “fixed” with mortar, presumably by the initial builders. Testing of this mortar might very well yield magnetic orientation data on age. I know of only one case where this was done. By a Russian team working one of the Peruvian megalithic sites. The published age was dismissed by the majority. Mortar sampling is generally frowned upon due to the destructive nature of the sampling process.
So. Here we sit in catch-22. We “feel” that these sites are older. But can’t prove it by existing technology, and we are not allowed to test a bit here and there for fear of diminishing the site. Or the accepted date upon which numerous professional reputations rest. So we can but speculate.
Fox out.
Well said, Fox. Thank you for the insightful comment.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina
I live to serve.
Fox out.
@@MrJento Have a great weekend, Fox 🦊
@@CuriousBeingbyTina
I am! Count on it. I’ve been out sighting in my squirrel rifle. It’s a fox thing.
Fox out!
Great documentary, Tina. I will tweet you some pics showing close-ups of tool marks at Petra.
Please do! Thank you Ziggy :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Asap.
Excelent. Thankyou for showing this to us.
Glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching!
Hi Tina. When I look at all of the stone structures in the world I wonder why. Why build like this. I think it was easy. I don't know how they did it, but it was easy. Your work with the machine marks is spot on. Keep being curious. Thank you for the great content.
Thank you for the support, Howie. It's very possible that it was easy for the ancients to create these massive stone caves.
You can see damage from the floods in Petra noticed the wear on the stones... In the lower areas the other thing I’ve been pondering is the Younger driest event..I believe the meteors/coment Musta hit 40 days later or in between that’s why it’s so significant 40 days and 40 nights 40 days 40 that it has some significant
What did they do with all the material removed to make the chambers?
I'm also more ancient than assumed!
Good to see you back for another interesting history lesson!
I've also just followed you on twitter. And gave your first tweet an RT.
Thank you so much for the support! ♥
I am suprised that no one to date has taken accurate measurements of some of the features of buildings. For example, how round and linear are the columns? What is the tolerance difference between similar columns etc. Also, how square are the corners in the caves? Such information would assist the debate about how they were made and with what tools.
You have a kind voice and personality that I hug the air. So, my hugs to you curious being. Your looks add up to your knowledge and curiosity.
Thank you! 😊 I really appreciate your support and kind words.
Excellent and thought provoking video as always. Your description of the interior rooms of that one structure in Petra (three rooms and a main room) reminds me of the top of some South and Central American pyramids. I wonder if they served that same possible purposes?
Thank you Yeti! I didn't know that the American pyramids have similar interior plans with the Treasury. I'll look them up - thanks for the information :-)
Impressive work. A very interesting subject.
Glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching :-) Hope you will enjoy my other videos too.
Great video and content, gives the mainstream something to think about I'm sure
Thank you! I hope so :-)
You've given me a lot to think about on the level of the stone work. "Thank you. I find Petra fascinating.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching. Hope you will check out my other videos too 🙂
petra is so very mysterious. immaculately decorated outside and very plain inside
Hello CB, RUclips never notifies me of your new posts.
Glad I found you again. I was wondering what new horizons you were exploring. ❤️ From Boston.
Also, the fine parallel markings look like the markings on that humongous cave in China that was possibly a reservoir. Sorry,
I forget the name.
Welcome back! Glad that you found me again - thank you for the support! The tool marks at Longyou caves do share resemblance with some Petra marks 🙂
Great Research Tina, you have brought forward many things in this video that all other pseudo-researchers have completely missed and I applaud you for it.
From the many videos I have seen on Petra, I observe that many facades could easily be fake-chiseled render. The evidence is there, just as it is all over the world at other sites.. Creating those perfect parallel chisel marks is very easy to accomplish with a jagged toothed wooden trowel, this gives perfect flat surfaces and parallel markings. Archeaologists are not builders, that havent got a clue!
Thank you. Hope you will enjoy my other videos too :-)
Great video Tina! Have you seen the flower room yet? That is beautiful. It's artwork is amazing.
Thank you! I'll search for the flower room :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina ruclips.net/video/SZ5JjLdzQ1o/видео.html
Hello Tina, whe have to listing less of the old masters of the arcelogia and more to the new masters of this time with modern tools tath we have now .
Whe are now able to use te modern tools for beter results and compared the old marks whit today marks.
Inside the rooms of petra the wals are 10 meters high, how is it possible to smooth the walls and selling of such high?
There are always more questions than answer and that is what I like , there is always a space to questions.
Thank you Jan. I agree that we need to be more open minded and seriously consider the origin of these marks. Hand tools are just not fit to excavate these massive caves and facades.
Next to Praveen Mohan, your channel has become my favorite. I actually felt happiness when I noticed this latest post 😍
Wow, thank you Kelly! I'm flattered. I love Praveen Mohan's work! He is one of the people who inspired me to start my own channel :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina you are not only curious; you are a Beautiful Being. May all your endeavors be prosperous.
I had no idea there is so much to discover UNDERground. How fascinating.
@@kellyjohns6612 Thank you very much! I really appreciate your support ☺
Amazing video!! You should have 10x subs!!
Thank you! I hope so :-)
New subscriber here, and a bit of an art history/architecture nerd; I have never seen, at least in my research and meandering, the use of pediments as in Petra. At 1:37, top left pediment, it’s folded along its vertical axis, but in unfolding it, the design and architecture isn’t lost, and it maintains continuity and its geometry until reaching the stone on which its carved.
Thank you and Welcome 😊 Keen observation on Petra's pediments! I agree that the folded and continuous feature is quite unusual for broken pediments. I can't recall seeing another one outside Petra.
Will watch soon, but I love the painting behind you.
Thank you! 🙂
Tina thank You for tons of informations, everything about Hegra is new for me .
Thanks, Good Work.This is IT .
Amazing video, uses of photos, good choices.
You are STAR!
Tina Curious Being Jones ! :) / You know , Indiana :)/
Still Curious and looking for Hidden Ancient Machine !
Must be somewhere and waiting for You !
You will find it, fingers cross for You !:)
Thank you very much! So glad that you enjoyed the video ♥ I do hope one day we will find some signs of ancient machinery! Have a great weekend :-)
My favorite super beautiful anthropologist and archeologist ❤️ I hope you e been well sweetheart, glad to see an upload. Much love and respect to you:
❤️-Troy
Thank you so much! I really appreciate your support ♥
@@CuriousBeingbyTina It's just such a beautiful site, the wonder it invokes....Tina there's just so much on this giant earth, and we, each so small, have been the hands that built forth all these creations. There's something so beautiful that's been lost- we've really came into a technological greatness of our own time period......but the ancients truly had something my heart yearns for so long.....it seems thou they had much more fullfilling life's and worked towards so thru all of their lasting things they've left us.
@@DetroitFettyghost My thoughts too...the ancients seem to have a different way of living that is both intriguing and beautiful.
Given the cavernous interior spaces in Petra, it might be that these interiors were fitted out with interior constructions made of wood or other materials.
These might provide multi level living spaces of more human sizes.
Also, such interior structures might have been more solid and stable than a similar excavation of rock which could be prone to collapse.
Thank you for your insight, Olaf. I appreciate it. I agree that some of the big caves show evidence of being multi leveled and might have been finished with other materials.
And where would they have got all that wood from in a desert?
@@daragildea7434 It wasn't always desert.
@@jondoealoe It was when Petra was built, so what's your point?
@@daragildea7434 When was Petra built?
I just discovered your page today. I can’t help but wonder if the books that Zecharia Sitchin wrote about the Anunnaki could answer some of the questions that you have. Good luck on your journey!
Have we tried using Sonar or some kinda rock penitrating equiptment to see if some of these fake doors inside doensn't lead into somewhere else like secret chambers that has been accessed from another area or cave hole that may have collapse. I know many say it's a belief they're to step into another demintion but has this been mistakin for ever and we just didn't think maybe it's a real door not finished but someone around that area accessed or dug a chamber to an area right behind that door and other hollow rooms exist?
Interesting - it would be nice if someone can do some kind of scanning or GPR in Petra to see if there are hidden chambers or openings. I read that there are underground "tombs" in Petra that haven't been excavated.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina This is what we need is a place everyone can throw out ideas or brainstorm in a group chat or voice chat like Discord or something. I think more things could and would be figured out or come to light then how everyone is doing it now typing in these boxes waiting for a reply not knowing if one is going to be coming in the next 15 minutes. I get frustrated easy because I get customers asking for help online they will message me and i will reply right away and get an answer 2 days later like dude not even 20 seconds passed and you got a reply instantly but I've never experienced it back. lol
@@dogcreek-customs5168 It'll be great for people to brainstorm and discuss together. We all have different things to be taken care of in life (and might in different time zones); so even though such discussions would be very interesting they might not be the no.1 priority. But the good thing is people in various countries can be in the same discussion.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina That would be the point of live chat & voice chat. as far a priority like I said you don't need help then ask for it then answer the person that's helping 2 days to 2 weeks later but the good thing about this even if they're in different timezones if there not in chat then there isn't a problem if they are in chat they will answer you just don't go into chat and ask a question then shut down the software for another time they do that on social media & youtube. Discord is an actual live chat if you're in there your either avaiable, DND, Idle, some even ghost using the offline feature but it's nothing like facebook, lubetube, twitter none of them. ;)
,hi Tina once again great video Petra is amazing and now I know a lot more about it thank you I always love your work take care Tina from Andy 👍
Glad that you enjoyed my video 🙂Thank you for the support, Andy!
thank you for your info on this subject
i too would like to go see the differences
i wonder if weather wear be dated to see if they were of the same time period?
Thank you Roy. Most Petra's structures appear to be more eroded and damaged, which might indicate a much older age than Hegra. I will try to do some digging :-)
Truly amazing…..we can only guess at the purpose and the technical skill involved….thank you very much for your work bringing this to us..cheers
My pleasure! Thank you for watching. Cheers
Really well done! Interesting and provocative.🤗
Thank you! 😊 Hope you will enjoy my other videos too.
Thank you for this very clear expose!
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching :-)
越来越喜欢你的视频和频道了,只是在国内想看到还挺不容易的😊。Petra也是令人惊叹和神往的远古遗迹之一,虽然我不是个很爱好旅游的人,但是如果真的要旅游,我觉得这样的地方才是真正值得去看的地方。
多谢支持呀 🙂 我还没精力把视频翻译成中文发到国内平台上... 我也很想去这些远古遗迹去看看,亲身体验一定会更震撼。
These photos are so incredible. Your analysis very poignant. Great job. Others show only a couple of areas at Petrus.
Glad that you enjoyed it :-) Hope you can check out my other videos too.
A good video presentation. Beautifully thought out, and beautifully presented by a beautiful girl. xxx
Thank you! I appreciate your support :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina lol
Great video. This place Petra has always stumped me a little more than other megalithic sites. Egypt,Gobekli Tepe, sites in South America all seem to have reliefs of animals or people or hybrids of both. Even the Sumerians had chariots. This place almost reminds me of those plain white clay figurines you get from an art store to decorate as your own but was never finished. I don't think there is even any evidence of paint anywhere. Seems like a lot of work not to personalize it.
Thank you. Like you, I haven't seen animal reliefs in Petra either though I received a message from some who stayed in Petra for 5 days - "There are many sculptures of birds, horses, and lions (in Petra). There are also people with wings. Most of them are broken or badly eroded. Many are in the Petra museum at the site." I'll try to find photos of these reliefs online.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina That is interesting. Thank you . I've only seen photos and short films over the years to go on. Never seen any about the museum.
@@cspencer3421 You are more than welcome. I found some photos of the animal and people themed artifacts in the Petra Museum. It seems that at least some of these items were made during the Roman time and may not represent the original Petra style.
Excellent thanks Tina.
Hows the weather?
PEACE from planet Perth ✌👽
Thank you for the support. We got some snow today. Hope all is well :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Snow sounds nice..we got 40degs. Too much. Have a great day ✌👽
@@wordzfailmebro Thank you. You too!
Have you noticed the stair step design motif is more than a little similar to that seen at Tiwanaku Bolivia
Yes they both have the stepped design motif...
Thanks!
Thank you for the support! Much appreciated ♥
You raise a very interesting questions, two resonate with me. First, why the scale dufference between them? Secondly, why the ' newer ' ones of less quality? In our current society, we have gone from log cabins to highrises and anyone can see the progression, not regression, of styles and teqniques to acomplish them. As to the question that undoubtedly arises, where is the rock from within, it may be as simple as literal sands of the deserts.
Thank you for sharing your insight with me, Eric. I appreciate it!
A remarkable water system in Petra is under reported in the media. The climate at Petra when it was built must have been cooler and wetter as agriculture to grow crops for the population occurred. I haven't seen any documentation about population density at Petra or information on burial practices of the general population.
Good points, William. Thank you for sharing with me. I agree that Petra's water system is under reported. I'll see if I can find some information on the population and burial practices in ancient Petra :-)
I'm disappointed. It took youtube a week to suggest the latest video from the Wonderful Tina? That's not right. I'm sure I'll get over it, I can listen to your beautiful voice any time!
Oh thank you! Hope you enjoy the video :-)
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Very much so, Thank you. The thing that always gets me about the major works at Petra, is the huge door ways? Was it for a big person? I think not, the rooms are small, a giant wouldn't have much space. But what if it was for something big that didn't need to move around at all? The smaller constructions look like living spaces and merchant areas. But the big , grand spaces with elaborate facade? What could they have put in there that required a doorway of that size and what made it so important? Most important, where did it go and why is there no evidence of it. Did it fly away or something? Just my two cents. Be well Tina.
In our country R.Makedonija we have a names Petra Jordan and I'm just wondering if hes any historical connections with the Macedonians?
It's my opinion that the differences in the quality of the stone work, would be that the machinery and knowledge to operate it, was lost, buried, destroyed or repurposed between both sites over the eons. Of course the natural fracturing in the stone facades of the monuments, as well as weathering from centuries of environmental occurrences surely had a part in it's appearance today.
Thank you for sharing with me. It appears that much knowledge was lost a vert long time ago...
I always wondered where did all the rock go that they removed
Me too
Hello my lovely, I've been away for a time. I read the essays of Montaigne and he describes an account of travellers who visited Bhagdad who were told by the priests that they had records going back 225000 years continuously, without any break in the timeline. - Stay lovely Tina!
Welcome back Michael! I haven't heard about this ancient record - I'll search for it. Thank you for the information!
Well researched!
Thank you Steve 🙂
That's Tina, on the right, at 12:15. 😂 Just kidding. Another excellent video about a subject I thought I knew. You give such extensive and compelling evidence, each time.
All of your topics are ones I'm interested in, especially your channel's general theme of an earlier civilization. I hope I live long enough to learn of it's discovery, one day. 🤩🥰
😂 Thank you very much for the compliment. I'm very glad that you enjoy my videos. Hopefully one day we will finally know about truth 🙂
@@CuriousBeingbyTina You should have 10x as many followers. I'd boldly say 100x.
@@zedmoe Thank you very much! I hope one day I can reach that goal ♥
@@CuriousBeingbyTina Perhaps a video on the Scythians and their expansion from the Eurasian steppes might help. 😋 I'd love to hear your theories on their influence they had over other cultures and their own origins.
I was wondering the same thing: where did the excavated stone go?
Perhaps some old Nabatine legends about those who came before exists? Seems to be a common thread.
Really good video with really good information. Thank you. =)
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you. I haven't found Nabataean texts on the creation of Petra. Btw hope you can check out my other videos too :-)
Yes, a very nice observation and precise research has enriched me. I agree with you very much. And thank you.💋🙏🙋♀️
Thank you very much, Eva ♥ I appreciate your support 🙏
Petra city of the God's.. Hegra city for us little humans.. Petra is one special place.. I loved your information thanks 😊
Glad to that that. Thank you for watching. Hope you will check out my other videos too 😊
Do you sell Curious Being t-shirt’s, jumpers or hoodies?
Not yet :-) maybe one day I will :p
Good work. I very much agree and don't understand why no serious work is done on these sites. Apparently there was a group of giant humans living at the time where they built All these giant places. There is one carving of a camel the size of a whole mountain in a recent archaeology report.
Thank you for sharing with me. I'll look for the mountain sized carving of a camel :-)
Well done!!!
Thank you :-)
Your talents are expanding very wonderful to see!!
I've been watching some of your videos, i love it so far as an ancient world and history enthusiast. I think we are all want to know the truth about the enigmatic of our ancestors, i believe i am not alone here :) love to see your reply and may i know about your educational background for the credibility? Hehe keep it great Mrs. Tina
Thanks for watching, Sabilla. I have an architecture background with a Master's Degree.
@@CuriousBeingbyTina how cool... good for you, I mean it's really cool knowing there are a lot of us involved in this topic without an archeology degree
There are similar structures in Iran as well. I have to see if it's the scale and quality of Petra or Hegra. Very interesting stuff.
Thank you Steven. Naqsh-e Rostam is a very impressive site too with ancient reliefs and inscriptions. These rock cut tombs seem to be similar to Hegra's scale.
Great content Tina thank you.
Hopefully something to spark your curiosity.
Indonesian pyramid gunung padang.
Thank you. Gunung Padang is a very intriguing site. I may look into it in the near future :-)
i find the stairs at the top of some of the sites rather curious. in my opinion the amount of recorded history of Hegra implies that Petra predates that location. you stated that Hegra was created in an adopted style, where i would suggest that it was created in an effort to mimic or copy that of Petra.
✌️🐝➕
Great information, thanks!!
Thank you David!
Great new photos
Glad you like them!
I had never before seen the interiors of Petra, but then again, I never researched Petra. Thank you for the look inside. I am still convinced that a race of great stone masons lived on Earth, Eons ago and either bugged out just before the Younger Dryas or before then. Why they did what they did, only "they" know.
Thank you Pope. I, too, think there was an advanced culture with amazing stone-related skills a long long time ago... that's why we find these megalithic sites all over the world.