Secrets of Stonehenge FULL SPECIAL | NOVA | PBS America

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 ноя 2022
  • Investigations about Stonehenge have kicked off a dramatic new era of discovery and debate over who built Stonehenge, how, and for what purpose? Granted exclusive access to the dig site at Bluestonehenge, a prehistoric stone-circle monument recently discovered about a mile from Stonehenge, NOVA cameras join a new generation of researchers finding important clues to this enduring mystery.
    About PBS America:
    Welcome to PBS America, a British TV channel from America’s public service broadcaster, PBS, showcasing award-winning American history, science, current affairs, plus arts and culture shows alongside the works of living legend Ken Burns, output is all hand-picked by a British team.
    Get More PBS America:
    Website: www.pbsamerica.co.uk/
    Twitter: / pbsamerica
    Facebook: / pbsamerica
    Instagram: / pbsintheuk
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 462

  • @diabolicalartificer
    @diabolicalartificer Год назад +22

    One of the best Stonehenge documentary's I've watched, thanks for posting.

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Год назад +1

      15:00 Or they just could be male sacrifices!

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Год назад

      22:30 HILARIOUS using the wrong type of wood! What a pointless experiment!
      So this explains all the rock balls that dont exist! LOL They could just do it with trees laid down for support and logs for rollers!

    • @ggyggg2272
      @ggyggg2272 Год назад

      A

  • @Cunning.Stunt7
    @Cunning.Stunt7 Год назад +8

    Stonehenge is outside my city, gathering with so many on Summer Solstice nights/mornings are the best!
    Never tire of going to the henge's all around Wiltshire

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Por favor ustedes y los ingleses están todo confundido ese lugar no lo creo ningún humano están diciendo estupideces llámenme yo le explico me están cansando

  • @DavyRo
    @DavyRo Год назад +17

    I visited stonehenge in 2019 & it's honestly difficult to describe the feelings I had while I was there. I was working not far away & decided to take a drive to it on a beautiful summers day. I was by myself but wasn't alone as there was a lot of people there. I stayed until the site closed & the visitors had left. There's a tack that runs parallel to the site called "The drove" where lots of new age hippies & general free spirits camp. I spoke with many as they were so friendly & spiritual. I mentioned at the time to the 1st people I spoke to, I said I don't know if its the beautiful weather or the friendly people around. But the feelings of Joy & that I was visiting a very special place will remain with me for the rest of my life. I was so taken I was constantly on the phone to my wife & kids. They were all jealous & I've promised ill take them this summer. I've got a lot of photo's but like I said seeing this place in a video or in photos, is honestly irrelevant. You have to visit the place if possible. It's surreal, spiritual, an amazing place. People who work on the site deserve a lot of credit & I love hearing the different theories. The truth be known there's no written records of its construction & we are clueless to what it really was & what it meant. Too many theories of any mysterious ancient buildings are labelled as tombs or sacrifice places of worship. It's always the same thing. I personally believe we need to start looking at the places from a totally different point of view. We in our arrogance always try & fit narratives to cultures & places from our views of things. It's what we think they should be like. It's ridiculous the cultures & people's who built these structures were nothing like us. We couldn't be more different so how the hell can we look at these places like they were created by an older version of us?

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад

      @shemnetto4128 You have been brainwashed.

    • @veestar9837
      @veestar9837 Год назад

      @shemnetto4128 Do tell me what all that "very misinterpreted"
      bible info has to do with Daveyro's comment OR Stonehenge??

    • @patsysadowski1546
      @patsysadowski1546 Год назад

      We always look at it with a modern perspective and I think you are right. The Victorian Empire perceived everything as empire building. I’m sure this continues. Hope you made it with the family.

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Ándate al psicólogo me parece que es en un lugar equivocado este lugar no los hizo los humanos ningún humano increíble que equivocados que están no es un centro de observatorio astronómico tampoco es sólo hizo la luna cuando se acercó a la tierra de qué carajo están hablando por favor dejen de decir estupideces no es nada de lo que creen nada absolutamente nada la luna fue la responsable de este lugar con la tierra

  • @davidgray3321
    @davidgray3321 Год назад +37

    I really enjoyed that , thank you to everyone involved. I went there as a child, in those days people didn’t do such foolish things as to spray paint monuments, one could walk amongst the stones and touch them, I remember it well. It is a shame little children cannot do that today.

    • @cathymacdonald1469
      @cathymacdonald1469 Год назад +2

      I was there in December 1967. It was a cold day but we spent hours there.

    • @sharonannlee1
      @sharonannlee1 Год назад +2

      August 1975 as a teenager. I remember touching the stones and feeling amazed.

    • @midnightspecial3827
      @midnightspecial3827 Год назад

      I also remember when it was open, no fences or gates

    • @bikinggal1
      @bikinggal1 Год назад +3

      most ruins around the world used to be free to climb and touch, but vandalism and theft have ruined that! It's a shame like you say

    • @cathymacdonald1469
      @cathymacdonald1469 Год назад +3

      @@bikinggal1 it is a shame the people leave their manners at home.

  • @virginiafry9854
    @virginiafry9854 Год назад +20

    I went there in 1965 when it was not fenced off - magical to walk under/around the stones!

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Estás mal hacete ver con un doctor Ese lugar no fue hecho por humanos lo hizo la luna cuando sean cerca de la tierra

    • @George-lq4li
      @George-lq4li Месяц назад

      Why they fenced it? Did someone steel from the stones?

    • @gennanam
      @gennanam Месяц назад

      ​@@George-lq4li graffiti and vandalism :(

  • @STX-BTC
    @STX-BTC Год назад +2

    So they brought all them giant stones from wales, 150 miles away? that's mind blowing. it would be nice if it was reconstructed back to how it used to be.

  • @robinhooper7702
    @robinhooper7702 Год назад +4

    This is for Parker Pearson, Andrew Young, Bruce Bradley, Mike Pitts and the the teams involved. Oh, and the videographer team.
    Just my two bits worth on how the stones were moved. I would look into the elevation of the river bed compared to the entrance or the end of the channel. If my suspicion is correct they also used buoyancy to transport the stones, as well as the fir/oak channels that you just used as guide rails, complete with the 75mm round ball stones. The round ditch was also filled with water to facilitate positioning before erecting them. But I'm a cabinet maker. Just something to chew on. Great documentary.
    I would also like to interject my take on the Summer and Winter solstices, but relative to the alignment of the great Pyramid. With polished limestone on each face, this would reflect our Suns' light in a triangular shape at a specific angle and a specific location into space. Much like a lighthouse would. Again, Thanks for the Great documentary.

  • @boojay111
    @boojay111 Год назад +19

    Mike Parker Pearson (the big bear) is the most wonderful guy, his knowledge is amazing and his discoveries through patience and diligence awe inspiring. No ego no plumped up 'hey look at me' just a good accademic mind and intense research. Thanks Mike can watch you all day. Have watched all these expert archaeologists over the years on Time Team and many other BBC programmes revealing to us the mysteries of our past.

    • @jonathonbod5721
      @jonathonbod5721 Год назад

      your comment says it . that god will come down to earth .just proves that he was an ALIEN..WHY HE HAS DONE FK ALL.WERE WAS HE WHEN THE JEWS WERE GASED.& pedos rape n kill children...NOWERE HES NOT REAL IN THE SENCE U BELEAVING IN.ALIENS MADE HUMANS FROM APES .GENE SPLICING,and the the proof their is why is their still ape/monkey. still on eath they would have died off once humans evolved Ie (to make someone change or something change & develop gradually ...and none of them have giving birth to other humans ever since we appeared on earth. and humans have 3 more genes than them mmm were did the 3 genes come from

    • @jonathonbod5721
      @jonathonbod5721 Год назад

      Guess the bible thumper dont like the truth.i dont see their comment i repled to

    • @CONEHEADDK
      @CONEHEADDK Год назад

      "Fun" fact - they have been moved around recently.............

    • @julianbrowne5562
      @julianbrowne5562 Год назад

      Yup he's a complete bore.

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Me parece que los haré quiero locos estos los estudiosos de estos monumentos de falla en la cabeza están desorientados totalmente desorientado ese lugar no es un centro de observación astronómica no lo hizo ningún humano

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
    @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 Год назад +15

    I love Nova for exactly this kind of well-researched but still accessible material. While I do enjoy deeper university lectures about such subjects they can sometimes be a bit dry, so it's also very nice to have something more easy-going like this here. Great stuff.

  • @SpuriousEmission
    @SpuriousEmission Год назад +156

    Adverts every few minutes. I'm afraid I've given up with this. Sadly there's far too many adverts on RUclips these days.

    • @fikent5252
      @fikent5252 Год назад +10

      Yes, it spoils every single program!!!! 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬

    • @amkokokko-wd4ht
      @amkokokko-wd4ht Год назад +11

      Hey come back there are no ads now.

    • @jannetteberends8730
      @jannetteberends8730 Год назад +3

      If you have VPN, just go to another country. I’m in Albany now. no advertising at all. But I also like to go to other countries to watch their advertisements. In most countries there is less than in the USA. Greetings from The Netherlands

    • @aishite_imasu097
      @aishite_imasu097 Год назад +3

      RUclips Vanced is still alive for mobile. No ads at all.

    • @Known-unknowns
      @Known-unknowns Год назад +26

      Pay for RUclips. I have Premium and there are no adds 😊

  • @roytonkin5929
    @roytonkin5929 Год назад +13

    Thank you for this great documentary. Hope to see a few more like this.

  • @balf1111117373
    @balf1111117373 Год назад +7

    Amazing how any ancient artefacts you have to dig to discover them. Yet stone henge is sat perfectly on top of a freshly mowed field.

    • @liukang3545
      @liukang3545 Год назад +1

      no shit

    • @ggyggg2272
      @ggyggg2272 Год назад

      U

    • @ceciliacrocker390
      @ceciliacrocker390 Год назад

      Not to mention how clean the found pieces are... always 😮

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Este lugar no lo hizo ningún humano lo puso ahí la luna cuando perdió la gravedad hay miles de lugares como este creado de la misma manera el taxi del valle Argentina hay uno pero hay en China hay en Perú están los muelles de la isla de Pascua que es lo mismo que eso nada más que están desparramados no tiene la magia que tiene esto lo hizo la luna eso si cuando se acercó a la tierra bueno cualquier cosa llámame y te explico porque está confundido muy confundido

  • @stuartrooksby5760
    @stuartrooksby5760 Год назад +3

    In the late 19th century Stonehenge was opened as a type of quarry where the landowner hired hammers and chisels to paying guests to break and tranport away as much as they required at a price. The site was finally prototected, but a huge amount has been broken up and carried away and lost. Access to the monumement was, in the 50s fully accessible and as children we played on the stones, thinking it a very magical and mysterious place.

  • @als1023
    @als1023 Год назад +14

    I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of this program. fascinating insights and discoveries, thank you for producing and a huge thanks to all the researchers and students that made this effort work!

  • @neilhobson3624
    @neilhobson3624 Год назад +8

    I’ve driven past it quite a few times. It’s so easy to miss.

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад

      Yeah it looks it!

    • @user-hy9nh4yk3p
      @user-hy9nh4yk3p 4 месяца назад

      Interest - is the mother of research - inner and outer dimensions - included.
      Fare thee well.

  • @johnsharman7262
    @johnsharman7262 Год назад +2

    Good documentary, with fairly plausible definitions and interpretations, evolving to shape the evidence. Pitts and Pearson are like the Neolithic chieftains of Stonehenge archaeology.

  • @tylerwatson8209
    @tylerwatson8209 Год назад +1

    nice story , i really loved it

  • @rot265we384
    @rot265we384 Год назад +5

    Stonehenge may also be part of the ancient beliefs of holed stones having healing properties. A form of a healing centre for the sick. Holed stones were often used by ancient people with ailments to pass through the hole of any large stone, believing they would be healed like a rebirth. Comparing it to the natural birth of an infant. Much like entrances of ancient churches of Ireland, Scotland and other places that were considered obscene because of symbolic carvings that have long since been removed.

  • @stuartrooksby5760
    @stuartrooksby5760 Год назад +2

    Despite the excess of adverts - although by today's sorry standards these are relatively few and mercifully brief - this is a good narrative, well spoken and thoughtfully researched giving a good informative and comprehensive scientific account of this famously enigmatic monument's origins. PBS mostly does a very good job... no hype, no myopic traditions aired here. Congratulations and thanks.

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      Por favor cuantas imprecisiones estás diciendo nada que ver este no es un monumento emblemático ni nada por el estilo no es un centro de observación no lo ha hecho ningún inglés ningún la persona humana nadie esto lo hizo la luna cuando fue perdiendo fuerza a través de la tierra cuando fue recuperada Nuñez bien bien nada monumento hay en todas partes del mundo no se crean que son los únicos acá en Argentina hay un lugar que en un café del valle los muelles de la isla de Pascua es la misma cosa que está ahí no entienden nada por favor llámenme y no digan más cosas que no corresponden engañando un montón de gente que va a ir a hacer A creer una cosa que no existe

  • @paulmadigan5603
    @paulmadigan5603 Год назад +1

    EXCELLENT DOCUMENTARY VERY GOOD CHEERS

  • @RolandRamirezTV
    @RolandRamirezTV Год назад +1

    By not skipping adverts is my way of saying thank you for sharing this great research for us.
    I visited Stonehenge way back in 2012 and it was really monumental, thinking it was made around 3000 BC. I feel privileged to have seen these stones.

  • @JensDIYMom
    @JensDIYMom Год назад +2

    One of my bucket list to see this places

    • @rsguastalla5370
      @rsguastalla5370 2 месяца назад

      No es nada importante como lo que dije por favor anda a otros lugares más linda a disfrutar

  • @cornwallparanormalresearch2378
    @cornwallparanormalresearch2378 Год назад +1

    Very interesting indeed 👌

  • @JensDIYMom
    @JensDIYMom Год назад

    Wow I love this kind of places 🥰😍😍😍

  • @favoursoffortune
    @favoursoffortune Год назад

    This was awesome

  • @daveyr7454
    @daveyr7454 Год назад +12

    Well, for a American production that was well done I thought! Much of the footage has been on UK TV off and on but it was well presented here as a whole :) ……thank you.

  • @malpete
    @malpete Год назад

    Magical , been in Stonehenge around 10 years ago , lucky me I live in London 😁

  • @pt14930
    @pt14930 2 месяца назад +1

    In this show, Parker Pearson does not mention that the animals in the feasting pits came from Scotland. Nor does he mention the Ring of Brodgar in the Orkneys, built hundreds of years before Stonehenge. Because perish the thought that the English would need to admit that this iconic monument might have been built by people who originally came from Scotland.

  • @syedaamirhussain6111
    @syedaamirhussain6111 Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing ❤ stay blessed you all the team who are working such unique work. Great to watch. I am a Social Science Teacher and I like your research work.

  • @howser1961
    @howser1961 Год назад +2

    Outstanding - very informative and engaging

  • @robloxdoron6398
    @robloxdoron6398 Год назад +2

    i learnt this at school
    so i wanted to learn more

  • @Kit-Talon
    @Kit-Talon Год назад +5

    Some rather old footage - that road no longer runs so close by to the monument it was buried about 10 years ago. More up-to-date research has revealed that there were 100s of barrows/tumuli and henges scattered all around the site surrounding Stonehenge.

  • @BedboundME
    @BedboundME Год назад +1

    How interesting to view the Stone Age as communal and before humans got wrapped up with personal wealth

  • @user-de6io5fh6b
    @user-de6io5fh6b 5 месяцев назад

    Stonehenge looks great would like to go there one day as any one seen the mini Stonehenge in Masham ripon North Yorkshire its a nice little place

  • @crs50
    @crs50 Год назад +6

    Indeed, #Stonehenge is a great marvelous ancient monument from Archaeologist, Astrologist, Anthropologist, Mystics, Civil Engineers, Druids, Astronomist, Masons, Theologist, Philosophers, Architects and Gnostics . . .

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад +2

      The question is what the hell is it?

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад +1

      @@mrdarren1045 It certainly is not hell.

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад +1

      @@Foxglove963 you're probably right

    • @hughesey009
      @hughesey009 Год назад

      😂 All those people to build it but you/we still don't know what it is.

  • @williamparker1085
    @williamparker1085 Год назад +5

    used to able to walk among the stones when i was a boy in england

    • @chrisapperley2616
      @chrisapperley2616 Год назад

      Yeh my dad took me many times don’t think you could do the today👍

  • @TheSilmarillian
    @TheSilmarillian Год назад +1

    Best Stonehenge doco I have yet 2 see, could they not lay all the bone fragments out and scan them then let the computer software reconstruct the fragments ?

  • @ArmanPeterson
    @ArmanPeterson Год назад

    Beautiful🎉

  • @bellebelle7868
    @bellebelle7868 Год назад +19

    I drive past here on a regular basis to get my food shop it’s insane to think people travel all over the world to see these rocks

    • @phoenixkb134
      @phoenixkb134 Год назад +2

      I think it's the power energy of the ancient past that these monoliths represent, that makes people travel the World to stood in front of...IN AWE.

    • @phoenixkb134
      @phoenixkb134 Год назад +1

      Typo error. Stand in front of.

    • @kathyhowarth2934
      @kathyhowarth2934 Год назад +1

      Lol yeah it is,I grew up near stone henge and still live near by,I remember when the uni went they let us watch them doing the experiments

    • @RolandRamirezTV
      @RolandRamirezTV Год назад +2

      Ya, I came from the other side of the world in 2011-2012 just to see these rocks. The computer screensavers really made me want to see that place.

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад

      @@phoenixkb134 Are you an energy seeker? Got the answer for you: EVERYTHING IS FORMED OF ENERGY.

  • @christinamann3640
    @christinamann3640 Год назад +4

    There’s even earlier structures at the site, three very large pits in a line which possibly held up wooden poles. If you ever visit the site, look for the three large circles painted in the parking lot. People might not even notice if they don’t know to look for them.

    • @shiveringsand
      @shiveringsand Год назад +2

      Car park please, old fruit.
      We use the Queen's English here you know...
      I shall look for those the next time that I drive past there.
      Thank you.

    • @christinamann3640
      @christinamann3640 Год назад

      @@shiveringsand “Old fruit?” I’ll have to remember that one 😂.

  • @bushrasharafuddheen9836
    @bushrasharafuddheen9836 9 месяцев назад

    Nice documentary

  • @Gyp79
    @Gyp79 Год назад

    Thanks for 'NO WARNING' of flashing images .. The old movie effect strobes so needed to turn away.

  • @FayazAhmad-yl6sp
    @FayazAhmad-yl6sp Год назад +2

    The builders of Stonehenge had only one goal to make people proud of their achievement for the rest of the world.

  • @tylerwatson8209
    @tylerwatson8209 Год назад

    amazing

  • @gardenaddict
    @gardenaddict Год назад +4

    Winter in Britain, very little to do 🤔 I've often wondered if the stones were moved when the ground was frozen 🤔 water onto ice would enable a smooth surface for dragging with alot less effort ❄️🥶💪

    • @pt14930
      @pt14930 2 месяца назад +1

      Or, seaweed underneath the stones and then dragged?

  • @wildone8397
    @wildone8397 Год назад +7

    23:10 Cheating!
    No! Not allowed!!! So the theory becomes dismissed instantly! How did they get the stones on the platform? Let alone without crushing/breaking the platform?

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад

      Ramp. No lifting. Simple machines and Oxen or animal power. The team only used two runners, where they could have used 4 for the distribution of weight.
      If only we could draw on here...I still think it's possible. God forbid a person to use their imagination!

  • @sapphicsx
    @sapphicsx Год назад

    The plaque is a gift from the past🤯

  • @TheAdvencherContinues2022
    @TheAdvencherContinues2022 Год назад

    Refreshing

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 5 месяцев назад

    If PBS was funded, like the BBC in the UK, it would be the best Public Broadcasting Service in the world!

  • @Known-unknowns
    @Known-unknowns Год назад +5

    I went to Stonehenge as a kid in the 70’s. We were the only people there. Climbed on the stones, jumped off, messed around and went home. I drive past today and there’s hundreds of people kept away from the stones moving in a circle around it. I think, where the hell do they all come from ? What made them all suddenly interested in these stones? Nobody gave a dam when I was little 😂😂

  • @benblakemore4195
    @benblakemore4195 Год назад +3

    WOW AMAZING DOCUMENTARY GUYS 😊 THAT BALL BARING TRANSPORT TECHNIQUE BLEW MY MIND. KIND REGARDS BEN FROM NZ

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад

      I still like the Ball-bearing method of transport, no matter what the mod Archeologists say. I think it's possible, and was the precursor to the wheel for that society

  • @hakanyilmaz1984
    @hakanyilmaz1984 Год назад +3

    The ancestors of those who made stoneage must have lived in Gobeklitepe, Turkey. Gobeklitepe B.C 9600

  • @owentaylor9884
    @owentaylor9884 Год назад +2

    It is in this area that 300 kings and chieftains were murdered in a peace conference that is remembered as 'the night of the long knives'. Their burial sight is in the surrounding area of Stonehenge.

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад +1

      There was hardly 300 Kings. More like 300 nobles with a handful of royalty.

    • @The_Deaf_Aussie
      @The_Deaf_Aussie Год назад

      [ facepalms ]

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад

      @@joa8227 it's real title is the treason of the long knives

  • @roybixby6135
    @roybixby6135 Год назад +1

    Interesting - but although the stone bearings are plausible the oak track would be difficult without machining...

  • @melshane862
    @melshane862 Год назад

    The ancient people are really something,, thanks God their craftmanship lasted a century.. Imagine the stones are so heavy

  • @DToxXx
    @DToxXx Год назад

    Interesting

  • @timrobertson2484
    @timrobertson2484 Год назад

    This is certainly one opinion. Whether it carries weight or not is a long conversation. And one of many to be had today regarding the many opinions of experts.

  • @thomascurran3222
    @thomascurran3222 Год назад +1

    Stonehenge is far older than we are being told, and the site was occupied by other people of a later age.

  • @newforestpixie5297
    @newforestpixie5297 Год назад +1

    I was fortunate to be amongst the 10 to 50 thousand freaks , mystics , punks , day trippers , acid trippers , lost soccer supporters etc whom enjoyed the annual Summer Solstice Free Festival which was held over about week since the early 1970s until its prevention by Mrs Thatchers’ orders in 1985. Fantastic .
    It puzzles me how folks in those days whom apparently only lived in tribes or family groups managed such a long - distance logistical feat such as this . ( the organisation & construction of the henge - not the festival ) For a race of folk whom lived in mud huts they certainly had some nifty techniques when construction of massive stone monoliths from quarries across the sea or 100 miles beyond the mountains became necessary . Maybe they combined smoke signals with herds of diplodocus 😁❤️🐢

  • @davidmarsh9526
    @davidmarsh9526 Год назад +1

    The stones were not local but brought from Wales!

  • @lordcommandernox9197
    @lordcommandernox9197 Год назад

    They built something that had never been built before, except for the Cromeleque dos Almendres in Portugal which was 2000 years old when this was built.

  • @uniivadeo8861
    @uniivadeo8861 11 месяцев назад

    Even in our place, there are stone a giant stone that is just impossible for human being to carry . What we heard is that, there's some supernatural, some kind of power which help them carry them.

  • @salamkpo
    @salamkpo Год назад

    I visited there in Feb 2023 , Heard the story about Stonehenge is very embarrassing..I am really enjoyed

  • @bintangnaibaho6707
    @bintangnaibaho6707 Год назад

    For more information,,, visit of the detectif astral from Indonesia,,, they allready exploration from other dimension about the stonehenge story

  • @petrovonoccymro9063
    @petrovonoccymro9063 Год назад +1

    Largely erected in Wales and then moved to its current site years later. An article in the national press said teeth found nearby also show by dendrology that the human they belonged to came from the West Wales area. It suggests a common Brythonic Cymric language, the forerunner of modern Welsh, was used all over Britain. It is interesting to note that by the time of the Roman invasion, the south Wales tribe the Silures were regarded as the shock troops of Britain, the toughest fighters in the land. They fought the Romans for thirty years, carrying on warfare even after the capture of their leader, Caradoc, for a decade. Perhaps the human remains came from the royal lineage of the Silures and other notable British tribes.

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад +1

      You are confused. The large sarsen stones came from Wiltshire, the so called smaller blue stones came from the Prescelly (Preseli) mountains in Wales.

    • @petrovonoccymro9063
      @petrovonoccymro9063 Год назад +1

      No confusion here. As I said, it was largely erected in Wales, not far from the Prescelly mountains. It was removed from there years later and re erected in its current position. Key blue stones have been shown to exactly fit the holes left in Wales. Sandstone sarsens came from nearby in Wiltshire.

  • @p24hrsmith
    @p24hrsmith Год назад +10

    What I find frustrating is that nobody appears to question why the lintels had tongue and grooves to fit together and ball and sockets to fit on the up rights. These would serve to lock the whole structure together but why? .. The only reason I can think of is that the uprights were freestanding at the time the lintels were placed on top this would then hold the uprights in place while the bases were secured so keeping the whole structure's shape exactly. The only way to place the lintels on top like this is to lower them and yes I know "Imposable they didn't have that technology" but look at Stonehenge everything about it goes against technology of the time and so must have been the construction methods used. If you still think the uprights were stood and secured first then the lintels would not need tongue and grooves and ball and sockets to stay in place look at other ancient structures around the would that still stand today where stone is just placed on top of stone. Plus it would have made construction far simpler. However you look at it the tongue and grooves and ball and sockets are so radical for the time their importance is being grossly undervalued.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад +1

      How dare those Neolithic people think in modern terms! The shame!!!🤣🤣😁🍻

  • @saishyamnilgiri1
    @saishyamnilgiri1 Год назад

    Huge logs were placed on top of the lintels in such a way so as to build/ create a wigwam or yuart. It was a shelter for giant people of the past!

  • @Section5_CdnIntelService
    @Section5_CdnIntelService Год назад +2

    Is this a rerun? I saw another doc featuring the same head archeologist who revealed that the blue stones had been part of a stone circle in Wales and that they were moved when the people moved to where they are now.

    • @connieembury1
      @connieembury1 Год назад +2

      TimeTeam did a special episode with the same man, very similar to this.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад

      No, it's more information added on. Last time the main Archeologist only had theories about the surrounding areas of Stonehenge. Now they have proof.

  • @willorr1494
    @willorr1494 Год назад +3

    UP in Scotland they used Kelp to move their stones for circles

    • @stewartjones2370
      @stewartjones2370 Год назад

      And they are older than stone henge

    • @willorr1494
      @willorr1494 Год назад +1

      @@stewartjones2370 Amazing to think that stone monoliths started way north of stone henge

    • @pt14930
      @pt14930 2 месяца назад

      And then there is Ring of Bridgar, much older than Stonehenge.

    • @pt14930
      @pt14930 2 месяца назад

      @@stewartjones2370Yes

  • @cindythompson9116
    @cindythompson9116 Год назад

    I seen a documentary where they dug Stonehenge up and moved the stones along time ago

  • @avi10000
    @avi10000 Год назад

    Bones were reburied. Very good. Let the dead rest in peace.

  • @Willy_Tepes
    @Willy_Tepes Год назад +4

    Its ritual importance is related to the fact that Stonehenge was located where the River Avon meets the sea. The sea level was once at about 90 meters. They demarked the shoreline in a peculiar way that allows you to see it very clearly in satellite images. Once you see it, you will not believe your eyes. There is not a single inch of this land which is not formed by human hands, there are massive harbors and cities. They must have had a fleet of thousands of ships. All those scattered stones make sense when you see where they are in relation to the water. All the islands where densely populated.

  • @allanbillington3770
    @allanbillington3770 Год назад +2

    I have heard that these two circles are both part of a super structure - as a ring of post holes have been found encircling both henges....more to come I hope.

  • @colettemartin4824
    @colettemartin4824 10 месяцев назад +1

    Loved the photo bombing goat.

  • @alexhayden2303
    @alexhayden2303 Год назад

    Ball Bearings: Russia's Thunder Stone move!
    A sphere on a plane surface is a point load.

  • @Chexsum
    @Chexsum Год назад

    I'd imagine they would wait for the ice to form before they moved boulders

  • @user-yt8ls1nu7t
    @user-yt8ls1nu7t 9 месяцев назад

    Maybe they moved the stones via the water as it joins up with the river and there was a trench dug. Also thought Stonehenge itself may have been used as a funeral pyre at one point. Perhaps when the ground was frozen they stored their dead there, and when it thawed they could bury them, as it seems even after being cremated they were still buried.

  • @bobdiaz1756
    @bobdiaz1756 Год назад

    Replicas are based on physical theories and they didn't consider the mental capabilities that were used backed then. Power of the mind.

  • @PuffingTheHerbs
    @PuffingTheHerbs Год назад

    What people don't realise is that this entire structure is not how it originally stood untouched. It was taken down and put back in 1958, repairs made with concrete and steal to hold up the stones.

  • @clivegrayston1939
    @clivegrayston1939 3 месяца назад +1

    A landing pad for space ships

  • @gilperalta4068
    @gilperalta4068 Год назад

    Nice archaeological try to "unravel" the ancient history of magnificent feats of human ingenuity, but ends just in unresolved hypothesis and speculations!

  • @jamesbraun7709
    @jamesbraun7709 Год назад +1

    Isn't there lay lines under stonehinge ?

  • @Simp_Zone
    @Simp_Zone Год назад

    Please for the love of god disable the pre written subtitles which are INVARIABLY broken and never sync up, and just let the auto generated ones do their job perfectly as always.

  • @lilithblackwhite.magicmake9576
    @lilithblackwhite.magicmake9576 Год назад +1

    It is a Celtic place of worship, also the place of the Druids who adopted it for themselves

  • @alangardner8596
    @alangardner8596 Год назад +12

    It's just a thought but I remember seeing a documentary about an excavation on a Norfolk beach where they found a neolithic wooden structure in the form of a circle and the centre was a tree that had been turned upside down and the roots must have formed a canopy.
    Could the 'Woodhenge' have the same feature and instead of wooden posts have trees embedded upside down their roots as a canopy? It certainly would have looked far more impressive than wooden posts and it probably could have some ritual significance?

    • @socrabe
      @socrabe Год назад +5

      If I recall properly, they found the remains of a woodhenge near Stonehenge. It also has an alignment with the sun.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад +3

      Yyggdrasil...the Norse tree that connects all realms...

    • @rezapahlevi3493
      @rezapahlevi3493 Год назад

      😊

    • @liukang3545
      @liukang3545 Год назад

      @@Eowyn3Pride l0l thats just myth

    • @jsi4064
      @jsi4064 Год назад +1

      ​@Eowyn's Pride how the fig do you pronounce that?

  • @svetlanasvetlana1800
    @svetlanasvetlana1800 Год назад

    🕊

  • @michaelmokotong
    @michaelmokotong Год назад

    Stonehenge should be moves to Limpopo South Africa. Maybe rebuilt at the entrance of a big Casino.

  • @pegasus6724
    @pegasus6724 8 месяцев назад

    There are bodies deep down under the center of the monument about 20 feet

  •  Год назад

    But how do they make the stones and from where?

  • @RizaldeBiyong-cv2tv
    @RizaldeBiyong-cv2tv Год назад

    So close to the real motives..... the birth of metal age.... the start of the road to the modern era...🤨✌️

  • @bunzeebear2973
    @bunzeebear2973 Год назад +1

    "WE SPECULATE" aka "WE GUESS" as we are not thinking they are flucking with our minds. I am amazed the Romans did not take it apart.

    • @mrdarren1045
      @mrdarren1045 Год назад

      For what purpose? The Romans had a policy of not getting involved in religious matters. The exception they made was the druids cause they didn't like their practice of human sacrifice

  • @phil3038
    @phil3038 Год назад +3

    I live a mile away from Stonehendge and never actually visited the stones. Sometimes, I feel a bit disrespectful given people travel the globe just to see them!! 😂😂

  • @Quantik53
    @Quantik53 Год назад

    Could you date all this research please?

  • @Eowyn3Pride
    @Eowyn3Pride Год назад

    ...ok, try this...
    The people of Stonehenge used that natural "roadway" from the River, and managed to make it muddy or watery and pull the stones in from either side with animals...?
    All the modern stuff wouldn't be there, so very little would get in their way...
    The idea of the stones coming by river is still a good one.

  • @saigonmonopoly1105
    @saigonmonopoly1105 Год назад +1

    Stonehenge is a 4 dimension portal the ancient build for their dead to cross over

  • @partypao
    @partypao Год назад

    If Stonehenge builders were so ingenious engineers, why didn't they just cut the large stones in the quarry into carriable little ones, transport them, then rebuild them on site? This isn't even engineering, it's simply common sense.

  • @jameshunt2603
    @jameshunt2603 Год назад +4

    Watching this is painful on so many levels!!
    Because these archaeologists deny that Giant Men existed back in ancient times they will never find the answers as to how these colossal stones were put together!
    Giant men carried these giant stones to there current spot and erected them with complete ease but until these guys acknowledge that they will never find the answer!!
    After watching this documentary we are no closer to finding the answers to Stonehenge’s mystery!

  • @dizzy6277
    @dizzy6277 Год назад

    The scientists are trying to work out how people 1000s of years ago built Stonehenge with materials available to them at the time, but the scientists have 21st centaury education and experiences, and as much as they would like to think they are trying to think like ancient people, they just can't. We are the sum of our experiences and what we have learned. It's easier to learn something than unlearn it.

  • @thangavelt4726
    @thangavelt4726 Год назад

    The explanation for the Blue stones is very interesting. Indian hill tribe 'Irula' put one stone collected from the river in their sacred place on behalf of the dead ones

  • @JulieAnneCorby
    @JulieAnneCorby Год назад +2

    I keep feeling like there was a roof on it, like made of straw or something. Quite interesting doc.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад +1

      Yes, I keep thinking that also. A great thatched roof or something...a church or hall or temple. It would make the sunlight inside more dramatic