Cuicuilco: A Round Pyramind destroyed by a Volcano

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024

Комментарии • 49

  • @badlandsexplorer3712
    @badlandsexplorer3712 Год назад +6

    I missed seeing this site the last time I was in Mexico City. Thank you for sharing Cuicuilco.

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Год назад +1

      I'm glad he did a video on it, it's an awesome site! 😭

    • @Smoug
      @Smoug 4 дня назад

      give me a call i can give you a tour!

  • @fadyarzolamerchak3476
    @fadyarzolamerchak3476 Год назад +3

    Gracias por compartir el programa cultural saludos desde la ciudad de México ❤️😘🏰🏰🏰🏰🙏

  • @Billthebaker420
    @Billthebaker420 13 дней назад +1

    The amount of earth moved by these peoples is mind blowing. Not just the builds but those roadways, the courtyards. I am really enjoying these videos, so glad you brought me along! 😁👍🏼

  • @RodrigoMera
    @RodrigoMera Год назад +5

    I used to study Etnohistory at the ENAH (National School of Anthropology and History) just next to Cuicuilco, so good memories. Sadly, I never finished.

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +3

      It is better to learn a bit of something than to learn nothing at all

  • @tetelestaicreations5740
    @tetelestaicreations5740 Год назад +7

    Love your videos

  • @BobDeGuerre
    @BobDeGuerre Год назад +7

    Although the likelihood of an extensive archeological excavation is next to nil, it is still fascinating to speculate upon what is buried beneath all that lava, and what sorts of insights could be gleaned from it.
    And the blue flower is very likely a variety of Morning Glory.

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +3

      The lava is 10 meters thick so it's amazing they managed to dig up all this already

  • @MB-bt9km
    @MB-bt9km Год назад +5

    Heck yeah time for another pyramid review!

  • @burneye
    @burneye Год назад +3

    awesome work Brother

  • @nathaliocaplan1493
    @nathaliocaplan1493 6 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome video. Thanks. In Jalisco there is an archaeological site called Guachimontones where there are about a dozen round “pyramids” including one that has a deep hole on the top thought to have been used for the “voladores” ceremony

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  6 месяцев назад +1

      It’s definitely on my to-do list, it seems like a very unique site!

  • @Chemtrailsurfer
    @Chemtrailsurfer Год назад +2

    thank you Pyramid Review

  • @BSIII
    @BSIII Год назад +3

    Will you be going to Comalcalco? One of my favorite sites in Mexico. It's made of fired brick, and is very unique to Mesoamerica, and the Americas in general. Love these more unknown sites getting exposure. There's sites in Mexico that have Pyramids smack dab right in the middle of uban neighborhoods, with virtually no tourism or restoration. People don't realize how many sites there actually are in Mesoamerica.

  • @FacesintheStoneShorts
    @FacesintheStoneShorts Год назад +2

    Fantastic as always! Are you a fan of Edwin Barnhart? He’s an archaeologist who works in S.America. All the best! ~FitS

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +2

      I never heard of him before but it seems like we would have some things to discuss!

  • @TheDistur
    @TheDistur Год назад +1

    "There was only fire, and then nothing."

  • @martinromero6099
    @martinromero6099 Год назад +2

    Back in the 80's a group of investigators found some columns that had Phoenician writing before anything else could be done the military came in and sealed off the entrances to the spaces underground. nice work.

  • @DastardlyTongs
    @DastardlyTongs Год назад +2

    What score would you give this pyramid out of 5 stars?

  • @nicksothep8472
    @nicksothep8472 Год назад +2

    Is this the site where the lava covers part of the structure? Which pretty much places the "pyramid" construction before the eruption, and effectively dating it millenia before the accepted time line?

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +2

      nope

    • @nicksothep8472
      @nicksothep8472 Год назад +2

      @@pyramidreview8664 ok, do you by any chance know what I'm talking about? The lava only covers a small part of the base anyway, just to put things in order.

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Год назад +2

      @@pyramidreview8664 It isn't? So which one is the Mexican pyramid that geologists said, "That eruption happened 7,000 years ago" and the archeologists said, "There was no culture here at that time" to which the geologists replied, "That's not our problem."

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Год назад +2

      @@nicksothep8472 I know exactly what you're talking about. It is this pyramid. There's no way the construction was after the eruption. No way. (Ask a geologist). The construction was completed and then the eruption occurred. Geology ( a hard science akin to physics) asserts the eruption happened at least 7,000 years ago.

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +1

      @@RogueReplicant Going to need a source for that

  • @loveandbarley
    @loveandbarley Год назад +1

    "worshipping a volcano comes with certain problems"

  • @puckingery915
    @puckingery915 6 месяцев назад

    wouldn't "cone pyramid" be a bit more accurate? Like, GEOMETRY isn't a thing and shapes don't have correct names

  • @shiftynipples5734
    @shiftynipples5734 Год назад +1

    If the structure collapsed a lot they should call it collapsedalotle. Sorry that was a bad joke.

  • @RogueReplicant
    @RogueReplicant Год назад +2

    In 1995 a friend and I saw a metallic orb in this area. We were walking around Ciudad Universitaria among the volcanic wastelands and the orb appeared and stayed in the sky for 3 minutes, in broad daylight.

  • @guystoner7277
    @guystoner7277 Год назад +2

    Maybe a observatory have seen other round structures in s west

    • @pyramidreview8664
      @pyramidreview8664  Год назад +3

      There are round ancient structures in Jalisco, Hidalgo, and Tamaulipas but very different from this one