I discovered Impossible Geometry on Google Earth

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thePOVchannel

thePOVchannel

3 ай бұрын

Viewing the path of the October 2023 Solar Eclipse on Google Earth led me down a series of events, resulting in the discovery of seemingly impossible Geometric shapes and evidence of an ancient civilization living among them.
I was puzzled by these objects, and I had many questions about them. So I drove to the top of this remote cliff to look at them.
I found many things here that defy explanation. One of which turned out to be much stranger than I could have imagined.
What conclusions do you think these objects point to? Do you take this as confirmation of intelligent design? Evidence of a very specific series of geologic and erosional processes ? Or perhaps, we are living in a video game (Minecraft or Roblox? )
Thanks for watching this video, and if anyone has any sort of expertise that can help me make sense of what I found towards the end of the video, how these earth blocks were formed, or the questions I posed I would love to hear from you in the comments.
If you enjoyed this video - please subscribe to The_POV_Channel and stay tuned for a lot more like this!
********* Yep. I am officially terrible at numbers. Turns out sandstone is much much heavier than 12.5 lbs / cubic foot. In fact it is much closer to ~150 lbs / cubic feet. Multiply every weight I mention in this video times 12 for a much more accurate number. ******
#googleearth #hiking #exploring #ancientdiscoveries #geology #camping #geometry #geology #history

Пікірлер: 11 000
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Ok, Thank you all. Cant believe how far I missed the mark on the pounds -per-cubic - foot weight of sandstone ☠☠☠Turns out these things are WAY heavier than I calculated. On a magnitude of 12x. The first object weighs closer to 1,354,500 lbs, about the same weight as a Giant Crane. The second object probably weighs 5,356,800 lbs which is about the weight of 4-5 Giant Cranes.
@MAGaBAMA_84
@MAGaBAMA_84 3 ай бұрын
When you say giant crane, I'm assuming you mean Big Blue. There are only a few cranes in the US that heavy. Look at the counter weight on big blue
@mobraun1970
@mobraun1970 3 ай бұрын
Where are you exactly?
@vollassitoni7795
@vollassitoni7795 3 ай бұрын
Looks like Mega Giant Cutten CUBE BLOCKS of an Mega Giant Tempel
@vollassitoni7795
@vollassitoni7795 3 ай бұрын
WOW thank you Bro for showing us
@vollassitoni7795
@vollassitoni7795 3 ай бұрын
IDA HO = IDA FIELD i think, very similar the names in old NORRS the Book of EDDA IDAFIELD was the Place of YGGDRASIL
@aandrus2169
@aandrus2169 3 ай бұрын
I am an adventurous soul in a disabled body. As I lay here in bed, where I've spent the majority of the last 34 years, I watch this completely enthralled and transported into a dream of life as I would have loved it to be. THANK YOU for this great gift!!!
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thank you
@XboxOriginal1321
@XboxOriginal1321 3 ай бұрын
Your comment helped me more than you know. I'm laying here about to give up but I really do forget there's people with much less opportunities than me.. thank you
@itsjustJen7304
@itsjustJen7304 3 ай бұрын
@@XboxOriginal1321. Never give up. Always fight Don’t let “ it” win.
@aandrus2169
@aandrus2169 3 ай бұрын
@@XboxOriginal1321 Thank YOU so much for your comment. I have been where you are in mind and spirit. Life can be very challenging! It took me a long time and a lot of tough experiences to realize that even my seemingly insignificant life can be helpful to someone else. It seems we all have a basic need to matter, to make a difference somehow, to have a purpose. It's hard to feel one's purpose when we have so many barriers in our way. Right? I have learned to think of my barriers as channels instead. Channels that guide my energy into where it needs to be. I have come to believe my life is meant for being thankful and having a good spirit. Thankfulness has taught me many things and brought me great blessings, like YOU! Others may have the ability to make a larger impact but my little service can be part of the glue that helps hold us all together in times of trouble. I send you a big warm squeezy hug and encourage you to hang on tight! Every little thing's gonna be alright. Thank you for helping me reflect on my blessings! I absolutely LOVE moments like this. ❤️
@kylehiatt3004
@kylehiatt3004 3 ай бұрын
@@XboxOriginal1321I hope everything okay!
@lestvee4948
@lestvee4948 3 ай бұрын
THANK YOU, for slow smooth camera panning, and no lame ass background music!
@gmp203
@gmp203 2 ай бұрын
I guess you didn’t hear the rain and thunder soundtrack playing the entire video?
@tyrusmfrechs7025
@tyrusmfrechs7025 2 ай бұрын
@@gmp203that’s just wind boomer
@fladave99
@fladave99 2 ай бұрын
Egyptian techno rap would have been nice.
@DragonLore520
@DragonLore520 2 ай бұрын
@@tyrusmfrechs7025 Its added in tho. its not OG audio
@cpainter56
@cpainter56 2 ай бұрын
@@DragonLore520you're added in.
@Holy.HannaH
@Holy.HannaH 21 күн бұрын
"I can't even get to where I want to go, I just can't stop finding things." Same.
@JamesJansson
@JamesJansson 15 күн бұрын
Any gap between rocks which are human width are super scary. Don't fall down them, or you'll starve to death with your body dangling caught by your head.
@nickrahe2595
@nickrahe2595 12 күн бұрын
127 hours movie lol
@JamesJansson
@JamesJansson 11 күн бұрын
@@nickrahe2595 In this case I doubt you'd be able to amputate your own head lol
@mikejones-go8vz
@mikejones-go8vz 12 сағат бұрын
@@JamesJansson😂 you could try I guess
@The_Great_Debate
@The_Great_Debate 3 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, even if there is a perfectly reasonable geological explanation for this, those damn sure look like a quarry..
@lukes5631
@lukes5631 3 ай бұрын
Almost as if the Earth had been ravaged for resources in its history.
@PastramiStaven
@PastramiStaven 3 ай бұрын
Scabland looking too though, when the great flood happen when the ice melted it took away a lot of material, Randall Carlson have talked about this, but don't know if this is in the same area but it sure looks like it.
@Faesharlyn
@Faesharlyn 3 ай бұрын
It *does* look like a quarry from some angles, but from the ground it's clearly natural. If you look at the actual spot you'll see that the cracks go much deeper and spread far wider than any quarry and there are no signs of drilling or hammering The drawings, however, are man-made and *spectacular*
@Ice_Queen_Empress
@Ice_Queen_Empress 3 ай бұрын
But nothing cut could cut that.
@BlackWaterCanyon
@BlackWaterCanyon 3 ай бұрын
It was a civilization called annunaki. Look it up. They chewed our earth up with great machineries, yes like a quarry.
@Colorado81401
@Colorado81401 2 ай бұрын
As a structural and architectural engineer I am super sensitive to geometry and you have given me the absolute best video I have ever watched....late in my 70s I can't go there to see it for myself so thank you for your great adventure
@momof2plusotaku657
@momof2plusotaku657 2 ай бұрын
Wouldn't this just be the same concept of machu picchu
@Colorado81401
@Colorado81401 2 ай бұрын
@@momof2plusotaku657 well I feel that machu Pichu was all man made geometry and I sense that this is natural geometry.... either way I am amazed....thank you for mentioning Machu Pichu because I have always felt that it is my launching place
@JohnnyB263
@JohnnyB263 2 ай бұрын
@@Colorado81401 there's nothing natural about this cuts xD
@hollytomas8392
@hollytomas8392 2 ай бұрын
Have you seen Amazing Aliens on Machu picchu? It's really interesting!! Very recent and on demand😊
@sdrc92126
@sdrc92126 2 ай бұрын
@@derrickmcadoo3804 Fractured, not cut
@holdernewtshesrearin5471
@holdernewtshesrearin5471 15 күн бұрын
Im just pleasantly amazed that there isnt piles of garbage everywhere. Since i was a young boy i loved to explore, to see an interesting rock outcrop or geological feature and hike to it in hopes that id be the 1st person to set foot on the site and perhaps discover something incredible. Without fail, EVERY single place ive ever visited dissapointed me to find remnants of others carelessness and disrespect for nature. Broken beer bottles, cans and trash around an accompanying fire pit was all i found. It used to make me so angry that people could be so lazy and apathetic to the beauty of nature. To see such a spectacular place unmolested by careless people is so refreshing. Beautiful cinematography btw. Thank you for sharing. Youve got quite a talent.
@jkennaw4314
@jkennaw4314 9 күн бұрын
Give it time. Humans always find a way to ruin this planet.
@zacharysherry2910
@zacharysherry2910 2 күн бұрын
Aren't*
@holdernewtshesrearin5471
@holdernewtshesrearin5471 Күн бұрын
@@zacharysherry2910 -aint.
@Sailor376also
@Sailor376also 7 күн бұрын
Been a builder all my life, Stone is about the same as concrete 150 pounds per cubic foot. Some stone a little lighter , some a little heavier. The 12.5 could only be a board foot,, 12X12x1 inches 21.5X21X20 yields 9030 cubic feet, weighs 1,354,500 pounds 677.25 tons. edited,, When my comment was entered,, it landed on my screen immediately below your correction. Same answer. Thought I was seeing double for a moment. (That is the San Juan down below? Not far from Goose Neck. I have never been up on that ridge,, I have paddled the full length of the San Juan,, That cliff is visible and distinctive from below,)
@user-hb1ve6mc6f
@user-hb1ve6mc6f 4 күн бұрын
I’m a Stonemason and I’m interested to know your thoughts on these rocks, please. Do you believe they are natural formations or cut by Humans or an Ancient Advanced Life?
@Sailor376also
@Sailor376also 4 күн бұрын
@@user-hb1ve6mc6f Interesting. Strictly natural, no question. I may even be able to guess why and how. A guess, based upon personal observation. I have traveled that area a few times,, mostly via canoe on the river. Trust me,, traveling at the astronomical pace 2+ mph, you have lots of time to think. That same regularly broken plateau covers thousands of square miles. Bring your google maps or Google Earth to look at the Confluence of the Colorado and the Green Rivers, you will see that same corrugation and the fractures in the same or similar directions. And,, if traveling I-70 somewhere near Grand Junction,, I don't remember exactly where. Earthquakes ripple ground like waves on the ocean. It has been reported many times, people looking across a flat expanse can see the waves as the Earth undulates. The waves are a regular spacing,, such that a 5 story building, or a 10 story or 15 story building, develop a rhythm,, every 50 feet or 5 stories. A 7 story building will survive an earthquake that demolishes a 5 story building. Take a rigid flat plate and ripple it into waves, I can easily imagine fractures regular at half the wave length, the rock gets bent from peak to peak with a trough in the middle. 21.5 X 2 MIGHT imply a 43 foot wave form. Fractured in the other direction,, my first guess is a separate earthquake. It IS of interest to note,, that approximate fracture direction? NE to SW is perhaps exactly perpendicular the to dinosaur killing event of 68 million years ago,, the impact that formed the Chixalub (sp?) Crater. The strike was so fierce it rippled the earth in waves like a storm at sea. A guess. (With a very high probability of being correct.) That interesting feature along I-70 ? Earthquakes can semi liquefy the earth. Sand 'blows' are a common occurrence. A sand blow is like a temporary sand geyser. At that point along I-70 is a line, approx north/south of sand hills,, all the same size. The earthquake that could have created that line of sand blows,, must have been huge. Something I just looked up Hudson Bay, northern Canada. There is a strike crater there.. scientists will say it could not possibly be,,, but sorry, no,, the shape is too exactly a meteor strike crater 350 miles in diameter. Sanikilauq And it IS almost exactly at right angles to the fractures from the Chixalub Crater to that point in the Southwest. Those fractures are from an earthquake,, a very, very, very large earthquake. Oh. I should have said. I do some stone work, not much, but some. One of may favourite jobs over the years. Set up a sturdy bench, and stand in the jobsite, 2.5 or 3 pound jack, a 2 to 3 inch chisel, and comb, and point and whack away at rocks to fit the need, to size and shape,, hour after hour, day after day,,, good work to have. I have thoroughly enjoyed that work. I may have a stone house , structural, coming up next winter. Native stone on site,, have not yet done some test cutting to see if the stone is suitable. We'll see.
@classicreaction5340
@classicreaction5340 3 ай бұрын
I think these cubes weigh a LOT more than you are estimating. A cubic foot of sandstone weighs about 150 pounds. Regardless of their mass.....this is another stunning video. You are putting out some very unique and amazing content.
@joshg4009
@joshg4009 3 ай бұрын
😂 the blocks are over a million lbs. how could you think that block weighed the same as a tank.
@E.K.1969
@E.K.1969 3 ай бұрын
You are correct, I calculated that solid sandstone to weigh approximately 145.02 pounds per cubic foot. Awesome video , even if the numbers where off , very impressive .
@BigPubez69
@BigPubez69 3 ай бұрын
​@@joshg4009because he confuzzled cubic feet with square feet... a measure of 3-dimensional volume vs. A measurement of 2-dimensional area. Simple mistake.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the correction haha. Wish I could sneak that into the video somehow
@joshg4009
@joshg4009 3 ай бұрын
@@BigPubez69 regardless it should click a solid block of mass can’t possibly weigh the same as a empty metal can at witch point you redo your math.
@blainesandifer77
@blainesandifer77 3 ай бұрын
The way a log burns in a fire, then falls into separate square/rectangular pieces is what this reminds me of, just on a massive scale. Awesome find !
@SAnn-rf3oz
@SAnn-rf3oz 3 ай бұрын
Best and most reasonable explanation!!
@Maggioretom
@Maggioretom 3 ай бұрын
This clip is amazing!! Ty very much for sharing it! Nature is the number one of the creators!!!
@carolinewhite6010
@carolinewhite6010 3 ай бұрын
So if these split by fire, imagine the intensity of the fire to split them like that 😲
@LMN2922
@LMN2922 3 ай бұрын
@@carolinewhite6010It was not split by fire, rock is not the same as wood. I think the comment aims to show that patterns like these can have a natural cause.
@anchorread68
@anchorread68 3 ай бұрын
@@carolinewhite6010 they are split by ice. Every winter water will freeze between the rock, water expand when freezing so it slowly wedges the rock apart. There's a video where water is contained in a steel tube and let to freeze, the steel tube exploded with great force.
@romeoalpha68
@romeoalpha68 12 күн бұрын
You have to remember that these places were once submerged underwater for millions of years . The tops of these mountains didn't start emerging from the depths until approximately 300 million years ago . Then thousands of years ago they were under ice from the last ice age . The evidence is there . Fossils of all types of fish and other deep sea dwelling crustaceans , and shellfish . The ground itself has the evidence on top of erosion that has taken place . First water , then ice , and millions of years of wind . These angles that form these "cubes " are done naturally . If you go diving in parts of the ocean you can see the same formations . No ancient aliens cut these rocks . Nature did all the work .
@bahramahmedzade7038
@bahramahmedzade7038 10 күн бұрын
but aliens we want, young padavan :)
@jamessawyer8744
@jamessawyer8744 9 сағат бұрын
Is that coral looking rock he found petrified coral?
@kbock7383
@kbock7383 24 күн бұрын
Search the area near Train Rock, Utah and find many of the same fracture patterns and also at 37º0'6.97"N 109º 6'25.16"W as well. One can find hundreds of instances of natural fracturing by observing the vegetation growing atop many of the mesas. The plants have found the natural fissures and take root there giving the appearance of tree lines or fence lines.
@desertstonestudio3315
@desertstonestudio3315 3 ай бұрын
Hey I live here! It never gets old. So much to find. Petroglyphs, pottery, fossils, even gemstone quality agate, agatized fossils, petrified wood. And of course some of the most unique rock formations on earth.
@future8796
@future8796 3 ай бұрын
CHECK OUT MUD FOSSILS UNIVERSITY AND THE ROCKS WERE ALIVE
@offthegridMarbella
@offthegridMarbella 3 ай бұрын
WHere on earth is it? Id love to go there?
@desertstonestudio3315
@desertstonestudio3315 3 ай бұрын
@@offthegridMarbella Moab, UT is the hub. The area surrounding it is Arches national park and Canyon lands.
@philip2774
@philip2774 3 ай бұрын
@@desertstonestudio3315 im going to salt lake area for the 4th May in a row for a week. Ive seen a lot that’s within 1-2 hours from SLC but haven’t been down to the desert yet because it’s a bit of a trip. If you were coming for one day, and could do whatever you wanted - what would it be?
@john-paulmcdermott2472
@john-paulmcdermott2472 3 ай бұрын
May the fourth be with you
@AvanaVana
@AvanaVana 3 ай бұрын
This is orthogonal jointing in the uppermost massive sandstone member of the Permian (~270 Ma) Cedar Mesa Sandstone (of the Cutler Group). It formed due to a combination of 1. changes in the stress field as the Laramide-era (75-50 Ma) compression in the Colorado Plateau gave way to tectonic relaxation and extension, 2. development of the joint pattern due to thermal cycling and freeze/thaw physical weathering as the overburden above the Cedar Mesa sandstone was denuded and the unit exposed, concomitant with a Neogene uplift of the Colorado plateau, and 3. endogenous, auxetic effects on quartz grains in massive sandstone due to burial and subsequent uplift. There are numerous papers on this subject: Wagon & Curran. (2021). “Sandstone Geometry on the Colorado Plateau”. The Mathematical Intelligencer., Bai et al. (2002). “Orthogonal cross joints: do they imply a regional stress rotation?”. Journal of Structural Geology., Rives et al. (1994). “Analogue simulation of natural orthogonal joint set formation in brittle varnish”. Journal of Structural Geology., Li & Ji. (2020). “A new interpretation for formation of orthogonal joints in quartz sandstone”. Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering., to name but a few.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Incredible. Thank you for sharing this knowledge
@rydonoghue3799
@rydonoghue3799 3 ай бұрын
No it’s an artificial formation
@NSGca
@NSGca 3 ай бұрын
People have no idea how much energy there is between freeze and thaw. Thanks for throwing it out there. It can move mountains!
@vitorino773
@vitorino773 3 ай бұрын
Palisade Mesophyll
@pjakobs
@pjakobs 3 ай бұрын
I wonder, in granite columns, the octagonal shape is a reflection of the crystalline structure of the material, but sandstone is not a single chrystal but lots and lots of small chtystals baked together and thus is mostly amorphous on large scales, or am I wong? I have often seen sandstone in layers that easily separate but never somethin like this
@MarkA-rz8mv
@MarkA-rz8mv 16 күн бұрын
Great video. When you squeezed between these massive blocks you made me feel claustrophobic. Felt like it was me in there for a minute haha 😂
@dolphinschild62
@dolphinschild62 Ай бұрын
I found this from “universe inside you” did a video about what you found here. Fascinating. The view is so beautiful and humbling too. Thank you so much for sharing with us. Edited: I have to add, if you were my son you would be giving me a heart attack watching at 11:31. I had to stop at 11:52, my PTSD anxiety couldn’t watch anymore. I will pray for your safety. Traumatizing your friends should be your first clue your a dare devil death wish waiting to happen. For your families sake love, please be more mindful, and careful. My brother was like you, and in his 50s he regrets those things and his injuries remind him every day. Love and best wishes on your journeys.
@juicefastforhealth
@juicefastforhealth 2 ай бұрын
You are exactly correct! That is fossilized coral. This entire region was once an inland sea, and when Earth changes happened long ago, the land rose, the water fled to the current oceans, and what was once at the bottom of the sea is now high above the current sea level.
@thebuff7271
@thebuff7271 2 ай бұрын
Yeah the mountains arose and the water ran off...at the end of the Flood
@annakeye
@annakeye 2 ай бұрын
@@thebuff7271 So where's all the water now? If the planet was engulfed in enough water to float a ginormous boat and the weight of the occupants and their life support inside, then where did all the water go?
@haventsleptyet
@haventsleptyet 2 ай бұрын
​@@annakeyethe water rise (great flood) was caused by the giant meteor that struck Greenland. They found the crater already to prove it. It also wiped out the ancient Egyptians but eventually the water washout around the globe returned to normal
@KatariaGujjar
@KatariaGujjar 2 ай бұрын
​@@annakeye It went into the subterranean aquifers
@EpicBunty
@EpicBunty 2 ай бұрын
First of all the story of the "ark" is a metaphor. we should assume that it was some kind of vessel. Second, the water on earth does not increase or decrease. It only changes form.@@annakeye
@popwillodrum1
@popwillodrum1 2 ай бұрын
BTW, your productions are of the finest quality. The purity of the hauntingly reflective, silent moments evoke profound wonder that would be spoilt by backing music. Thank you.
@robertblackmore4283
@robertblackmore4283 5 сағат бұрын
According to Plato, the fundamental building blocks of Earth are four cube-shaped particles that make up earth, pointed tetrahedron-shaped particles that make up fire, less pointy octahedron-shaped particles that make up air, and round icosahedron-shaped particles that make up water. Researchers have found that the average shape of various rocks is a cube, supporting Plato's theory.
@lindarushton6502
@lindarushton6502 Ай бұрын
Excellent slow, quiet look at this unique geology. Thanks. I swam in rockpools where there was a square gap, 4 separate huge rocks on sides. It is likewise looking manmade but at impossible location and huge size. And mostly underwater. Sandstone also, on Queensland south east coast. I always wondered if there were others too, so thanks for showing these.
@williamp9361
@williamp9361 3 ай бұрын
It boggles the mind to believe this is natural. There are so many lines that look like precise cuts.
@pierrebreton1153
@pierrebreton1153 2 ай бұрын
😂😂 il est plus fou de croire que cela viens des humains ou des extraterrestres. Il arrive que la roche ce decoupe en cube PRESQUE parfait
@gmaulpker4765
@gmaulpker4765 2 ай бұрын
Zero chance its natural as the compositions of minerals change throughout the blocks. Most likely been cut with diamond tipped chains. They still use those in Egypt today. You can see the whole top level is laid with them.
@hristoborisov3713
@hristoborisov3713 2 ай бұрын
@@gmaulpker4765 can you explain why the compositions of minerals changing would be proof its not natural also, diamond tipped chains doesnt by itself explain the logistics of cutting so much rock in such a remote place and for no apparent reason and god knows how long ago
@sobaze
@sobaze 2 ай бұрын
@@hristoborisov3713, It’s relevant because sedimentary layers have different density and grain patterns. If the stone had broken free from the cliff naturally due to temperature changes, or erosion you would expect the rock to break unevenly. These stones appear to have been quarried.
@MichaelSchwab-nk4rm
@MichaelSchwab-nk4rm 2 ай бұрын
​@sobaze THIS☝🏻💯...But people will still swallow some ridiculous narrative of this all being "Natural"
@AngelEyes_55
@AngelEyes_55 3 ай бұрын
From the UK, I just want to say how incredibly envious I am of this excursion and how brilliantly shot and narrated it is. Having been through Monument Valley twice and always wanted to get on top of the cliffs there, this is a real thrill to see this. Look forward to watching more of your adventures.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton. Even though it looks over monument valley it is still quite far away. Lots more headed your way 🤙
@AngelEyes_55
@AngelEyes_55 3 ай бұрын
​@@the_pov_channel Keep up the great work!
@giannavaldaterra6606
@giannavaldaterra6606 3 ай бұрын
Stupendo!
@kimlizotte694
@kimlizotte694 3 ай бұрын
Fascinating video! So breath taking! If someone had described what your video shows - there's no way I could have believed it! At times the cubes look like perfectly baked loaves of bread with soft rounded tops and other times the imagination is going everywhere at once! Sooo much evidence of a MASSIVE VIOLET TORENT OF A FLOOD!
@_construction_2024-
@_construction_2024- 2 ай бұрын
​@@the_pov_channel I'm not envious. Looks like you discovered things they don't want discovered. But, are these guys still in control? Have you watched David wilcock ?
@valdiroliveira5019
@valdiroliveira5019 7 күн бұрын
I'm from Brazil and looking at these rocks with this level of precision, wondering what would be the method used for such precise cuts. Truly a part of human history has not been told. Congratulations on the discovery and thank you for posting the video, without it we wouldn't know about this place!!
@realamerican1555
@realamerican1555 6 күн бұрын
I know nothing of filming anything. But i see skill in the way you operate. Wonderful video. To see those petroglyphs, thank the universe for that moment
@GrammaJo360
@GrammaJo360 3 ай бұрын
I’m close to a panic attack just watching you and waiting for you to fall or get stuck in a crevice. The dog has no fear either. That is an unbelievable place to explore. Thanks for sharing and staying alive!
@bryantaylor948
@bryantaylor948 3 ай бұрын
he really should watch 72 hrs at least I think that's the movies name
@olewetdog6254
@olewetdog6254 3 ай бұрын
Yeah he is a bit of an idiot for climbing down in that crap. We'll probably read about him disappearing one day.
@abbottsplace8080
@abbottsplace8080 3 ай бұрын
Scared me too. Could have easily gotten stuck between the rocks.
@sparklesparklesparkle6318
@sparklesparklesparkle6318 3 ай бұрын
@@bryantaylor948 the move name is 68 Hours Of Peril.
@sparklesparklesparkle6318
@sparklesparklesparkle6318 3 ай бұрын
@@abbottsplace8080 if you get stuck it's no big deal. eventually you'll burn enough fat while you're stuck there you'll be able to slide out again.
@topangasideeye
@topangasideeye 3 ай бұрын
It looks like you’ve actually found coral fossils, similar to the affects which created the nearby petrified forest. All of that land was once under water. Great work, by the way!
@jondonn4913
@jondonn4913 2 ай бұрын
Не знаю кораллы или нет, но нарезано очень ровно.
@lissaleggs4136
@lissaleggs4136 2 ай бұрын
​@@jondonn4913 Imagine a 300 ft high block of ice expanding through sandstone and granite would not take much to crack its way through.
@stephenlivingstone1682
@stephenlivingstone1682 2 ай бұрын
A great flood. In the days of Noah
@MrErad2008
@MrErad2008 2 ай бұрын
​@stephenlivingstone1682 Exactly! But that would mean believing the Bible and that means people will do anything to try to convince themselves there is another explanation.
@zephaniahwitoko5038
@zephaniahwitoko5038 2 ай бұрын
@@MrErad2008there are stories of an ancient flood in cultures all over the world
@anim8torfiddler871
@anim8torfiddler871 24 күн бұрын
You did some great video work, I assume using a drone with a decent video cam. Thank you for investigating and sharing this post.
@MangatInc
@MangatInc 15 күн бұрын
The strangest part I noticed at 6.40 into the video, the aerial view show's the background. The whole are has outlines of these pre-cut lines. Have you ever tried to ask a geologist or someone what could have caused these naturally ? I'm thinking, in Ireland there is the Giants Causeway, but they are tiny compared to these but there are over 40,000 interlocking square columns over there. This is amazing though, i'd love to have come on this adventure with you !!
@laurenlovein562
@laurenlovein562 3 ай бұрын
Your dog getting so close to the edge and wanting to follow you is KILLING me!
@ZebaKnight
@ZebaKnight 3 ай бұрын
I'm with you. It's one thing to go out onto a cantilevered ledge oneself - _risky!_ It's another thing entirely to bring a dog with you.
@openyoureyes4799
@openyoureyes4799 3 ай бұрын
Me too......................................... ARGH!!!!!!!
@brunycastro9023
@brunycastro9023 3 ай бұрын
I too was worried about the dog
@madhammer232
@madhammer232 3 ай бұрын
So
@openyoureyes4799
@openyoureyes4799 3 ай бұрын
@@brunycastro9023 ME too!!! I was petrified he (the dog), was going to follow his dad and fall off the edge!!! I didn't breath until the end of the video!
@cspencer3421
@cspencer3421 3 ай бұрын
I can't get the image out of my head of Wile E. Coyote prying one of those blocks up to smash the roadrunner. Thus is a great video.
@2990rick
@2990rick 3 ай бұрын
That was good beep beep 🙃
@dr.a006
@dr.a006 3 ай бұрын
Well, and end up smashing himself😂
@mikelee2503
@mikelee2503 4 сағат бұрын
Those are some unbelievably awesome natural formations. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Btw, do be careful around the edges of those boulders and crevices. It only takes one bad step.
@kbock7383
@kbock7383 24 күн бұрын
Oh, and by the way, love the video. Enjoy exploring the SW with you and your ilk.
@pingpong9656
@pingpong9656 2 ай бұрын
The block you measured weighs 600 TONS. That is 1,323,000 LBS. A typical tank is 50 tons, so this rock weighs 12 military tanks.
@oth2091
@oth2091 2 ай бұрын
Pretty American way of weighing things 😂😅
@gerardoricor
@gerardoricor 2 ай бұрын
@@oth2091 hahaha that's true
@trippybruh1592
@trippybruh1592 2 ай бұрын
One mile is 1000 paces in any direction, at least it used to be that way.
@jakereid2084
@jakereid2084 2 ай бұрын
Anything but the metric system
@Everett-eh4nn
@Everett-eh4nn 2 ай бұрын
That sound more accurate.
@icqtrinity
@icqtrinity 3 ай бұрын
Okay, I'm just going to admit it, I'm really, really impressed with the drone footage that you shot. Truly top quality. Very professional.👏
@eblair12
@eblair12 3 ай бұрын
I agree ..
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thanks. It's something I have really enjoyed learning. The fact that technology allows me to fly a personal drone still blows my mind every time I fly the drone. We live in a sci fi reality
@_construction_2024-
@_construction_2024- 2 ай бұрын
​@the_pov_channel Impossible for the blocks to be natural. I'm not touching this with a 10 foot pole. I'd be taking down the video if I were you. You got a whole life ahead of you bro.
@Frenchy78ify
@Frenchy78ify 2 ай бұрын
yeah like thats the most interesting part lmao, clown
@MrTrollbaby
@MrTrollbaby 8 күн бұрын
Awesome report and finding. This is how i like to be presented with this kind of 8nfo. Just the sound of nature, great footage and easy going narration. Thanks man
@MilkandHoney13914
@MilkandHoney13914 27 күн бұрын
O my gosh you are scaring me! Stop walking so close to the edge!! Great find and video. We have been so lied to about everything. Thanks for sharing!
@razoraz
@razoraz 3 ай бұрын
The wide shots with the thunder off in the distance are so peaceful. You could make an hour-long video just with cuts like that and I'd play it in the background just for the feeling it invokes. Also, can I ask what kind of shoes you are wearing? They seem to be very grippy. I'm guessing something with a minimal sole, like Merrells?
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Vivo Barefoot shoes. My absolute favorite shoes. Very good for slippery surfaces and increasing foot strength
@tamaradeeks2707
@tamaradeeks2707 3 ай бұрын
@@the_pov_channelif you’re do see this, the thunder sounds would be great to fall asleep to 💤
@Remarkable-Moose
@Remarkable-Moose 3 ай бұрын
The thunder sound is the wind into the microphone... perfectly clear skies.
@mallariculp3551
@mallariculp3551 2 ай бұрын
@@tamaradeeks2707I think that sound is wind.
@loganlong3104
@loganlong3104 Ай бұрын
At 6:38 you can see where each new block will break off in the future, I'm not sure if it's moist or red clay in the spaces but it makes a grid pattern. I haven't seen any comments on this and thought it made it so much cooler that you can tell where it'll start receding thousands of years from now
@DailyShit.
@DailyShit. 26 күн бұрын
No please stop making sense. Those are markings of an ancient civilizations quarry.
@TheLobsterBurger
@TheLobsterBurger 22 күн бұрын
Exactly. I see them 2.
@Persianking1997
@Persianking1997 20 күн бұрын
Ikr I noticed that too.
@erstwhile6163
@erstwhile6163 12 күн бұрын
That’s what makes it so special I agree
@eljuak
@eljuak 7 күн бұрын
Tienes razón. Esa parte tiene marcas geológicas de futuras grietas.
@SoundLegion
@SoundLegion 4 сағат бұрын
I was nauseous several times watching this. You are super brave or... yeah im gonna go with brave. Incredible video. Fantastic job.
@GJ-rs2fb
@GJ-rs2fb 23 күн бұрын
Dude ! You must feel like your on Mars or another planet. And you give me anxiety when you get close to the edge. I enjoy watching you. Thanks
@Williams.L
@Williams.L 2 ай бұрын
Looks like a prehistoric oceanfloor. With the corals and dried up, petrified mud and everything. Amazing video! Thank you
@SkylerBaird
@SkylerBaird 2 ай бұрын
There were many in the area. Might be right.
@davidbintliff2852
@davidbintliff2852 2 ай бұрын
That's exactly what this is.
@ipaddleYOass
@ipaddleYOass 2 ай бұрын
​​@@davidbintliff2852yeah, cant believe he didnt get the idea when he literally picked up an ancient coral reef
@MrCazjd
@MrCazjd 2 ай бұрын
That wasn’t coral reef, you could see the different stages of the stone changing
@albopicklemcnicol1682
@albopicklemcnicol1682 2 ай бұрын
@@MrCazjdalso the actual way the stones have been split, separated and made; seems to be up for debate, interesting geology or architecture is in the works. Personally, I sway towards ancient humans, but will not throw the consensus to the side it very most likely is a coral reef; yet somethings off about this location, no doubt.
@matthewbattie1022
@matthewbattie1022 3 ай бұрын
Sandstone is usually between 145 to 160 pounds per cubic foot. Usually sandstone doesn't naturally cleave like that. This is more indicative of a Halite. This level of accuracy makes me wonder about past civilizations and ancient quarrying techniques.
@SatellitesKnow
@SatellitesKnow 3 ай бұрын
My first thought. Looks so similar to quarry’s I have seen in in my travels…
@future8796
@future8796 3 ай бұрын
CHECK OUT Mud Fossils University and the Rocks Were Alive
@SatellitesKnow
@SatellitesKnow 3 ай бұрын
@@future8796 I will check it out! On here? I wonder what the H2O levels would have been?
@josephkincaid8748
@josephkincaid8748 3 ай бұрын
They would fracture just like that, but only according to the crystalline structure of the rocks that formed in that area. Maybe plus a huge electrical storm
@liliaaaaaaaa
@liliaaaaaaaa 3 ай бұрын
Being sandstone, it is the same kind of stone you get in Egypt, in the desert, so these look to me exactly like the kind of thing the pyramids were made out of. I've been watching a lot of stuff about ancient aliens and giants and ancient civilisations and this to me, looks like yet more evidence of an ancient pre--flood / glacial civilisation involving giants and lost technology we don't know about today. That just looks like a quarry no doubt about it. Even the petroglyphs look similar to those found in Sinai. Look up ancient pre--flood megaliths, you'll find loads of similar advanced technology stonework all over the planet.
@liamwatts8597
@liamwatts8597 Ай бұрын
You've inspired me to go on a spontaneous trip to a cool place near me. Great video!
@thomasoleson2651
@thomasoleson2651 23 күн бұрын
Bro, you are the man. Your videos are so interesting. All of this kind of stuff really fascinates me too. I love investigating earth on Google Earth too. Totally get it.
@sojourner413
@sojourner413 3 ай бұрын
Honestly ~ this is the most incredible video I've ever seen. I'm 67 and spent many years hiking and traveling, and have never seen anything like this!! I can't thank you enough for your fantastic videos. The area looks as if it has been mined. I was a Miner, from an AZ mining town. At app'x the 20:25 mark, there's a pyramid. Also- when you're at the cedar tree, looking at the odd 'coral' rock, I noticed perfect bricks. I am absolutely blown away. Sharing your video to my friends!!! 🏆
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton. You must have seen some pretty incredible stuff!
@lyramanning2825
@lyramanning2825 3 ай бұрын
❤😅​@@the_pov_channel
@sophiiageneve2317
@sophiiageneve2317 3 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. Thank you, it's incredible, enlightening and your bravery in going there makes it so very interesting to watch.
@MartinD9999
@MartinD9999 3 ай бұрын
A pyramid?! Where, in the center of the scenery? If so, erhm….🤨
@h.bsfaithfulservant4136
@h.bsfaithfulservant4136 3 ай бұрын
I thought mining too...and maybe not so old?
@ni7suj
@ni7suj 3 ай бұрын
Amazing find! I will suggest you carry around with you a GPS Beacon like a Garmin InReach mini just in case you don't already have one. If you got stuck you could use it to save your life.
@refind4God
@refind4God 3 ай бұрын
Reminded me of David Paulides, "Missing 411" documentary's, where people go missing never to be seen again. What he's doing there could explain why some people go missing in parks all across America, I bet if he explored more around there he might've found a missing person. Cause if I could explore like he does, I'd do just like what he's doing but the difference is I'd get stuck and become a blerp in one of Paulides documentary's.😅
@Calamity_Leo
@Calamity_Leo 3 ай бұрын
​@refind4God yeah Dave has good tips with that personal location beckon and a glizzy
@refind4God
@refind4God 3 ай бұрын
@@Calamity_Leo if I remember correctly a few people went missing carrying one of them, but later found miles away in a spot that had already been searched sometimes multiple times. It's been awhile since I've watched one of his documentaries so I may be wrong. With one or without one it doesn't count for all the strange ways people just disappear in front of others, it's creepy how someone is there than they're not. This kid has some big gonads to go out all alone and explore in some of those hair raising places.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Yep! Stays in my pocket always.
@speakup398
@speakup398 3 ай бұрын
Same thoughts! What if something happens to you or your dog? Remember the adventurer from years ago who became stuck between 2 huge rocks and ultimately severed his arm to get loose and get help. He did survive but with an amputated arm! It's called being smart!
@timoeland6159
@timoeland6159 9 күн бұрын
In order to check if it's a cube you need to measure the diagonals from corner to corner. If the diagonal measurements are the same, the corners are 90 degrees, provided the opposite sides measure the same.
@ariameg
@ariameg 5 күн бұрын
Interesting side quest: One of my favorite teachers in high school had a PhD in biochemistry, and she would share with us that she worked in a lab for a very, very long time and their job was to convert CO2 to sandstone. I grew up in New Mexico. 👀
@Materialworld4
@Materialworld4 3 ай бұрын
Andrew, I know of many formations around the world of polygonal Basalt columns, but this is really amazing, I mean WOW. Looking at the edge of that cliff from high above, and the perfect square blocks that had fallen away was mind blowing. Look I am 70 years old, and have done my share of off roading, back packing in the High Sierras, and hiking in the Sonoran Desert, but this is other worldly. Your'e going to be at 300,000 subscribers in short order if you keep this up, and I have no doubt you will. Thank You So Much for Sharing.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton. Stay safe out there! - Andrew
@ForestWanderer_YT
@ForestWanderer_YT 3 ай бұрын
where do you guys see "perfect" squares? What's your definition of "perfect"?
@user-thedoors423
@user-thedoors423 3 ай бұрын
Those lines go a good ways they had big plans to move all that but why did they stop the question
@future8796
@future8796 3 ай бұрын
CHECK OUT MUD FOSSILS UNIVERSITY AND THE ROCKS WERE ALIVE.
@Scapularbore
@Scapularbore 3 ай бұрын
It is absolutely amazing that I have seen my share of the world and have only seen stuff like this but in something that used to be something to say this is natural is like saying you are crazy I don't know you so I can't make that assumption. Maybe this is natural but I highly doubt this but that would be saying that whoever made this was way more advanced than we will be in the next 200 years we don't know our past because everything that we should know was taken from us when our captures won is how I will say this do you feel free or do you feel like your past was taken from you like I do. That is Coral 🪸🪸
@LavenderLori406
@LavenderLori406 3 ай бұрын
This is one of the most incredible finds I've ever seen! And your cinematography skills are super! I hope your friends have recovered.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Haha they are getting there. Thanks a ton
@malaikamillions
@malaikamillions 3 ай бұрын
I too am so appreciative of the cinematography skills. I especially love that he does so many close ups, and gives us glimpses deep under crags and crevices. It’s the stuff I’m always gagging to see. Thank You so so much.
@litestreamer
@litestreamer 3 ай бұрын
@@the_pov_channel It may not be so much they're mad at you for leading them down the cliff, but that they made the choice to follow you.
@guhrizzlybaire
@guhrizzlybaire Ай бұрын
My fear of heights is so bad that I was getting dizzy just watching this but it was so incredibly interesting I powered through. I am also fascinated by the way these blocks are put together. Awesome to see someone right up next to them
@marcusburk4707
@marcusburk4707 29 күн бұрын
I think this was once a quarry. That 1 cube with the extended lip on top really tells it all.
@Steve-ec6ed
@Steve-ec6ed 3 ай бұрын
Bro...your dog near the edge of these cliffs gives me anxiety. 😅
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
I try to mitigate as much risk with him as possible, but he's been like this since he was a puppy. He is now 8 years old
@nancygibson8854
@nancygibson8854 3 ай бұрын
The dog is smarter... it's you that gives me anxiety. Why try and get stuck...
@SonoftheBread
@SonoftheBread 3 ай бұрын
​@@TexasGrlmy late buddy always spooked me with edges and I honestly think he noticed it made me nervous/upset so he'd always keep a little more distance and look at me approvingly
@2990rick
@2990rick 3 ай бұрын
Was going to say the same thing 🤐
@VMeed-jo7fb
@VMeed-jo7fb 3 ай бұрын
It’s safe…..as long as no one throws a stick 😂😂😂
@DavidAbyssal
@DavidAbyssal 3 ай бұрын
@6:35 you can see that the pattern of fracture has already formed...! Good video, interesting, and beautiful view...!
@cryptosfarhan
@cryptosfarhan 20 күн бұрын
Really enjoyed that exploration... Would be scared to do what you did, but travelling on your shoulder through the camera is a real eye opener... Definitely more to it than natural geography... Had to be either man made or extra terrestrial in origin..
@davidmtokilivila8947
@davidmtokilivila8947 5 күн бұрын
Amazing exploration, I wish was able to travel to these rugged and beautiful locations and do what you did!👍🏽
@Yut00bisSUS
@Yut00bisSUS 3 ай бұрын
They're so straight with perfect angles. Definitely looks like a quarry, like someone cut the cliff side with technology that's foreign to us.
@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164
@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164 3 ай бұрын
Did you go there and check the Angles? No! They are NOT perfect 90* Angles!
@Cold_Cactus
@Cold_Cactus 3 ай бұрын
​@@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164nah but it's a really special natural formation either way , nature hardly ever does flat , straight or corners so it's rare to see perfect or not and these are pretty darn close
@ammoniawilder4451
@ammoniawilder4451 3 ай бұрын
@@oldmanfromscenetwentyfour8164sir, if you’re going to say they’re not perfect 90 degree angles because he didn’t go check, you can’t sit there and type that they ain’t because you, yourself, infact, did not go check.
@Yut00bisSUS
@Yut00bisSUS 3 ай бұрын
Old man so triggered! Does the formation remind you of the box you're trapped in?
@DJSolistica
@DJSolistica 3 ай бұрын
? foreign technology? Humans have been quarrying rock for thousands of years 😂
@paulballard304
@paulballard304 3 ай бұрын
The mass of little round rocks that look like coral could be oolites. This area was a sea at one time, oolites form from a couple of different natural processes, Google oolitic or oolite sandstone/limestone. I'm envious, really cool exploration and video, consider sharing your discovery of the petroglyph's with nearby tribal leaders or rangers. Thank you!
@03stmlax
@03stmlax 3 ай бұрын
It's actually rocks formed when lightning(electricity) hits sandstone. Called *'drigg fulgurite'*
@paulballard304
@paulballard304 3 ай бұрын
I believe you're correct after viewing on a larger screen, it's a better example than online specimens and I hope he brought it back? @@03stmlax
@anonymousfujane6666
@anonymousfujane6666 3 ай бұрын
Yes they should be reported to local tribes and local colleges for them to record or something so it's not lost!!
@PenguinFetus
@PenguinFetus 3 ай бұрын
@@03stmlaxso does it essentially melt pieces of the rock to glass causing the bubbling effect ?
@lovinwildlife2150
@lovinwildlife2150 3 ай бұрын
Just watched it again with my hubby, great video...thank you so much!!😊
@guicohj
@guicohj Ай бұрын
Crazy, the amount of work put into these and how well they fit together. Also noticing how incredibly flat they are on top.
@frozencanuck6764
@frozencanuck6764 Ай бұрын
Dude...thanks for taking us along. What a cool thing to find! The petroglyphs were amazing to see. As for the blocks...who works in stone that massive? The scale is unreal. We know nothing about our past beyond living memory.
@debdeb5093
@debdeb5093 3 ай бұрын
No more jumping from rock to rock...it's too much on my nerves , thank you for thinking of us out here
@pyropulseIXXI
@pyropulseIXXI 3 ай бұрын
You both sound like moms, lmao
@user-nj2vv2xm4j
@user-nj2vv2xm4j 3 ай бұрын
I sure and heck didn't do that while we were there. lol
@heathheriger2229
@heathheriger2229 3 ай бұрын
I bet his views would’ve went up
@qweshsjmkakakskqwe6409
@qweshsjmkakakskqwe6409 3 ай бұрын
( Urban warfar , jumping between buildings and destructions ) has entered the chat
@johnmason6213
@johnmason6213 3 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the “giants causeway” and other places where geometric shapes occur naturally in stone. But this is really strange. Great work!!
@katharina...
@katharina... 3 ай бұрын
That's the first thing I thought of too.
@carolking1374
@carolking1374 3 ай бұрын
Go to: MUD FOSSIL UNIVERSTY
@Frenchy78ify
@Frenchy78ify 2 ай бұрын
its not just strange, its an obvious sign of a an advanced civilization. Open your eyes. What would creat 60t square blocks in nature except humans ?
@jamesmcgowan3296
@jamesmcgowan3296 2 ай бұрын
@@Frenchy78ify grow up ffs!
@Frenchy78ify
@Frenchy78ify 2 ай бұрын
@@jamesmcgowan3296 son of a
@donaldnorth3714
@donaldnorth3714 21 күн бұрын
Obviously, you are not afraid of heights. What beautiful landscape and thank you for the drone shots of this beautiful location!
@finn4785
@finn4785 8 сағат бұрын
You've got me looking up Javelinas and coatimundis and learning cool stuff.
@Graybear78
@Graybear78 3 ай бұрын
Your videos, your expressions, your dialog helps one understand what the first explorers, the mountain men must have felt when they first ventured into the whole western US after the Louisianna Purchase. For me, I have nothing but admiration for those explorers.
@YasumuSento
@YasumuSento 3 ай бұрын
They were far from the first more like the last. Indigenous tribes lived here thousands of years before the Louisiana purchase
@Graybear78
@Graybear78 3 ай бұрын
I am well aware that indigenous tribes explored the whole of North America many thousands of years before Europeans arrived. My comment was intended to say "the first European explorers, the mountain men, who came after the Lousanna purchase". I assumed the words, ""mountain men" would be enough, but I errored. Please note the phrase, "the mountain men". I should have placed a comma after the word "men" to be clear. Some should read the entire script before jumping to conclusions and trying to find errors. @@YasumuSento
@silvertbird1
@silvertbird1 3 ай бұрын
This was clearly the most interesting thing I’ve seen today. Had no idea such a place existed - absolutely spectacular. I live in Rockwall, Texas named for an odd and once supposedly ancient wall unearthed in the 1850s and later supposedly confirmed to be a completely natural geologic phenomenon. Perhaps what you discovered is similar but on a colossally grander scale. I love the shot where doggo is watching the drone.
@sandrawarren7196
@sandrawarren7196 24 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for taking us all to see the sights,I would not be able to see this without you.😊
@melissabill1640
@melissabill1640 24 күн бұрын
Omg this is an incredible find. This apparent quarry reminds me of the stuff Brian Foerster has identified on his channel, which covers huge ancient megalithic rock ruins. The rocks were quarried, transported and placed using technology way beyond what should have existed at the time. Even more than we have now because these would have to be literally levitated to get where they are at.
@Genesis-wo3dg
@Genesis-wo3dg 2 күн бұрын
Exactly 💯
@Aggies44
@Aggies44 Күн бұрын
No
@jandraelune1
@jandraelune1 3 ай бұрын
Looking around on google earth/maps. These straight lines are all over the area, but limited to just this peninsula. 1918: those are fossilized corals which are often found in the area.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
That’s insane.
@teresadvorak6145
@teresadvorak6145 3 ай бұрын
Yeah... it makes me think this was pre flood 🤔
@mhicaoidh1
@mhicaoidh1 3 ай бұрын
@@teresadvorak6145 the whole area, during the Cretaceous period, was an inland sea. As the Rocky Mtns were forming, the sea was pushed south by the rising landmass into what is now the Gulf of Mexico.
@NitroTheRhino
@NitroTheRhino 3 ай бұрын
​@mhicaoidh1 Yep! I love searching for crinoid stems in the foothills of Appalachia. Hundreds of millions of years old!
@kurtloptien185
@kurtloptien185 3 ай бұрын
​@@the_pov_channelWell I would say insane is putting it mildly at best. When you learn/discover the multitude of limestone cliff faces, not all that dissimilar to this sandstone cliff, all formed in marine environments of reef building, it becomes infinitesimally unimaginable how long it took to build and how much sea life it took to do it. Check out the Capitan Reef of the Guadalupe Mountains in Southern New Mexico. Of course there are hundreds more all over the world.
@spikebeer1373
@spikebeer1373 2 ай бұрын
Beautiful! I have to agree with others, thank you for not adding music and extensive editing, just gorgeous footage all on its own.
@paulstevenson789
@paulstevenson789 2 ай бұрын
Great Comment!! Totally agree. So many videographers mess up a great shoot with incongruous very annoying music which totally destroys the ability to imagine!!
@JoMagic-ny8zu
@JoMagic-ny8zu Ай бұрын
That bubble rock is an asteroid that struck the mountain and created all that chaos.. Now that's the result and pieces of the meteor.. Excellent find..! 💥👍🏼😄
@moonman4768
@moonman4768 Ай бұрын
I saw your Antediluvian Discovery on "0:49 / 12:02 Pre-Flood Mega Quarry Discovered in Utah " I hope you name it first.
@D_Cali_Life
@D_Cali_Life 3 ай бұрын
6:38 !!! You can see everything is already pre-cut ! By looking at the Vegetation growth. Shows where water formations and grooves drain the water. So the stones are already pre cut or fabricated. They just have to be uncovered or picked up. Take a look at your drone footage, the lines going across like a grid
@mightywind7595
@mightywind7595 3 ай бұрын
I noticed that too, if you look at his shots from above you can see marks where they were going to cut off the next blocks. They are all consistently the same size and shape as the ones that have already broken off. And nature did that??? I’m saying no. And people saying in comments ice or whatever does make cube shapes, that’s true but this is not ice. Can you recreate this exact effect with the same materials? Science is consistent so show us this somewhere else with the same rock, weather etc?
@reubenhubbard5692
@reubenhubbard5692 3 ай бұрын
i’m not claiming these were constructed or not but ice is to water as lava is to rock; the basic process is the same they just happen at differently temps
@johnnovotny5074
@johnnovotny5074 3 ай бұрын
If there were signs of tools or tooling patterns the would be definitive.
@replynotificationsoff
@replynotificationsoff 3 ай бұрын
it's the whole, if aliens were real, they'd be untraceable unless they wanted to be discovered... did you know some ways of machine cutting doesn't leave trace of tool marks??? @@johnnovotny5074
@LMN2922
@LMN2922 3 ай бұрын
Found something for you. Not for this exact site, but for similar rock patterns. It is an open access article, maybe that is interesting for you, the title is: A new interpretation for formation of orthogonal joints in quartz sandstone by Le Li, Shaocheng Ji
@joshuaemerson1980
@joshuaemerson1980 3 ай бұрын
7:50 i had never felt claustrophobic until I had to squeeze through a deep slot in the granite at the Alabama Hills outside lonepine CA. Great find! Excellent footage 🌵👍🏻 i think you're blessed to be doing this and not wasting away at a gaming console.
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 3 ай бұрын
Lone pine!!! I've driven past there many times on my way to Mammoth Lakes CA! Stopped there late at night on one trip and the town was all but shut down. OFC this was in 1996... LOL
@joshuaemerson1980
@joshuaemerson1980 3 ай бұрын
@@chefscorner7063 I grew up in a family with little luxury and skiing was out of the budget
@stephaniewilder2341
@stephaniewilder2341 25 күн бұрын
Great video, thank you! I need to see if Thunderbolts Project has done a vid on this place.
@justinmorrison718
@justinmorrison718 26 күн бұрын
I believe those cubes are located there because the coastline was there at some point and those blocks were used to disrupt the tides as seen in Mexico coastlines like in Cancun. It is still unfathomable in current times to see how these megalithic structures were orchestrated during prehistoric times. Amazing
@evoxpop2088
@evoxpop2088 3 ай бұрын
Yes, I am afraid of heights, I got butterflies in my stomach every time you point your camera down the cliff or your dog walks to the edge. Awesome site🎉 thanks for sharing🎉
@chrystallee5528
@chrystallee5528 3 ай бұрын
Me too. I had to look away. He was giving me the Willie's. Especially because, he said his friends had fled and left him alone.
@double2mo382
@double2mo382 3 ай бұрын
Haha! Yes, me too!
@MostBever
@MostBever 3 ай бұрын
Great editing. The back and fourth drone fotage gave a great perspective. You standing that close to the cliff makes me uncomfortable.
@pickl3dill
@pickl3dill 6 сағат бұрын
Those saying erosion is kind of laughable. Erosion doesn’t occur in straight angles like that. You can see other areas where it looks like erosion. It does look quarry like though
@HippiandKat
@HippiandKat 3 ай бұрын
I've seen wonders in Egypt and alot around the world but this is something that left me speechless.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
Cheers. Would love to go see the pyramids someday
@surfman88
@surfman88 3 ай бұрын
There might be a connection. They build them with rocks from usa.
@Sir-.-
@Sir-.- 3 ай бұрын
Interesting theory 🤔
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
@@surfman88 Imma be honest- Thats quite the stretch 😂
@surfman88
@surfman88 3 ай бұрын
@@the_pov_channel not if you believe in alien tech. So many huge rocks in very old buildings all over world. If you own laser tech and defy gravity it’s easy. Doubt it were native Americans that cut em. But we never know.
@santafecanon
@santafecanon 3 ай бұрын
I went out to this formation in the mid 1970's while a student at UNM. This area has been studied by geologists and geo students more than a few times. Am sure there is a PhD thesis or two which examines the sandstone, the under laying formation and what it went through over time with pressures. There are lots of examples across the planet of fracturing along , more or less, angular lines then movement occurred as underlying formations shifted. You make a cool video and get people thinking about the real world that surrounds us. A note: stone masons have split sandstone along angular lines for millennia. Some sandstone's split that way be it small or massive.
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
It is an incredible place and alot to learn from it. Thanks I am glad to hear that. The splits that travel through sandstone remind me so much of a brittle wood like cedar. Would the action that splits the sandstone along the faults occur when it is very deep underground and subjected to high pressure?
@santafecanon
@santafecanon 3 ай бұрын
The splits occur long after sandstone was initially laid down during a desert environment (dont recall which epo period). A very complex scenario to long too explain here. @@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel
@the_pov_channel 3 ай бұрын
@@santafecanon Cool, thanks for the info I will look up this process
@kurtloptien185
@kurtloptien185 3 ай бұрын
What always captures my imagination are the forces that cause these huge blocks to separate and fall from the formation. Water and freezing temps. Water seeps into the initial hairline crack, freezes causing expansion of water into ice and pushes on the block, moving it away ever so slightly. Ice melts, more water enters crack, freezes, pushes block. It's referred to as freeze-thaw erosion. Eventually gravity is the greater force that tumbles the block.
@kaytay9214
@kaytay9214 8 күн бұрын
Reminds me of the massive slabs of stone the Egyptians used to build their largest structures. Like an ancient quarry. Those lines are just TOO perfect and there are so many, I feel like man was definitely involved in the creation of these...even if it was thousands of years ago. Such an interesting video, thank you for sharing!
@Booksn0b
@Booksn0b 28 күн бұрын
Directly to the point, no fluff or bullshit. Really refreshing, thanks.
@966Mako
@966Mako 3 ай бұрын
When thinking about the geological processes, the time scales involved. Starts to blow my mind. Those boulders that look like they’re on the edge. Could be sitting there for the next hundred thousand-million years. Our life span is barely a blip.
@simonaarflot4743
@simonaarflot4743 3 ай бұрын
I agree, but the fact that they are so high up goes to show how quickly the landscape from the plateau is raising. The sheer energy potential that forces water and salt down the cracks, yet dry so they remain for soo long. Insanity. Mesa mountains never cease to amaze.
@nwchrista
@nwchrista 2 ай бұрын
Though I don't deny the obvious fact that there are geologic processes at work here, it would be a misnomer to state that these rock formations are natural or geologically formed. Clearly, these mirror the ancient megaliths found the world over from Egypt, South and Central America, Central Asia, China, Greece,... Even Vietnam. This is one of the most incredible sites I've ever seen, to be honest. You had not only evidence of ancient stonework of cutting out giant symmetrically perfect cubes from the hillside, but also a dolmen head, at the same site. And you also had ancient hieroglyphs. This site is absolutely fantastic. These are not ancient American Indians, these are pre younger dryas impact event megalithic structures... Unknown in both date and origin. But that impact event was 12,800 years ago. And it ended the ice age, in a virtual blink of the eye. These particular megaliths, with the dolmen head, could literally be hundreds of thousands of years old. Check out chimney Rock in North Carolina. Similar views and almost all cases.
@nick9602
@nick9602 2 ай бұрын
Exactly. So while I understand there are a multitude of geological processes that could create these formations, I dont think its completely insane to believe that wayyy before modern recorded history this was some type of quarry. Regardless its still cool to think about at least.
@harrisonsimons3846
@harrisonsimons3846 2 ай бұрын
This rock formation is the Cedar Mesa Sandstone Member of the Permian Cutler formation. The Cedar Mesa Sandstone Member consists of two totally unlike facies- a sandstone facies present only in the area near Cedar Mesa and a gypsiferous facies. As typically exposed on Cedar Mesa, the sandstone facies consists of a sequence that is dominantly sandstone having minor interbedded siltstone. The sandstone is grayish orange, very pale orange, and yellowish gray and shows at places pale-reddish-brown and very light greenish-gray mottling. It consists of rounded to subangular very fine to medium quartz grains and minor accessory minerals and is generally well cemented by calcium carbonate. The sandstone occurs in thick prominent ledges as much as 125 feet thick that consist of individual beds from 5 to 35 feet thick. Many sandstone beds are cross laminated, and the inclination of the laminae is dominantly eastward (Read and Wanek, 1961, p. 7). Sears ( 1956) rnapped and described a "lower soft" part of the sandstone facies, which is locally present and contrasts markedly with the typical sandstone facies of the Cedar Mesa Sandstone noted above. This lower softer zone forms a steep slope and is overlain by remnants of cliff-forming grayish -orange cross bedded sandstone in all respects similar to typical Cedar Mesa exposed at the type locality near Cedar Point. From s structural standpoint, the area in this video falls along the fold axis of the Cedar Mesa Anticline which is referred to in the literature as "Essentially the summit of the Monument Upwarp ". The monument upwarp is considered to be a large structural element of the Colorado Plateau, and is characterized as a broad northward trending uplift about 35 miles wide and 100 miles long extending from near the junetion of the Green and Colorado Rivers to near Kayenta, Ariz. The upwarp is asymmetrical and has a gently dipping west limb and a steeply dipping east limb. I think that the regional structural deformation and local surface conditions, consisting of relatively brittle sandstone over the "lower softer, gypsiferous" member of the Cedar Mesa Standstone, produced thenearly perfect symmetrical joint sets shown in this video. Some references- Structural geologic evolution of the Colorado Plateau George H. Davis Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA Alex P. Bump BP Exploration and Production Technology, Houston, Texas 77079, USA Geology of the Cedar Mesa-Boundary Butte Area San Juan County, Utah , ROBERT B. O'SULLIVAN GEOLOGICAL SURVEY BULLETIN 1186 Geologic Map of the Cedar Mesa-Boundary Butte Area, San Juan County, Utah (GIS reproduction of USGS Bulletin 1186 [1965]) by Robert O'Sullivan 2019 PERMIANLAND: THE ROCKS OF MONUMENT VALLEY by D. L. BAARS Department of Geology Fort Lewis College Durango, Colorado
@ProfessionalNapper
@ProfessionalNapper 2 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper 2 ай бұрын
Massive respect for anyone that does actual research on a subject and then adds references so others are able to reach their own newly educated conclusions.
@nikimccrossan9497
@nikimccrossan9497 2 ай бұрын
Sweet info and links to sources, cheers much 👏
@veritas_phantasia4653
@veritas_phantasia4653 2 ай бұрын
pin this lmao
@mikeb.7068
@mikeb.7068 2 ай бұрын
Of course you would, your professional reputation prevents you from contemplating anything other than a natural cause. Show me another example of this anywhere in the word.
@jorgematurino1312
@jorgematurino1312 Ай бұрын
Hey man great video . I work at a travertine and marble quarry, the cuts on the walls and the way de blocks where tossed down are identical as the procedure we do to extract our marble blocks , its completely surreal nature did something like this , specially with those crazy angles an geometry. Strange....
@jrae4348
@jrae4348 22 күн бұрын
Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland has some fascinating rock formations, too, but not nearly as massive!
@villagevaliant
@villagevaliant 3 ай бұрын
I like how you and your dog both have the same energy. And your dog is having as much fun as you lol
@MargaritaSanchez-ir7yf
@MargaritaSanchez-ir7yf Ай бұрын
THAK YOU for sharing this marvelous scene and new aspects of the nature formations that no one would believe were possible.
@RexxorDDG
@RexxorDDG 13 күн бұрын
resembles a mineral formation known as an "iron concretion." Iron concretions are found in various shapes and sizes, and they form when mineral cement, primarily iron, binds sand particles together. They are typically denser and harder than the surrounding sandstone or other sedimentary rocks.
@EquineAdvocateForever
@EquineAdvocateForever 3 ай бұрын
Best aerial photography I've ever seen. I had goose bumps on my scalp on several occasions. Wish I was fearless of heights like you.
@davidhunternyc1
@davidhunternyc1 3 ай бұрын
OMG! Starting at 1:45, your silence and this recording of rumbling thunder in the vastness of nature had me trembling. Simply stunning. Perhaps the most wondrous recording of nature I've ever seen. Thank you!
@youtube-user73424
@youtube-user73424 3 ай бұрын
How is there some shots that are completely clear and you hear thunder in the background? Seems to be that some of the wind sound and thunder sound was added
@hugoirrazabal4520
@hugoirrazabal4520 Ай бұрын
Espectacular tu canal, tenes mi suscripción, una consulta, tenes algo sobre el eclipse del 8 de abril ?
@angiwinter5644
@angiwinter5644 Ай бұрын
this is mesmerizingly puzzling. these blocks are so evenly cut like I would cut butter into cubes.
@keithdonaldson3945
@keithdonaldson3945 2 ай бұрын
The thing I find most interesting is how many block shapes are slightly visible way before they break up and get near the edge.
@touriel8943
@touriel8943 Ай бұрын
It looks like a plaza that got cut up when flood erosion cut a channel. It would be interesting to see how far back from the edge it goes. Also, if it is natural, why is it the only cliff edge like it...🧐....
@tadpolesoup
@tadpolesoup 3 ай бұрын
Spectacular views! I find it hard to believe those perfectly straight cuts and geometrically shaped rocks were formed by natural processes.
@whatabouttheearth
@whatabouttheearth 3 ай бұрын
😂 they're not perfectly straight
@bingedrnker.
@bingedrnker. Ай бұрын
As much as I would love there to be some strange explanation, the grand canyon used to be under water so I'm guessing these blocks form when the water recedes, the sun baking and cracking it like mud does when it drys out just on a huge larger scale. Still amazing though
@RicardoRodriguez-zu8rf
@RicardoRodriguez-zu8rf Ай бұрын
Definitely it looks like a quarry. Whoever civilization and age was there they were extracting enormous stone cubes there, and about the small hand size rocks with bubbles around it could indicate heat it was maybe melted. Some ancient technology? Hope you took home some samples with you, it'd be great if any geologist could analyze them.
@gjjkhjkk9241
@gjjkhjkk9241 25 күн бұрын
the ancient astronaut for the electricity of the egyptian pyramid
@guitarcrazyusa
@guitarcrazyusa 2 ай бұрын
Absolutely AMAZING! Being claustrophobic AND acrophobic your investigation (climbing, navigating, and standing atop) would scare the hell out of me makes me grateful YOU have the abilities! This is one of the BEST things I've seen on KZfaq....EVER!
@JoyMG_
@JoyMG_ 2 ай бұрын
It's freaking ME out too lol
@deborahmahon5451
@deborahmahon5451 2 ай бұрын
I agree. This is one of the best things I've ever seen on KZfaq and I watch a lot of KZfaq 😅
@Fvpigpen26
@Fvpigpen26 2 ай бұрын
Sorry for your phobias. I have had stiff-person-syndrome for the past 12 years, and it comes with startle syndrome, and it has done a number on my sanity. My PTSD from commercial fishing for 23 years has had a field day with me, and the ruptured Cochlea has my vertigo going to the Olympics. So, I feel for you.
@HalfBakedHeroes
@HalfBakedHeroes 2 ай бұрын
So you're afraid of being alive?
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