1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,600 Speaker 1: Hey, guys, Steve here, you are listening to one of 2 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:06,600 Speaker 1: our original twenty six episodes. If you listen to any 3 00:00:06,640 --> 00:00:09,280 Speaker 1: of our new episodes, you're gonna notice that we're sounding 4 00:00:09,320 --> 00:00:11,639 Speaker 1: a little different in these ones. Yeah, there's a reason 5 00:00:11,680 --> 00:00:14,520 Speaker 1: for that. There is they've been remastered. They have been 6 00:00:14,520 --> 00:00:18,040 Speaker 1: remastered because they had a really annoying hum. Yeah, I 7 00:00:18,040 --> 00:00:21,480 Speaker 1: mean a huge thanks to listener James for doing almost 8 00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:23,880 Speaker 1: all of the legwork on this thing. They'll also notice 9 00:00:23,880 --> 00:00:25,880 Speaker 1: if you had listened to what we're calling the last 10 00:00:25,920 --> 00:00:29,639 Speaker 1: twenty six episodes before and you're re listening now, the 11 00:00:29,800 --> 00:00:33,160 Speaker 1: music and sound effects are gone. Yes, we've we've gone 12 00:00:33,159 --> 00:00:35,720 Speaker 1: back to straight audio, so be warned. We sound a 13 00:00:35,720 --> 00:00:38,000 Speaker 1: little different today than we do in what you're about 14 00:00:38,040 --> 00:00:46,760 Speaker 1: to listen to. Yeah, and bye bye, Thinking Sideways. I 15 00:00:46,800 --> 00:00:57,080 Speaker 1: don't think you never know stories of things we simply 16 00:00:57,160 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 1: don't know the answer to. All Right, well, hello, folks, welcome. 17 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:08,119 Speaker 1: This is Thinking Sideways. My name is Joe Steve. Hey, 18 00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:11,840 Speaker 1: I'm talking all over each other here. We're really good 19 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:14,480 Speaker 1: at this cars. I don't need to explain what we 20 00:01:14,520 --> 00:01:16,640 Speaker 1: do for many millions of fans, but there are maybe 21 00:01:16,640 --> 00:01:18,319 Speaker 1: a few who are just tuning in. So we're going 22 00:01:18,360 --> 00:01:24,880 Speaker 1: to talk about mysterious stuff tonight. We're gonna talk about rocks. Yeah, 23 00:01:24,920 --> 00:01:27,959 Speaker 1: I'm gonna talking about that special, a special bunch of 24 00:01:28,040 --> 00:01:30,320 Speaker 1: rocks in Brittaan in the south of France called the 25 00:01:30,360 --> 00:01:34,679 Speaker 1: Carnex Stones. The Carnex stones are just thousands of stones 26 00:01:34,800 --> 00:01:37,959 Speaker 1: laid out, very large stones, I might add, laid out 27 00:01:38,000 --> 00:01:41,959 Speaker 1: in mysterious rows that are like over a kilometer long 28 00:01:42,480 --> 00:01:46,080 Speaker 1: in some instances and ten ten ten stones wide. These 29 00:01:46,120 --> 00:01:48,720 Speaker 1: stones are called men here's they are, which are needs 30 00:01:48,760 --> 00:01:52,640 Speaker 1: standing stones, and they vary between several feet high to 31 00:01:53,440 --> 00:01:57,640 Speaker 1: fifteen feet high and yeah, ten stones wide, over a 32 00:01:57,680 --> 00:02:02,520 Speaker 1: kilometer long, hundred meters wide, and some end change along. 33 00:02:02,680 --> 00:02:05,080 Speaker 1: So we're just saying, like, so some guy in the 34 00:02:05,120 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: Brittany decided to take a crane and a bunch of 35 00:02:10,280 --> 00:02:12,840 Speaker 1: stones up or that's kind of my guess, you know. 36 00:02:12,960 --> 00:02:17,840 Speaker 1: And so you know, there's a there's a too fascinating 37 00:02:17,840 --> 00:02:20,000 Speaker 1: things about this. Number one, nobody has any clue as 38 00:02:20,000 --> 00:02:23,400 Speaker 1: to why this these people did this. And number two, 39 00:02:23,919 --> 00:02:26,240 Speaker 1: given the size of the stones and then huge vast 40 00:02:26,360 --> 00:02:28,320 Speaker 1: numbers of them, and then the very careful arrangement, the 41 00:02:28,360 --> 00:02:30,839 Speaker 1: obviously they a huge amount of energy to this, so 42 00:02:31,600 --> 00:02:34,600 Speaker 1: there had to have been a fairly large, sophisticated society. 43 00:02:34,720 --> 00:02:38,160 Speaker 1: I ask a good question. They were there estimated between 44 00:02:39,280 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: BC and three thousand. I thought you were talking about 45 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:46,800 Speaker 1: like some dude like fifty years ago with a crane. 46 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:50,760 Speaker 1: I'm not gonna put these rocks up. You know, it 47 00:02:50,800 --> 00:02:52,919 Speaker 1: could possibly be. I mean, we don't really know. I mean, 48 00:02:52,919 --> 00:02:55,400 Speaker 1: these guys, these guys that is this Carnack Stones are 49 00:02:55,480 --> 00:02:58,680 Speaker 1: named after a town in France called Karnak, and it 50 00:02:58,800 --> 00:03:01,120 Speaker 1: may very well be the little pals felt that they 51 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:03,000 Speaker 1: would like a little more tourism and maybe they just 52 00:03:03,040 --> 00:03:04,920 Speaker 1: snuck these things out into the fields. On that and 53 00:03:04,960 --> 00:03:14,119 Speaker 1: it says there's a many large rocks explained maybe yeah, yeah, 54 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:18,680 Speaker 1: companies without town that good rail. I'm gonna put that 55 00:03:18,760 --> 00:03:21,480 Speaker 1: on the list of possible experts. I think, yeah, that's 56 00:03:21,520 --> 00:03:23,600 Speaker 1: a good one. Yeah. I I have actually, and you 57 00:03:23,600 --> 00:03:26,000 Speaker 1: guys have been have been looking at some of this material, 58 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:28,200 Speaker 1: have been going out and reviewing some of the various 59 00:03:28,360 --> 00:03:30,760 Speaker 1: theories that people have as to why these things were 60 00:03:30,760 --> 00:03:32,160 Speaker 1: put up. And that's one of the mysteries. Of course. 61 00:03:32,160 --> 00:03:36,320 Speaker 1: The other mystery is it's very large, somewhat largely sophisticated 62 00:03:36,360 --> 00:03:38,920 Speaker 1: society that obviously, I don't know, wealth and spare time 63 00:03:38,960 --> 00:03:41,960 Speaker 1: to do this vanished without a trace. And that's another 64 00:03:42,120 --> 00:03:45,840 Speaker 1: huge mystery. Where did these guys go? So we don't 65 00:03:45,960 --> 00:03:49,440 Speaker 1: know who actually did all this work. We have no clue. 66 00:03:49,840 --> 00:03:51,720 Speaker 1: So yeah, I guess can you like tell me because 67 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:54,880 Speaker 1: I always get really fuzzy only human history and all 68 00:03:55,000 --> 00:03:58,240 Speaker 1: that stuff. Like three thousand BC, that's when you said 69 00:03:58,440 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 1: these were people what already five three? Okay, So what's 70 00:04:02,280 --> 00:04:04,000 Speaker 1: going on then? I mean, you know, are we like 71 00:04:04,640 --> 00:04:07,520 Speaker 1: obviously we're not time of Christ. Are we like Great Pyramids? 72 00:04:07,680 --> 00:04:11,320 Speaker 1: Or we like this is like before the Great Pyramids, 73 00:04:11,640 --> 00:04:14,280 Speaker 1: two thousand years before the Great Pyramids. So I mean, 74 00:04:14,320 --> 00:04:18,080 Speaker 1: I mean, well, when they finished up in about three 75 00:04:18,120 --> 00:04:20,240 Speaker 1: thousand d C. And I assume that they didn't really 76 00:04:20,240 --> 00:04:22,720 Speaker 1: finish the project, they all probably just died or something 77 00:04:22,760 --> 00:04:26,800 Speaker 1: like that. Civilization just went out of style. But but yeah, 78 00:04:27,080 --> 00:04:29,200 Speaker 1: that was that was still a couple of centuries. That 79 00:04:29,279 --> 00:04:31,240 Speaker 1: was still at least a couple of centuries before the 80 00:04:31,240 --> 00:04:33,760 Speaker 1: first pyramids built in Egypt. All right, that's all right, 81 00:04:33,800 --> 00:04:36,680 Speaker 1: I'm getting interested now. And elsewhere in the world, I 82 00:04:36,720 --> 00:04:39,160 Speaker 1: think we were just basically living in mud Hutson beating 83 00:04:39,160 --> 00:04:40,960 Speaker 1: each other to death, you know, and stuff like that. 84 00:04:41,040 --> 00:04:43,839 Speaker 1: It sounds like that that sounds about this is the 85 00:04:43,880 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 1: time in human history right where we like seem to 86 00:04:45,920 --> 00:04:49,400 Speaker 1: have forgotten Stonehenge was kind of happening, right, you know, 87 00:04:49,440 --> 00:04:53,000 Speaker 1: all these like big times where it seems like there's 88 00:04:53,040 --> 00:04:56,920 Speaker 1: this moment in human history where everyone was like, oh, yeah, 89 00:04:56,960 --> 00:04:59,720 Speaker 1: we had all these big civilization civilizations, you have really 90 00:04:59,760 --> 00:05:03,680 Speaker 1: mess with people in the future, let's just forget about them. Well, 91 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:08,919 Speaker 1: there's all these megalithic constructions around that around those those 92 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:13,719 Speaker 1: thousands of years have then all of the people that yeah, 93 00:05:15,080 --> 00:05:17,560 Speaker 1: moved along, the knowledge was forgotten. I think we've talked 94 00:05:17,600 --> 00:05:20,800 Speaker 1: about this in a different show before. And in the future. Yeah, 95 00:05:20,960 --> 00:05:23,919 Speaker 1: we're just like what we prior to the invention of 96 00:05:23,960 --> 00:05:26,280 Speaker 1: writing and all that, there's no records left and you know, 97 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:29,920 Speaker 1: all of their little houses and everything have fallen down. Okay, 98 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:32,400 Speaker 1: so we're talking about this time period of time where 99 00:05:32,400 --> 00:05:35,120 Speaker 1: it's like this big question mark and just as the side. 100 00:05:35,279 --> 00:05:37,520 Speaker 1: One time, I was in Wales some some years back 101 00:05:37,560 --> 00:05:39,800 Speaker 1: and I visited a sumulus, which is what they have 102 00:05:39,839 --> 00:05:42,920 Speaker 1: at Karnac also, which are these big barrows or burial mounds, 103 00:05:43,720 --> 00:05:48,080 Speaker 1: and that was dated at about again and author unknown. 104 00:05:49,520 --> 00:05:52,039 Speaker 1: The most ancient structure I've ever been in, but you know, 105 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:56,520 Speaker 1: and those are those mounds that are thirty plus feed high. 106 00:05:56,560 --> 00:05:59,160 Speaker 1: Somebody buried underneath the bottom of the mound with all 107 00:05:59,200 --> 00:06:02,640 Speaker 1: their gear. Yeah yeah, And this was this one was 108 00:06:02,680 --> 00:06:04,760 Speaker 1: not quite that impressive. It was on the Welsh coast, 109 00:06:04,839 --> 00:06:07,480 Speaker 1: but it was like basically like a little flint stone's house, 110 00:06:07,520 --> 00:06:10,360 Speaker 1: you know, with like slate walls and a slate roof, 111 00:06:10,400 --> 00:06:12,280 Speaker 1: and that was just it was buried and eventually was 112 00:06:12,360 --> 00:06:14,520 Speaker 1: excavated and then reburied, but there was they left a 113 00:06:14,520 --> 00:06:16,640 Speaker 1: tunnel so you could walk inside it and see what. 114 00:06:17,560 --> 00:06:19,800 Speaker 1: I don't think I've seen something on that one. Yeah, 115 00:06:20,080 --> 00:06:22,719 Speaker 1: actually brings a bell. Yeah yeah. I I went to 116 00:06:23,040 --> 00:06:29,200 Speaker 1: Stonehenge and the weird like stargazing huts. They can't totally 117 00:06:29,240 --> 00:06:31,960 Speaker 1: figure out what's going on there. And those are really 118 00:06:32,000 --> 00:06:34,200 Speaker 1: old and they I think they kind of fit this 119 00:06:34,279 --> 00:06:39,040 Speaker 1: category of like weird stonework from a prehistoric age. Well, 120 00:06:39,080 --> 00:06:41,360 Speaker 1: and so you know, I mean, I obviously I've never 121 00:06:41,400 --> 00:06:43,400 Speaker 1: been and seeing a chronic stone, but just like you, 122 00:06:43,520 --> 00:06:46,520 Speaker 1: I've been to Stonehenge and it is amazing to see 123 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:50,800 Speaker 1: these giant, giant rocks. I mean, what is the rock 124 00:06:50,880 --> 00:06:55,080 Speaker 1: of Stonehenge. You're five tons at least minimums, you know, 125 00:06:55,200 --> 00:06:58,160 Speaker 1: if not ten or twenties, and you just gotta think weight. 126 00:06:58,240 --> 00:07:01,840 Speaker 1: This was before we really knew how to use a 127 00:07:01,880 --> 00:07:05,760 Speaker 1: lot of complex systems and a bunch of guys figured 128 00:07:05,839 --> 00:07:08,560 Speaker 1: out figured out how to howk these rocks up on time, 129 00:07:08,600 --> 00:07:11,600 Speaker 1: and they didn't fall over. Yeah, they still haven't fall Yeah, 130 00:07:11,640 --> 00:07:14,000 Speaker 1: and that's what's that's I mean, that's what's amazing with 131 00:07:14,080 --> 00:07:17,760 Speaker 1: these carnex stones because they're also really really large, a 132 00:07:17,840 --> 00:07:20,080 Speaker 1: lot of them, and yeah they are, and some of 133 00:07:20,080 --> 00:07:23,360 Speaker 1: them have broken and fallen over, but most of them 134 00:07:23,360 --> 00:07:26,239 Speaker 1: are still standing. That's wear and tear, it kind of expect. 135 00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:30,120 Speaker 1: It's not that they've actually like fallen because they've fallen 136 00:07:30,160 --> 00:07:33,480 Speaker 1: out of their place, but they because they were poorly. Yeah, 137 00:07:33,960 --> 00:07:36,640 Speaker 1: so it's impressive. Ancient man could do a lot of 138 00:07:36,680 --> 00:07:39,560 Speaker 1: impressive stuff. You know, we we think of Asian man 139 00:07:39,600 --> 00:07:41,640 Speaker 1: is ignorant and stupid, which I'm sure he was, but 140 00:07:42,440 --> 00:07:44,320 Speaker 1: a lot of a lot of them were. But but 141 00:07:44,480 --> 00:07:50,080 Speaker 1: it's just make stuff. Yeah, So anyway, let's let me 142 00:07:50,360 --> 00:07:52,280 Speaker 1: I'll describe them a little bit more for our readers, 143 00:07:52,320 --> 00:07:53,720 Speaker 1: who I'm sure but now I've already got out to 144 00:07:53,760 --> 00:07:56,960 Speaker 1: Google and they're looking at pictures right now. For those 145 00:07:57,000 --> 00:07:59,960 Speaker 1: of you that haven't, let me describe them a little bit. 146 00:08:00,040 --> 00:08:04,320 Speaker 1: There's three major alignments, um, and it appears when you 147 00:08:04,320 --> 00:08:06,160 Speaker 1: look at the aerials and the maps and everything, it 148 00:08:06,160 --> 00:08:09,640 Speaker 1: appears that they might most possibly were just one huge 149 00:08:09,680 --> 00:08:13,720 Speaker 1: long alignment that was broken up by people stealing rocks 150 00:08:13,720 --> 00:08:17,559 Speaker 1: for construction. Roads going through is another one of those 151 00:08:17,600 --> 00:08:21,160 Speaker 1: that like there's no actual preservation of Yeah, it wasn't 152 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:25,400 Speaker 1: for a long time. There is now there is because 153 00:08:25,440 --> 00:08:28,520 Speaker 1: I actually went to the Karnak website that's run by 154 00:08:28,520 --> 00:08:32,440 Speaker 1: the French government and it has visiting in hours and 155 00:08:32,480 --> 00:08:34,560 Speaker 1: all that, but a lot of it is behind fences 156 00:08:34,640 --> 00:08:37,880 Speaker 1: now and you can't actually walk into other roads through 157 00:08:37,920 --> 00:08:42,760 Speaker 1: parts of this and stuff built like with the okay, 158 00:08:42,840 --> 00:08:45,440 Speaker 1: all right, yeah, I got it, Okay. You would think 159 00:08:45,440 --> 00:08:46,680 Speaker 1: that that you would think that you'd be able to 160 00:08:46,679 --> 00:08:49,000 Speaker 1: find some some big match in or castle nearby that's 161 00:08:49,160 --> 00:08:52,679 Speaker 1: you know, obviously built from rocks stolen from and then 162 00:08:52,679 --> 00:08:54,560 Speaker 1: if you go knock the castle down and take the 163 00:08:54,600 --> 00:08:56,520 Speaker 1: rocks and put them back, maybe that's what it is 164 00:08:56,559 --> 00:08:58,439 Speaker 1: that's my theory. I'm gonna go and say it right now. 165 00:08:58,440 --> 00:09:00,920 Speaker 1: My theory is that it was a castle on that 166 00:09:01,000 --> 00:09:03,400 Speaker 1: they were just like, screw the dude who lives here, 167 00:09:05,200 --> 00:09:09,360 Speaker 1: in the most obvious way possible. Yeah, and as acid 168 00:09:09,600 --> 00:09:11,960 Speaker 1: the mysterious disappearance of the people that built this, What 169 00:09:12,080 --> 00:09:14,360 Speaker 1: I think happened is I think that they did this 170 00:09:14,559 --> 00:09:17,199 Speaker 1: and eventually time, you know, news traveled slowly and for 171 00:09:17,559 --> 00:09:20,559 Speaker 1: three thousand BC. I think eventually what happened is the 172 00:09:20,640 --> 00:09:25,520 Speaker 1: Stonehengians got wind of this and tried to file a 173 00:09:25,559 --> 00:09:30,880 Speaker 1: copyright infringement lawsuits that discovered discovered to their rage that 174 00:09:31,000 --> 00:09:33,280 Speaker 1: lawyers didn't yet exist, and so they went over there 175 00:09:33,280 --> 00:09:35,880 Speaker 1: and just slaughtered these people and burned their homes to 176 00:09:35,920 --> 00:09:43,000 Speaker 1: the ground. What happened that that's what happened. Okay, Yeah, anyway, 177 00:09:43,280 --> 00:09:46,520 Speaker 1: so I'll talk about the alignment. So the big things 178 00:09:46,880 --> 00:09:50,400 Speaker 1: the medic alignments is eleven rows of men. Here's an men. 179 00:09:50,440 --> 00:09:54,319 Speaker 1: Here is a large standing stone for one point one 180 00:09:54,400 --> 00:09:59,920 Speaker 1: six five kilometers. That's that's one thousand, sixty five by 181 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:04,280 Speaker 1: a hundred meters um. So that's that's a lot of rocks. Uh. 182 00:10:04,280 --> 00:10:07,480 Speaker 1: And apparently there is that there appeared to be the 183 00:10:07,600 --> 00:10:10,320 Speaker 1: remains of stone circles at either end of this room. 184 00:10:11,080 --> 00:10:14,520 Speaker 1: Next after that comes to car Mario alignment, which is 185 00:10:14,640 --> 00:10:17,800 Speaker 1: further to the east. Um. This is called the Camaro 186 00:10:17,920 --> 00:10:19,760 Speaker 1: House of the Dead. I love the name House of 187 00:10:19,760 --> 00:10:24,400 Speaker 1: the Dead alignment uh one thousand, twenty nine stones in 188 00:10:24,400 --> 00:10:29,480 Speaker 1: ten columns, about hundred meters in length, stone circles to 189 00:10:29,559 --> 00:10:33,880 Speaker 1: the east end. Uh. Last of all the curl Scan alignment, 190 00:10:34,920 --> 00:10:37,840 Speaker 1: smaller group of five hundred fifty stones further to still 191 00:10:38,600 --> 00:10:42,400 Speaker 1: thirteen lines with the total length of about eight hundred meters. Oh, 192 00:10:42,440 --> 00:10:44,800 Speaker 1: they talked about a little bitty group also the petty 193 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:47,680 Speaker 1: min Echo alignment, which is on Pettit and French means 194 00:10:47,720 --> 00:10:56,680 Speaker 1: little uh so nine month. The much smaller group further 195 00:10:56,800 --> 00:10:59,920 Speaker 1: the east of curl Scan is actually they're actually in 196 00:11:00,040 --> 00:11:02,760 Speaker 1: the woods and covered with moss and ivy and stuff. 197 00:11:03,200 --> 00:11:04,839 Speaker 1: And then after that, besides that, there's a bunch of 198 00:11:04,840 --> 00:11:09,400 Speaker 1: other artifacts. There's timuli, which is a proto tumulus, which 199 00:11:09,480 --> 00:11:11,719 Speaker 1: is amount of earth built up and which essentially is 200 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:16,960 Speaker 1: a burial mound for barrel barrel. There are dolmans are 201 00:11:17,040 --> 00:11:19,360 Speaker 1: kind kind of like they're they're basically kind of like 202 00:11:19,360 --> 00:11:23,240 Speaker 1: clint Stone houses um that were tumbes basically a big 203 00:11:23,280 --> 00:11:25,559 Speaker 1: big square rocks stacked up with a big flat rocks 204 00:11:25,679 --> 00:11:27,839 Speaker 1: and set on the top of it. And I don't 205 00:11:27,840 --> 00:11:29,440 Speaker 1: know how many guys it takes the lift up one 206 00:11:29,480 --> 00:11:31,040 Speaker 1: of those things that set it on top. I mean, 207 00:11:31,640 --> 00:11:33,640 Speaker 1: getting the sides up wouldn't be that hard, but getting 208 00:11:33,640 --> 00:11:36,160 Speaker 1: the roof on, that's that's pretty impressively. That's always a 209 00:11:36,200 --> 00:11:38,080 Speaker 1: big question, right is that? Like Okay, I guess I 210 00:11:38,120 --> 00:11:41,920 Speaker 1: can see how they like made those stones vertical, but 211 00:11:42,080 --> 00:11:46,560 Speaker 1: like it's those giant horizontal pieces on top that's standing 212 00:11:46,720 --> 00:11:49,360 Speaker 1: standing a stone up right, you dig a big hole 213 00:11:49,480 --> 00:11:51,600 Speaker 1: on me that you just roll it in, You roll 214 00:11:51,679 --> 00:11:53,679 Speaker 1: it in and then your backfill. I can see that, 215 00:11:53,760 --> 00:11:56,120 Speaker 1: But yeah, it's the it's the lifting up the big 216 00:11:56,160 --> 00:11:59,320 Speaker 1: flat ones and putting them on top there still boggles me. 217 00:11:59,400 --> 00:12:02,320 Speaker 1: It's although actually, actually I think I just figured it out. 218 00:12:02,760 --> 00:12:04,280 Speaker 1: You put up your walls, and then you and then 219 00:12:04,280 --> 00:12:06,439 Speaker 1: you and then you fill it around, bill it around 220 00:12:06,440 --> 00:12:08,320 Speaker 1: with dirt till till the dirt is level with the 221 00:12:08,360 --> 00:12:10,720 Speaker 1: top of the walls, and then you roll the top 222 00:12:10,800 --> 00:12:13,160 Speaker 1: up on logs and then you just pull the logs 223 00:12:13,200 --> 00:12:16,640 Speaker 1: out from underneath. Then you dig the dirt away again. Okay, 224 00:12:16,679 --> 00:12:19,040 Speaker 1: we figured that out. Yeah, because I was gonna say, 225 00:12:19,080 --> 00:12:20,440 Speaker 1: I'm glad I came up with that, because otherwise I 226 00:12:20,440 --> 00:12:22,120 Speaker 1: would have had to go though somewhere I hate to go, 227 00:12:22,160 --> 00:12:25,840 Speaker 1: which is aliens. I like aliens for this, and I 228 00:12:25,840 --> 00:12:27,840 Speaker 1: want to talk about aliens later. You want to talk 229 00:12:27,840 --> 00:12:32,400 Speaker 1: about later, we'll talk about our theories. Yeah, always do well. 230 00:12:32,440 --> 00:12:34,880 Speaker 1: So anyway I saw, like I said, I feel free 231 00:12:34,920 --> 00:12:36,800 Speaker 1: to go out to Google and look at some of 232 00:12:36,800 --> 00:12:38,920 Speaker 1: the pictures and stuff of this. You should, because I mean, 233 00:12:38,920 --> 00:12:41,839 Speaker 1: you know, it's hard to imagine. There's some pictures where 234 00:12:41,880 --> 00:12:44,040 Speaker 1: there are people standing next to the rocks and you 235 00:12:44,080 --> 00:12:46,360 Speaker 1: get a good scope of how big they are. What 236 00:12:46,480 --> 00:12:48,440 Speaker 1: is the one, Joe, do you remember the name of 237 00:12:48,440 --> 00:12:51,400 Speaker 1: the one that? I mean? Somebody re erected it because 238 00:12:51,440 --> 00:12:55,000 Speaker 1: it had fallen down, But it's the famous picture is 239 00:12:55,000 --> 00:12:58,560 Speaker 1: always some little kid sitting at the bottom of it. 240 00:12:58,640 --> 00:13:02,360 Speaker 1: And this thing is I don't know, thirty feet high. 241 00:13:03,200 --> 00:13:06,520 Speaker 1: It's called it's called the money a giant or something like. 242 00:13:07,800 --> 00:13:09,840 Speaker 1: It's yet a big honking rock. I don't know how 243 00:13:09,880 --> 00:13:11,719 Speaker 1: deep into the ground it goes, either, it's got to 244 00:13:11,760 --> 00:13:13,320 Speaker 1: be a long way down. Yeah, it's got to be 245 00:13:13,320 --> 00:13:15,360 Speaker 1: going Yeah, it's gotta be going down at least what 246 00:13:15,520 --> 00:13:18,160 Speaker 1: ten feet? Yeah, at least. Yeah, they have to not 247 00:13:18,280 --> 00:13:20,440 Speaker 1: fall over. So somebody had to dig dig a hole. 248 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,880 Speaker 1: That would be approval work. Yeah, somebody had to dig 249 00:13:24,880 --> 00:13:27,400 Speaker 1: a hole. And then and then while the other guys okay, man, 250 00:13:27,440 --> 00:13:29,280 Speaker 1: well you dig the hole, we're gonna go get the rock. 251 00:13:31,040 --> 00:13:35,720 Speaker 1: So okay, since I'm the question asker of this, yes, 252 00:13:36,360 --> 00:13:39,520 Speaker 1: my question right now when we're talking about description of 253 00:13:39,559 --> 00:13:45,320 Speaker 1: it is what keeps these rocks from just being like rocks? Right? Like? 254 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:47,720 Speaker 1: Are they just normal rocks? They're just like you found 255 00:13:47,720 --> 00:13:50,520 Speaker 1: them anywhere or there any kind of like stone mason 256 00:13:50,640 --> 00:13:53,840 Speaker 1: remarks or anything like that. Yeah, they definitely found marks, 257 00:13:53,920 --> 00:13:57,560 Speaker 1: I mean marks of stonemasonry. Um, definitely, they found like 258 00:13:57,600 --> 00:14:01,400 Speaker 1: they split the granite by drilling holes, and god knows 259 00:14:01,400 --> 00:14:02,880 Speaker 1: how they did that. And then imagine they took a 260 00:14:02,920 --> 00:14:05,680 Speaker 1: stick and just like just sort of rubbed it around 261 00:14:05,679 --> 00:14:07,560 Speaker 1: like they know, like spun it around like about five 262 00:14:07,600 --> 00:14:09,920 Speaker 1: million times. And then and then we managed to bore 263 00:14:09,960 --> 00:14:11,560 Speaker 1: a hole in there and then and then get in 264 00:14:11,559 --> 00:14:14,400 Speaker 1: there with wedges and split the rock. But apparently these 265 00:14:14,480 --> 00:14:16,120 Speaker 1: these people didn't know how I didn't know how to 266 00:14:16,120 --> 00:14:18,480 Speaker 1: work stone. They don't knew how to break it, and 267 00:14:18,559 --> 00:14:21,280 Speaker 1: we didn't we didn't figure out how to make iron. 268 00:14:21,320 --> 00:14:22,960 Speaker 1: We didn't know how to make iron at that time. 269 00:14:23,040 --> 00:14:25,360 Speaker 1: So I think, I mean, the best tools we had 270 00:14:25,440 --> 00:14:29,880 Speaker 1: besides other stones was maybe brass. Yeah, I don't know. 271 00:14:30,000 --> 00:14:32,880 Speaker 1: I don't even knows brass at that time. But brass 272 00:14:32,960 --> 00:14:36,680 Speaker 1: is super soft. It's the worst tool in the world. 273 00:14:36,840 --> 00:14:40,640 Speaker 1: Not it really granted, is like a really hard rock, 274 00:14:41,120 --> 00:14:43,960 Speaker 1: so and like a stick isn't really gonna So, you know, 275 00:14:44,000 --> 00:14:46,440 Speaker 1: I guess that's a question. Yeah, I mean, because I've 276 00:14:46,440 --> 00:14:48,600 Speaker 1: seen pictures of some of these rocks, and they've they've 277 00:14:48,680 --> 00:14:51,840 Speaker 1: bored holes in the rocks in a line that eight 278 00:14:52,160 --> 00:14:55,080 Speaker 1: and breaking these things and certain and god knows how 279 00:14:55,080 --> 00:14:57,000 Speaker 1: they did that. I don't know. I mean, it's you know, 280 00:14:57,000 --> 00:14:59,760 Speaker 1: maybe these people actually succeeded in creating steel, you know, 281 00:14:59,800 --> 00:15:02,560 Speaker 1: who knows? Yeah, you know, I guess We've talked about 282 00:15:02,600 --> 00:15:06,560 Speaker 1: some stories where there's some evidence that maybe man knew 283 00:15:06,600 --> 00:15:09,640 Speaker 1: how to work metal before we gave him credit for 284 00:15:10,840 --> 00:15:14,120 Speaker 1: entirely possible to possible. Yeah. Yeah. One of the things 285 00:15:14,280 --> 00:15:17,200 Speaker 1: I'll say about these is, even though there's evidence of stonework. 286 00:15:17,240 --> 00:15:19,440 Speaker 1: They left a lot of this natural part of the rocks. 287 00:15:19,440 --> 00:15:21,720 Speaker 1: And they didn't totally shape these rocks into like a 288 00:15:21,800 --> 00:15:25,120 Speaker 1: perfect rectangle or anything like that. They looked like they 289 00:15:25,120 --> 00:15:28,760 Speaker 1: look like long rocks basically um in mostly in most cases, 290 00:15:29,280 --> 00:15:31,320 Speaker 1: some of them are pointed, some of them were flat. Well, 291 00:15:31,360 --> 00:15:34,880 Speaker 1: and I think that I swear that I saw something. 292 00:15:34,920 --> 00:15:37,120 Speaker 1: And tell me if you heard this or if I'm 293 00:15:37,160 --> 00:15:41,640 Speaker 1: just making this up, Joe, But in these long swaths 294 00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:44,400 Speaker 1: of all these pillars of rock, I swear I saw 295 00:15:44,440 --> 00:15:48,720 Speaker 1: somewhere were not only were they in basically perfect rows, 296 00:15:49,400 --> 00:15:52,480 Speaker 1: but they were they were level with each other, so 297 00:15:52,560 --> 00:15:56,640 Speaker 1: that or was it level or were they stick They 298 00:15:56,720 --> 00:15:59,160 Speaker 1: descend from one end to the other and in height, 299 00:15:59,320 --> 00:16:04,120 Speaker 1: so especially so they decreased from end from one end 300 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:07,000 Speaker 1: and hight to the other end, and also side to side. 301 00:16:07,280 --> 00:16:10,440 Speaker 1: Oh so the less side is the tallest and then 302 00:16:10,440 --> 00:16:12,720 Speaker 1: they get shorter as they go. Is that what I'm 303 00:16:12,720 --> 00:16:15,840 Speaker 1: to understand? Yeah, and so, but you know, when you 304 00:16:15,840 --> 00:16:17,920 Speaker 1: actually look at the pictures of them on the ground, 305 00:16:17,960 --> 00:16:20,800 Speaker 1: it's kind of hard to see that pattern. But but again, 306 00:16:20,880 --> 00:16:23,200 Speaker 1: part of this is because they're on rolling ground, So 307 00:16:23,280 --> 00:16:25,960 Speaker 1: it's like it's so you have to like go out 308 00:16:25,960 --> 00:16:28,880 Speaker 1: and measure the rocks to really see. My own personal 309 00:16:29,000 --> 00:16:31,680 Speaker 1: theory is that what happened is they started out small, 310 00:16:32,480 --> 00:16:35,160 Speaker 1: and then and then and then the first rocks were 311 00:16:35,160 --> 00:16:37,640 Speaker 1: the shortest ones, and those were the ones that they 312 00:16:37,640 --> 00:16:41,680 Speaker 1: actually were capable of moving. And then as time went by, 313 00:16:41,240 --> 00:16:44,680 Speaker 1: they figured out more effective ways to move rocks, and 314 00:16:44,680 --> 00:16:47,920 Speaker 1: and so they started moving bigger rocks. And then you know, 315 00:16:48,000 --> 00:16:49,840 Speaker 1: somebody else had another bright idea, and they were even 316 00:16:49,880 --> 00:16:52,280 Speaker 1: they were able to tackle even bigger rocks. And so 317 00:16:53,080 --> 00:16:54,680 Speaker 1: by the time about by the time they wrapped it 318 00:16:54,720 --> 00:16:57,440 Speaker 1: all up, they're putting up rocks that are high. So 319 00:16:57,480 --> 00:16:59,720 Speaker 1: you know, if it was me, it would be the 320 00:16:59,760 --> 00:17:02,840 Speaker 1: exact act opposite. I would I would overestimate how much 321 00:17:02,840 --> 00:17:05,520 Speaker 1: work I could do, so they would start out really 322 00:17:05,560 --> 00:17:08,399 Speaker 1: cool and tall, and as I started working along, I 323 00:17:08,440 --> 00:17:11,560 Speaker 1: started getting lazier and lazier, and they would get shorter 324 00:17:11,640 --> 00:17:14,760 Speaker 1: and shorter because I didn't want to do so much work. Well, actually, 325 00:17:14,800 --> 00:17:17,159 Speaker 1: this debunks one of the theories that I was tossing 326 00:17:17,160 --> 00:17:20,320 Speaker 1: around talking about initially was that I thought maybe they 327 00:17:20,320 --> 00:17:23,200 Speaker 1: were just gravestones. I think I read somewhere that they 328 00:17:23,280 --> 00:17:25,440 Speaker 1: might have just been gravestones, but I think that it's 329 00:17:25,480 --> 00:17:29,159 Speaker 1: suspicious that they would there would be such a solid 330 00:17:29,359 --> 00:17:33,119 Speaker 1: down grade or down plane. You know that if they 331 00:17:33,119 --> 00:17:35,240 Speaker 1: were just gravestones, they would be like whatever side. They 332 00:17:35,240 --> 00:17:37,200 Speaker 1: wouldn't be like while all the big ones are over 333 00:17:37,240 --> 00:17:40,560 Speaker 1: here and all the ones are over here. Yeah, that's that, 334 00:17:40,560 --> 00:17:42,080 Speaker 1: that makes sense. Yeah, I mean I was, I was 335 00:17:42,119 --> 00:17:45,840 Speaker 1: thinking that they started at one end and then it's 336 00:17:46,000 --> 00:17:48,480 Speaker 1: possible that they realized that they're running a little short 337 00:17:48,480 --> 00:17:51,040 Speaker 1: on rock. Maybe their corey was like, you know, not infinite, 338 00:17:51,080 --> 00:17:53,199 Speaker 1: and they realized that that their quarry stone was not 339 00:17:53,320 --> 00:17:55,960 Speaker 1: an infinite supply, and so they started putting up smaller ones. 340 00:17:56,040 --> 00:17:58,919 Speaker 1: That's a possibility, yess. Yeah, but yeah, I guess if 341 00:17:58,920 --> 00:18:01,439 Speaker 1: it was, if it was a graveyard and say they 342 00:18:01,480 --> 00:18:04,040 Speaker 1: started at one end, then they would have been like, 343 00:18:04,160 --> 00:18:06,240 Speaker 1: you know, modest sized rocks and then want some some 344 00:18:06,320 --> 00:18:08,199 Speaker 1: big mucky muck dies and he would have gotten a 345 00:18:08,200 --> 00:18:11,280 Speaker 1: really big rock and then and then after that they 346 00:18:11,359 --> 00:18:13,560 Speaker 1: go back to small one. But the great stones are 347 00:18:13,720 --> 00:18:17,479 Speaker 1: one of the theories is and again I believe it 348 00:18:17,520 --> 00:18:20,359 Speaker 1: was there was something somebody had said that because it's 349 00:18:20,600 --> 00:18:24,359 Speaker 1: x number of stones, that there were x number of tribes, 350 00:18:25,080 --> 00:18:28,399 Speaker 1: So every time the leader of that tribe died, they 351 00:18:28,400 --> 00:18:31,800 Speaker 1: would put up a new stone. And so everybody came 352 00:18:31,840 --> 00:18:34,879 Speaker 1: together as leaders died and continually put more and more up, 353 00:18:34,920 --> 00:18:39,560 Speaker 1: not necessarily as a headstone, but a marker for that person. 354 00:18:40,240 --> 00:18:42,760 Speaker 1: So they would get bigger and bigger like the pyramids did, 355 00:18:42,960 --> 00:18:46,120 Speaker 1: right because they were you know, well, I'm better than them, 356 00:18:46,240 --> 00:18:52,600 Speaker 1: so when I die, then bill over there. The theory 357 00:18:52,600 --> 00:18:55,160 Speaker 1: we're talking about this again named Manthuel Vega who wrote 358 00:18:55,160 --> 00:18:57,720 Speaker 1: this theory that that was a necropolis for the leaders 359 00:18:57,760 --> 00:19:02,960 Speaker 1: of supposedly ten confederated tribes Neolithic tribes. And uh, there's 360 00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:05,399 Speaker 1: no real basis for this nice theory and everything, but 361 00:19:05,480 --> 00:19:07,880 Speaker 1: you know, I mean so basically he takes the fact 362 00:19:07,880 --> 00:19:09,760 Speaker 1: that there are ten rows to mean while there must 363 00:19:09,760 --> 00:19:11,680 Speaker 1: have been ten tribes and just goes from there. So 364 00:19:11,720 --> 00:19:14,680 Speaker 1: it's it's entirely possible that I don't know, yes, since 365 00:19:14,760 --> 00:19:17,879 Speaker 1: this is prehistoric, right, that you can kind of just say, well, 366 00:19:17,920 --> 00:19:21,919 Speaker 1: there were this many tribes and they were totally altoge. 367 00:19:22,000 --> 00:19:23,480 Speaker 1: You know, it's very easy to just you can just 368 00:19:23,520 --> 00:19:25,480 Speaker 1: kind of make it up as you go along. In 369 00:19:25,680 --> 00:19:30,000 Speaker 1: my story world. This yeah, you know, an actually this, 370 00:19:30,000 --> 00:19:32,119 Speaker 1: this gives me an idea. Though supposedly there were ten 371 00:19:32,280 --> 00:19:35,560 Speaker 1: ten tribes and and so supposingly they all felt the 372 00:19:35,600 --> 00:19:37,440 Speaker 1: need to make an offering to the gods every year, 373 00:19:37,560 --> 00:19:40,600 Speaker 1: like once a growing season. So each tribe came out 374 00:19:40,720 --> 00:19:42,639 Speaker 1: and came out to the spot and then put up 375 00:19:42,640 --> 00:19:45,080 Speaker 1: a big gas stone. And they kept trying to outdo 376 00:19:45,119 --> 00:19:47,520 Speaker 1: each other, which is why the stones kept going and 377 00:19:47,520 --> 00:19:50,480 Speaker 1: growing in size. So wait, okay, so are there ten 378 00:19:50,480 --> 00:19:53,840 Speaker 1: different sites and each tribe had a site or apparently 379 00:19:53,880 --> 00:19:57,160 Speaker 1: they have a common sight, but they're how many sites 380 00:19:57,200 --> 00:19:59,440 Speaker 1: are there? Oh? We're talking about like if this whole 381 00:19:59,520 --> 00:20:02,640 Speaker 1: thing was like one was one single thing. Yeah, oh 382 00:20:02,720 --> 00:20:04,480 Speaker 1: I see, yeah, but we don't know. See that's the 383 00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:06,800 Speaker 1: hard part is we don't know if they were supposed 384 00:20:06,840 --> 00:20:10,800 Speaker 1: to be connected or if it was just disgroup. Did 385 00:20:10,840 --> 00:20:13,560 Speaker 1: their's over here, you know, nobody knows. It's yeah, it 386 00:20:13,600 --> 00:20:15,359 Speaker 1: might have made it as you go along. It might 387 00:20:15,400 --> 00:20:17,160 Speaker 1: have been that they left open spots because I knew 388 00:20:17,160 --> 00:20:18,880 Speaker 1: that in the twentieth century somebody would want to put 389 00:20:18,880 --> 00:20:24,119 Speaker 1: a road to there. You know, they were time travelers. Yeah, 390 00:20:24,200 --> 00:20:27,439 Speaker 1: so we don't know if they spoke French. We don't anyway, 391 00:20:27,600 --> 00:20:29,040 Speaker 1: so he let me let me run down at a 392 00:20:29,160 --> 00:20:32,360 Speaker 1: real quick list of the theories for what they were. 393 00:20:32,400 --> 00:20:37,040 Speaker 1: One is that they were pathways between temples, giant temples, 394 00:20:37,040 --> 00:20:40,800 Speaker 1: which is sense disappeared. That's weird to me that well, yeah, 395 00:20:40,840 --> 00:20:43,119 Speaker 1: because where the where the temples go. Well, also it 396 00:20:43,119 --> 00:20:44,720 Speaker 1: seems like a lot of work, Like I know that 397 00:20:45,240 --> 00:20:48,960 Speaker 1: prehistoric like the societies of the past, and I guess, 398 00:20:49,000 --> 00:20:51,040 Speaker 1: you know, to be fair, modern societies to put a 399 00:20:51,080 --> 00:20:54,920 Speaker 1: lot of stock in their religious whatever, but you would 400 00:20:54,960 --> 00:20:57,600 Speaker 1: think they would put more work into their places of 401 00:20:57,640 --> 00:21:02,000 Speaker 1: worship usually, right, and the road up to that, yeah, 402 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:04,720 Speaker 1: well you know, I actually have an idea on that, 403 00:21:05,119 --> 00:21:08,760 Speaker 1: which is if you think about a culture that is 404 00:21:08,840 --> 00:21:15,040 Speaker 1: based hundred years before the birth of Christ and somehow 405 00:21:15,080 --> 00:21:17,879 Speaker 1: they know how to make stone, well they may be 406 00:21:18,320 --> 00:21:22,280 Speaker 1: one of those cultures that is very um connected to 407 00:21:22,600 --> 00:21:24,840 Speaker 1: nature's is the way I'm trying to say it almost 408 00:21:24,880 --> 00:21:29,360 Speaker 1: like something like that, yes, or you know, the same 409 00:21:29,400 --> 00:21:32,520 Speaker 1: way that the American Indians viewed it, and so their 410 00:21:32,600 --> 00:21:36,440 Speaker 1: place of worship may not have been a construct as 411 00:21:36,520 --> 00:21:39,480 Speaker 1: much of as an open space of nature to look 412 00:21:39,520 --> 00:21:41,800 Speaker 1: at the stars and all of that, or like maybe 413 00:21:41,840 --> 00:21:44,159 Speaker 1: it was like a labyrinth this is a thing of 414 00:21:44,240 --> 00:21:46,760 Speaker 1: Native American cultures. How you kind of celebrate as you 415 00:21:46,800 --> 00:21:49,800 Speaker 1: have this, this labyrinths that you build out of stones, 416 00:21:50,359 --> 00:21:52,080 Speaker 1: and how one of the ways you find this, like 417 00:21:52,160 --> 00:21:54,280 Speaker 1: inner pieces, you go out to the forest where your 418 00:21:54,359 --> 00:21:56,840 Speaker 1: labyrinth is and you walk your labyrinth a couple of times, 419 00:21:56,840 --> 00:21:59,320 Speaker 1: and that's how you like celebrate your spirituality. So I 420 00:21:59,359 --> 00:22:01,919 Speaker 1: guess that's possible that it is more about the journey 421 00:22:01,920 --> 00:22:04,560 Speaker 1: than the destination, if you won't yeah something like that. 422 00:22:04,640 --> 00:22:07,960 Speaker 1: I mean again, I'm I'm spitballing here, but I could 423 00:22:07,960 --> 00:22:15,280 Speaker 1: just see that everybody else's spitball Yeah. The path just 424 00:22:15,280 --> 00:22:19,520 Speaker 1: seems weird. Yeah, that's fair alright. Well, so anyway, another 425 00:22:19,560 --> 00:22:23,840 Speaker 1: theory is at their giant paper weights. I just made 426 00:22:23,880 --> 00:22:30,440 Speaker 1: that one up. God the God. Uh there was there's one. 427 00:22:30,600 --> 00:22:32,359 Speaker 1: There was one local legend that it was a leegion 428 00:22:32,400 --> 00:22:36,000 Speaker 1: of Roman soldiers who were turned to stone, alternatively by 429 00:22:36,680 --> 00:22:41,240 Speaker 1: Merlin the Magician or by God. Yeah, one or the other, 430 00:22:41,560 --> 00:22:44,200 Speaker 1: because they were a miss of avalon about that one 431 00:22:46,080 --> 00:22:48,760 Speaker 1: points for anyone who knows that. So yeah, I guess 432 00:22:48,760 --> 00:22:50,720 Speaker 1: the really really huge soldiers were out front and the 433 00:22:50,800 --> 00:22:55,320 Speaker 1: really tiny ones weren't back are in the back, I guess, yeah, 434 00:22:55,720 --> 00:22:58,840 Speaker 1: so they were chasing St. Cornelius and so they got 435 00:22:58,880 --> 00:23:02,160 Speaker 1: their come up. And anyway, that's not really a scientific theory, 436 00:23:02,320 --> 00:23:04,399 Speaker 1: that's just that's more of a local legend, that's an 437 00:23:04,480 --> 00:23:07,760 Speaker 1: urban legend. Yeah, let's be fair here. Uh. Some people 438 00:23:07,800 --> 00:23:12,480 Speaker 1: have said that possibly could be some sort of astronomical observatory, 439 00:23:12,560 --> 00:23:15,640 Speaker 1: something on the lines of Stonehenge and some other There's 440 00:23:15,640 --> 00:23:17,520 Speaker 1: a lot of other ancient peoples in my background this 441 00:23:17,560 --> 00:23:22,160 Speaker 1: time that build all kinds of astronomical, astronomically oriented structures, 442 00:23:22,440 --> 00:23:26,040 Speaker 1: and it was to predict things like slips and stuff 443 00:23:26,119 --> 00:23:29,960 Speaker 1: to keep track of the seasons, you know, seasons and 444 00:23:30,160 --> 00:23:31,920 Speaker 1: all that stuff. And possibly I don't know how you 445 00:23:31,920 --> 00:23:34,119 Speaker 1: would use just to predicting the eclipse, but you know, 446 00:23:34,200 --> 00:23:36,760 Speaker 1: I mean I'm not an astronopt and you know what 447 00:23:36,880 --> 00:23:38,760 Speaker 1: I was just going to say, well, does it align 448 00:23:38,840 --> 00:23:40,959 Speaker 1: with the stars anyway? And then I realized that, like 449 00:23:41,119 --> 00:23:46,399 Speaker 1: that long ago different Yeah there were, and so okay, 450 00:23:46,640 --> 00:23:49,760 Speaker 1: so that okay, yeah, there really isn't all that the 451 00:23:49,760 --> 00:23:51,800 Speaker 1: one week spot I find in this theory. It's it's 452 00:23:51,840 --> 00:23:54,119 Speaker 1: always possible. That seems to be one of the leading 453 00:23:54,240 --> 00:23:56,120 Speaker 1: reasons people did that kind of thing back in the days. 454 00:23:56,160 --> 00:23:58,320 Speaker 1: But he wouldn't think they would need so many rocks, 455 00:23:58,400 --> 00:24:01,960 Speaker 1: you know, I mean, just a handful of rocks would suffice. Yeah, 456 00:24:01,960 --> 00:24:03,719 Speaker 1: I mean, like like Stonehange. I mean, if you were 457 00:24:03,720 --> 00:24:05,600 Speaker 1: going to do a Stonehenge type of function, you don't 458 00:24:05,640 --> 00:24:08,160 Speaker 1: need to have thousands and thousands of rocks to do it, 459 00:24:08,760 --> 00:24:11,560 Speaker 1: just a couple of big ones. Alternately, there are other, 460 00:24:12,240 --> 00:24:15,280 Speaker 1: you know, ancient observatories around that are just like thousands 461 00:24:15,280 --> 00:24:19,680 Speaker 1: and thousands of small like a man could feasibly pick 462 00:24:19,720 --> 00:24:22,679 Speaker 1: that up with his two arms, right, it could be 463 00:24:22,720 --> 00:24:25,760 Speaker 1: the difference between feet and meters. Though in the way 464 00:24:25,800 --> 00:24:28,400 Speaker 1: that they did their their math, you never know they 465 00:24:28,400 --> 00:24:32,240 Speaker 1: had a different system. Yeah. So anyway, the astronomical observatory, 466 00:24:32,280 --> 00:24:34,720 Speaker 1: it's like the juris the jury is out on that one. 467 00:24:34,760 --> 00:24:38,359 Speaker 1: And again there's like there's no there's no predominant theory 468 00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:41,439 Speaker 1: in this whole thing. Another one, this is this is 469 00:24:41,480 --> 00:24:43,399 Speaker 1: one I considered to be kind of kind of weak, 470 00:24:43,560 --> 00:24:46,800 Speaker 1: is that it was an ancient earthquake detector because yeah, 471 00:24:47,880 --> 00:24:52,720 Speaker 1: and I'm sorry that that doesn't hold water explain what 472 00:24:52,760 --> 00:24:55,040 Speaker 1: this is supposed to be. Yeah, So like if you 473 00:24:55,080 --> 00:24:57,320 Speaker 1: see the if these things are out in the big field. 474 00:24:57,359 --> 00:25:00,280 Speaker 1: If you see the rocks starting to starting to quiver 475 00:25:00,359 --> 00:25:03,200 Speaker 1: and wave around a little bit, you know, then you 476 00:25:03,280 --> 00:25:06,080 Speaker 1: like it. But you could feel it by then, yeah, 477 00:25:06,119 --> 00:25:08,800 Speaker 1: exactly exactly what about it is? So you got so 478 00:25:08,840 --> 00:25:10,639 Speaker 1: you got somebody hanging out there, keep an eye on 479 00:25:10,680 --> 00:25:13,960 Speaker 1: the earthquake detector, and so he sees it. He sees 480 00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:16,960 Speaker 1: this happening, so he heads off, or maybe he sends 481 00:25:16,960 --> 00:25:19,000 Speaker 1: people off to all the different villages to warn the 482 00:25:19,040 --> 00:25:22,400 Speaker 1: impending earthquake, and of course, you know, by the time 483 00:25:22,400 --> 00:25:26,560 Speaker 1: they get there, the villages have been leveled. But when 484 00:25:26,280 --> 00:25:29,280 Speaker 1: I when I read this theory, my initial thought was, oh, 485 00:25:29,320 --> 00:25:33,920 Speaker 1: like dominoes, Yeah, all right, like the like the little 486 00:25:33,960 --> 00:25:36,480 Speaker 1: one would like knock over and be like the first 487 00:25:36,480 --> 00:25:38,119 Speaker 1: and they would just like knock each other over, and 488 00:25:38,160 --> 00:25:40,760 Speaker 1: then like everybody would know there was an earthquake over there, 489 00:25:40,920 --> 00:25:43,240 Speaker 1: and you know, the dominoes fall faster than the earthquake ship. 490 00:25:43,320 --> 00:25:45,600 Speaker 1: But that's not you know actually that but you know 491 00:25:45,640 --> 00:25:47,600 Speaker 1: what that that gives me an idea. You know, maybe 492 00:25:47,600 --> 00:25:49,760 Speaker 1: that's why they started making him shorter so they wouldn't 493 00:25:49,800 --> 00:25:53,840 Speaker 1: knock each other over. Yeah, yeah, it's like, hey, you know, 494 00:25:53,920 --> 00:25:56,200 Speaker 1: we just had to put those things back up, either 495 00:25:56,280 --> 00:26:00,000 Speaker 1: space them a little further apart or make them shorter. Yeah. 496 00:26:00,040 --> 00:26:03,040 Speaker 1: Another one. This is one to create a geomagnetic field. 497 00:26:03,240 --> 00:26:05,160 Speaker 1: This is This is on a website, and this is like, 498 00:26:05,400 --> 00:26:08,359 Speaker 1: I think a little silly, and so this is like 499 00:26:09,160 --> 00:26:12,600 Speaker 1: I'm just gonna read an excerpt from this. Okay. The 500 00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:14,720 Speaker 1: people who built Carnac must have been highly knowledgeable with 501 00:26:14,760 --> 00:26:17,480 Speaker 1: the Earth's energy fields. According to a concept noticing world 502 00:26:17,480 --> 00:26:20,480 Speaker 1: grid theory, certain places on our planet contained higher magnetic 503 00:26:20,520 --> 00:26:24,720 Speaker 1: forces than others. Yeah, I know, an interesting coincidence for 504 00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:26,720 Speaker 1: all the megalithic structures where we have around the Earth 505 00:26:26,840 --> 00:26:28,959 Speaker 1: are place at specific points that could be harnessing an 506 00:26:28,960 --> 00:26:33,680 Speaker 1: ancient world energy grid. Uh. Yeah, anyway, let me skip 507 00:26:33,680 --> 00:26:35,800 Speaker 1: a little bit here. Energy feels different there. The ancient 508 00:26:35,840 --> 00:26:38,159 Speaker 1: stone monuments were built to harness that force and that 509 00:26:38,280 --> 00:26:41,720 Speaker 1: potential to create a funnel like vortex. Uh. And the 510 00:26:41,760 --> 00:26:44,320 Speaker 1: combination of geomagnetic properties and the unique shapes of the 511 00:26:44,320 --> 00:26:48,640 Speaker 1: stones themselves have allowed ancient builders to actually manipulate gravity. Yes, 512 00:26:48,720 --> 00:26:53,879 Speaker 1: so where did this knowledge come from? You know about 513 00:26:53,880 --> 00:26:58,080 Speaker 1: the Oregon wartax right? Yeah? Yeah, the mystery spot that's 514 00:26:58,119 --> 00:27:01,520 Speaker 1: you know, an alignment of magnet of lines. I'm sorry, 515 00:27:03,840 --> 00:27:06,760 Speaker 1: I just learned about this recently. I you know, I've 516 00:27:06,800 --> 00:27:08,440 Speaker 1: been a couple of times and like the first time 517 00:27:08,440 --> 00:27:11,679 Speaker 1: it was whatever. But no, I this is apparently a 518 00:27:11,680 --> 00:27:15,800 Speaker 1: predominant theory in like the vortex theory community right now, 519 00:27:15,840 --> 00:27:19,439 Speaker 1: that like they're just areas that are like that, and 520 00:27:19,480 --> 00:27:22,720 Speaker 1: that they'll make people sick. And oh, there's all kinds 521 00:27:22,720 --> 00:27:25,280 Speaker 1: of great theories. Okay, so I have a question for you. 522 00:27:25,680 --> 00:27:29,239 Speaker 1: This also kicks into one of the theories, which is 523 00:27:29,560 --> 00:27:33,000 Speaker 1: you were profiting, profiting and profering at the beginning about 524 00:27:33,520 --> 00:27:37,200 Speaker 1: we don't know what happened to the people who lived there, 525 00:27:37,680 --> 00:27:41,960 Speaker 1: and if I understand correctly, there's no there's no evidence 526 00:27:42,040 --> 00:27:45,480 Speaker 1: left behind who they are or any any remains. Is 527 00:27:45,480 --> 00:27:49,359 Speaker 1: that right? Yeah? And uh, but apparently, uh, sea levels 528 00:27:49,359 --> 00:27:51,679 Speaker 1: were a lot lower in those days, about thirty feet lowers, 529 00:27:51,760 --> 00:27:55,840 Speaker 1: so any villages most probably most of their most of 530 00:27:55,880 --> 00:27:58,840 Speaker 1: their villages would have been on the shoreline or near 531 00:27:58,960 --> 00:28:01,280 Speaker 1: near the shore line, so they probably are underwater now. 532 00:28:02,080 --> 00:28:04,480 Speaker 1: But you're still there's still you would think there'd be 533 00:28:04,480 --> 00:28:07,160 Speaker 1: some structures up on the hills. Well, that's I think 534 00:28:07,160 --> 00:28:09,920 Speaker 1: that's something I read those that based on how long 535 00:28:09,960 --> 00:28:13,159 Speaker 1: ago this was. I mean we're talking anywhere from what 536 00:28:13,640 --> 00:28:17,719 Speaker 1: four to seven thousand years ago somewhere in that ballpark 537 00:28:18,440 --> 00:28:21,399 Speaker 1: more than that, right, because it was three thousand, it 538 00:28:21,440 --> 00:28:23,399 Speaker 1: would have been it would have been five thousand to 539 00:28:23,960 --> 00:28:27,280 Speaker 1: seven thousand something like that. Yeah, so a long time ago. Long. Well, 540 00:28:27,320 --> 00:28:30,920 Speaker 1: the problem is is that even bones don't last that long, 541 00:28:31,400 --> 00:28:34,720 Speaker 1: and so they break down and there's no evidence in 542 00:28:35,080 --> 00:28:37,960 Speaker 1: what the barrows is that what they're called a lot 543 00:28:38,000 --> 00:28:41,640 Speaker 1: of those, Yeah, they've gone into them and there's stuff, 544 00:28:42,240 --> 00:28:46,720 Speaker 1: but there's no Well, the soil and the brittany is 545 00:28:46,880 --> 00:28:50,560 Speaker 1: really acidic, right, Yeah, so it'll eat away at bones. Yeah, 546 00:28:50,600 --> 00:28:52,840 Speaker 1: and if I suppose if it would, it would eat 547 00:28:52,840 --> 00:28:56,400 Speaker 1: away and anything else too. Yeah, you know, so I 548 00:28:56,440 --> 00:28:58,760 Speaker 1: need any tools and anything like that. But although you 549 00:28:58,800 --> 00:29:01,600 Speaker 1: think that things like say, if you had like arrowheads, spearheads, 550 00:29:01,600 --> 00:29:03,200 Speaker 1: things like that, you would think that those things would 551 00:29:03,400 --> 00:29:05,560 Speaker 1: I guess you know, the big question here is right 552 00:29:05,600 --> 00:29:09,360 Speaker 1: that like, if they're using granite to build these big stones, 553 00:29:09,440 --> 00:29:11,840 Speaker 1: they're probably using granite to build other things too, And 554 00:29:11,840 --> 00:29:15,880 Speaker 1: they're you know, houses and whatever, and you know, maybe 555 00:29:15,880 --> 00:29:19,120 Speaker 1: they're underwater, but you know that they probably still existed 556 00:29:19,360 --> 00:29:22,600 Speaker 1: somewhere or well, there might still be you know, somewhere 557 00:29:22,600 --> 00:29:24,360 Speaker 1: out in the woods. There might be some old ancient 558 00:29:24,440 --> 00:29:27,240 Speaker 1: villages that are just totally covered over with moss and rocks, 559 00:29:27,240 --> 00:29:28,880 Speaker 1: and so they might be buried in the sea bed 560 00:29:28,920 --> 00:29:35,280 Speaker 1: because silt and everything like knocking down. I mean you 561 00:29:35,360 --> 00:29:37,440 Speaker 1: and you need to remember too that, you know, the 562 00:29:37,800 --> 00:29:40,720 Speaker 1: romantic attraction of ancient ruins is a fairly recent thing 563 00:29:40,800 --> 00:29:44,000 Speaker 1: in human history. Yeah, I till a few hundred years ago, 564 00:29:44,040 --> 00:29:46,360 Speaker 1: we basically dismantled all those things and they built our 565 00:29:46,400 --> 00:29:49,840 Speaker 1: own houses. Yeah, nobody cared, so yeah, yeah, but it 566 00:29:49,960 --> 00:29:52,560 Speaker 1: is interesting that these people came and went without without 567 00:29:52,560 --> 00:29:55,800 Speaker 1: a trace, you know. Anyway, another theory besides this geo 568 00:29:55,840 --> 00:29:58,480 Speaker 1: magnetic field which aliens might use with you know, people 569 00:29:58,480 --> 00:30:00,560 Speaker 1: get used to manipulate gravity or a could use this 570 00:30:00,600 --> 00:30:03,120 Speaker 1: guidance systems to their spacecraft because they hadn't get invented 571 00:30:03,200 --> 00:30:05,400 Speaker 1: invented the sexton apparently, and so they needed to use 572 00:30:05,440 --> 00:30:10,120 Speaker 1: these rocks to get their sophisticated spacecraft. So another another 573 00:30:10,120 --> 00:30:13,440 Speaker 1: one is a random geological occurrence which these things were 574 00:30:13,440 --> 00:30:16,600 Speaker 1: extruded from the Earth and perfect straight lines and I 575 00:30:16,960 --> 00:30:18,960 Speaker 1: don't know, yeah, I feel like we've already just proved that, 576 00:30:19,040 --> 00:30:21,040 Speaker 1: right wait wait, okay, So I just want to I 577 00:30:21,040 --> 00:30:23,400 Speaker 1: just want to make sure I understand this. So when 578 00:30:23,480 --> 00:30:26,560 Speaker 1: I was a kid and I was playing with Plato, 579 00:30:27,320 --> 00:30:29,840 Speaker 1: there was the porky pine toy where you stuck the 580 00:30:29,880 --> 00:30:32,560 Speaker 1: Plato into it and you squeezed and the Plato came 581 00:30:32,560 --> 00:30:34,600 Speaker 1: out and made the little quills. And that's what this 582 00:30:34,680 --> 00:30:37,480 Speaker 1: theory is saying, is that the Earth just extruded him 583 00:30:37,520 --> 00:30:42,400 Speaker 1: out up like he put through a calander or something. Yeah. Yeah, 584 00:30:42,760 --> 00:30:45,560 Speaker 1: I'm not buying that one. Just make sure I understood 585 00:30:45,560 --> 00:30:50,360 Speaker 1: what that. Yeah. Now, and again given the fact that 586 00:30:50,400 --> 00:30:56,480 Speaker 1: there's markings indicating that these things were quarry and somewhat shape. Yeah, 587 00:30:56,520 --> 00:30:59,680 Speaker 1: what else? There's of course the alien angle. Uh. Somebody 588 00:30:59,720 --> 00:31:01,920 Speaker 1: said pointed out that one of these, one of the 589 00:31:02,000 --> 00:31:04,920 Speaker 1: layouts is in a rectangle, which is a three by 590 00:31:04,960 --> 00:31:07,760 Speaker 1: four rectangle, and that's proportions three by four. I don't 591 00:31:07,760 --> 00:31:09,840 Speaker 1: I don't remember what the three by four by five. Yeah, 592 00:31:10,000 --> 00:31:12,680 Speaker 1: well the five is a diagonal between two corners, any 593 00:31:12,720 --> 00:31:16,960 Speaker 1: two corners of it, which is that sounds like yeah, 594 00:31:17,040 --> 00:31:22,800 Speaker 1: perfect pagan triangle, Yeah, exactly. Yeah, And so that could 595 00:31:22,800 --> 00:31:25,000 Speaker 1: be just an incredible coincidence, or maybe they had actually 596 00:31:25,040 --> 00:31:28,040 Speaker 1: figured out some some things about geometry back in those days. 597 00:31:28,080 --> 00:31:31,800 Speaker 1: And this is many years before the Pythagoras lived. It's 598 00:31:31,960 --> 00:31:35,880 Speaker 1: a long time, a couple hundred years at least. Maybe 599 00:31:36,240 --> 00:31:38,000 Speaker 1: you know, you never know, maybe he stole the idea 600 00:31:38,080 --> 00:31:43,080 Speaker 1: from these guys. Yeah, yeah, so you know. And it's funny, 601 00:31:43,160 --> 00:31:45,640 Speaker 1: is that the alien thing and the perfect triangles and 602 00:31:45,720 --> 00:31:50,200 Speaker 1: all the alignments. I did see something where somebody had 603 00:31:50,240 --> 00:31:53,720 Speaker 1: said that they were basically aliens had told the ancient 604 00:31:53,760 --> 00:31:55,840 Speaker 1: people how to a line at all, because that was 605 00:31:55,880 --> 00:32:00,320 Speaker 1: the landing pad for their giant spaceship. Okay, okay, okay, 606 00:32:00,320 --> 00:32:02,760 Speaker 1: so that's a little silly. But I do want to 607 00:32:02,760 --> 00:32:05,600 Speaker 1: say that there are a lot of reports and in Okay, 608 00:32:05,840 --> 00:32:08,160 Speaker 1: like you if you listen to the show, and you 609 00:32:08,200 --> 00:32:12,280 Speaker 1: guys know me, and I'm generally not like an alien person, 610 00:32:12,880 --> 00:32:15,760 Speaker 1: but I do think that there's a lot of historical 611 00:32:16,800 --> 00:32:22,080 Speaker 1: maybe evidence for aliens visiting Earth in ancient times. And 612 00:32:22,160 --> 00:32:24,480 Speaker 1: you know, this is a thing that I think I'm 613 00:32:24,560 --> 00:32:26,640 Speaker 1: just gonna do a whole show about at some point, 614 00:32:26,720 --> 00:32:29,400 Speaker 1: so everybody stay tuned for that. But I think that, 615 00:32:29,560 --> 00:32:31,959 Speaker 1: like I like ancient aliens a little bit for this 616 00:32:32,040 --> 00:32:34,000 Speaker 1: that you know, I don't think for like a landing pad, 617 00:32:34,080 --> 00:32:37,480 Speaker 1: so they could land like whatever, They could land anywhere, probably, right, 618 00:32:38,200 --> 00:32:44,920 Speaker 1: But I do think that, you know, there's some miniscule 619 00:32:45,120 --> 00:32:49,560 Speaker 1: like marble of a idea and the idea that you know, 620 00:32:49,600 --> 00:32:53,960 Speaker 1: aliens visited ancient civilizations. Well you should see you see 621 00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:59,800 Speaker 1: the documentary Aliens Versus Predator. There's another documentary series called 622 00:33:00,040 --> 00:33:07,480 Speaker 1: our Gate. Yeah, all of those. Yeah, yeah, so anyway, 623 00:33:08,280 --> 00:33:11,160 Speaker 1: but anyway, so yeah, but the you know, another another 624 00:33:11,360 --> 00:33:13,680 Speaker 1: variant on that is that you create a perfect sweet 625 00:33:13,680 --> 00:33:17,320 Speaker 1: by four rectangle and then did the aliens tell them 626 00:33:17,320 --> 00:33:20,520 Speaker 1: how to do it? And and and then they do it, 627 00:33:20,880 --> 00:33:23,640 Speaker 1: and the aliens saying, well, we left our calling cards. 628 00:33:23,640 --> 00:33:25,720 Speaker 1: Sooner or later, somebody's going to figure out that, hey, 629 00:33:25,880 --> 00:33:28,920 Speaker 1: don primative people couldn't have figured this out, must be aliens. 630 00:33:29,480 --> 00:33:32,720 Speaker 1: But of course, at that point, really is why, you know, 631 00:33:32,760 --> 00:33:36,720 Speaker 1: are they just trying to tweak us? Um? I mean? 632 00:33:37,080 --> 00:33:39,120 Speaker 1: Because so what I mean, I mean you need to 633 00:33:39,200 --> 00:33:41,160 Speaker 1: leave us like a walkie talkie so you can actually 634 00:33:41,200 --> 00:33:44,320 Speaker 1: get on the horn with you and talk to you. Okay, Yeah, 635 00:33:44,600 --> 00:33:48,240 Speaker 1: that's another little tidbit of my like whole big theories 636 00:33:48,400 --> 00:33:51,800 Speaker 1: like maybe they intended to come back, yeah, and maybe 637 00:33:51,800 --> 00:33:55,920 Speaker 1: they will. Um, you never know. Is this that Jodie 638 00:33:55,960 --> 00:33:59,960 Speaker 1: Foster movie Contact? Is that what we're doing here? Now? 639 00:34:00,200 --> 00:34:05,840 Speaker 1: We're not doing that. The aliens done, I've done what 640 00:34:07,200 --> 00:34:10,440 Speaker 1: you know what? I think we have gone over all 641 00:34:10,480 --> 00:34:12,160 Speaker 1: of all of them. We're talking about the Road of 642 00:34:12,200 --> 00:34:17,760 Speaker 1: the Temples and necropolis and astronomical observatory, earthquake detector, geomagnetic 643 00:34:17,840 --> 00:34:24,560 Speaker 1: field to harness, magic energy and defied gravity, echine aliens 644 00:34:24,920 --> 00:34:28,040 Speaker 1: and echine aliens and random geological currencies. This, this, to 645 00:34:28,360 --> 00:34:30,279 Speaker 1: the best of my knowledge, sums up all of the 646 00:34:30,320 --> 00:34:35,760 Speaker 1: possible explanations. To me, the necropolis idea sounds the most compelling, 647 00:34:35,800 --> 00:34:41,400 Speaker 1: although his whole theory about ten confederated Neolithic tribes that's 648 00:34:41,400 --> 00:34:44,000 Speaker 1: a little weak. So okay, wait, so can somebody explain 649 00:34:44,040 --> 00:34:47,680 Speaker 1: to me they go and they descend in height, right, 650 00:34:49,440 --> 00:34:51,560 Speaker 1: Is there like a center point like that's the highest 651 00:34:51,560 --> 00:34:54,040 Speaker 1: and they descend outwards or is that just the corner 652 00:34:54,440 --> 00:34:56,600 Speaker 1: They go from one corner down to the other corner 653 00:34:56,600 --> 00:35:00,359 Speaker 1: of the opposite opposite diagonal. So okay, so imagine that. Sorry, 654 00:35:00,400 --> 00:35:02,920 Speaker 1: there's directangle in front of you. Right, let's just say 655 00:35:02,960 --> 00:35:05,600 Speaker 1: that we've got a we'll just do this north, south, east, 656 00:35:05,600 --> 00:35:08,480 Speaker 1: and west. Just make it easy so everybody can follow along. 657 00:35:09,000 --> 00:35:14,040 Speaker 1: So the north west corner has the tallest stone, the 658 00:35:14,080 --> 00:35:20,560 Speaker 1: southeast corner has the shortest stone. So from north to 659 00:35:20,680 --> 00:35:23,440 Speaker 1: east they slope down, and from north to south they 660 00:35:23,440 --> 00:35:27,360 Speaker 1: slope down, so they make a general gradation in that direction. 661 00:35:27,520 --> 00:35:30,839 Speaker 1: What about if we're going to assume this is one 662 00:35:30,960 --> 00:35:34,799 Speaker 1: big giant thing, like there's something still buried under the ground. No, no, no, 663 00:35:34,880 --> 00:35:36,799 Speaker 1: I mean like if this is meant to be, like 664 00:35:36,920 --> 00:35:40,839 Speaker 1: if all of the different sites interconnected all the same thing. 665 00:35:41,440 --> 00:35:44,560 Speaker 1: Does that pattern hold true throughout the whole thing? Is 666 00:35:44,600 --> 00:35:47,040 Speaker 1: there like one that's in the center that's much taller? 667 00:35:47,080 --> 00:35:50,200 Speaker 1: Do we know? Even I don't. I don't know. It's 668 00:35:50,280 --> 00:35:51,840 Speaker 1: it's it's really hard to say it to you because 669 00:35:51,960 --> 00:35:53,880 Speaker 1: quite a few of the stones have been removed at 670 00:35:54,000 --> 00:35:57,160 Speaker 1: various points, and and a lot and they haven't been 671 00:35:57,200 --> 00:35:59,840 Speaker 1: carefully guarded. They've been there for thousands of years, so 672 00:36:00,080 --> 00:36:02,080 Speaker 1: and like I said, it's only very recently in history 673 00:36:02,120 --> 00:36:04,240 Speaker 1: that we've got this idea that we should preserve stuff 674 00:36:04,280 --> 00:36:09,080 Speaker 1: like this so there's roads through them. It's notoriously to 675 00:36:09,200 --> 00:36:12,480 Speaker 1: make the what is the stones that were stacked up 676 00:36:12,480 --> 00:36:14,520 Speaker 1: into a grave? Would you call that again? All the 677 00:36:14,560 --> 00:36:18,600 Speaker 1: men here or without the dirt on the dirt on top? 678 00:36:18,719 --> 00:36:23,759 Speaker 1: That is, so the dolmans are have been used as 679 00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:27,800 Speaker 1: chicken coops and places to keep your sheep when it rains. 680 00:36:27,880 --> 00:36:30,319 Speaker 1: Got it? Okay, So they haven't been treated well. I 681 00:36:30,360 --> 00:36:32,120 Speaker 1: was going to say, if they were like just lines 682 00:36:32,320 --> 00:36:36,080 Speaker 1: that come towards like a center meeting point. What if 683 00:36:36,160 --> 00:36:39,080 Speaker 1: they were the tribes coming together and like making like 684 00:36:39,200 --> 00:36:41,399 Speaker 1: small offerings and bigger and bigger and bigger every time, 685 00:36:41,400 --> 00:36:42,520 Speaker 1: and they meet in the middle and they have their 686 00:36:42,520 --> 00:36:46,360 Speaker 1: biggest offering of stones to each other. But that theory 687 00:36:46,400 --> 00:36:51,440 Speaker 1: doesn't hold. I just felt like I needed to share it. Yeah, 688 00:36:51,440 --> 00:36:55,080 Speaker 1: I would. Any of all theories are appreciated. So who 689 00:36:55,080 --> 00:37:00,000 Speaker 1: the heck knows? So Joe likes the acropolis theory, Yeah, 690 00:37:00,680 --> 00:37:03,600 Speaker 1: I I go with the tribes. I don't think that 691 00:37:03,640 --> 00:37:06,000 Speaker 1: it was necessarily X number of tribes, but I think 692 00:37:06,000 --> 00:37:08,200 Speaker 1: they are grave markers. It seems to make the most 693 00:37:08,200 --> 00:37:10,960 Speaker 1: sense to me. It's definitely not seismic. I mean I 694 00:37:11,000 --> 00:37:14,680 Speaker 1: like Aliens definitely. No, I think you know Aliens was standing. 695 00:37:14,760 --> 00:37:17,960 Speaker 1: I think that yeah, grave marker, not grave markers, but 696 00:37:18,120 --> 00:37:22,520 Speaker 1: death markers monuments. That makes sense, Yeah, I think, yeah, 697 00:37:22,560 --> 00:37:24,920 Speaker 1: I think if aliens aliens, we're not involved with it, 698 00:37:24,960 --> 00:37:27,720 Speaker 1: they would have like you know, brought up a cool lasery, 699 00:37:27,800 --> 00:37:30,920 Speaker 1: rock cutting tools and in a beautiful, beautiful, perfect key 700 00:37:31,719 --> 00:37:36,520 Speaker 1: stuff that exist in other historic Yeah. Well with those, 701 00:37:36,560 --> 00:37:40,360 Speaker 1: well yeah, that's for another show. Okay. So anyway, Um, 702 00:37:40,640 --> 00:37:44,040 Speaker 1: so I guess that I concludes our presentation with Unfortunately 703 00:37:44,120 --> 00:37:46,560 Speaker 1: this is probably the first time we haven't solved the mystery. 704 00:37:46,840 --> 00:37:53,320 Speaker 1: Yeah we haven't. I thought we did. It was aliens. Yeah, okay, 705 00:37:53,360 --> 00:37:56,440 Speaker 1: so before we go, before I started reading off all 706 00:37:56,440 --> 00:37:59,160 Speaker 1: that stuff about our website and everything else, and please 707 00:37:59,160 --> 00:38:02,680 Speaker 1: send us money, uh, we're gonna do. We're gonna deal 708 00:38:02,719 --> 00:38:04,040 Speaker 1: with a little bit of reader mail. As you know, 709 00:38:04,080 --> 00:38:06,520 Speaker 1: we're pretty much inundated. So what we do is we 710 00:38:06,600 --> 00:38:09,560 Speaker 1: just every now and again, we randomly grab a message 711 00:38:09,600 --> 00:38:11,560 Speaker 1: off the top of the pile to read you guys, 712 00:38:12,120 --> 00:38:14,200 Speaker 1: And that way, whoever wrote the message to us gets 713 00:38:14,200 --> 00:38:15,960 Speaker 1: this thrill of knowing that his name is mentioned on 714 00:38:15,960 --> 00:38:18,200 Speaker 1: our web part podcast. So, Steve, would you like to 715 00:38:18,239 --> 00:38:21,160 Speaker 1: read this email? Yeah, yeah, I'll do the honors today. 716 00:38:21,200 --> 00:38:24,400 Speaker 1: So we've got an email here from Andrew. Andrew said 717 00:38:24,760 --> 00:38:27,799 Speaker 1: he discovered our podcast this morning. He had listened to 718 00:38:27,800 --> 00:38:29,960 Speaker 1: all of them already while he was driving to work. 719 00:38:30,400 --> 00:38:35,360 Speaker 1: Really drives, that's all. That's a lot of Holy Mac. 720 00:38:35,760 --> 00:38:38,080 Speaker 1: Evidently he drives for a living, is what it sounds. 721 00:38:40,000 --> 00:38:43,360 Speaker 1: So he did. He did suggest a couple of topics 722 00:38:43,440 --> 00:38:46,719 Speaker 1: for us, which is awesome. We we love it when 723 00:38:46,760 --> 00:38:49,000 Speaker 1: people do that. One of them was the lost Colony 724 00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:51,320 Speaker 1: of Roanoke, which is actually one that I've had on 725 00:38:51,440 --> 00:38:53,799 Speaker 1: my list to look into, which is so funny because 726 00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:57,680 Speaker 1: I feel like it's so pointless to do. It's interesting, 727 00:38:58,120 --> 00:39:02,719 Speaker 1: it's interesting. And then the other one is, uh, the 728 00:39:03,120 --> 00:39:07,960 Speaker 1: diet toll of past incident. Does that? I think that's 729 00:39:08,000 --> 00:39:09,560 Speaker 1: the one I'm thinking about. That's the one where some 730 00:39:10,200 --> 00:39:12,759 Speaker 1: some some skiers one way up into the mountains in 731 00:39:12,840 --> 00:39:16,680 Speaker 1: Russia somewhere and okay, yeah, bodies where bodies are found 732 00:39:16,760 --> 00:39:23,960 Speaker 1: like wearing only underwear and yeah, something like that. Yeah, yeah, alright, 733 00:39:24,080 --> 00:39:26,959 Speaker 1: I've heard obviously that one's a really good probably gonna 734 00:39:27,000 --> 00:39:31,040 Speaker 1: do that. Thanks for bringing that up. Uh, and yeah, 735 00:39:31,080 --> 00:39:33,200 Speaker 1: he says, you know, he knows that they're they're well 736 00:39:33,280 --> 00:39:35,800 Speaker 1: known ones, but he wanted to hear our theories and 737 00:39:35,880 --> 00:39:38,800 Speaker 1: opinions on them, and we'll we'll put them on the docket. 738 00:39:39,080 --> 00:39:41,880 Speaker 1: So here's here's the reason that I I chose this 739 00:39:42,040 --> 00:39:44,359 Speaker 1: one to say because it's it really it's it's kind 740 00:39:44,400 --> 00:39:49,800 Speaker 1: of what our drive was when we that. Uh, and 741 00:39:49,960 --> 00:39:52,799 Speaker 1: I'm just gonna read it read from the email, he says, again, 742 00:39:52,840 --> 00:39:55,640 Speaker 1: I thoroughly enjoyed the podcast on the website. It's refreshing 743 00:39:55,719 --> 00:39:58,960 Speaker 1: to listen to three intelligent people discuss these topics in 744 00:39:59,080 --> 00:40:02,520 Speaker 1: a logical, informative kind of way that steers away from 745 00:40:02,560 --> 00:40:08,480 Speaker 1: the kookie theatrical, embellished way of storytelling. Unfortunately, that seems 746 00:40:08,520 --> 00:40:13,840 Speaker 1: to have become the norm when discussing conspiracy theories, unsolved mysteries, whatnot. 747 00:40:15,040 --> 00:40:18,000 Speaker 1: So anyways, from one sideways thinker to another, keep up 748 00:40:18,040 --> 00:40:20,640 Speaker 1: the good work. That's what we've got from it. So, Hey, Andrew, 749 00:40:20,960 --> 00:40:25,320 Speaker 1: thanks a lot, thought appreciate you. Sorry, we apparently probably 750 00:40:25,360 --> 00:40:28,040 Speaker 1: can't keep up with the demand that you have. We're 751 00:40:28,080 --> 00:40:30,520 Speaker 1: actually we're actually looking for a couple of interns to 752 00:40:30,600 --> 00:40:33,360 Speaker 1: read the mail. So if you would like to apply. 753 00:40:35,440 --> 00:40:39,160 Speaker 1: Yeahs O, that was that was listener mail. So how 754 00:40:39,200 --> 00:40:41,000 Speaker 1: can people get a hold of his show? How can 755 00:40:41,080 --> 00:40:44,160 Speaker 1: they get a hold of this c phone email? Well, 756 00:40:44,200 --> 00:40:47,040 Speaker 1: they could email us the US jump on this. They 757 00:40:47,080 --> 00:40:50,520 Speaker 1: could email us at Thinking Sideways Podcast at gmail dot com. 758 00:40:50,920 --> 00:40:53,839 Speaker 1: That's one which is a great way. Um. And then 759 00:40:53,880 --> 00:40:57,120 Speaker 1: we also have a website which is just Thinking Sideways 760 00:40:57,200 --> 00:41:01,200 Speaker 1: podcast dot com. You can leave us a comment which 761 00:41:01,280 --> 00:41:03,799 Speaker 1: somebody left as a comment earlier, which was pretty great. 762 00:41:03,840 --> 00:41:05,640 Speaker 1: I got a chance to respond, which was nice and 763 00:41:05,719 --> 00:41:09,520 Speaker 1: it proved me right and you guys wrong. So, but 764 00:41:09,600 --> 00:41:12,360 Speaker 1: you guys are probably has then that's fine. I have 765 00:41:12,480 --> 00:41:15,239 Speaker 1: not yet read that comment, so I'm not I can't 766 00:41:15,280 --> 00:41:18,040 Speaker 1: comment on the comment. Yeah, I know. I usually let 767 00:41:18,120 --> 00:41:21,480 Speaker 1: the interns deal with that. No, but you know, those 768 00:41:21,520 --> 00:41:23,399 Speaker 1: are two really great ways to get ahold of. Yeah, 769 00:41:23,400 --> 00:41:25,520 Speaker 1: we love to hear from you folks. So if you've 770 00:41:25,560 --> 00:41:28,080 Speaker 1: got if you've got thoughts, anything like that, go ahead 771 00:41:28,120 --> 00:41:30,640 Speaker 1: and let us know. Yeah, if you you know, if 772 00:41:30,680 --> 00:41:33,719 Speaker 1: that doesn't work right and out tied to a brick, 773 00:41:33,800 --> 00:41:35,800 Speaker 1: throw out to our window if you can find our window, 774 00:41:36,719 --> 00:41:40,240 Speaker 1: but you know, you any random window. Yeah, go to Brittany. 775 00:41:40,760 --> 00:41:44,040 Speaker 1: Do you face one of the rocks? No? Yeah, stop 776 00:41:44,120 --> 00:41:47,640 Speaker 1: now we're not We're not going to be responsible for that. Oh, 777 00:41:47,719 --> 00:41:52,040 Speaker 1: you're right, okay, fine, all right, Well that is about it, folks. 778 00:41:52,040 --> 00:42:00,319 Speaker 1: We're gonna see you next week. Lou Owy