The Strangest Structures of Ancient Peru

Фильм және анимация

The film tells about the little-known ancient Peruvian monuments, such as the Kasma lines, the Chanquillo temple-fortress, the geoglyphs of Lima, the archaeological complex of Piquillacta. They may not be as impressive, but their origin and purpose are no less a mystery, like the mysteries associated with the world-famous Nazca geoglyphs, the ruins of Machu Picchu, the Sacsayhuaman megaliths in Cusco.
Film by Igor Aleksejev
Chankillo fortress & temple 3D SPLOSHNOFF sketchfab.com/3d-models/chank...
Pikillaqta reconstruction 3D SPLOSHNOFF sketchfab.com/3d-models/pikil...

Пікірлер: 1 000

  • @elforeigner3260
    @elforeigner3260 Жыл бұрын

    Old Peru is a whole world on its own

  • @-yara-859

    @-yara-859

    Жыл бұрын

    Peru is a very mystical country

  • @Scp716creativecommons
    @Scp716creativecommons Жыл бұрын

    Production value, and lack of "highly compelling" retellings of fluff bits, over, and over, and over, is appreciated. Y'all aren't as prolific as other channels i watch, with similar subjects, but the individual videos are superior, and far less redundant. Thanks

  • @Gianfranco_69

    @Gianfranco_69

    Жыл бұрын

    Highly compelling.... i know exactly who/what you are referring to.... and yes you are right ,this channel presents data "Hype" free.

  • @taborturtle

    @taborturtle

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I like those videos for the most part, but my wife and I have a joke about that over-repeated one-liner. Whenever we say something interesting, we follow it up with Hightly Compelling! Haha!

  • @MM-yl9gn

    @MM-yl9gn

    Жыл бұрын

    Please point to more drone footage of ancient Peruvian desert ruins. I've watched plenty of the Nazca Lines, Caral and every Incan archaeological site but this production is hands down the best I've ever seen!! These are ruins that most do no know about much less will ever see in their lifetime!! Truly amazing production!! Goosebumps!!

  • @bigkilla2608

    @bigkilla2608

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a very highly compelling comment

  • @Emerild

    @Emerild

    Жыл бұрын

    highly compelling man is just a click baiter.

  • @piedpiper6425
    @piedpiper6425 Жыл бұрын

    The graphics and blueprint designs were a huge help!

  • @87mrreynolds
    @87mrreynolds Жыл бұрын

    Preu is a amazing country the more I learn about the place the more iam amazed a lot of people talk about ancient Egypt but for me ancient preu is just as remarkable surly at some stage this was the most advanced civilisation on earth I dream one day of visiting there if anyone has any recommendations of where i should visit please write me back 🙏

  • @catholic3dod790

    @catholic3dod790

    6 ай бұрын

    Check your spellings!!!

  • @user-wy9nx5ou6w

    @user-wy9nx5ou6w

    5 ай бұрын

    The very oldest indication of organised human activity appear to be traces of mining in Africa but there’s little to see as a tourist. If you had scuba skills then there’s fascinating archeology at least 12,000 years old off the coast of Japan. I suspect you’d get the most ‘ bang for your buck ‘ by looking at everything strewn across India, food, accommodation, taxis and trains are incredibly cheap and there’s a mind bending amount to see. Greece will remain the font of east/west philosophy/history/culture/ gods invented. If I wanted to actually find something then I’d head to South America with a girocopter to do my own landscape surveying, I’d also take a metal spike that could be hammered into the ground - a surprisingly good easy way to find brickwork / foundations. Outside of South America I suspect it’ll come back to Africa, this is a continent historically pillaged for gold, precious stones and human slaves but largely ignored in terms of history and culture - one tribe holds a story that there was a time before the moon… Egypt holds much but it’s primarily recycled idea’s from Sumerian / Zoroastrian and Buddhist cultures with a focus on ‘Elites’ using religion to somewhat enslave the people whilst being obsessed with the Zodiak and wanting to cheat death. If you have an unlimited budget and feel brave then consider finding all the places you are banned from going, some of this will be modern military use, but not all. There are parts of the Grand Canyon that are completely off limits and strong rumours of Native American petroglyphs, treasure and Egyptian style archeology …., consistent rumours surrounding the North Pole and there are many Islands around the world that are totally off limits…. In the last few hundred years the Eastern European civilisation of Tartaria has been wiped off the maps and written out of history….

  • @mariovillarreal8647

    @mariovillarreal8647

    5 ай бұрын

    Macchu Picchu.

  • @cdv5514
    @cdv5514 Жыл бұрын

    I've been interested in ancient sites for a while now and had never heard of any of these mind blowing locations. Thank you, that was an incredible documentary.

  • @harrywalker5836

    @harrywalker5836

    Жыл бұрын

    watch viper tv sumerian tablets. & revalation of the pyramids..the pyramids are far older, like 300,000 yrs..if not more..

  • @harrywalker5836

    @harrywalker5836

    Жыл бұрын

    the pyramids were built way before the flood,,which was 13k ago..mainstream vids lie..

  • @harrywalker5836

    @harrywalker5836

    Жыл бұрын

    granite,,only cut with diamond or harder..think about it..they didnt have diamond tools saws..

  • @sailingaeolus

    @sailingaeolus

    Жыл бұрын

    @@harrywalker5836 Something remarkable went on in the ancient world. What that is...? The "star gods" showed up...?

  • @jesusberrocal2556

    @jesusberrocal2556

    7 ай бұрын

    Tienes k venir aca en peru hay las lineaa de nazca caral cuzco etc los incas soy peruano de lima

  • @anim8torfiddler871
    @anim8torfiddler871 Жыл бұрын

    More information in this video than we get from a dozen videos from some producers! Thank you for all the work assembling, editing, writing and narrating. This is one video that I will have to review a few times to absorb all the connections.

  • @user-fn3vy4ug2n

    @user-fn3vy4ug2n

    Жыл бұрын

    In the ley line vein of truly insightful explorations, deep, mysteriously enigmatic questions arise, crumbling slowly across the horizon... Pacha mama visible from the sky... and a lingering sense of deja vu, superbly shamanic journey 🌌 🙏🌞

  • @aslemartinsen5284

    @aslemartinsen5284

    Жыл бұрын

    Narcissistic information. You cannot date stone. It's impossible to know how old this is, and they're trying to make us think they know how old it is based on guesswork. Bad guesswork. Tell me, how did they build the pyramids? Gobekli Tepe? How did they carry these huge monoliths? It's fucking impossible, unless humanity or similar creatures developed technology in a different direction and lived in a time we think they didn't. I suggest an alternative theory. Imagine human-like creatures who got further than we have, but who developed a different type of technology than we have. Maybe through different conditions on the planet. Maybe not. Who knows? Anyway, We're finding things that must have been buried since the last ice age and flood. We've had humans close to 3 meters tall in modern times. Is it possible the standard was different before, and that we were a lot bigger? Look at Robert Wadlow, he was 272cm cus of some gland issues. Imagine if that was the way we were supposed to be. 200kgs. Strong like gorillas. Maybe that's what the standard used to be?

  • @fredflintstoner596

    @fredflintstoner596

    Жыл бұрын

    Mrs Richards: "I paid for a room with a view!" Basil: (pointing to the lovely view) "That is Torquay, Madam." Mrs Richards: "It's not good enough!" Basil: "May I ask what you were expecting to see out of a Torquay hotel bedroom window? Sydney Opera House, perhaps? the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically past?..." Mrs Richards: "Don't be silly! I expect to be able to see the sea!" Basil: "You can see the sea, it's over there between the land and the sky." Mrs Richards: "I'm not satisfied. But I shall stay. But I expect a reduction." Basil: "Why?! Because Krakatoa's not erupting at the moment ?"

  • @cfrandre8319

    @cfrandre8319

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fredflintstoner596 Classic Basil, from “Fawlty Towers”.

  • @fredflintstoner596

    @fredflintstoner596

    5 ай бұрын

    @@cfrandre8319 forget about the horse you know nothing !

  • @andrewporrelli8268
    @andrewporrelli8268 Жыл бұрын

    I don't believe it! Awesome, simply AWESOME! No bullcrap, just footage and concise details. Absolutely fantastic!!

  • @lawerancelanham
    @lawerancelanham Жыл бұрын

    No over dramatization, nobody wanting us to focus on their face, images of the actual topics. Ya nailing it, my fellow man!

  • @Gubastek
    @Gubastek Жыл бұрын

    Chanquillo was not a temple or fortress - it was a storage facility for people who were living in a tough climate. Food and/or goods stored in round structures, rectangle structure was an administrative/security building for the complex. The entrances limit the flow of people in and out, as well as providing an easy area to defend for security - only single file human entry possible. The fact that there is a hill higher than outer wall perimeter means nothing for defense during the age of simple swords and spears. We have always been "squirreling" food and goods as humanity throughout history - that's why we are still here today. The valley floor covered in broken pieces of pottery supports this idea: massive amount of people bringing and removing items from this location over an extended period of time. I believe we tend to overthink some of these ancient sites as more grandiose and mysterious than what they actually were intended to be used for, by the people who built them. Regarding the alignment and shapes of this structure - we usually do not build ugly things, we take pride in ourselves and our work today. I'm sure it was no different for ancient people - they built beautiful things because they could, and they took pride in their accomplishments.

  • @Henrikbuitenhuis
    @Henrikbuitenhuis Жыл бұрын

    Wow a real video. No copy of a copy of a copy of a copy. Thanks so much.

  • @palmvalleyinvestments

    @palmvalleyinvestments

    2 ай бұрын

    NIN YEA BUDDY

  • @m3sca1
    @m3sca1 Жыл бұрын

    fascinating, i have been interested in this subject for many years and to see things i have never seen before is so refreshing.

  • @MADFUN1979
    @MADFUN1979 Жыл бұрын

    I love it when I see vids like yours that shows me an entirely new ancient structure. I’ve seen every major interesting ancient structure I think and I’m so insanely wrong. New ones continue to be shown and continue to appear and be uncovered. So amazing.

  • @davidhennen7045

    @davidhennen7045

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly, I never heard of this place before, but better now than never!😱😱🪄🪄

  • @jakemoeller7850
    @jakemoeller7850 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful video! I could have watched another hour of this. Pikillacta 🤯 W O W ! The number of people and the tens of thousands of man-hours expended in order to construct this facility is just mind blowing. I'm glad that there are archeological studies now. I would love to know more about these civilizations.

  • @Yeshuasdaughter888

    @Yeshuasdaughter888

    Жыл бұрын

    @jakemoeller7850 🤓I find these videos on ancient civilizations and ancient history fascinating too. Read the KJV Holy Bible. It's the GREATEST & MOST INCREDIBLE history book of ALL time! It's also the WORD OF THE LIVING GOD & IT'S ALIVE! No joke! If you want to know more about ancient history, ask the Lord God to fill you with His knowledge and to give you His discernment, and then ask for the wisdom to know what to do with it once you gain that knowledge BEFORE you read the Holy Bible. I'm telling you that if you read it just at face value, you will not comprehend the most intriguing & incredible things about the Word of God. The Old Testament is chalked full of these ancient civilizations. There are numerous hybrid (fallen angels/human/animal) & fallen angel cities all over the world that the Lord God Himself destroyed in the world wide deluge OR had His people destroy them because of the continually evil & corrupted 🧬 DNA🧬 that the fallen angels created when they rebelled. Giants and chimera (3rd meaning of the definition chimera) existed & STILL exist today! Aliens from outer space, different universes, & galaxies are not what the majority of the world have been made to "think" or programed to "believe" what they truly are. Aliens = demons. There has been some serious clean ups taking place since the waters resided. They have purposely hid the TRUTH from all of surface dwellers so that we would fall for their narrative/lies in the end times which we are at the end of the end times rn. One of my many testimonies is how the Lord YESHUA/Jesus revealed this truth to me. I have only posted two of my testimonies and if you are interested in listening to the video "Jesus Told Me The Truth About Aliens," you'll need ear buds/head phones bcuz the sound is terribly low. Take care and God bless you and your family in Jesus name.

  • @VeggyZ
    @VeggyZ Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for pointing these out - they may not be as impressive as totally megalithic sites, but some of those details are fascinating and the implications of them in our ancient past are incredible. Man, how I wish I could travel around and study these archaeological sites.

  • @chicks-on-the-loose

    @chicks-on-the-loose

    Жыл бұрын

    The last ruins were totally impressive. Most impressive of all I have seen. We need very powerful computers nowadays to draw such structures.

  • @davidbenyahuda5190

    @davidbenyahuda5190

    10 ай бұрын

    Perhaps some of us are unaware that so-called non-black people have nothing to with anything associated with ancient civilizations. They have only been here for six to ten thousand years according to science and our records.

  • @cdfdesantis699
    @cdfdesantis699 Жыл бұрын

    This is so fascinating. I'm very interested in the ancient cultures of S. America, but this is the 1st time I've seen these sites. Thanks so much for this video.

  • @JS-ob4oh
    @JS-ob4oh Жыл бұрын

    There is a very strong resemblance between Piquillacta and the structures at Chaco Canyon in that many of the "rooms" have no entrances or windows, no signs of soot resulting from lighting, and they were both deliberately abandoned in such a way that the site were stripped of everything but the structures itself.

  • @djquinn11

    @djquinn11

    Жыл бұрын

    They took their electric lights with them when they left?

  • @janellepank

    @janellepank

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought the same thing!

  • @danielgreensides8463
    @danielgreensides8463 Жыл бұрын

    I watch ancient construction and technology type docs so much and I've never heard of alot of this stuff. Thanks for some awesome content Ombio! So interesting!

  • @Nethseaar
    @Nethseaar Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating stuff! I've never heard of most of the sites mentioned, and the production value is fantastic!

  • @williammaurer9450
    @williammaurer9450 Жыл бұрын

    Chanquillo temple-fortress: Fascinating! The concentric precision, the solstice and N/S orientations of structural aspects speak to sophisticated engineering and precise geometrical layout skills. As do the survivals of the many remarkable macro geoglyphs and megalithic construction located in different regions of Peru. I think Peru has some of the most interesting survivals in need of better understanding. Where are the scholarly Archeologist? Excellent video, well done! TY!

  • @vladimircharvat7331

    @vladimircharvat7331

    Жыл бұрын

    Where are scholarly Archeologists? Well... these informations about Chankillo are from studied archeologists... Chankillo has been even partly reconstructed (but covid stopped reconstruction). I know what iam talking about, i have been there in may 2022... Most of ruins in Casma valley had been studied by archeologists... Most of work in last decades was done by Sheila and Thomas Pozorski (Las Haldas, Pampa de las Moxeke etc). But also others... For example El Purgatorio was excavated in 2017... Sechin Bajo is being excavated right now... I took a lot of videos in that area, you can check them on my profile.

  • @jakemoeller7850

    @jakemoeller7850

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree, William. Chanquillo is fascinating...and beautiful. The aerial views are stunning. How nice it would be to travel back in time to see the purpose for which this monument was constructed.

  • @vladimircharvat7331

    @vladimircharvat7331

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jakemoeller7850 It was a clearly fort of some kind (maybe sort of communication tower). And why so massive walls? Well, there is usually very strong cold wind from sea. I have been there in tshirt, down in casma was hot, at chankillo, when exposed to wind, it was chilling. Look just few hundert km north to Chan Chan. They builded 13m high walls around palaces and other areas. Because of cold wind. If you shield that wind, you get warm... (there is cold Humboldt stream in pacific ocean coming from antarctic area around south america coast and its very cold... Peru is just bellow the equator and there lives penguins, seals... first 20km from seashore are very cold, you have to shield the wind, than there is about 20km of ht fertile land combined with deserts and than starts andes...)

  • @vladimircharvat7331

    @vladimircharvat7331

    Жыл бұрын

    And btw, at Las Haldas, the same day, 20 km away on coast, I had to take coat not to freeze... The same day we visited El Purgatorio and Pampa de las Moxeke, both lies on other side of valley where chankillo is, and we were dying there of hot air...

  • @vladimircharvat7331

    @vladimircharvat7331

    Жыл бұрын

    You get three very different types of weather just on 20 km length. From Casma river (where el purgatorio is) to Las Haldas.

  • @jasonshumate6456
    @jasonshumate645611 ай бұрын

    They were Master Farmers, the were for Irrigation. Water is Life for all Humans, the "Rivers" just eroded around them. The Narrator has a brilliant voice, his English is Flawless.

  • @gotMylky
    @gotMylky11 ай бұрын

    Incredible research to find these very unknown locations, top quality production and filming, great explanations. One of the best channels from any site for this kind of content. Love it.

  • @user-fn3vy4ug2n
    @user-fn3vy4ug2n Жыл бұрын

    2² km complex of isolated cubes rooms, with 3 story tall walls?! What could it be... The Ark of Viracocha?? Looks like an extremely well organized Zoo... Could maintain thousands of different species, all in 2² km... Blows my mind ! 🤯🤯🤯

  • @somewhereyouarent
    @somewhereyouarent Жыл бұрын

    The tranquillizing and Shamanic narration has induced momentary amnesia... 30+ minutes into the film and the only thing i can remember watching was the Casma? lines.

  • @tomasrikona4021
    @tomasrikona4021 Жыл бұрын

    An incredible documentary. The mismanagement of mans history for profit and power has left gaping holes in the current narrative that need to be addressed. Thank you to you and your team of dedicated individuals who continue to do so. Keep up the good work. 👍😁

  • @jdholbrook33
    @jdholbrook33 Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Peru for about two years. I lived in the city of Piura. We visited the beach often and on our drive to the beach we would cross over or even drive through similar "lines". I was a teenager at the time (1972 - 1974) and had never heard of the "lines" such as the Nazca lines. They made an impression on me for being so straight and clearly man made. Maybe there are lines all around Peru. What if the lines and structures were made before the Younger Dryes event? That would explain the discontinuation of some, the washed out area of some and other things.

  • @boa1793

    @boa1793

    Жыл бұрын

    JD, Have you ever gone on Google Earth and looked through Peru for the different lines? It’s fascinating, through they are at first hard to pinpoint.

  • @thenoneckpeoplerepresentat8074

    @thenoneckpeoplerepresentat8074

    Жыл бұрын

    @@boa1793 I wish google earth would remove the pixelated areas of Antarctica.

  • @Rogercabello

    @Rogercabello

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow, I lived in Talara around the same time.

  • @wholearthwisdom8271

    @wholearthwisdom8271

    Жыл бұрын

    Was thinking the same thing. Those mountains were not there when the city was vibrant. Then the Younger Dryus came along and the earth heaved and destroyed everything

  • @sbnqy

    @sbnqy

    Жыл бұрын

    If it was made before the younger dryas surely it would have washed away?

  • @LogicEscapesME
    @LogicEscapesME Жыл бұрын

    Once again, the least popular ancient sites are the most interesting! Great job.

  • @calgoodbomb3617
    @calgoodbomb361711 ай бұрын

    I think that the numerous rooms could be functional as a seed-bank, along with many separate yard areas for testing crops and isolating male and female plants for breeding purposes. If you look at the thousand of varieties of corn and potato in Peru, you can conclude that large seed banks would play a role in their culture. Agriculture is also given by the gods so it makes sense to see agricultural facilities crossing over with spiritual functions.

  • @digitalrandomart3049

    @digitalrandomart3049

    10 ай бұрын

    my first though was a massive slaughterhouse

  • @fastinradfordable

    @fastinradfordable

    8 ай бұрын

    You’re rationalizing your random guess makes sense.

  • @GizzyDillespee

    @GizzyDillespee

    8 ай бұрын

    I assumed it was designed and built because of a massive society-wide satanic panic (of an appropriate nature to their culture) IOW some sort of freak out or hysteria. What that could have been, or what is the meaning of their response, IDK. My friend thinks it was a giant brothel, and that you would access the chambers from openings in the wooden floor above. He said it's cheaper that way, because there's no f***ing overhead. It... almost seems like none of the theories make sense or entirely fit the evidence or lack thereof... Maybe it was like the Olympics, or an initiation, and one of the tests was you had to go up that "road to nowhere" and make it back to a way point alive (and you couldn't go back down the road). IDK you'd have to think like the people who made the complex, and we don't know how to do that.

  • @taleofus2970
    @taleofus2970 Жыл бұрын

    This chanal is my hypnotherapy .. i admire the whole creation of it same as these blow minding ancient structures

  • @Bruno.420
    @Bruno.420 Жыл бұрын

    Pikillaqta looks a lot like a giant microchip, and the fact that it has isolated spaces it's really curious to say the least.

  • @philipmariposa3067

    @philipmariposa3067

    Жыл бұрын

    I was thinking along the same lines, maybe a battery of some kind ?

  • @Tea_in_the_Sahara_with_you

    @Tea_in_the_Sahara_with_you

    Жыл бұрын

    @@philipmariposa3067 energy generation like the pyramids perhaps?

  • @emilyrooks

    @emilyrooks

    Жыл бұрын

    Literally same thoughts

  • @samuelyoung6272

    @samuelyoung6272

    9 ай бұрын

    well i had the idea too, but you can rule out it ACTUALLY being some form of microchip because of the material its built from. however, maybe its not the material its made of thats important, maybe its the design. this is crazy..but.. what if information processing structures replicate themselves retroactively back in time as a means of self perpetuating themselves, almost as a way to ensure that they exist when time comes to that point where it loops back onto itself like a mobius strip. and the archetype of the dying and dismembered "god" who resurrects and the imagery of dismembered bodies suddenly makes more sense..hmmm..

  • @David1Eskin

    @David1Eskin

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@samuelyoung6272 Yes, that is crazy. 😂

  • @dennisxavier9513
    @dennisxavier9513 Жыл бұрын

    Nice to know more of a not famous site from Peru.

  • @malloryknox1637
    @malloryknox1637 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much. Most people show the same old sites over and over.....for those of us who actually want to learn something NEW this is a breath of fresh air. Id much rather watch this then some over rated regurgitated BS. Very appreciated.

  • @dr.brandileebunge
    @dr.brandileebunge Жыл бұрын

    A great hidden 💎 gem of a documentary. Love the new sites & perspectives.💖

  • @AnonYmous-uw2qm
    @AnonYmous-uw2qm Жыл бұрын

    it's just too depressing that Peru is destroying these amazing places

  • @Gianfranco_69
    @Gianfranco_69 Жыл бұрын

    My god....my mind is blown,the 2KM long building is enough...

  • @Scribe333
    @Scribe333 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic work! Thank you very much for your continued passion and effort. Your videos are incredibly thought provoking and evocative. 10/10 production

  • @lunchmoneydnb
    @lunchmoneydnb Жыл бұрын

    This was amazing. I have never seen most if not all of these places. Made me feel as if I was there on an adventure. Thank you.

  • @gilgameshbebop
    @gilgameshbebop Жыл бұрын

    damn i want more of this. also music was dope. superb drone shots.

  • @firouz256
    @firouz2567 ай бұрын

    Don't you love it when a documentary shows you ancient sites, plays mysterious music, asks questions and delivers no answers? Those are the best to fall asleep too 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @fractalxco64
    @fractalxco64 Жыл бұрын

    Im a Mexican architect discovering my passion for ancient structures , and lost technologies, i went to Perú 5 years ago, i wasn't able to see these places, but I've seen some other spectacular ones, I'm pretty sure not even Peruvians are interested anymore, but people like yourself from other countries can bring up more research. here and in other locations around the globe we have evidence of ancient connections to other places, communication between nations, global wars, and other lost ways of transport and tools , technologies now long lost and forgiven, imagine our metal aleation stones in the future they will think we were crazy adoring phones etc. You should put subtitles in spanish for your videos so the people of these nations can be more interested and invested in finding these technologies and information that can be of help for our present and future , i can talk for mexico as well because not all people of these nations can understand inglish, im pretty sure the vatican have lots of answers hidden in its library. Because the world history and human civilization is more complex and with more longevity. I can help you with subtitles in spanish if you need. Thank you for everything cheers.

  • @ProblemChild-xk7ix

    @ProblemChild-xk7ix

    Жыл бұрын

    We need more young archeologists that are open to these ideas and are not dogmatic in sticking to the old narratives. Thank you

  • @87mrreynolds

    @87mrreynolds

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes sir we need this translated in Spanish Iam sure many would watch in Latin America I lived in Mexico City for several years I love the country and the people so much and your country has many amazing archaeological sites from your ancestors I hope that this guy does a video on Mexico also some less well known sites are many 🙏

  • @davidbenyahuda5190

    @davidbenyahuda5190

    10 ай бұрын

    I As an historian who has had the privilege to study history from primary sources available to serious academics I can assure you that socalled white people and their supporters have no interest in actual history. This is due to the fact that actual history is a history of a particular group of Black people called Israelites who are responsible for everything associated with civilization and culture throughout history. There are no ancient nonBlack people in history due to their inorganic origins and them having been on the planet for six to ten thousand years.

  • @-yara-859
    @-yara-859 Жыл бұрын

    Peru is a very mystical country 🇵🇪🤝✨✨

  • @walterphoenix8045
    @walterphoenix8045 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent documentary! Great images, music and 3D WORK, Also VO : ) Thanks!! Love your films.

  • @marcwichmann2012
    @marcwichmann2012 Жыл бұрын

    Very Nicely Done, Great Footage. I never ever heard of these amazing Places before! That said my interest in this kind of things is now over 40 Years ongoing, I can't believe not reading or seeing of any of this before... Thank you for bringing them to a wider Audience. Greetings from Germany Marc

  • @fairweee8058
    @fairweee80587 ай бұрын

    Thankyou for the up close and ground views. Give such a better perspective of these ancient wonders.

  • @Leopoldo888
    @Leopoldo888 Жыл бұрын

    Viracocha pampa was an industrial sized (even for modern standards) maize beer (Chicha) brewery. There has been found "Pisco" vessels used to ferment the maize to make the beer. (In fact, the national liquor of Perú, it's called PISCO, because the lack of wood in the desertic coast, made the producers in the 1590s and beyond, to store the beverage made from European grape in those traditional and millenary vessels instead of wood barrrels). Pikillact LOOKS like it was a BIGGER industrial complex as the first one. It's known that the WARIs were merchants, and the WARI CHICHA (Maize beer) was PROBABLY one of the goods they interchanged (or sell because it's found there was some sort of coins) with other cultures. The merchant thing its very old in the territory that know we know as Perú. There's been found peruvian goods (even dolls and toys!) in places like Chile, Colombia and other places THOUSAND of miles away...

  • @MM-yl9gn

    @MM-yl9gn

    Жыл бұрын

    Look at the Battlefield Palatte from Naqada Egypt and tell me if it looks Iike a giraffe. Vicuna of the royal Inca, Peruvian giraffe maybe because other stones depict an African giraffe perfectly! Mind blown!

  • @amodernalchemist432

    @amodernalchemist432

    Жыл бұрын

    Prostitution and the merchant or salesman are the 2 oldest professions...

  • @coryernewein

    @coryernewein

    Жыл бұрын

    My friend and his father still make annual journeys back home to Peru and go on ceremonial treks, he brought me back a bottle of "Inca Pisco", it was something that would wake you up for sure😵

  • @theyard6958
    @theyard6958 Жыл бұрын

    This was a terrific video. I was able to follow the ancient road in Piquillacta with google maps, and was able to search the surrounding area for any continuation. that was fun. It was almost like I was there.

  • @johnhough4445
    @johnhough4445 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent reportage ... low key, no hype; very much appreciated.

  • @headsails
    @headsails Жыл бұрын

    Great work here. Ombio is a favorite and would like to see more from them.

  • @wadeparker8695
    @wadeparker8695 Жыл бұрын

    I think it’s absolutely incredible that the Inca found megalithic structures and built upon them. You can see the megalithic polygon on seamless construction of the ancients below and the smaller anchor construction above. Thank you

  • @Sixtilio1
    @Sixtilio1 Жыл бұрын

    Recarding Casma, I would invite you to consider the Ruin called "La Cantina", one of their corners rise also creating a precise 90° angle. I think this place looks like the house of the Priest from Chankillo. It is very close to the main ruins. The laberint doors at Chankillo reffers to two periods of the year. 6 months in one direction, 6 months in the other direction, which are related two the year round 13 towers. The four Seasons.

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps87582 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Well done! The photography and background sound help bring the story here to life. I have heard of other lesser known pre-Mayan cultures and structures before, but not these. I am willing to bet that Chanquillo is a ceremonial site. It occurs to me that it was a place of one of the "mystery religions" like once thrived around the Mediterranean Sea, as in Greece and Crete and Egypt. A place where pilgrims would go to invoke the Gods for a transformative experience. One wherein the supplicant would fast, contemplate the questions of their heart, meditate and pray before arriving. Then after receiving instructions from a priesthood, be given an hallucinogenic drug, and guided through the circles a proscribed number of times, all the while priests would play instruments and or chant hymns and further prayers, as the pilgrim went through the ego death and subsequent rebirth. A lucrative business we can be sure. We appreciate your sharing with us. New sub.

  • @donbakerseattle
    @donbakerseattle Жыл бұрын

    Interesting video. Your choice of music was great too. Abstract and spacial, and a bit mysterious.

  • @jamesodonnell4771
    @jamesodonnell4771 Жыл бұрын

    I find this.. highly compelling

  • @Roy-tf7fe
    @Roy-tf7fe Жыл бұрын

    Also, about Chanquillo, the arial shots, especially at 28:16, make the careful, full destruction look more like not-so-perfect-to-begin-with walls falling slowly over as thousands of years have passed. Just gotta say it. So not really looking like enemy destruction, not really looking like filling in a ritual site in a place with a number of them like Gobekli Tepe. The word "abandoned" with all the connotations the word has in Detroit, Michigan (USA) comes to mind. That would also carry an explanation of why it looks like no one thought the knocked over stone was a worthwhile thing to carry off when they finished. Just, like your local typewriter store, one day, they closed and went home, and no one came back the next day.

  • @kailiebejung
    @kailiebejung Жыл бұрын

    Wow.....this is great! Thank you so much.The speaker has a beautiful and warm voice and these places I have never seen. The video has a wonderful atmosphere.

  • @kyledonaghy1700
    @kyledonaghy17006 ай бұрын

    This was a wonderful watch.. Thank you for delving into the lesser known, and not dwelling on sites that are so well and regurgitated to death. Looking forward to diving head first into the rest of your content.

  • @taborturtle
    @taborturtle Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy your videos! I've seen them all and get really excited when I see a new one come out! I only wish there were more to watch! I'm very much into ancient architecture, especially in Peru and Egypt. From your videos, I have learned a lot about some sites I had no idea existed. Thank you!

  • @atlantisboliviaorg
    @atlantisboliviaorg Жыл бұрын

    When an ancient site in Peru appears to have measurements in round numbers of metres, it is more probable that the actual units were not metres but cubits, so 1, 2 or 5 metres would be 2, 4 or 10 cubits respectively, using cubits also found in ancient Sumeria and Assyria of 19.8” (502.92mm) so two such cubits would be 1005.8mm. Therefore the stated 5 meters between towers would be 10 such cubits and from end tower to end tower 60 metres or 120 cubits. When the sun rose or set above an end tower at one of the solstices, then watching the sunrise or sunset throughout the year the sun would appear to progress along the line of towers until at the next solstice it reached the far end tower, and counting from tower to tower would divide the half-year into 12. Thus the complete year would be 24 divisions counting from tower to tower or 12 months counting every second tower. Thus is was in the time of Inca Pachacuti. Long before his time a line of 11 pillars set into a wall in Tiwanaku similarly divided the year but with 11 pillars there were 10 divisions between solstices making 20 divisions for the complete year or 10 divisions or months counting every second pillar. This can be borne out by a statement given by Spanish explorer Cieza de Leon who said the people of the region of Tiwanaku “counted their years from 10 months to 10 months.”

  • @LIza-eg3jx
    @LIza-eg3jx2 ай бұрын

    nagyon igényes értékes film, köszönet a készítőknek

  • @buddyrupp6235
    @buddyrupp6235 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating! Beautifully captured.

  • @flosslittle5231
    @flosslittle5231 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, absolutely fascinating 💚

  • @MM-yl9gn
    @MM-yl9gn Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this incredible production!! Entirely amazed especially for those of us deeply fascinated by these ancient civilizations and who've spent so many hours on Google Earth completely bewildered and amazed by such vast complexity, it's wonderful to finally see it up close and within historical context! Peru is underrated as a "Cradle of Civilization" and is one of the greats like Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley as well as others such as Mesoamerica and the Danube civilizations and is as old or older even! If you could do a documentary on their seafaring capabilities, it would be much appreciated! I would expect it to be an overwhelming realization as well, especially when science coins Polynesians as the great oceanic voyagers which one cannot delineate or take the pride of that reality from the ancient peoples, however, traces of ancient civilizations from the America's is evident within other major civilizations and I would love to see Peru take its proper place in the world!

  • @annikafrolander7903
    @annikafrolander7903 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this amazing video!🙏🏼

  • @nemesi3913
    @nemesi3913 Жыл бұрын

    Complimenti, non è il solito video che si vede su KZread è una novità molto interessante e piacevole.

  • @toosiyabrandt8676
    @toosiyabrandt867611 ай бұрын

    Hi Really great voice for narration! Eminently listenable! The actual content of the video is quite mind blowing! I never saw all those carvings of body parts before, and that they were not about sacrifice but medicine! Shalom to us only in Christ Yeshua returning soon to reign over the world from Jerusalem forever.

  • @Toltexan
    @Toltexan Жыл бұрын

    The Chanquillo observatory is actually quite similar to Uraniborg made by Tycho brahe to observe the motion of the stars and planets. From there Johannes Kepler worked out the mathematics of how the planets orbited the sun. The various towers and platforms likely had astronomical instruments on them to make the observations.

  • @Verianov
    @Verianov Жыл бұрын

    Great job Igor!

  • @ombiofilms

    @ombiofilms

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks, man))

  • @Williams.L
    @Williams.L5 ай бұрын

    Fascinating stuff. Great video thanks!

  • @jamesmcguire5312
    @jamesmcguire531210 ай бұрын

    The information about these long lines in Peru are rather fascinating. I was a commercial pilot for many years and the lines bear a resemblance to what we call on arrival into an airport. It is a pathway that aircraft have to follow arriving in an airport. Early attempts at navigation in the 1920s involve beacons and arrows and landmarks that could be visually seen to guide airmail pilots across country.

  • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095

    @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095

    4 ай бұрын

    *_"I was a commercial pilot for many years and the lines bear a resemblance to what we call on arrival into an airport"_* Yes, and we all know that interstellar aliens arrived in 1920s propeller driven, petrol aircraft! Derpy von Derpiken told us! 🤣 {:o:O:}

  • @jip230
    @jip230 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating- I’ve been to Peru and have informally studied Peru and never heard of the structures described or that there are many other potentially lost civilizations from Peru’s long history. For the building with no windows or doors, perhaps when the building was intact people could enter from the roof via a ladder. A hole in the roof could also let in light and air and the roof may have acted like surfaced streets do today in modern society

  • @teresitawirthmuellerguille181

    @teresitawirthmuellerguille181

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes! You are so right...with walls 15 meterse wall it makes sense to enter from the top

  • @CyberWitchShares
    @CyberWitchShares2 ай бұрын

    Moving to Peru this year and I can’t wait to see these sites. ❤❤❤

  • @carystus675
    @carystus675 Жыл бұрын

    The details given allowed me to 'crack the code' at to the function of the complex, great work, Ombio!

  • @PatriceBoivin
    @PatriceBoivin Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, thank you

  • @m.talmagemoorehead
    @m.talmagemoorehead Жыл бұрын

    "Fortress" not "forest." Great speaking voice, dude! Fascinating video, too. Thank you for your hard work and brilliant analysis!

  • @aaroniouse

    @aaroniouse

    4 ай бұрын

    I get the feeling that the temple fortress was a place for sport-fighting.

  • @dragonfly873
    @dragonfly873 Жыл бұрын

    Excelente trabajo, fantástico, perfecto, maravilloso, grandioso, GRACIAS

  • @christianpnorris
    @christianpnorris Жыл бұрын

    Wow, hadn't heard mention of any of these mysteries... thanks!

  • @iforce2d
    @iforce2d Жыл бұрын

    I don't see why the 'fortress' would not have military value as you suggest. It is built in a location with extremely good views in most directions. The walls even in their current state are high enough to pose a decent defense, and they would have been higher originally. The towers could could easily have been high enough to see over the crest of the hill you mentioned. The choke points in the walls are perfect for forcing one enemy soldier at a time to enter, and be attacked from both sides, while not even being able to see how many more such corners they might have to deal with. I'm also skeptical that it was deliberately destroyed - for one thing there is no evidence of that, the masonry is not very durable looking and I would expect the damage could easily have been caused by earthquakes. Plus, military acquisitions with high long-term value like that are rarely wasted. Regarding the layout of the walls, that actually doesn't seem very difficult. An arc can easily be drawn fixing a rope at one end and walking around with the other end pulled tight. Joining two such arcs with their tangent line is done just by walking the circumference of one and stopping when the other circle is no longer 'behind' the one you're standing on - do that for both sides and make a straight line between them. To make the walls 'ignore' the uneven terrain beneath, perhaps that's what the outer pedestals were used for. Make all the pedestals the same height, draw a rope tight between them. Then walk around with a rope pulled tight by the end of a pole held vertical, and let it lightly rest on the rope between the pedestals. This will let you 'project' the circle downward onto the terrain. hmm... looking at the video again after writing that, the pedestals don't seem like they would go high enough, and some are a little far out, so maybe not. But in general that method would work. btw aligning with the solstice line is not hard either. Sure, finding the angle the first time requires watching the sun at those times of year, but after that you can just relate it to the north-south line, which is easy to find on any day of the year. You can do that by noting the length of sides on a right-angle triangle, eg. a 345 triangle always has angles of 53.13 and 36.87 degrees. After you find the north-south line, just use the rope pulling method again and scale the lengths up if you need more accuracy. So those factors don't seem like much of a mystery to me. The main things that puzzle me are: why they would want two separate towers so close to each other, and why was it important to use the solstice lines?

  • @Few_Thousand_People

    @Few_Thousand_People

    11 ай бұрын

    You are talking about Chanquillo, right? *Why two towers -* Why do nation heads have two or more similar looking cars. And where do they meditate?

  • @fredsilvers1427
    @fredsilvers1427 Жыл бұрын

    I haven't looked, but if you check key points and boundaries within the structure (edges, walls, etc), you'll find distances of 12' or multiples thereof. This was positioned and built in conformance with the properties required to manipulate scalar physics. This was but a small component among a worldwide construct of Babylon. The lines are part of it, too.

  • @gerardtuxen5069
    @gerardtuxen5069 Жыл бұрын

    You're right. These discoveries are as amazing as they are perplexing.

  • @iny0urbrain
    @iny0urbrain Жыл бұрын

    Amazing thorough documentary, thank you for sharing!

  • @odalisque111
    @odalisque111 Жыл бұрын

    thanks for a very informative, minimally speculative and best of all non-sensational delivery. The structures are mysterious enough without all the "amazing" adjectives usually found in these types of videos. I look forward to more from you. Thankyou

  • @Sam-qd8cj
    @Sam-qd8cj Жыл бұрын

    Loved the video. Great job. Also the last structure is a huge cemetery for the whole capital city. It's laid out according to status and wealth and they used ladders to get in and out. The road to nowhere is a spiritual thing. And when circumstances meant they had to leave they cleaned it and took their dead to their new home.

  • @13minutestomidnight

    @13minutestomidnight

    Жыл бұрын

    An entire city full of generations of dead is moved? Why?

  • @fionagoldie1610

    @fionagoldie1610

    Жыл бұрын

    45 foot ladders?

  • @kevinchastain727
    @kevinchastain727 Жыл бұрын

    It always amazes me when archaeologist say that just because something is orientated with alignment to the sun that it must be a temple, maybe they should look at some of our solar power plants and rethink their conclusions. our ancestors were not idiots, They may have been as advanced as we are now, what we should wonder about is what destroyed such an advanced culture.

  • @englishteacher4229
    @englishteacher42293 ай бұрын

    I just loved it! Good job! 👏 Thank you.

  • @ombiofilms
    @ombiofilms Жыл бұрын

    Spanish version kzread.info/dash/bejne/oI6ax6eqY9KXcqw.html Chankillo fortress & temple 3D SPLOSHNOFF sketchfab.com/3d-models/chankillo-fortress-temple-casma-peru-f18dcf3ad41944b381c77f4cf53b7b1b Pikillaqta reconstruction 3D SPLOSHNOFF sketchfab.com/3d-models/pikillaqta-reconstruction-quispicanchi-peru-48ac6913e325449bbb8d1116d542789c

  • @oilchng

    @oilchng

    Жыл бұрын

    I can not thank you enough for the information and video you have shared with us. Please answer this question. Does the layout of these structures imply an understanding of calculus?

  • @ombiofilms

    @ombiofilms

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oilchng It's hard to say anything. There are many works on these cultures, but there is very little of anything significant. It all comes down to the assumptions and interpretations of historians. However, as with all cultures of the preliterate period. That is why such archaeological sites are not given enough attention, as they are somewhat out of the historical context.

  • @Scribe333
    @Scribe333 Жыл бұрын

    any potential to have Lidar work done at Piquillacta?

  • @ombiofilms

    @ombiofilms

    Жыл бұрын

    Of course. The water supply system has not yet been studied. The existence of underground structures is not ruled out.

  • @julieanntregeagle2594
    @julieanntregeagle25944 ай бұрын

    Excellent, extremely professional and well produced video with captivating narration. I’ve never heard of any of these place!

  • @Shiryone
    @Shiryone5 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of the Star Maps of the Pyrenes; chateaus and churches aligning to make geometric designs and aligned to the constellations. Fascinating.

  • @JJ33438
    @JJ33438 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing Presentation. Lima Peru is such a mystery of the past. Such mysteries I did not know about until this Presentation. something very odd was going on - on earth in ancient times. These are very old ancient alien structures. the technology required is not even known yet in our modern world! I think the dating on these stuctures is accurately pre flood. the black/red/white pottery is the colors of atlantis. many of these structues look industrial. thank you so very much for this.

  • @mohinderkumar7298
    @mohinderkumar7298 Жыл бұрын

    Mars and Peru look similar topography.

  • @toosiyabrandt8676

    @toosiyabrandt8676

    11 ай бұрын

    Hi That’s because ‘Mars’ IS Peru! ( We can’t get past the Firmament/ Van Allen radiation belt) Shalom to us only in Christ Yeshua returning soon to reign over the world from Jerusalem forever.

  • @victorarata4138
    @victorarata4138 Жыл бұрын

    Peru es amazing country

  • @milanetc4865
    @milanetc4865 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. Thank you. Love the graphics showing alignment to the solstices / north-south axis, for example. Really professional work. Thanks. Subscribed

  • @kathybradbury
    @kathybradbury Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for such an exquisitely detailed overview of these mysterious ancient constructions. Seeking to understand the “why” of some of the constructions, my mind was brought back to some ancient text found in the Qumran caves and others. The fallen angels were said to have taught technologies to man such as warfare, geology, architecture…and their offspring are said to have been strange and varied types of super-human entities. Some of these offspring were giants, some were monstrous -and it is said they pushed men into their service until man couldn’t keep up with their demands; then they began to devour them. Some of these constructions make sense if you consider the cruelty of the relief carvings shown in the first chapter of this documentary. I see how blind corners, tiny dwellings with thick walls, and lack of easy movement in and out would all be advantageous for a prison.

  • @Foxglove963

    @Foxglove963

    Жыл бұрын

    Kathy Bradbury. Those who wrote that silly paranoid stuff has too many bad accacia trips. Everything in Peru can be reasonably explained by thought, consideration, orientation and measure.

  • @bubashalom8274
    @bubashalom8274 Жыл бұрын

    You know, this structure looks very much like the strange anomaly they found at the bottom of the sea in the the Balkan sea; recently while hunting for treasures, you know, it looked like a spacecraft in star wars. Very much like it.

  • @OmisoXXX
    @OmisoXXX Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. I am going to visit these sites this summer. Thank you!

  • @peterhernandez3790
    @peterhernandez3790 Жыл бұрын

    Cool, I learn something new about ancient Peru. Never seen some of these structures before.

  • @mikedebell2242
    @mikedebell2242 Жыл бұрын

    I've never heard of these places before in Peru. There seems to have been a lot going on in the area. The stone work is good, but not megalithic, and we are told many of these are 4000 years old. In other videos where much smaller stone fill in of the megalithic structures has been done, we hear it is Incan. From this I am beginning to wonder if some of those repairs are from previous civilizations.

  • @Monster12367
    @Monster12367 Жыл бұрын

    I'm guessing that the entire mid to southern region of the pacific from the area around Easter Island all the way to the west coast of South America, there are ruins buried in the sea, from civilizations lost before the great flood. The seas rose 400 feet at the end of the last ice age.

  • @gabos7892
    @gabos78927 ай бұрын

    Peru is crazy, they have sooooo many ancient ruins. I advise you all to go if you have the chance.

  • @susanmyers1899
    @susanmyers1899 Жыл бұрын

    This is an amazing video, thought I had seen it all,but I was wrong. Thank you for this video,and just cone across it.Brilliant.

  • @kinetic5808
    @kinetic5808 Жыл бұрын

    Моя версия в том, что Комплекс Питиякта с замкнутыми помещениями без следов крыш - это система хранения. Судя по танкам, состоящим из нескольких стен с рёбрами жёсткости, которые чередуются через один с танками с одинарными стенами, предполагаю, что там хранились насыпные грузы. Возможно, это были расходные материалы, типа металлолома или ценной руды. Вообще, такая система хранения с ячейками разных размеров и множеством мелких ячеек похожа на лоток, который используется при сборке сложной аппаратуры. Возможно в некоторых ёмкостях была жидкость, но не похоже. К нужным ёмкостям можно пройти с корзиной по стенам и высыпать нужный груз в нужную камеру. Впрочем, ДВЦ скорее всего наполняла их с воздуха. Ведь рисунки на плато Наска они же рисовали с воздуха. (Версию про рисунки я пока не готов изложить публично). Если Вам, Игорь, интересно, я бы пообщался по поводу рисунков, мне кажется, я бы мог подкинуть полезные мысли.

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