Megalithic Mysteries around Alberta (2023)

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2023-02-19に共有
Learn about three megalithic sites around Alberta: the mystery rocks (possibly natural, and actually in Saskatchewan near the Alberta border), the Majorville cairn and medicine wheel, and a mysterious concrete block discovered during the Valley Line LRT construction in Edmonton.

Link to video on Edmonton concrete slab:
   • Mysterious Concrete Obstacle Discover...  

More recent Mystery Rocks footage from Wandering Wolf channel:
   • MYSTERY ROCKS of SASKATCHEWAN - Walk ...  

コメント (21)
  • @newts225
    something worth noting. Cypress Hills is the highest point between the rockies and the atlantic ocean.. If a giant flood wiped out a past civilization that location would have been the most protected and would explain why there is still some trace of a structure there.
  • It's worth checking out. In Siberia, Russia, there was a huge megalithic wall found in the Ural mountains. No one knew about it till some people just exploring, discovered it. It's a huge complex of stone work. Some hewn stones are bigger than the one in Baalbek.🙂
  • I've become extremely suspicious the day I realized that rapidly cooling liquid magma forms perfectly hexagonal columns is extremely questionable. Needles to say I am not in the least surprised to hear that there are no leads to any reports as to what the car sized block of concrete found is or how old. It has come to my belief that this world is not what are being told it is.
  • I was there at Rundle Park in Edmonton. I never knew about the hidden slab on that side of the bridge but lots of strange activity in the water. I think I'm gonna go back & check it out when it warms up. Thank you so much for all the info regarding the Anomalies that surround us in AB & areas!👍
  • I have never. An once heard of pebbles being blown round and round and actually making round holes in rocks. And no geologist worth his degree can show evidence that this is possible on flat natural rock faces
  • Here in central California when we see those holes, or rather pits on the tops of the rocks like that we're told that the tribes which used to live here had formed those holes over time while grinding down acorns and grains for food preparation.
  • About the concrete slab in Edmonton, simple expediency is probably what caused the cover up. The project manager probably cursed his 'bad luck' that the aincient structure was in his way, lied about its true origin and just got on with 'building civilization'. It must be frustrating for inimaginative people to find things that make their own work look less sophisticated than a child's Lego set.
  • @myname604
    "Megalithic Mysteries around Alberta" Starts in a different province entirely.
  • I would like to volunteer for any excavation projects at these megalithic sites. This is one of my passions along with Ancient Civilizations. So glad I stumbled upon your channel!!
  • the sage wall is in Montana almost straight south ( a few miles south) of the mystery rocks. it has some large size rock walls that looks like it could be man made.
  • Last summer I explored and documented the mystery rocks- and the holes in the rock were not (in my opinion) from pebbles rolling around. I found them on rocks that were further down in the valley, on the tip of boulders where there was no way a pebble would balance itself long enough to start making these holes. Also on the side of boulders, leading me to believe they were there before they fell into their resting place.
  • The first half of this video is in Saskatchewan, near the Alberta border. Cypress Hills is an interprovincial park of Alberta and Saskatchewan. You may be interested in Saskatchewans Valley of 1000 Devils, Big Muddy, the badlands in general and the northern most sand dunes in the world near Uranium City, SK.
  • It’s interesting to note that these cup notches in the stones can be found in on the standing stone circles here in the UK and Europe.
  • It looks like the remains of a hill fort. It's definitely archeology. It's more than just rock. It's got features, like buried structures. It looks really good.
  • @ABagOfLag
    Hey bro interesting stuff maybe make a follow up video about sites in canada in general. feel like nobody covers any canadian megalithic sites but there is evidently some around
  • @swainsongable
    Canada's Stonehenge was written by a chemical engineer, meaning the academic author (with an open mind) applied rigorous standards to his research. Freeman and his wife camped on site over the course of decades in every season and his epiphany, which triggered the same in me, was a realisation that the 360° horizon of the landscape is integral to the structure. He figures most Medicine Wheels are not necessarily astronomical observatories but does compare this one to Big Horn. He also travels to Stonehenge in England to reveal their astronomiical similarities. It's truly a fascinating read for anyone interested in archaeoastronomy, especialy in Canada :)
  • i found a whole bunch of additional stuff!! i've saved the links if you want them. the holes are probably cupules (?) there are petroglyphs not to far away and the two seem to go together
  • @gdcakaban
    The glaciation of the western part of the prairies never reached Cypress Hills that makes it a very interesting area.
  • By the way, there are at least 2 more Medicine Wheels just outside Lethbridge, AB