In my opinion the most interesting archaeological sites are the Great pyramid of Cholula, Cahokia and another one recently discovered in Kansas known as Etzanoa. Wichita is named after these Indians, There used to be a population of around 20,000 of them.
A lot of these places like the Nazca lines are all about venerating bodies of water. Nazca had been proven to be about water sources.
Etzanoa had a huge river, Cahokia is on the Mississippi. All the dragons are about their interactions with storm and thunder gods.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etzanoa
There's one barely known to anybody
Snaketown in Arizona has ballcourts and Quetzalcoatl depictions along with tropical macaw bird skeletons showing they had trade networks to some extent down to southern Mexico
There's also another underwater city in India, I've seen photos of gigantic collossal heads comparable or larger than the Olmec ones here that washed up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr_5LQb6Y9o
from the 2004 tsunami the water receded for a bit and people were like WTF
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Pago...he_tsunami
This one corresponds to where one of Edgar cayces hall of records are said to be located.
Just reading about Piedras Negras in Guatemala is crazy and the tie in with Edgar Cayce and the Oregon sunstones...it's like Moria from lord of the rings it's never been explored it is so inaccessible yet gigantic. Very strange.
The countless Earthworks in the Brazilian jungle. Big wtf.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8G9II1nQMc
There's a lot of places in Colombia akin to this. Huge societies that used to exist
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OltD83dCyKg
I noticed a long time wgo if you go to google maps and switch to pedestrian navigation there's a direct path between cahokia and teotihuacan.
same with etzanoa between cahokia.
i wonder etzanoa and teotihuacan now
It's not some huge discovery but makes you wonder how old those trails are...it's not like people invented them in the last 100 years
A lot of these places like the Nazca lines are all about venerating bodies of water. Nazca had been proven to be about water sources.
Etzanoa had a huge river, Cahokia is on the Mississippi. All the dragons are about their interactions with storm and thunder gods.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etzanoa
There's one barely known to anybody
Snaketown in Arizona has ballcourts and Quetzalcoatl depictions along with tropical macaw bird skeletons showing they had trade networks to some extent down to southern Mexico
There's also another underwater city in India, I've seen photos of gigantic collossal heads comparable or larger than the Olmec ones here that washed up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr_5LQb6Y9o
from the 2004 tsunami the water receded for a bit and people were like WTF
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Pago...he_tsunami
This one corresponds to where one of Edgar cayces hall of records are said to be located.
Just reading about Piedras Negras in Guatemala is crazy and the tie in with Edgar Cayce and the Oregon sunstones...it's like Moria from lord of the rings it's never been explored it is so inaccessible yet gigantic. Very strange.
The countless Earthworks in the Brazilian jungle. Big wtf.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8G9II1nQMc
There's a lot of places in Colombia akin to this. Huge societies that used to exist
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OltD83dCyKg
I noticed a long time wgo if you go to google maps and switch to pedestrian navigation there's a direct path between cahokia and teotihuacan.
same with etzanoa between cahokia.
i wonder etzanoa and teotihuacan now
It's not some huge discovery but makes you wonder how old those trails are...it's not like people invented them in the last 100 years