My name is Mike and I'm glad you found your way here!
I've spent many years visiting, documenting and researching hundreds of ancient sites all over the world searching for commonalities within our ancient past. It was a long winding road to find something I love to do for a living. I am happy to share it with you and I hope my content inspires you to ask your own questions and go out and see the world for yourself!
You would do better by not trying to be a star with crap (natural or otherwise) hanging out your snot hole, and showing your mutilated face more than not.
Looks to me like a natural sedimentary formation that has been actively quarried... and abandoned, and subsequently visited by graffiti carving kids over the last 50 years or so. The rock appears to be much softer than the red Lyons (Colorado) sandstone where i live. The Lyons is amoung the hardest sandstone in the world harder than most granite). I have been to dozens of quarries- from ancient to modern. This looks to me to be at least a couple hundred years old, and perhaps much older depending on rock hardness and natural errosion rates. The rock appears to be left in place after it was cut (split using iron or bronze wedge tools driven by sledge hammer). Abandoned for some unknown reason - for instance too costly to haul, death of the owner, etc. IMO they are natural stones cut in place. They are not big enough to qualify as megalithic. The appear to be about 5 tons at the most and could be hauled by heavy duty ox carts. Around here it takes over a hundred years for lichen to grow to the extent evident on these rocks. Some evidence that the cutting was not natural includes the fact that there are distinct zones typical of quarries: a zone where the stones are where they were cut with only a little space between them (moved just far enough to cut the next row), another zone where more room around the stones was needed for dressing and loading, and finally a zone where stones were picked up on one side and slid over (partially stacked) to make more room for continuing opperations. This pattern is evident in most quarries i have been to; however i am no expert on the subject , perhaps a real expert on geology can convince me it's 100% natural (except for the graffiti)...
This is an Asian dolmen . It is a shrine to Noah’s ark there are 80 000 worldwide . The Bhuddist call it a stupa. They were constructed when the sediment was soft. It is an inverted boat . The three openings symbolise three decks of the ark. The nubs symbolize the rivets on the hull.
I'm going to have to say that does not look man made to me. It may have been altered by humans at one point, but I believe it's mostly natural. The section @ 5:29 with the long skinny horizontal stone joints definitely looks natural. Those 'nubs' are also found on natural granite. I'm not sure what causes them, but I've seen them on random granite a lot. 13:52
I think the knobs were used to adjust the resonate frequency of a given stone so it interacts well with it's neighbors. If the quartz content does in fact oscillat, knob placement and size would be crucial. I would use probes and an oscilloscope to see if there is any electrical activity.
This was absolutely fascinating ! But PLEASE, if you ever make another video, please don't include the music ! The narrative is enough without the noisy music. I had to use CC because sometimes the music was just too loud.
It's a volcanic dyke extrusion, as would have been immediately evident if you had considered the terrain that the "wall" is found in. The notion that anybody would accept the false impression that this is manmade is laughable. I can feel myself getting dumber by the minute as I watch you misinterpret the product of natural erosion. Please, I beg you, try to learn just a smidge of geology.
Requires extensive excavation. May be best to wait till you find a team who are willing to accept a more ancient hypothesis. Mist researchers are tied to a University that refuses to accept new ideas.
Try and get involved somewhere! Volunteering is a great way to meet like minded people. I host trips also…there is one upcoming to Peru in October. I hope you get plugged in somewhere! It’s worth it and so are you! Thank you for being here! Follow me on Twitter or Insta (@wwolfprod), happy to connect…might find a good community to connect with and find some opportunities. (It’s hard for me to keep up here with exchanges!)
Bigger Folk made that with great ease, a really long time ago. No way humans construct such megalithic sites. Not with our two hands. What's the Native American mythologies for this region? Creation Stories? I look forward to researching to learn the answers.
Your channel is my latest discovery ~ loved all of the items you'd shared, as well as details of your adventures, including the Sage Wall ~ my thanks for all your enlightened + interesting observations ~ so cool.🙏
Mike Collins, after watching several videos and comments about the Sage Wall in Montana I truly believe it is manmade but offer a different idea as to it's possible uses. What you are describing as channels for flooding or mudslides, might have been used as KILL ZONES for Hunter Gatherers to drive large hurds of animals up the mountain side into those channels with the community/villager's waiting to throw down spears and other weapons safely from the protection of the above walls, The "Nubs" you have found could be used with ropes tied to them to trip animals to cause a "Hurd Tumble" to make it easier for the kill. Common since tells me, if you had a very large number of people to feed that could actually build a wall like that, Trible Leaders first and foremost duty would be able to feed the people, thus building a "Safe Kill Zone" to harvesting the animals. After many years of success, it may have become a sacred burial site and religious site over time. The owners of the property need to dig in my opinion. It is also my understanding that less than 100 miles away from the Sage Wall "Clovis" period remains were found. That is AMAZING to me! The Sage Wall has me hooked, as well as the "Pyramids in Appalachians Mountains." Thank you for bringing this wonderful site to the world, my family and I will defiantly be visiting the Sage Wall very soon.