10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States.
???? Thank for watching! If You enjoy it, please Like and Subcribe this Chanel. ????
These ancient American relics remain unexplained.
A centuries-old stone wall, stretching for miles; enormous pictures scratched into the ground of a desert; rocks arranged in a circle. You know what these landmarks are, right?
Guess again. Instead of the Great Wall of China or Stonehenge, these are all ancient American ruins and landmarks. The United States is a relative newcomer to the world stage, but there have been people long living on this continent, and they’ve left traces of their presence just as mysterious as those found in other countries.
1. Mystery Hill: America’s Stonehenge.
SALEM, NEW HAMPSHIRE.
About 40 miles north of the city of Boston, and about 25 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean...
2. Casa Grande Ruins.
COOLIDGE, ARIZONA.
This is an artist's depiction of the Casa Grande (Great House), and its surrounding compound as it may have appeared around 1350 C.E....
3. The Blythe Intaglios.
BLYTHE, CALIFORNIA.
The Blythe Intaglios, often called America’s Nazca Lines, are a series of gigantic geoglyphs found fifteen miles north of Blythe California in the Colorado Desert....
4. Judaculla Rock.
SYLVA, NORTH CAROLINA.
Buried in the mountains of Jackson County, just outside of Sylva, there exists a very, very strange rock....
5. Bighorn Medicine Wheel.
LOVELL, WYOMING.
Located high in the Bighorn Mountains of Northern Wyoming, the centuries old Medicine Wheel....
6. Dighton Rock.
BERKELEY, MASSACHUSETTS.
In the fall of 1680, John Danforth – with his freshly minted degree from Harvard College – visited the South Shore of Massachusetts in Taunton and took a side trip to see one of the curiosities of the age....
7. The Great Serpent Mound.
HILLSBORO, OHIO.
The Great Serpent Mound is a 1,300 foots long, and 3 foots high prehistoric effigy mound located on a plateau of a crater along Ohio Brush Creek in Adams County, Ohio....
8. Berkeley Mystery Walls.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
The ancient Berkeley walls remain an ancient unsolved enigma. Often referred to as the “Great Wall of California”...
9. Miami Circle.
MIAMI, FLORIDA.
The worst place in Florida to discover an ancient mystery is on prime real estate in downtown Miami....
10. Hemet Maze Stone.
HEMET, CALIFORNIA.
Near the town of Hemet in the Reinhardt canyon, of southern California there is a curious petroglyph known as the Hemet maze stone...
Music: Kevin Macleod
Artist:
Mystery of Death Valley's Moving Stones Solved
For decades, scientists have been trying to solve Death Valley's mystery of the moving stones. Now, two scientists say they have figured out what makes the rocks move on the desert floor. WSJ's Monika Auger reports.
Subscribe to the WSJ channel here:
Visit the WSJ channel for more video:
More from the Wall Street Journal:
Visit WSJ.com:
Follow WSJ on Facebook:
Follow WSJ on Google+:
Follow WSJ on Twitter:
Follow WSJ on Instagram:
Follow WSJ on Pinterest:
Follow WSJ on Tumblr:
Don’t miss a WSJ video, subscribe here:
More from the Wall Street Journal:
Visit WSJ.com:
Visit the WSJ Video Center:
On Facebook:
On Twitter:
On Snapchat:
To The Moon: The Movie (Subtitles)
Little to no gameplay (just that which supports the story line). Two doctors, Eva and Neil, traverse through the memories of a dying man to fulfill his last wish.
This ‘movie’ can be confusing especially without the game play. It’s like reading a book starting from the last chapter and going backwards.
It may help to watch the section 2:59:24 – 3:10:54 . And remember Dr. Eva Rosalene’s line: “All these nice memories, lost and never found…”. The section explains the significance of rabbits, the moon, lighthouses, platypuses, even the hacky sack, the colors blue & white, and the short hair.
Remember to comment, like, and subscribe.
Living Universe | Journey To Another Stars - Documentary 4K
The Earth is Not Alone:
LIVING UNIVERSE is an interstellar adventure that seeks to answer the most profound question of all: are we alone? Based on the latest scientific knowledge, we will take a journey to a planet beyond our solar system in search of life.
We ask the world's leading space scientists what we might find if we travel to a neighboring star system. Recent breakthroughs have proven that every star we see in the sky is orbited by at least one planet, many similar to our own Earth. How do we get to these exoplanets? Once there, what will we find? And what will it mean for humanity when we discover we are not alone?
Our speculative journey through space is set a hundred years in the future - when we have the technology to journey well beyond our solar system. On this first expedition, our star ship Aurora will be piloted not by astronauts, but by the artificial intelligence (A.I.) we call Artemis. We imagine how Artemis travels through space, on its 25-year journey, at one fifth of the speed of light. Its objective is Minerva B, a planet much like our own, with an atmosphere, temperature and liquid water that appears a likely candidate to contain life.
With spectacular special effects we will reach and explore a new planet as we seek to answer the most profound question of all: are we alone in the universe? Our guides on this journey are narrator Dr Karl Kruszelnicki and as the voice of our AI, Artemis, real-life astrophysicist, Professor Tamara Davis.
Inspired and informed by our rapidly developing knowledge of far-off worlds, our best scientists - including NASA engineers, astrophysicists and astronomers - we will discover that this amazing journey is not only possible, it is inevitable. To venture into distant space is our destiny.
LIVING UNIVERSE captures a pivotal moment in the human story. A film full of insight and inspiration certain to thrill anyone who dreams of distant worlds, or have ever wondered why are we here?
Have you ever wondered that someone like you, sitting less than a mile away, in some other universe, exists? The possibility in itself seems frightening as well as astonishing.
From breaking news and intriguing historical documentaries to conspiracy theories, classified NASA files and UFO's. We provide you with material that the government doesn't want you to see. The Insomnia team comes up with a promise. To keep up with the same, the team now brings to us a documentary that aims to change your perspective Of another existence, of another possibility, as today, the scientists now believe there may really be the presence of a parallel universe - and in fact, also believe that there may be an infinite number of parallel universes, and where we live today just happens to be only one of them and many of these other parallel universes come with different laws of physics as well.
These other universes that we are talking about not only contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter but to surprise you, Some of them may even contain you, only maybe in a slightly different form. The thought itself is quite intriguing and scary on the same hand. The basis of this theory is as we know it the idea that parallel universes are constantly spinning off from reality that we humans know of. Though generally ignored at the time, that theory has gone on to become not just a popular topic of study among respected physicists, but the inspiration for such popular films, television shows, and books as Star Trek and The Golden Compass. according to the sources.
The video soon progresses into the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), that is now changing everything, as some say that the remarkable images reveal the true shape of the universe through baby pictures of the same from the time when it was 4 hundred thousand years old, looking so back in time, when there wasn't even the formation of galaxies yet. The WMAP is catching the very first signs of creation as it is officially tagged with measuring radiation that is left over from Big Bang. And now scientists have devised an experiment to find the overall true shape of the universe. The WMAP hence shows that the universe is flat. From here arises the possibility of more mind boggling parallel universe that are of the level-2 type and is made up of giant cosmic soap bubbles that float in hyperspace. Each of these bubbles within it has a whole universe. Now, the question that arises is that - Do we all live in a giant cosmic bubble?
Journey to another stars
finding lives on other planets
Pokemon Fire Red Walkthrough Part 35: Seafoam Islands and Articuno
This is part 35 of my continuous walkthrough on Pokemon Fire Red.
In this video, I go through the Seafoam Islands and battle Articuno, one of the three birds in the legendary trio. Articuno is an Ice/Flying type Pokemon at level 50.
Articuno is extremely hard to cach, so bring 20-30 ultra balls and lowering its Defense and Special Defense helps A LOT!
Virtual Villagers Origins 2~Yellow Statue completion (Yellow statue final)
Forge Bucket crafting recipe below :)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colour statue guild playlist:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Metal recipes:
Metal = Stone + Fire
Forge Bucket recipe:
Cement = Stone + Clay
Ceramic = Limestone + Cement
Clay = Red Earth + Water
Forge Bucket = Ceramic + Clay
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Download the game here:
Itunes:
Google Play:
Song: Original in-game soundtrack
The Devil's Sea: Beyond the Bermuda Triangle | FULL LENGTH | MagellanTV
WATCH NEW RELATED CONTENT IN 4K on MagellanTV
TONY ROBINSON: GODS AND MONSTERS
In this series, famed British host Tony Robinson takes us through 2,000 years of history to explore occult practices from brutal human sacrifices in Iron Age Britain to the horrifying witch-hunts and exorcisms of the 16th and 17th centuries. What dark corners of our history will Tony unveil?
ANOMALY: HAUNTING STORIES OF PARANORMAL INVESTIGATION
It's northern Florida. A group of paranormal investigators enters the old Castle Warden Hotel and a local fire department to investigate spiritual anomalies reported by local people. They scrutinize the stories told around town, look at previously gathered evidence and explore the dark corners of these haunted sites.
Why have so many ships met their doom in the sea off the south coast of Japan? Could this stretch of water be the Bermuda Triangle of the Pacific? One man sets out to find a long lost wreck, and separate fact from fantasy as he explores The Devil’s Sea.
PREVIEW our other award-winning paranormal and mystery documentaries without commitment
Here at MagellanTV it is our mission to bring you the finest documentaries from around the world. With over 2000 streaming titles ranging in subject from science and space to nature and history, we hope to broaden your mind by introducing you to a world of educational and entertaining content. We believe in the power of telling real stories that have defined the human experience and point the way to the future. We call it: Documentaries worth watching.
SUBSCRIBE TO MagellanTV
Check out all 2000+ premium documentaries today with MagellanTV. Start your free trial, then continue watching for as little as $4.99 / mo.
LEARN MORE AT:
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL
Facebook:
Twitter:
EXPLORE DIFFERENT GENRES
Science:
Natural World:
History:
Human Spirit:
The Dark Side:
READ CAPTIVATING ARTICLES
Divinity Original Sin EE: Source Temple Puzzle and Trial of Ascension
This video is part of a guide and taken out of context can be confusing. Full guide can be found at and will most likely answer all your questions. Enjoy.
What Physicists Do Lecture Series - September 10, 2019 - Dr. Jeffrey Bennett
GLOBAL WARMING DEMYSTIFIED
Dr. Jeffrey Bennett, noted astrophysicist and author, and winner of the American Institute of Physics Science Communication award, will present a clear summary of the science, the consequences and the solutions of Global Warming.
The Science of Extreme Behavior: The Line Between Courageous and Crazy
“Because it’s there” was George Mallory’s famous explanation for why he risked (and lost) his life trying to become the first person to summit Everest. We don’t all want to climb Everest, but we all, to some degree, take risks. Why does this behavior survive natural selection? What’s going on in our brains when we put ourselves in danger? Is there a line between courageous and crazy? In search of answers, we bring together extreme risk takers and the scientists who study them. What can we learn from people who BASE jump from buildings, climb cliffs without ropes, or leap into danger to save a stranger? Join us for an exhilarating adventure—all from the safety of your seat.
PARTICIPANTS: David Sloan Wilson, Omer Mei-Dan, Cynthia Thomson, Abigail Marsh, Chad Lindsey
MODERATOR: Bill Weir
MORE INFO ABOUT THE PROGRAM AND
PARTICIPANTS:
TOPICS
0:03 - Extreme sports montage
0:59 - Moderator & program introduction
2:09 - Panelist introductions
3:24 - What is the definition of risk?
6:27 - How does risk-taking behavior vary across age and culture?
10:11 - Panelist backgrounds in studying risk taking behaviors
14:13 - Alex Honnold “Free Solo” climb
23:19 - Mt. Everest’s deadly climbing season
26:06 - Sensation seeking vs. impulsivity
28:08 - Studying fear in the brain
34:14 - What role does risk play in evolution?
38:54 - Dopamine and serotonin in sensation seekers
40:20 - Addictive behaviors and sensation seeking
42:19 - Social benefits from risky behaviors
43:10 - Panelists’ extreme sports experiences
46:24 - Male vs. female differences in risk taking
49:03 - BASE jumping fatalities and the development of the wingsuit
52:23 - Recovery from extreme sport related injuries
54:51 - Chad Lindsey “subway hero” introduction
1:02:40 - Studies in motivations for altruistic behavior
1:04:56 - Selfishness and altruism in society
1:08:17 - Training for altruistic behavior
1:10:04 - Psychopathy in the human species
PROGRAM CREDITS
- Produced by Jonathan Schienberg
- Associate Produced by Laura Dattaro and Emmalina Glinskis
- Music provided by APM
- Additional images and footage provided by: Getty Images, Shutterstock, Videoblocks
This program is part of the BIG IDEAS SERIES, made possible with support from the JOHN TEMPLETON FOUNDATION.
- SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube Channel and ring the bell for all the latest videos from WSF
- VISIT our Website:
- LIKE us on Facebook:
- FOLLOW us on Twitter:
Virtual Villagers Origins 2: Completing Puzzle 11 (Finishing the red statue)
This video shows you how I got the last of 3 pieces of the red statue and the completion of puzzle 11. Unlike other puzzles, solving this gets you 20 lavastones! Insane!
If you would like to see more Virtual Villagers Origins 2 walkthroughs, you can view the following links:
Blog Walkthrough:
Resources and Crafting Guide:
Virtual Villagers Origins 2: The Basic Guide eBook:
Please let me know if you have any queries or game suggestions as well!
Note that the tube at the stream is from the 2017 Christmas event. Children can also harness vines, apples, and poison.
Synonyms and Antonyms
Lily the frog will help you to identify synonyms and antonyms. Then you'll encounter a familiar story that you can rewrite using synonyms and antonyms! This lesson includes practical exercises. Recommended for grade 3.
Kids Educ
SUBSCRIBE TO US
To see the more kids movies go to
What Love Can Teach us About Tackling the Impossible | Teju Ravilochan | TEDxMileHigh
Are our biggest challenges impossible, or just difficult? In this inspiring talk, Teju Ravilochan examines some special combinations of determination and collaboration that might crack the code on our impossible problems.
Teju is co-founder and CEO of Unreasonable Institute, which runs mentor-driven boot camps for entrepreneurs tackling social and environmental challenges. Ranging from the chairman of Whole Foods to the founder of three startups with IPOs over $1 billion, mentors advise entrepreneurs for at least six months. Entrepreneurs also connect with 100+ funders and have raised over $72 million in total. Some 93 companies from 45 countries have participated, and have collectively affected the lives of more than 7 million people
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at
The Shadow by Arthur Stringer | Audiobook with subtitles
A manhunt for a bank robber takes a determined and fixated New York City detective on a gripping, globe-spanning adventure, with many plot twists along the way.
Arthur Stringer was a novelist, screenwriter and poet. He published 45 works of fiction and 15 other books in addition to writing numerous film scripts and articles. See:
This book is unrelated to the 1930s and 1940s pulp magazine and radio series of the same name. (Lee Smalley)
Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction
The Shadow by Arthur STRINGER
Our Custom URL :
Subscribe To Our Channel:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Audio Book Audiobooks All Rights Reserved. This is a Librivox recording. All Librivox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer visit librivox.org.
The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy (The Scarlet Pimpernel #1)
The classic story of Sir Percy Blakeney and his alter ego, the Scarlet Pimpernel. A great adventure, set during the French Revolution.
Chapter 1. Paris: September, 1792 - 00:00
Chapter 2. Dover: The Fisherman's Rest - 15:27
Chapter 3. The Refugees - 33:22
Chapter 4. The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel - 47:14
Chapter 5. Marguerite - 1:02:00
Chapter 6. An Exquisite of '92 - 1:12:22
Chapter 7. The Secret Orchard - 1:30:43
Chapter 8. The Accredited Agent - 1:42:25
Chapter 9. The Outrage - 2:03:44
Chapter 10. In the Opera Box - 2:15:16
Chapter 11. Lord Grenville's Ball - 2:42:02
Chapter 12. The Scrap of Paper - 2:53:11
Chapter 13. Either - - Or? - 3:08:11
Chapter 14. One O'Clock Precisely - 3:12:34
Chapter 15. Doubt - 3:27:20
Chapter 16. Richmond - 3:37:06
Chapter 17. Farewell - 4:04:07
Chapter 18. The Mysterious Device - 4:16:39
Chapter 19. The Scarlet Pimpernel - 4:24:41
Chapter 20. The Friend - 4:41:14
Chapter 21. Suspense - 4:53:02
Chapter 22. Calais - 5:07:10
Chapter 23. Hope - 5:24:20
Chapter 24. The Death-Trap - 5:36:23
Chapter 25. The Eagle and the Fox - 5:48:38
Chapter 26. The Jew - 6:03:27
Chapter 27. On the Track - 6:18:48
Chapter 28. The Pere Blanchard's Hut - 6:32:05
Chapter 29. Trapped - 6:48:35
Chapter 30. The Schooner - 6:57:12
Chapter 31. The Escape - 7:18:34
Read by Karen Savage (
Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media full documentary
Full Documentary. Manufacturing Consent. 1992. Noam Chomsky
Equites ~1984 Alpha Denshi~ Arcade MAME equites
An arcade game or coin-op is a coin-operated entertainment machine typically installed in public businesses such as restaurants, bars and amusement arcades. Most arcade games are video games, pinball machines, electro-mechanical games, redemption games or merchandisers. While exact dates are debated, the golden age of arcade video games is usually defined as a period beginning sometime in the late 1970s and ending sometime in the mid-1980s. Excluding a brief resurgence in the early 1990s, the arcade industry subsequently declined in the Western hemisphere as competing home-based video game consoles such as Playstation and Xbox increased in their graphics and game-play capability and decreased in cost.
The first popular arcade games included early amusement-park midway games such as shooting galleries, ball-toss games, and the earliest coin-operated machines, such as those that claimed to tell a person's fortune or that played mechanical music. The old Midways of 1920s-era amusement parks (such as Coney Island in New York) provided the inspiration and atmosphere for later arcade games. In the 1930s the first coin-operated pinball machines emerged. These early amusement machines differed from their later electronic cousins in that they were made of wood. They lacked plungers or lit-up bonus surfaces on the playing field, and used mechanical instead of electronic scoring-readouts. By around 1977 most pinball machines in production switched to using solid-state electronics both for operation and for scoring.
In 1966 Sega introduced an electro-mechanical game called Periscope - an early submarine simulator and light gun shooter which used lights and plastic waves to simulate sinking ships from a submarine. It became an instant success in Japan, Europe, and North America, where it was the first arcade game to cost a quarter per play, which would remain the standard price for arcade games for many years to come. In 1967 Taito released an electro-mechanical arcade game of their own, Crown Soccer Special, a two-player sports game that simulated association football, using various electronic components, including electronic versions of pinball flippers.
Sega later produced gun games which resemble first-person shooter video games, but which were in fact electro-mechanical games that used rear image projection in a manner similar to the ancient zoetrope to produce moving animations on a screen. The first of these, the light-gun game Duck Hunt, appeared in 1969; it featured animated moving targets on a screen, printed out the player's score on a ticket, and had volume-controllable sound-effects. That same year, Sega released an electro-mechanical arcade racing game, Grand Prix, which had a first-person view, electronic sound, a dashboard with a racing wheel and accelerator, and a forward-scrolling road projected on a screen. Another Sega 1969 release, Missile, a shooter and vehicle-combat simulation, featured electronic sound and a moving film strip to represent the targets on a projection screen.
It was the earliest known arcade game to feature a joystick with a fire button, which formed part of an early dual-control scheme, where two directional buttons are used to move the player's tank and a two-way joystick is used to shoot and steer the missile onto oncoming planes displayed on the screen; when a plane is hit, an animated explosion appears on screen, accompanied by the sound of an explosion. In 1970 Midway released the game in North America as S.A.M.I.. In the same year, Sega released Jet Rocket, a combat flight-simulator featuring cockpit controls that could move the player aircraft around a landscape displayed on a screen and shoot missiles onto targets that explode when hit.
In the course of the 1970s, following the release of Pong in 1972, electronic video-games gradually replaced electro-mechanical arcade games. In 1972, Sega released an electro-mechanical game called Killer Shark, a first-person light-gun shooter known for appearing in the 1975 film Jaws. In 1974, Nintendo released Wild Gunman, a light-gun shooter that used full-motion video-projection from 16 mm film to display live-action cowboy opponents on the screen. One of the last successful electro-mechanical arcade games was F-1, a racing game developed by Namco and distributed by Atari in 1976; this game appeared in the films Dawn of the Dead (1978) and Midnight Madness (1980), as did Sega's Jet Rocket in the latter film. The 1978 video game Space Invaders, however, dealt a yet more powerful blow to the popularity of electro-mechanical games.
Allen Ginsberg Visiting Fellow: Rosa Alcala
The Jack Kerouac School cultivates contemplative and experimental approaches to writing. Our esteemed faculty teach literary arts in innovative ways that foster both rigor and creative expansion. Students have numerous opportunities to work with invited guests during our events: Ginsberg Visiting Fellow, Scalapino Lecturer in Innovative Poetics,Jack Kerouac School Symposium, and What Where Series.
Another distinctive aspect of the curriculum is our internationally recognized Summer Writing Program, a colloquium of Jack Kerouac School and visiting faculty who teach workshops, give lectures and readings, as well as mentor students in one-on-one conferences.
Graduates of our programs publish widely, teach in universities and abroad, establish small presses, work in arts administration, and have received numerous awards: NEA Fellowship, Fulbright, American Book Awards, PEN/Hemingway Award, and Next Generation Indie Book Award.
Located in Boulder, Colorado, Naropa University is a private, liberal arts university offering undergraduate and graduate degree programs in the arts, early childhood education, environmental studies, peace studies, psychology and religious studies.
Laura Larson and Mark Alice Durant
BFA Photography and Video and Saint Lucy Books, a website devoted to writing about photography and contemporary art, present a reading and book signing with Laura Larson and Mark Alice Durant.
Larson will read excerpts from her book Hidden Mother which tells the story of the adoption of her daughter from Ethiopia as mapped through nineteenth-century hidden mother photographs. Durant will read excerpts from 27 Contexts: An Anecdotal History in Photography, a series of linked essays that weave memoir with photographic history and theory to examine how photographs are inextricably bound in our personal and collective histories. The readings will be introduced and moderated by SVA faculty member Lyle Rexer, author of The Edge of Vision: The Rise of Abstraction in Photography, and will be followed by a Q&A and a book signing reception.