Tartaria Decoded: Part 8 - IMPOSSIBLE Engineering? 19th Century Structures Built w/ Chisels Hammers?

Описание к видео Tartaria Decoded: Part 8 - IMPOSSIBLE Engineering? 19th Century Structures Built w/ Chisels Hammers?

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Was there a more advanced society among us before we even know? Is it possible that several architectural and engineering feats were already here before we arrived? This is the theory amongst a slew of online research coming out every day. What do we really know about the structures of our world that have served us for so long? Perhaps they were already here and simply discovered and re-purposed. Or were they created by a previous civilization?
Let’s rewind to the 19th century. Power tools and heavy machinery were very uncommon as they had only started to be used in the late part of the century. They weren’t invented yet in the early 1800’s or even up to the mid to late 1800’s. Some of the most opulent feats of engineering are impossible to fathom how they were built by a simple horse and buggy society working with tools like spades, pickaxes, rakes, and hammers.
All over North America we find incredibly long and large canal systems that move large bodies of water to new directions to better serve us. 14 mile long and 450-foot-wide canal systems were built at depths of 35 feet or more in places like Delaware. Considering the tools and manpower needed, this must have been an incredible feat for the early 19th century.
Between 1817 and 1825 the Erie canal was built. When it was first constructed, it was meant to be a whopping 363 miles long! This number is astounding. If this is broken down more simply, the builders were constructing almost a mile of canal per week. This is truly a stunning feat. Through forests, large rock escarpments and various other challenges, the early 19th century builders managed to construct this massive structure at a pace simply unmatched today. Without modern machines or tools, they were able to complete this massive canal in under a decade. The system has 20 to 30 locks and several complex aqueducts. Researchers have tried to identify if there were any civil engineers in the country at the time, without any luck. Perhaps, there weren’t any. This massive accomplishment of architecture, engineering, construction, and sheer determinative manpower was, nonetheless, completed and is still being used today.
There are numerous other examples of astounding accomplishments across our realm. Many of them, built in the early 19th century. Who were these highly skilled determined workers of the early 19th century? Today, with all our modern technologies, many of these structures are simply too costly and expansive to be able to economically justify their construction.
Let’s use the megalithic rock theory to compare. In the world today, we find several precision cut megaliths peppered across our realm. From Peru to Egypt, and Turkey to Italy and even North America. Archaeologists in Lebanon have uncovered a megalith from the Phoenician era at a 2,000-year-old limestone quarry that weighs an estimated 1,000 tons. The megalith was first discovered by a farmer in the Bekaa Valley back in 1978 and it is believed to have been originally quarried sometime between 50 BCE and 200 CE. This is just one example of a precision cut megalithic stone. If we can come to an understanding that societies thousands of years ago were able to cut and shape stones like this, why wouldn’t a more recent civilization be able to achieve what we think is impossible today? Online research speculates that we may be suffering from a collective memory loss. Was there a more recent societal reset that we simply are not aware of today?

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