Blackwater Draw, The Clovis & The Younger Dryas Comet?

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Published 2021-08-03
A report on Blackwater Draw in New Mexico. The Clovis and extinct Megafauna shared this site where impact proxies are found at a common layer in ancient American sites. The dating is based on the oldest suggested dates and new Clovis specific dating.

grahamhancock.com/america-before/

www.newscientist.com/article/dn25044-a-history-of-…
www.portales.com/blackwater-draw-national-historic…
www.thoughtco.com/blackwater-draw-hunting-in-new-m…
alchetron.com/Blackwater-Draw#blackwater-draw-7951…
www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/how-were-the-ame…
www2.palomar.edu/users/scrouthamel/ais130/site_1.h…
www.tripadvisor.com/LocationPhotoDirectLink-g46990…

Intro credits
soundcloud.com/hazy_music
www.plugnplaymusic.net/
Thanks Julie !!




#ancienthistory #ancientAmerica #YoungerDryas #Comet #Cataclysm #Clovis #PreClovis
#BlackwaterDraw #YoungerDryasComet #GrahamHancock #AmericaBefore #artifacts #megafauna #history #ancient #iceage #YDB #NewMexico #archaeology #smithsonian #projectilepoints #platinum #impactproxies #extintion #mystery #extinction

All Comments (21)
  • A very interesting site. It is fortunate that some people are actually wise enough to question the Smithsonian Institute!
  • The area north of the site is a dirt bike track. During the 1970s, we used to ride motorcycles, dune buggies, and shoot freely at the old Gravel pits. In the late '70s, people started finding arrowheads and mammoth bones in the pit and it was closed off to the public as an archeological site. The house at the entrance used to be the gravel pit office and homestead. It's now a museum for the site.
  • @dorecannon2851
    That's an ancient go-cart track, the longest in North America.
  • @tobystewart4403
    Interesting stuff. I noticed the strata of sand layers that date to the younger dryas. Leaving to one side the issue of impact proxies, or electrical storm proxies, it is notable that sand deposits such as grey, blue and then silt above represent the movement of very large volumes of water, so far inland. Usually such deposits are created by ancient seas that have been lifted, but in this case the sands and silt were clearly deposited by some contemporary flow of water. A lot of water. Not from melting glaciers, either. Inland glaciers don't carry sand. Mega tsunamis caused by profound earth crust shift would totally carry a lot of sand across continents. A great flood, if you will. One hundred years ago, all this was known and discussed as "the drift". The "drift" was the curious layer of sand and other ocean debris that was known to cover very large parts of the earth, beneath which people often found odd things, like preserved tree stumps and bones. Sometimes such a layer of drift could be 150 feet or more. The drift went right out of fashion, due to the advent of plate tectonic theory. Plate tectonics is very strange magic. It holds that the earth has been exactly the same shape, size and position for millions and hundreds of millions of years. Why? Well, it goes against the bible. And that has been "good academic thinking" for a long time now. The drift became a theory associated with Christians, and so it became officially hocus pocus amongst the godless left, who worship Marx and Darwin. For Darwinian evolution to work out, you sort of need very (very) long periods of stable climate conditions. Big catastrophic events sort of wreck the theory a bit. Oddly enough, Darwin knew this very well. He knew about the various periodic mass extinction events in the fossil record, as well as explosions of new mutations within relatively short periods of time. Natural selection according to favourable mutation is a neat theory, but in some ways it is shown to be unlikely. For a start, ecosystems tend to favour specific animals for very long periods, without them changing due to mutations, and then everything changes all at once. For example, some species of dinosaur went unchanged for ten of millions of years, only to be wiped out suddenly and replaced by new species, which then grew to dominate for very long periods. Gradual change, which is essentially the basis for unconscious evolutionary theory, is what natural selection is all about. It is certainly a hammer blow to the idea of a creator spirit that is sentient, and indeed that challenge to the power of the church was almost certainly the point, the spirit of the age. England had adopted usury in the law, making interest gathering lawful for Christian bankers, and there was much derision of classical moral institutions like the church amongst Darwin's caste. However, there remain profound problems with natural selection as the engine for biological change on earth, and competing ideas, whether supported by the bible or not, do exist. Given the known effects of strong electromagnetic radiation upon DNA, it is perhaps probable that solar activity, possibly due to the varying path of the solar system through its 270 million year galactic round trip, is the root cause of flare ups in the electromagnetic spectrum which play havoc with DNA, creating new species and generating all kinds of spectacular celestial energies inside a normally peaceful solar system.
  • @duncanden
    The squiggly lines encompassed in the circle north of the Blackwater site is a former irrigated circle that the water ran out on and the farmer made it into an ATV track.
  • @JonnyCobra
    You absolutely nailed it in suggesting we all can agree that something really bad happened 12 000 years ago. Something equally disastrous wiped out all the the Bronze Age civilisations 6 000 years ago and turned the once-verdant Cradle of Civilisation and the great fresh-water sea in north Africa into a desert while flooding the Mediterranean basin, so creating the Sea People. And 3,000 years ago, something else also happened: according to the last known Irish druid Ben McBrady (there's a Youtube interview), the Druidic recorded Venus' orbit bringing it so close to Earth that it caused massive electrical discharges and forced people to move underground, preferably in a cave above maximum flood levels. I therefore think we can also agree that there is a persistently repeating pattern as old as time itself. In fact, it appears to be time itself. There are similar sites here in the Namib desert in Namibia, except we think they were ancient San (so-called Bushmen) sites of similarly abundant hunting sites, Your video here made me realise the site on Rostock Ritz is as old as Blackwater Draw now.
  • @anzulove3310
    Yes! Finally the Clovis site covered! I lived in Clovis, NM from 2010-2014. That's the only place I liked while living there. 2:45 is the actual site not the museum. 3:44 is the site that was shown in 2:45. The building at the entrance of the site is a smaller museum to the one near Portales. My brother still lives in Clovis, I did not notice those strange tracks you've pointed out when I visited. I will put attention to that.
  • @RNW11B94B
    visited Blackwater Draw yesterday thanks to listening to this post years ago!!! ABSOLUTELY AWESOME!!! Chuck 🙏 may be gone but his inspiration of others continues!!! 🦣
  • @sgtrock68
    I'm only on chapter 3 of Graham Hancock's "America Before". The design in the crop circle was eating at me so I had to take a closer look on Google earth. I thought that it might be a corn maze. That's not really a fall custom they participate in, in the desert...but normally neither is growing corn. Well, it's not a maze for the kiddies. It seems to be a huge, very well maintained track, for 4 wheel vehicles, with a wider track than cars. Someone spent a lot of time and money making that thing. Military test track maybe. So, tangent disengaged! I'm looking forward to the rest of the book.
  • @ernestturner915
    A cowboy fossil collector named McJunkin gets the credit for discovering the site..
  • @MuddyPoppins
    I read a comment from a geologist who worked for the oil industry one time that posed this question and comment. He said: “What is oil? It is decaying plant and animal matter…so how did it end up buried 5000 feet underground?” How did all of this plant and animal matter that was once alive on the surface of the earth suddenly end up as buried pockets of gelatinous goo 5000 feet underground?…something VERY bad must have happened to all life on earth in earth’s distant past.”
  • @MiuMiuKoo
    Fascinating and I am inclined to agree that the evidence does point to a major event 👍
  • @dazuk1969
    We are at the point where it is fairly obvious the were people in north America before Clovis 1st. And yes, something really bad happened to this planet at the younger dryas. I will let others argue about what that was. Great stuff dude, always enjoy your vids.
  • The Smithsonian representative determining that "there is nothing to see here" sounds like their usual denial of the evidence in front of their faces.
  • Great video, for sure the history books need to be updated with more accurate information. thank you.
  • @mizaru5413
    When I lived in Portales in the mid 50s my mail man was known as the one who found the first Folsom point.
  • Very cool Chuck! I love hearing about Younger Dryas in New Mexico, my home state!