Pre-Historic Mega Structures of Japan & Unexcavated Giant Tombs

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Published 2024-05-11
From massive granite blocks and quarries carved with extraordinary accuracy to immense stone walls, Japan’s landscape tells a story of an advanced prehistoric society. This documentary delves deep into the heart of Japan’s forgotten megaliths.

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All Comments (21)
  • @hanknyc
    Why is it so hard for people to accept that technological civilizations have been rising and falling on this planet for millions and probably hundreds of millions of years.
  • @user-dk3xz5rv9d
    I am Japanese and still live in Japan. Since I was a child, I grew up looking at the stacked stones at shrines and castle ruins without thinking about it. I remember learning that they were built by the Japanese in the Middle Ages using only human power, but the more I grew up and did my own research, the more I wondered how they were built in an era when there was no heavy machinery. Even today, there are still many half-buried buildings and underground structures in Japan. I hope to someday collaborate with people from all over the world to study them. This is about the history of all mankind... A mysterious history in the place where we live without thinking. I would like to cherish this.
  • @yogidemis8513
    Kinda weird that ancient civilizations had the same type of stone cutting skills all over the world but the mainstream said " There's no proof that different people never traveled the world to meet other people" but yet, all these people somehow figured out how to cut, move 100ton blocks and fit them perfectly on their own.
  • @rodyates1
    Perhaps the wisest men are those who realise how little they actually know?
  • The fact that some of the cut stone is under the sea, indicates this workmanship was pre-flood.
  • @jpwski9425
    Oglądam niektóre filmy po 3 razy, ponieważ wracam do nich i co bardzo ciekawe, za każdym razem odkrywam kolejne istotne szczegóły i fakty.
  • This is so crazy. My mind isn't blown easily. This stuff blows my mind more than anything. Everything we thought we know about history is probably not true.
  • @zemog1025
    Thanks for putting the magnitude of the ancient work in Japan into perspective, I wasn't aware of the majority of what was presented, thought provoking, indeed.
  • @anchorpoint5871
    “The falsification of history has done more to impede human development than any one thing known to mankind.” JJ Rousseau
  • A very interesting and detailed presentation of the Japanese megalithic sites - very enjoyable - I like that there wasn’t too much sensationalism or over dramatized content- super chill -
  • @milesdyson5211
    MY QUESTION IS : Who keeps saying it's all from Cavemen and Chilels Hammers and spikes when its clearly not?
  • @mirandansa
    In the movie "Princess Mononoke", San and her wolf goddess mother live in a cave made of giant cut stones. It's a reference to the lost megalithic culture of the Jomon period. And in "My Neighbor Totoro", the big Totoro lives in a den with a collection of Jomon pottery, implying that this mythical creature was once in contact with the Jomon people. What this suggests (at least in the fictional world of the creator Hayao Miyazaki) is that the Jomon people were in touch with the nature and they could manipulate stones in the way they did because of their knowledge of certain aspects of the nature.
  • that footage is unbelievable. it's all very remarkable and mysterious when you think about it. if nothing else, it's impressive to think that these constructions are so massive they stayed in one piece for over 1000s of years. globally, we don't build stuff like this anymore... too expensive.
  • @user-mh3kp7we7i
    Traveled to Japan many times. First time to hear of this information. Big thumbs up.
  • @m.pearce3273
    These are not leftovers from the last ice age but the previous Japan was the northern tip of Lemuria and Nan Madol in the South. The last ice Age saw the End of Atlantis the next one has us in it. What will be left of us compared with the past. We don't even come close.
  • @evegaboury6366
    A whole new world is opening up thanks to your channel!
  • @joshhigh8488
    My word that was good! Thank you for an obviously well planned, expertly executed video. One of my new favorites!