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ExomatrixTV
19th June 2021, 00:55
7000 Mysterious 'Band of Holes' in the Peruvian Mountains:

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In Peru’s Pisco Valley, across the rugged Cajamarquilla Plain, we find this incredible feature known as the Band of Holes. What we are looking at is a highly unusual feature, being thousands of small depressions running upslope, but what is it? Is it some kind of Nazca-inspired geoglyph, a defensive barrier or something else? Who was the culture behind it and when was it made? Taking a closer look and there are around 7,000 depressions, all of which are around 3 feet across and 20 to 40 inches deep. The band of holes itself is 65 feet wide and it extends for nearly a mile. In this video I investigate the mysterious 'Band of Holes' in the Peruvian Mountains and give two possible explanations for what we are looking it.

palehorse
19th June 2021, 10:33
Very interesting, it could be some sort of storage, like the "plain of jars" located in Laos, the locals believe it was used to store booze for the big festivals that were held yearly, but who knows if it is really the truth. The one in Peru seems to be damaged like the things stuck in the hole was removed, could it be jars or something? Also the holes are not uniform, some has stones in the wall, like old wells, others are just a dirty hole.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/ancient-urns-or-drinking-vessels-giants-behind-laos-mysterious-plain-jars-180955462/

DeDukshyn
19th June 2021, 20:42
The idea that it was to "pay taxes" is dumb. Seriously who comes up with this stuff? (Is there a precedence in history for people paying taxes this way in any culture? If it was to "make sure" everyone paid their taxes, whats to stop someone from just stealing the other guys "taxes"? Did the Inca empire collect "taxes" even? - plus a million other questions that need to all have a "yes" answer for that to even be a remote possibility.)

Also, I don't think digging them the way they are would be as easy as stated in the video. The dirt isn't all dug out to one direction - its evenly spread between the holes (if not removed altogether), so imagine using a pickax or hoe type implement walking in a circle to evenly dig out the hole, then imagine digging all the holes next to it without falling in to the one you dug - it would be awkward as all hell -- who would subject themselves to that torture? Sprained feet, broken ankles, constantly tripping ...


Interesting phenomenon though ... thanks for the share!

palehorse
20th June 2021, 04:42
what about those ancient battery, like the "Baghdad Batteries" check this out -->> https://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/ciencia/ciencia_hitech05.htm
Could be some sort of energy grid, who knows..
I don't believe it was for collecting taxes either, sounds inappropriate.

Ratszinger
20th June 2021, 09:39
Quite obviously it's where they gathered all the specific rock and ingredients to build their walls with! Think about it! They made them, a polymer or cement tech now long forgotten because they sure didn't carry those boulders up or roll them to where they sit! I think they look melted for a reason, and that is because at one time it was a slurry mix or putty that later set up hard! For that matter the burn marks on some rocks indicate to me they were heated, probably with that 'GOLD Disc' to the sun that the Spaniards took down and melted! What was that pedestal stone for if not to control the movements of the big disc so they could turn it to an array of other smaller gold discs, (also found all over by the by some hand held types) and since gold polished to reflect the sun like a disc transfers 100% of the energy not losing one bit of the heat or efficiency it would have been directed anywhere they needed it, even into a crack into a corner! They were probably setting up the mix with heat and light like your dental office does today when he fills your tooth only these guys? They crowned a mountain! They thought bigger than just using the stuff for teeth I guess!