Discover a Kayaking Adventure Just Outside of Las Vegas
There’s more to Vegas than The Strip. Kayak the crystal clear canyon waters of the Colorado River with Evolution Expeditions to discover the beautiful desert wilderness and learn about the environment, all just a short distance from Las Vegas.
Bikepacking Nevada, June 2019 BarYak com
Leaving Las Vegas,
Bikerafting down Black Canyon, Exploring Hot Springs, Pictographs Bikepacking Ghost Towns, Area 51 and Valley of Fire.
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States.
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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:
States of Consciousness & Levels of Civilization | Steven Greer Petaluma Workshop Pt. 2 | 2018-07-22
In Part 2 of this 4 part series, Dr. Greer covers, amongst others things:
- The Correlation between so-called Siddhis or Vedic powers in consciousness and ET technological abilities such as levitation, bi-locations, remote viewing, teleportation , materialization / dematerialization and more
- The Higher States of Consciousness - beyond Cosmic Consciousness to Unity Consciousness and beyond...
- How ET Technology Assisted Consciousness systems work
- How ET Consciousness Assisted Technologies operate
- The future phases of human civilization predicated on its progression through higher states of consciousness
- The stages of Conscious Evolution as we move from the current state of the world to a Level One peaceful civilization and into a new time of Enlightenment on Earth.
- What does Earth and human society look like in 500,000 years: The Vision of a World both enlightened and inter-stellar that is emerging all around us.
...and much more, all covered with simplicity by Dr. Steven Greer.
Part 3:
Find out more at
This Year @ NASA, 2012
Curiosity Has Landed, Flight of the Dragon, Antares Rolls and so much more...
City of Boulder City Council Meeting 04-16-19
Celebrating the 125th Anniversary of the US Board on Geographic Names: Traditions & Transitions
The 125th anniversary of the U.S. Board of Geographic Names was observed with a one-day symposium on geographic names. The Board was established by an executive order of President Benjamin Harrison on September 4, 1890, to standardize geographic names for federal government use. The Board is a federal body comprised of 10 member agencies and includes a Domestic and Foreign Names Committees and three Advisory Committees. Committee meetings are held regularly, and activities are reported annually.
For transcript and more information, visit
Global Water Dances 2015 - Ridgewood , New Jersey, USA - excerpts
Participating in Global Water Dances was a moment to honor the fragility of the Earth and focus on the state of the environment. It allowed us to improvise in an organic setting on the Ho-Ho-Kus Brook, a site once graced by Native Americans, spiritual, beautiful, and calming. The name Ho-Ho-Kus is derived from Native American terms evoking running water, a cleft in the rock; the word hohokes, which signifies the whistle of the wind against the bark of trees. The sound of the brook and waterfall was mesmerizing, creating a natural metronome which sparked improvisatory movement. As dancers, we embraced challenges offered by the landscape such as precarious balances on tree roots, branches, mud, stones, and in the cascading water itself. We were filmed by Goucher College/AOM dance student, Sarah Clark, who self-designed a major in the Expressive Arts. Working with various generations of dancers in an organic setting was like nature itself; some trees are saplings, some at full growth, other species not yet realizing their potential. The water is constant, feeding the wildlife which is diverse, ranging from birds, to frogs, turtles, deer, insects and fauna. Its musical and healing properties were apparent and the perfect backdrop to the trio.
Annie Hickman's Monarch butterfly wings were an instrumental inspiration, since part of the AOMDT's vast repertoire emphasizes the relationship between Man vs. Nature, and explores creation myth as well as beauty and legend. Climbing trees, ancient stone walls, embankments and stepping on stones as though they were lily pads was not only engaging but contemplative. Improvising and performing with Janette Dishuk and Courtney Karam was an experience in trust, understanding and mutual respect, something we all need to have for the earth so that we can sustain the health of the environment. AOMDT.org
Lynn Needle, RYT/500 is the Founder/Artistic Director of Art of Motion, Inc., a non-profit cultural and educational organization home to the Art of Motion Dance Theatre, an internationally recognized repertory company. A veteran of site-specific touring, Lynn has performed throughout the world in a multitude of indoor and outdoor theatres, at the foot of volcanoes, in bullfighting rings, federal cultural institutions such as the Library of Congress, in Zoos, and at countless Festivals, Parks and Galas. Needle is a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from College of Southern Nevada's Dance in the Dessert Festival and the Dance Magazine National ADCFA Award for Choreography.
The Art of Motion Dance Theatre (AOMDT) is committed to a unique artistic vision honoring legacies, celebrating collaboration and expanding creative boundaries. Lynn Needle, former soloist with Nikolais Dance Theatre, and co-artistic director Olivia Galgano, former principal with Ballet Russe have created original work on the company that has developed into a vast array of repertory honoring the complexities of dance as an art form. Their work is continually evolving, has a clear aesthetic base in the classical ballet and modern dance legacies with repertory featuring contemporary street dance. The synthesis of movement is unpredictable, theatrical and accessible; highly sophisticated yet street savvy.
Needle and Galgano continue the vision and commitment to mixing genres, multimedia and theatricality by collaborating with costume designer, Annie Hickman, lighting designer, Ruth Grauert, various conductors, musicians and composers who have created original scores for their work, and choreographic collaboration with former Pilobolus principal, Kent Lindemer.
Dr Steven Greer Contact and Higher States of Consciousness
Dr Steven Greer Contact and Higher States of Consciousness PART 1 OF 2 . Remastered audio From his Laughlin Nevada presentation back in of 2017 Steven shares his personal ufo/ET.
Dr Steven Greer Contact and Higher States of Consciousness PART 2 OF 2 REMASTERED.
Please visit: Best of World Puja: Higher States of Consciousness and Extraterrestrial Contact Dr. Greer will discuss the importance of higher states of consciousness.
Dr Steven Greer ☆ Higher States of Consciousness and Extraterrestrial Contact (NEW DISCLOSURE 2017) #DrStevenGreer #StevenGreer2017 #SiriusDisclosure #DrStevenGreerUFOAliens #StevengreerUnacknowl.
The Bigfoot Stories You've Never Heard #WeirdDarkness
I KNOW THE MUSIC IS TOO LOUD. Unfortunately I had to learn that after I'd already posted this and it had been up for a while. My other videos do not have the same problem.
SOURCE: Cabinet of Curiosities by Troy Taylor:
Check out the HauntingStories channel!
This episode is a collaboration with my friends and Haunting Stories. I’ll be telling you about Bigfoot – and over at Haunting Stories they’ve posted another video, with me narrating a continuation of this regarding the Minnesota Iceman! Be sure to check out their video right after you watch this one! This is Weird Darkness – where you’ll find creepypastas, ghost stories, unsolved mysteries, crytptids like Bigfoot, and other stories of the strange and bizarre. Feel free to share your own creepy story at WeirdDarkness.com, I might use it in a future episode! Now.. sit back, turn down the lights, and come with me into the Weird Darkness!
It all started with a bunch of footprints at a construction site. Or at least the modern-day fascination with “Bigfoot” did. Stories of hairy giants in the woods and wandering “wild men” had been a part of American lore for nearly two centuries by the time the nickname “Bigfoot” was coined in the late 1950s. But it was then, with the advent of television and the modern media, that chasing down giants in the woods became a national craze.
It was the spring of 1957 and a road construction project was underway near Bluff Creek in northern California. The project was run by a contractor named Ray Wallace and his brother, Wilbur. They hired thirty men that summer to work on the project and by late in the season, Wilbur Wallace reported that something had been throwing around some metal oil drums at the work site. When winter arrived that year, cold weather brought the work to a halt, even though only ten miles of road had been completed.
In early spring 1958, some odd tracks were discovered near the Mad River close to Korbel, California. Some of the locals believed they were bear tracks. As it happened, this was close to another work site that was managed by the Wallace brothers.
Later on that spring, work started up again on the road near Bluff Creek. A number of new men were hired, including Jerry Crew, who drove more than two hours each weekend so he could be home with his family. Ten more miles of road were constructed, angling up across the face of a nearby mountain. On August 3, 1958, Wilbur Wallace stated that something threw a seven-hundred-pound spare tire to the bottom of a deep gully near the work site. This incident was reported later in the month, after the discovery of the footprints.
On August 27, Jerry Crew arrived for work early in the morning and found giant, manlike footprints pressed into the dirt all around his bulldozer. He was at first upset by the discovery, thinking that someone was playing a practical joke on him, but then he decided to report what he found to Wilbur Wallace. At this point, the footprints had not been made public. That occurred on September 21, when Mrs. Jess Bemis, the wife of one of the Bluff Creek work crew, wrote a letter to Andrew Genzoli, the editor of a local newspaper. Genzoli published her husband's Big Foot story and caught the attention of others in the area. One of these was Betty Allen, a newspaper reporter who suggested in a late September column that plaster casts should be made of the footprints. She had already talked to local Native Americans and interviewed residents about hairy giants in the area. She convinced Genzoli to run other stories and letters about Bigfoot. This would be the beginning of a story that would capture the imagination of America.
On October 1 and 2, Jerry Crew discovered more tracks, very similar to the first ones. In response to the new discovery, two workers quit and Wilbur Wallace allegedly introduced his brother Ray to the situation for the first time, bringing him out to show him the tracks. On the day after the last tracks were found, Jerry Crew made plaster casts of the footprints, with help from his friend Bob Titmus and reporter Betty Allen. He was irritated that people were making fun of him and wanted to offer the casts as evidence that he wasn’t making the whole thing up. On October 5, Andrew Genzoli published his now-famous story about Bigfoot. It was picked up worldwide by the wire services, and soon the term was being used in general conversation.
This Year @ NASA, 2012
Curiosity Has Landed, Flight of the Dragon, Antares Rolls and so much more...
CU Boulder New Venture Challenge 10 Championships
Live at the Boulder Theater, the final five teams (Specdrums, Hasel, Beautibook, Cannibas Marketing Association, and Statehill) pitch to win $100k and the title of NVC10 winner! Special guest appearances by Dan Caruso and Brad Feld, discussing the why they support the New Venture Challenge and innovation and entrepreneurship at CU Boulder. Learn more at
Weather, Storm, Moving Clouds, Snow, Rain, Thunderstorm Part 16 of 17 - Nature of Western N America
thenatureexplorers.com
DESCRIPTION: The Nature Explorers creates naturalist cinéma-vérité style documentary videos, audio recordings, and photographs. This documentation serves as a record of the flora and fauna species inhabiting the ecosystems during the specific time frame and can be used in the future as a reference to how the ecosystems are constantly evolving as well as the affects on them by anthropogenic activities. These ecosystem videos, audio recordings, and photographs are presented in a format so they may be used for educational instruction and testing purposes as well as scientific study of the ecosystems, therefore narrations have been left out and classical music used in the background when no natural sound is available, ultimately leaving the videos for self interpretation, individual discovery, and for professors to explain or show as examples in a classroom setting. Expeditions usually take place in an area of five square miles over 7-21 days during which time the flora, fauna, geology, weather, and landscapes of the ecosystem are all documented. The Nature Explorers do not seek out, bait, or wait for species, filming only what is encountered while exploring the ecosystem on foot.
EXPEDITION LIST:
Dark Canyon Expedition, Utah/USA - May 2011
South Flaming Gorge Expedition, Utah/USA - May 2011
Ishawooa Expedition, Wyoming/USA - June 2011
Kooskooskia Expedition, Idaho/USA - June 2011
Hells Canyon Expedition, Idaho/USA - July 2011
Umatilla Expedition, Oregon/USA - July 2011
Ochoco Black Canyon Expedition, Oregon/USA - August 2011
Mt. Jefferson Expedition, Oregon/USA - September 2011
Yolly Bolly Expedition, California/USA - October 2011
Redwoods Temperate Rainforest Expedition, California/USA - January 2012
Siuslaw Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Oregon/USA - February 2012
Santiam Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Oregon/USA - March 2012
Olympic Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Washington/USA - April 2012
Wenatchee Expedition, Washington/USA - May 2012
Channeled Scablands Expedition, Washington/USA - May 2012
Kaniksu Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Washington/USA - June 2012
Kootenai Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Montana/USA - June 2012
Bob Marshall Temperate Rainforest Expedition, Montana/USA - July 2012
Lemhi Expedition, Idaho/USA - August 2012
Beaver Dam Slough Expedition, Idaho/USA - August 2012
Uinta Expedition, Utah/USA - September 2012
White River Expedition, Colorado/USA - September 2012
Collegiate Peaks Expedition, Colorado/USA - October 2012
El Rio De Las Animas Perdidas En Purgatorio Expedition, Colorado/USA - November 2012
Amistad Expedition, Texas/USA - March 2014
Chihuahuan Desert Expedition, Texas/USA - May 2014 - May 2016
President's Day at the Hoover Library
To celebrate President's Day 2013, Carl Christensen portrays 31st President, Herbert Hoover and Tim Walch discusses the newly completed six-volume biography of Herbert Hoover.
Bigfoot
So I've heard many different stories about how bigfoot can be real or be fake... I personally think if these sightings were going down for a very long time now...It will be hard to get a clan of wanna be sasquatch to dress up and hide/live out in the forests and caves of nearby mountains to create a more than a several decade hoax...unless evolution took place and really started to breed these types I can't say. This video explains some samples and verbal evidence that might change your mind in the way you think on bigfoot. I personally had a similar encounter in the state of az. I and my dad traveled up north to chill in the little snow we had during the winter. There is a cabin that my dads half brother owns and behind is a few acres of uncharted forest near the rim. We decided to hike up it and found some fresh droppings of some sort of animal but not too far. There was a giant footprint embedded into the snow and I have a picture somewhere I left 1000miles away. It looked like a big human foot.. that day I felt someone or something was watching we both got creeped out after we seen a bear like creature hide & ducked behind trees and shrubs...Still to this day I can't say what it was or what made that footprint...it surely cut our expedition short.. I can believe there is a form of human like bear such as bigfoot and yetis hiding away in the forests or the cold tundra. Thanks for Watching! If you like this video please thumbs up, subscribe or comment
History Made Vivid: The Interior Museum at 80
With the Interior Museum’s 80th anniversary in March 2018 comes the opportunity to reflect upon its innovative origins. Interior Secretary Harold Ickes envisioned the museum playing a key role at the new Interior headquarters, and when it opened in the midst of the Great Depression, it was a truly novel addition for a federal office building. Interior Museum Chief Curator Tracy Baetz will explore how one wing of the headquarters was popularly transformed into history made vivid. Get a glimpse of how state-of-the art exhibition techniques of the 1930s achieved groundbreaking results that highlighted what was important to the Department in the interwar period.
Chain Length, find the right chain length for your bike
How do you find the correct chain length for your bike?
Saul with explain how to determine the optimal chain length for your bike. Better Watch Saul
To find out how to actually replace your chain: see BICYCLE CHAIN REPLACEMENT
How to Raise Handlebars on a Bicycle
How to Raise Handlebars on a Bicycle. Part of the series: Bike Maintenance. Raising the handlebars on a bicycle depends on what type of bike you have and must also be done with different safety concerns in mind. Raise or lower the handlebars on your bicycle with advice from an experienced bicycle mechanic in this free video on bike maintenance. Read more:
Copyright Matters: Create an Adventure with Copyright
This program celebrated the way copyright inspires adventure and how adventure promotes copyright. While copyright might not be the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about taking an adventure, copyright and adventure actually go hand in hand. There was a focus on the impact copyright has on photographs, travel books, music, television and movies.
- Jeanne Fink is vice president and senior associate general counsel for the National Geographic Society.
- John Hessler is a cartographic specialist in the Geography and Map division and curator of Jay I. Kislak Collections of the Archaeology & History of the Early Americas at the Library of Congress.
- Andrea Sachs is a travel reporter for the Washington Post.
- Shodekeh is a beatboxer, hip-hop vocal percussionist and breath artist.
For transcript and more information, visit