Machu Picchu: What They Found Underground Should NOT Exist!

Stimulus mind

Well-known member
  • Feb 27, 2021
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    "Archaeological heritage" එක රැක ගන්න එකයි, වැඩියෙන් 'profit' හොයන එකයි කියන කාරණා දෙක හරියට බැලන්ස් කරගන්න බැරි වුණාම එන ප්‍රශ්ණ තමයි ඉතින් ඕවා. :dull: මහා අපරාදයක් ඉතින් ඔය වගේ වටින ප්ලේස් එකකට පොඩි හරි හානියක් වෙනවා නම් ඔය එයාර්පෝර්ට් එක නිසා. 😑
     

    topkollek

    Well-known member
  • May 22, 2014
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    ┬┴┬┴┤(·_├┬┴┬┴
    Summary of the Video

    The YouTube video (uploaded 11 February 2026 by the channel StellarInsights42, runtime approximately 20 minutes) is titled “Scientists Scanned Machu Picchu: What They Found Underground Should NOT Exist!” It employs a sensationalist style typical of “hidden history” content, framing recent scientific work as revolutionary discoveries that challenge conventional understanding of Inca engineering and imply a possible cover-up tied to modern development.

    Key points covered, following the video’s own timestamps:

    • 2023 Yale DNA study: Analysis of 34 individuals buried at Machu Picchu showed diverse genetic ancestry, including substantial Amazonian components, indicating the site housed retainers/servants drawn from across the Inca Empire rather than solely local populations.
    • 2024 LiDAR scans: Alleged discovery of 12 previously undocumented structures in restricted or jungle-covered zones, suggesting the known citadel is only part of a larger complex.
    • 2025 geological findings: Confirmation of a 175 km “X”-shaped intersection of fault lines beneath the site, chosen deliberately for earthquake resistance; claims that 60 % of the city’s infrastructure (foundations, drainage channels) lies underground and remains functional.
    • Astronomical precision: The Intihuatana stone is aligned within 3° of true north and functions as an advanced solar calendar.
    • 2026 airport controversy: Peru’s sudden fast-tracking of the Chinchero International Airport (capacity up to 8 million passengers/year), which the video links to the need to “pave over” functioning Inca terraces by 2027, citing Odebrecht corruption history, ignored warnings from Yale/Cambridge/Japanese scientists, and the timing after 15 years of delays.
    The narrative concludes by questioning why these revelations coincide with accelerated tourism infrastructure and suggests Peru may be rushing development to obscure or destroy evidence of advanced ancient knowledge.

    Is the content true?

    The video is partially accurate but heavily sensationalised and misleading in presentation, chronology, and implications. A fact-check of the core claims, drawing from peer-reviewed sources and reputable reporting (as of February 2026), yields the following:

    • Yale DNA study (2023): Entirely factual. Published in Science Advances (July 2023), the genome-wide analysis of 34 retainers confirmed high genetic diversity, with roughly one-third showing significant Amazonian ancestry. This supports historical accounts that the Inca relocated specialists and servants empire-wide. No “unknown pattern” anomaly; it aligns with and expands known Inca administrative practices.
    • LiDAR “12 hidden structures” (claimed 2024): Based on real work, but misdated. Drone-mounted LiDAR surveys at the nearby Chachabamba ceremonial complex (within the Machu Picchu National Park) identified approximately 12 small structures and water channels; the primary study appeared in the Journal of Archaeological Science in 2022. No major new Machu Picchu-specific LiDAR revelations were reported in 2024–2025 in scientific literature.
    • Fault-line “X” and earthquake engineering (claimed 2025): The intersecting fault system (some lineaments up to 175 km) and Inca placement of Machu Picchu atop it were documented in a 2019 study by Brazilian geologist Rualdo Menegat. The choice likely aided quarrying and may have conferred seismic resilience. Not a 2025 confirmation.
    • 60 % underground infrastructure: Long-established engineering fact, cited since at least the 1990s by civil engineer Kenneth Wright. The visible ruins sit atop extensive subsurface drainage, foundations, and crushed-rock layers that have kept the site stable for 600 years. It is not an “invisible city” or unexplained mystery.
    • Intihuatana alignment: The stone’s cardinal-point orientation and solar-calendar function are well-documented; modern GPS measurements confirm near-true-north alignment within a few degrees. This reflects sophisticated Inca astronomy but is not a recent or anomalous discovery.
    • Chinchero International Airport: The project is real and highly controversial. Construction has faced repeated delays since 2018 due to funding, environmental, and corruption concerns (including historical Odebrecht links in Peruvian infrastructure). As of mid-February 2026, reliable sources (BBC, Peruvian government statements) report the airport is still targeted for late 2027—not suddenly “fast-tracked” in February 2026 as the video asserts. Capacity is planned for several million passengers annually, raising legitimate fears of overtourism and impacts on the Sacred Valley, but there is no credible evidence linking airport approval to suppressing archaeological scans or “paving over” Machu Picchu’s core terraces. Warnings from archaeologists about increased visitor pressure exist but are not newly “ignored” in 2026.
    Overall assessment All major scientific elements are grounded in genuine research; the Inca demonstrated remarkable engineering and organisational skill, which the video correctly highlights. However, the content distorts timelines (shifting 2019–2022 work to 2024–2025), exaggerates the novelty and “impossibility” of the findings, and fabricates a conspiracy narrative around the airport without supporting evidence. No peer-reviewed source or official Peruvian statement supports the idea that discoveries were hidden or that development is a deliberate cover-up.

    The video is best viewed as entertainment that popularises real archaeology while adding unsubstantiated drama. For reliable information, consult primary sources such as the 2023 Science Advances paper, Kenneth Wright’s engineering studies, or updates from Peru’s Ministry of Culture and UNESCO.
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,825
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    "Archaeological heritage" එක රැක ගන්න එකයි, වැඩියෙන් 'profit' හොයන එකයි කියන කාරණා දෙක හරියට බැලන්ස් කරගන්න බැරි වුණාම එන ප්‍රශ්ණ තමයි ඉතින් ඕවා. :dull: මහා අපරාදයක් ඉතින් ඔය වගේ වටින ප්ලේස් එකකට පොඩි හරි හානියක් වෙනවා නම් ඔය එයාර්පෝර්ට් එක නිසා. 😑
    Currently they limit the number to the main site itself. We just got a one full day ticket and it takes at least half a day to cover the main site. We started at 5.30AM from Aguas Calientes where we stayed for two nights. 30m min shuttle bus to Machu Picchu site, included with the ticket.
    Also we did the trek to Inti-Punku (the Sun Gate).