10 Most Incredible Discoveries Found In The Middle Of Nowhere

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From a Neanderthal flute to a creepy abandoned Russian air base, and even a piece of the moon! Here are 10 of the most incredible things ever found in the middle of nowhere!

#incrediblediscoveries #amazingdiscoveries #hiddendiscoveries #americaneye
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Number 10. The flute. ‘Nobody knows what it sounded like’.
Blow it.

TheGreatest
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Believe it or not my dad had found 3 M22 light tank turrets(or atleast they looked like it) around 2 years later while I was wandering in the forest I found a m22 I’m still surprised it survived so long without being found. It’s intact and believe it or not it still runs and we use it for towing/work when we go out there

imcoolerthanu
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Me and my wife Kitty pushed the like button and the subscribe and we love this video of her new

briangeeslin
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Thank you for your Channel update God bless you

thomasrobertson
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i cant belive it that the flute is on this channel cuz slovenia are like one of the smallest countries and im slovenian (location of the flute's discovery place is: Jama Divje Babe aka Cave of Wild woman [i think] )

AxelotlPlayz
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That metallic blue on the Bees is a beautiful color!

brycex
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This dude talks so fast he could get a job as an auctioneer if this one ever stalls out. 😂

ratgirl
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When I was a kid, maybe 12 years old, I was out with my 2 nieces and 2 nephews at the local playground near where they lived. The playground also had a pond next to it that wasn't all that deep. Was just around the beginning of winter so we did have our coats with us. We were walking around the pond, and noticed something with a wooden handle just out of reach in the pond stick out of the water like an inch. It didn't look like a stick because it was too smooth. We ran back to the house and got something like hockey sticks, and got the thing out of the water

It was an Axe made of red cherry wood for the handle, that belonged to the city fire department from the 1800s. We don't know how long it had been there, or what, and it wasn't damaged like it was in there long... who knows if it was used in a crime of some sort lol my brother hung it above his tv's after we cleaned it up

TechX
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A number of years ago i was walking along the railroad line to port Tampa that runs near my house just kinda eyeballing the roadbed when i found a whole fossil clam

mikebodler
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As a little girl, I played outside a lot. We had 5 acres. I would play in the ditches of the dirt roads and find cool round rocks with stars on them!!! I found fossilized sea biscuits!! Still have them!

ineedanewname
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#2 is heartbreaking. All thoes beautiful aircraft, you would think rather than letting them rot they would give them an overhaul, and an upgrade package.

Highice
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As far as the Neanderthals that might not be an instrument at all very well may be used for hunting you would think a couple notes would mimic some kind of bird or animal

mikerichards
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In 3:20 is one Bulgarian lev. Greetings from Bulgaria mate! Love your videos!

NaPoFeN
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I really like the video you put out. Keep up the good work

mikecampingforfun
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When I was a kid, I found a layer of sandstone that had all kinds of little skeletons of old small aquatic plants and animals. I collected them but I have since lost track of them. I went back there a few years ago and it was all gone.

thom
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IAM NEW AND I SUB I LIKE THIS CHANEL SO MUHC

Μαζου
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If you really want to know how it sounds get somebody with a laser scanner and then have them 3D printed

loganr
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I am in love with your summary, your good I love you

Danshudbetigtig
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I wasn’t aware Madagascar is “far from civilization.”

sharonkaczorowski
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In my early 20's, freediving on the west edge of DRUMMOND ROCK, LEEMAN, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, I found the steel prow of a [ estimated] 30-40 ft vessel. It was then an isolated area north of Perth having had no human activity prior to the then beginning lobster fishing, a few years before. My father being one of the early pioneers of the fishery. [ a town [ now established] street was named after him . I have lost this artifact over the years [ I'm now 81] but have not been able to connect it, the artifact with the lobster industry. The only possible human activity in the area could have been related to WW 2 or even earlier the Dutch exploration of the coast [ e.g. Abrolhos Islands/ Batavia massacre] . To my knowledge, no records exist of the loss of a steel frame vessel of this size. Just about all lobster boats out of Fremantle were
built of Jarrah timber, clinker and carvel.

GARY-ksqc