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00:03Teotihuacan, Mexico, a 2,000 year old mega city built around one of the largest pyramids on the
00:12planet. Teotihuacan is remarkable and unique. The scale of it, its degree of planning are really
00:19phenomenal. Today, teams are investigating inside the city's many pyramids, revealing gruesome
00:27discoveries. We think they are buried alive. And unearthing hidden treasures. But what
00:39were these massive pyramids for? Who built them? And why was this once great city abandoned
00:46just 900 years after it was built? Blowing the pyramids apart will reveal the hidden clues
00:55inside these ancient wonders. Their secret tunnels and sacrificial burial chambers, exposing
01:04the dark secrets at the heart of this mysterious city. The ancient city of Teotihuacan, an archaeological
01:23gem in the heart of Mexico. Incredibly, this single site was once home to 100,000 people. Giant
01:34pyramids tower over the city center, lined up along a central avenue. The remains of government
01:43buildings sit alongside, surrounded by the homes of the elite. And in the fields beyond lies evidence
01:53of ancient suburbs that stretch out for miles. This sprawling metropolis was built 1,000 years
02:00before the ancient Aztecs rose up. But nobody knows for sure who the Teotihuacan were, or why
02:10just 900 years later, this civilization seemingly vanished. Teotihuacan was the biggest city in the Americas
02:18in the first half of the first millennium. But there's still a lot we have to learn about
02:25the Teotihuacanos. Today, teams of archaeologists use advanced scanning and forensic technologies
02:32to reveal hidden clues and unearth Teotihuacan's deepest secrets. David Carballo has been studying
02:41this ancient civilization for 18 years. He believes the best way to understand who the Teotihuacano
02:49were is to explore the city's ritual landscape that flanks its main road, the Street of the Dead.
02:57You have to imagine back in classic period times, 1500 years ago or so, there probably would
03:02have been people gathered in the Street of the Dead. And from just about anywhere in the city,
03:06you could see rituals. The most important ritual structures on the street are Teotihuacan's
03:13three massive pyramids. The largest is also the oldest. The ancient Mexicans built this
03:22vast shrine around the time Jesus was alive, and some believe they dedicated it to the sun.
03:31The pyramid of the sun is a man-made mountain, clad in a layer of cement and stone which gives
03:39shape
03:39to its rough heart. Millions of tons of earth and sand pile up layer upon layer. On the outside, 248
03:53cut stone steps lead all the way to its towering peak, over 200 feet above the city. The sheer scale
04:04of this stone Goliath shows just how important religion was to the mysterious civilization that
04:11founded this city. David believes the ancient Mexican priests climbed the pyramid at key
04:25times in the celestial calendar, so they could be closer to their sun god.
04:34So we are now at the summit of the sun pyramid. We're on top of the world as far as
04:38that goes
04:39right here into the Teotihuacan Valley.
04:47The sun pyramid would have been one of the most spectacular monuments of the ancient world.
04:53We have a lot of imagery that's suggestive of fire rituals happening in the sun pyramid.
04:57The sorts of rituals which would not only commemorate big calendar endings, but also some sort of accession
05:03to office events. So it would be a real place of spectacle and pomp.
05:10The earliest Teotihuacano needed height to worship their god.
05:15But surprisingly, the pyramids built by later generations were relatively short.
05:22Why?
05:25David believes that the Teotihuacano were a civilization capable of significant cultural change.
05:33Including the invention of a new cult, to worship a different god.
05:39This is the feathered serpent, which gives the pyramid its name.
05:44You can see the rattle elements telling you that this is a rattlesnake.
05:48And then also the feathered elements on the body, that this is the feathered serpent.
05:54The Teotihuacano came to believe that the feathered serpent created the world.
05:59And in 200 AD, to honor their newly elevated god, they constructed a work of unsurpassed complexity.
06:09Teotihuacano is the origins of this god, at least as a primary god, who completely decorated a pyramid.
06:16And what it really represents is a new effort on part of the Teotihuacano to highlight this god.
06:23The outside of the feathered serpent pyramid is stunning.
06:27But it's the inside that truly takes the breath away.
06:33Instead of a simple pile of mud, the core of this building is a complex man-made honeycomb of rock
06:40and mortar.
06:43Five distinct layers of construction are bound by thick walls.
06:51Rubble fills the spaces between, creating modular cells.
06:56They come together to make huge, solid building blocks.
07:01This advanced design suggests that Teotihuacano's building skills were evolving in step with their changing religion.
07:14But why did they create such complexity in a part of the pyramid that would never be seen?
07:21David believes the reasons were practical, not ceremonial.
07:27The geometric design made the core of the pyramid super strong.
07:33The ancient Mexicans could then cement over 400 giant carved heads to the outside,
07:38without the whole structure collapsing.
07:43These are beautiful sculptures and the fact that there are so many of them on all four facades of this
07:48building
07:49attest to the immense amount of labor that went into constructing this monument.
07:56The feathered serpent pyramid displays precision engineering.
08:00To build this complex modular design, the Teotihuacano had to create a completely new way of constructing their pyramids,
08:08using four distinct building materials.
08:14The first material was wooden posts, used to mark out a precisely aligned grid and create a sturdy scaffold.
08:25Then they clad this wooden skeleton with mud mortar and volcanic stone,
08:31to build a honeycomb of strong structural walls.
08:36They packed the cells with more volcanic rock.
08:39Super strong, but too rough to be used on the outside of the building.
08:46Finally, they reserve their finest material for the exterior.
08:51High quality slabs of stone decorated with elaborate sculptures.
09:00This new religion of the feathered serpent was groundbreaking and incredibly significant,
09:06going on to influence both the Mayan and Aztec civilizations.
09:10It is at Teotihuacan where we see the major origins of this cult to this deity,
09:16who then becomes important within Mesoamerica.
09:21Invigorated by their new religion, the Teotihuacano put their advanced building skills to good use.
09:28They provided their growing population with a perfectly geometrical city grid of buildings and homes.
09:38And deep below the pyramids, archaeologists have also discovered secret tunnels.
09:45Could these be evidence of a bloody ritual practice?
09:58In Mexico, investigators are unraveling the secrets of a 2,000 year old mystery.
10:05Why was the ancient pyramid city of Teotihuacan built?
10:13Archaeologist Sergio Gomez Chavez is searching the city's giant pyramids for clues.
10:18He believes one key is to understand how they were used.
10:23The excavations are going to be very important to understand a lot about the cosmovision and the religion of the
10:32ancient Mesoamerican peoples,
10:34and particularly Teotihuacan.
10:37The largest pyramid in Teotihuacan hides a surprising secret.
10:45Directly beneath the pyramid of the sun, archaeologists unearthed a tunnel in the bedrock.
10:52First, they thought it was a natural cave, until they hid a carved out chamber.
10:59And beyond it, the remnants of 17 thick, man-made walls built to block access to the tunnel.
11:06At the very end of the tunnel, they found an elaborate chamber, carved in the shape of a clover.
11:14Whatever this subterranean vault was designed to hold, it was meant to be locked away for eternity, buried under millions
11:23of tons of rock.
11:28Now, the tunnel lies empty. Ancient robbers most likely stripped it bare hundreds of years ago.
11:36But the discovery under the sun pyramid was just the beginning.
11:45Today, Sergio is exploring a tunnel he's recently uncovered under the feathered serpent pyramid.
11:52This time, the tunnel appears untouched by thieves.
12:17Sergio and his team have had to remove 1,000 tons of soil.
12:21It was probably put there by the Teotihuacan to seal the tunnel.
12:27But the effort has been worth it.
12:29Because under the debris, he's found a treasure trove of ancient artifacts.
12:44Today, the team is carefully removing soil from two ancient pots.
12:50Nobody has touched these objects at least in 1,800 or maybe 2,000 years.
12:56But it's really surprising the quantity and the quality of many of the materials that were deposited in this place.
13:03After 2,000 years in soil, the ceramic is incredibly fragile.
13:12It's interesting because it's complete.
13:16Sergio has already uncovered thousands of artifacts like this one.
13:22Marks on the pots offer tantalizing hints of how they were carried.
13:36Sergio believes that all these rare objects are offerings to the gods.
13:42But was this tunnel a tomb like those inside the ancient Egyptian pyramids or a shrine?
13:51So far, Sergio has found no evidence of human burials.
13:56And dark marks at the very end of the tunnel suggest this apparent dead end looked very different in the
14:02past.
14:08The first section of the tunnel runs nearly 50 feet under the pyramid.
14:14To a cross-shaped chamber beneath the steps.
14:18But then it cuts down again into the bedrock.
14:21Towards the center of the pyramid.
14:24And opens out into a second, much deeper chamber.
14:31Sergio believes the marks reveal this chamber was once filled with water.
14:37Making it a religious shrine.
14:39A gateway to the gods of the underworld.
14:43We are in the most sacred place of all Teotihuacan.
14:47What we see here is the mark of the level that water reached at some point in time.
14:53Because the inframundo is an aquatic place.
14:56We are already in what is the true inframundo.
14:59Today, the water table is over 50 feet below ground.
15:04Two thousand years ago, it was much higher.
15:08Filling the final chamber with water.
15:11Forming a subterranean lake.
15:14A replica of the mythical underworld.
15:16Where the Teotihuacan would make offerings to the gods.
15:24For the cosmogonic mesoamerican thinking, there are three levels in the cosmos.
15:30The inframundo.
15:31The terrain.
15:33And above, the celestial region.
15:35These three levels of the cosmos are interconnected.
15:39But the inframundo is a very special place, very particular.
15:43Because it is the place where life is generating.
15:47The ancient Mexicans even placed fool's gold in the walls of the tunnel.
15:52Which recreated the night sky when they passed with their torches.
15:57You can see how it shines here.
16:02Tunnels under the pyramids have taught historians much about the religion of the Teotihuacan.
16:09And perhaps why the pyramids were built.
16:15But high above the tunnels, excavations into the main body of the pyramids have revealed a darker secret.
16:25Human remains.
16:28Who were these people?
16:30And could they be proof of ritual sacrifice?
16:43Archeologists at Mexico's largest ancient city.
16:47Are slowly assembling the pieces of a monster puzzle.
16:52The once powerful civilization that built these 2,000 year old pyramids disappeared without a trace.
17:00They left little evidence of who they were and how they lived.
17:06Anthropologist Saburo Sugiyama is examining bones unearthed from the ancient city of Teotihuacan.
17:14Human bones tell us a lot of things.
17:16Male, female, how many years they had when they died.
17:21How they lived, how they died.
17:24Saburo believes these bones may be evidence of gruesome human sacrifice.
17:30The biggest clue comes from how these bones were found.
17:35Archeologists stumbled across them while tunneling deep inside the body of the pyramids.
17:43Within the feathered serpent pyramid, inside the central cell, is a dark secret.
17:5120 skeletons, almost completely intact, carefully arranged in what looks like a symbolic pattern.
18:00And they're not alone.
18:03In total, over 260 bodies are built into the fabric and foundation of the building.
18:10The pyramid is a mass grave.
18:14A truly gruesome find.
18:18But the dead can yield valuable clues to the civilization that lived here 2,000 years ago.
18:30Who were these people built into the pyramid?
18:37Suburo hunts for tell-tale traces among the bones.
18:48Suburo hunts for tell-tale traces among the bones.
18:52And materials associated to them.
18:55Like this ornament he had on his chest.
18:59You can see the real human maxillas, upper jaws.
19:04Suburo believes the jawbone necklace is a war trophy.
19:10And marks the man as a soldier.
19:14The skeleton was found with a further 89 soldiers, split up into groups of 18.
19:22And there's more.
19:27At the center of the pyramid lie the 20 carefully arranged bodies.
19:32They are surrounded by precious possessions, suggesting they were members of the social elite.
19:38In long trenches on either side lie two rows of 18 soldiers, flanked by rows of eight women.
19:49The pattern repeats around the edge of the pyramid.
19:54Rows of necklaced soldiers, bordered by rows of women.
19:59A cross-section of society entombed in what looks like a sacred symmetry.
20:04But is this simply a graveyard or were these people ceremonially murdered?
20:12Saburo searches the bones for evidence of human sacrifice at Teotihuacan.
20:18Here, the jaw bones.
20:20You can see they cut the head.
20:24Then they left the cut marks on the hair.
20:28Incisions on the jaw show that the Teotihuacanos slit the throat of this sacrifice.
20:35And there's evidence of even more gruesome execution practices.
20:41Some of these victims may have been buried alive.
20:45Their hand was tied like this.
20:49So obviously they are not willing to die.
20:53We think they are buried alive very probably.
20:57Because otherwise you don't need to tie the bodies.
21:04Two hundred and sixty people in total were sacrificed to build the Feathered Serpent pyramid.
21:11But were these people local?
21:13Or outsiders?
21:17Saburo finds answers by analyzing the bones of the dead.
21:22Throughout our lives the water we drink is locked inside the chemistry of our growing teeth and bones.
21:29And because water alters from place to place,
21:33Saburo can extract the ancient chemicals to work out exactly where these people grew up and lived.
21:42They are not Teotihuacan people.
21:47People came from different regions.
21:50Including the Oaxaca areas.
21:54The Pacific Ocean areas.
21:56And also Guatemala area.
21:59That's the possibilities.
22:01Some of the high status skeletons seem to be from Michoacan.
22:06250 miles away.
22:09The soldiers with jaw bone necklaces from Guatemala.
22:12900 miles away.
22:15Saburo believes that these victims may have been sacrificed because they were outsiders.
22:21So why would anyone travel up to a thousand miles to Teotihuacan with the threat of bloody sacrifice waiting for
22:29them?
22:31The city was really an awesome city.
22:34Very attractive for many people.
22:37A huge amount of people came here to see the rituals and economically benefit.
22:48But what was the source of this city's immense wealth?
22:54Strange artifacts arranged alongside the sacrificed could offer clues.
23:13Two thousand years ago, Mexico was home to a thriving cosmopolitan city.
23:21But where did the wealth come from to build its pyramids and vast urban spread?
23:29Archeologist David Carballo finds fragments of an unusual volcanic glass called obsidian all over the city.
23:38Today, he's hunting down a local source for this rare rock.
23:43It has this beautiful golden green hue to it.
23:47It's a tremendous volcanic glass and the Teotihuacanos used it for making tools, weapons.
23:54This was their primary cutting stone.
23:57The massive amount of obsidian found in Teotihuacan suggests it was a hugely important commodity.
24:06Buried within the feathered serpent pyramid, alongside the hundreds of bodies sacrificed here.
24:13Archeologists found thousands of obsidian objects, arrow points and spearheads, and razor-thin blades.
24:23Perhaps workmen's tools, but none show any signs of use.
24:28And at the center, a collection of mysterious figurines.
24:34These obsidian pieces weren't the personal possessions of the dead, but ritual items made especially as an offering.
24:42A clue that this civilization prized obsidian above all else.
24:52David suspects the city's economy was boosted by a vast local supply of top-grade obsidian glass.
25:02His colleague, Alejandro Pastrana, is tracking down evidence of ancient passages inside this modern obsidian mine.
25:12You can see an Hispanic tunnel that was founded for this modern tunnel.
25:21So these were carved out a long time ago?
25:24Yes.
25:25Like, in Teotihuacan times?
25:27In Teotihuacan times.
25:28Uh-huh.
25:30Alejandro guides David to an obsidian seam he believes was mined by the Teotihuacano.
25:36And here is a good obsidian blocks, high quality.
25:45Wow, that's a great piece.
25:47Yeah, so it's that green gold hue, and just look where it's freshly struck.
25:53Perfect glass.
25:54Can you find this quality all across Mexico?
25:57No, this quality is only at this source.
26:02Mm-hmm. So this is one of the major sources of obsidian for Teotihuacan.
26:06Exactly.
26:07David believes the obsidian found here produced the finest blades in Mesoamerica.
26:14The Teotihuacan had exclusive access to the source and grew rich by mining and crafting the rare glass into valuable
26:22tools for export.
26:25I will show you the technique that has been done for hundreds of years.
26:32I will try to make a platform.
26:37One.
26:38Two.
26:40Arriba.
26:42So this is very brittle and sharp, and you can see how clean these edges are.
26:50The Teotihuacano used rocks to tap obsidian blocks.
26:55Get the angles right, and the glass fractures off into smaller and sharper sections.
27:01And eventually you could make something like a knife or a really large spear point out of this.
27:08This is the sharpest edge that you can get in nature.
27:13Just cutting leather like that.
27:15It's like a knife through butter.
27:17So this is sharper than surgical steel.
27:21The ancient Mexicans didn't know how to forge metal.
27:25They relied on obsidian for simple blades and weapons.
27:29There's no question that this was part of the backbone of Teotihuacan's economy.
27:35David believes Teotihuacan was a trading hub for the mining and manufacture of obsidian blades.
27:42But this miracle blade did have a limitation.
27:46One that made the people here even richer.
27:50The fact that it's brittle and it loses its edge quickly means that there was continually a market for it.
27:58Obsidian's fragile nature supercharged the market for this precious resource.
28:05David has found evidence that suggests obsidian workshops operated right across the city.
28:12Craftsmen would have been in constant production, making a steady stream of replacement obsidian tools and weapons.
28:22The Teotihuacan had so much obsidian they could export their tools and weapons far and wide.
28:29They started building roads to reach distant cities.
28:33Always choosing the fastest path and letting nothing stand in their way.
28:40They established a huge trade network, spreading their obsidian over 1,000 miles from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
28:53As demand for obsidian grew, more and more people came to the city and its population exploded.
29:08Obsidian bankrolled the city of Teotihuacan.
29:12But who were the local ruling kingpins filling their coffers with cash?
29:18This recent discovery, a bizarre family of statues, offers a vital new clue.
29:37Mexico's mysterious pyramid city is slowly giving up its secrets.
29:43Grizzly finds have revealed this place was built on human sacrifice.
29:49And thousands of locally crafted blades show how the city was bankrolled.
29:56But for decades, archaeologists were stumped as to who ruled the Teotihuacan.
30:03Were they a monarchy like the Aztecs and Maya?
30:09For archaeologist Julie Gazzola, local design suggests a different story.
30:14In my area, you have all the time the representation of the king.
30:20We don't have this in Teotihuacan.
30:25Teotihuacan imagery shows religious icons and everyday life.
30:29But there are no images of royalty.
30:33So who was in charge here if it wasn't a monarch?
30:38Julie believes a recent find from under the feathered serpent pyramid could be a crucial clue to solving this mystery.
30:50Buried under 1,000 tons of rubble.
30:5540 feet beneath the pyramid.
30:57In the heart of the most sacred place in Teotihuacan,
31:02archaeologists found four greenstone statuettes.
31:06Three women and a small naked man.
31:10Two of the figures stood under the apex of the pyramid.
31:13Looking up towards the sunrise.
31:16These simple statues are priceless pieces in an archaeological puzzle.
31:21Perhaps they are direct links to the rulers of Teotihuacan.
31:31Julie believes the ritual location of the statues suggests they are offerings to the gods of the underworld.
31:39The figures are unique.
31:42This is the biggest offering in Teotihuacan and in other parts of Mesoamerica.
31:49More treasures were found alongside the statues.
31:53We have dead ornaments and beads.
31:57And you have also mirrors.
32:01Julie believes all these ancient relics were commissioned and placed in the tunnel by the leaders of Teotihuacan.
32:08To celebrate the birth of the city out of the sacred underworld.
32:14This is not a burial.
32:16This is an offering, a biggest offering in association with the construction of the city.
32:24For Julie, it's the exotic green stone used to produce these luxury objects
32:29that gives her the biggest clue to who the rulers were.
32:35We don't find jade around Teotihuacan, but in the Maya area in Guatemala.
32:43So they imported the green stone, the jade.
32:50The Teotihuacano made many of their ritual pieces from foreign green stones.
32:58Julie believes these imported goods prove that an elite group of Teotihuacan traders got so rich,
33:05they were able to take control of the city.
33:09The entire place was ruled by businessmen and women in place of kings and queens.
33:20Buildings surrounding the pyramids give an indication of the extravagant life of the city's leaders.
33:30This elite lived and governed among the many pyramids and temples at the very heart of Teotihuacan.
33:40Single-level structures, built around a central courtyard, provided spacious accommodation for wealthy traders.
33:49The elite could afford to cover the rough stone walls in expensive lime plaster and decorate them with elaborate murals.
34:01But over a mile away on the outskirts of the city, the poor built their own dwellings, using only the
34:08cheapest materials.
34:15Graves discovered underneath these workers' huts reveal a life of extreme poverty for those at the bottom of the social
34:22pile.
34:23This is a skeleton of a child with some disease on the skull, maybe due to deficiency in the food.
34:37There is a big difference in the kind of life that they have poor people and elite people.
34:49Horrendous living conditions likely caused malnutrition, infection and early death among the poor.
34:57In this city of traitors, the wealthy had the power and the poor were starving and desperate.
35:05The perfect cocktail for civil unrest.
35:09Could these scorch marks recently discovered on the city's wealthiest buildings finally reveal the secret to the fall of Teotihuacan?
35:302,000 years ago, Teotihuacan was the largest and busiest city in the Americas.
35:38Over 100,000 people lived here.
35:42From the super rich ruling traitors in the center to the dirt poor workers in the outskirts.
35:52Investigators dating artifacts found inside the city believe that this once great civilization shut down suddenly after just 900 years.
36:03But why?
36:06Archeologist David Carballo believes a crucial clue can be found at the most ornate building in Teotihuacan.
36:13The Feathered Serpent Pyramid.
36:16Here we have feathered serpent heads sculpted out of stone.
36:20They're tenons, meaning they would have stuck into the facade of the building.
36:25Originally, there were over 400 pristine heads.
36:29But at the back of the pyramid, the sculptures look very different today.
36:34So here on this one you can see that it's been defaced by knocking the snout off.
36:42So this one too seems to have been heavily damaged in the snout.
36:47David believes the damage to the heads is so similar it's suspicious.
36:52This damage doesn't look accidental.
36:54It's always the snouts that are knocked off.
36:58And so if you expect these to have sort of fallen haphazardly, you would expect breakage on other sides.
37:04So that suggests that there was some sort of cataclysmic event like some sort of factional dispute, conflict or maybe
37:11even a civil war.
37:14But was this conflict limited to a religious feud at the Feathered Serpent Pyramid?
37:21David searches the ruins of nearby elite buildings for further clues of destruction.
37:30Well, if you look over here, this has the original white and red stucco motifs, these interlocking scroll motifs.
37:37But then you see these footmarks right here in the corner that would have been from burning these structures.
37:44David is convinced these scorch marks are clear signs of deliberate arson.
37:49And he finds them on just about every building in this part of town.
37:55This is where there likely was some sort of wooden beam, a support beam for the roof.
38:00And since that was wood, with the burning, you ended up with this blackening with sooting the stucco.
38:08The layers of ash and burnt wood suggest a massive fire raged in the center of the city.
38:14The fire consumed all the elite and religious buildings.
38:17That there's burning in multiple rooms in multiple palatial and temple compounds suggests that this was a planned and coordinated
38:26event.
38:32I think this is really compelling evidence that those structures that were most associated with state power, be that religious
38:40or political, were targeted disproportionately in the burning of the city.
38:48If this destruction was deliberate, who did it?
38:52Was it an invasion by a rival civilization? Or was this an inside job?
39:00A crucial clue lies a mile from the center of Teotihuacan, in a field of scattered debris that was once
39:08the workers' suburbs.
39:10What we've found out here in our excavations is that there's no evidence of the sort of burning that we
39:15see in the center of the site.
39:16So that to us suggests that this isn't an attack from outside, rather the collapse happens from the inside out.
39:25David believes the impoverished workers rose up against their rulers in a social revolution.
39:34These people, who are the working class backbone of the city's economy, felt like the system was failing them.
39:40And so because of that, they rejected the system, and they took up arms and decided to sack their own
39:46city.
39:47In the seventh century, the disenfranchised poor rebelled.
39:53They burnt the city center in an inferno of heat and destruction.
40:00With the ruling elite of traitors wiped out, the city quickly fell into decline and was eventually abandoned.
40:09Teotihuacan is remarkable in terms of world history.
40:14It was a huge political capital, a huge economic hub, and also a pilgrimage center.
40:21And after the collapse, there's really nothing like Teotihuacan in Mesoamerica.
40:33Although the city had died, the legend of Teotihuacan lived on.
40:39It influenced the famous Maya civilization.
40:43And the Aztecs were so in awe of this place, they believed it could only have been made by the
40:49gods themselves.
40:54Today, archaeologists are slowly uncovering the secrets of this ritual landscape.
41:00With its hidden chambers, ceremonial tunnels, priceless buried artifacts,
41:07and gruesome pits filled with the bones of immigrants tragically drawn to this city of dreams.
41:15What amazing secrets could still lie locked inside the heart of this?
41:21The oldest megacity in the Americas.
41:44The oldest has been in the Americas.
41:53The oldest of the largest caves, latent cells, rlauses, in the Americas
41:56And in the Americas, these were the most powerful ones.
41:56Once it's been in the Americas, these were the most powerful ones.
41:56The most powerful ones have been developed in the Americas.
41:57The most powerful ones have been developed in the Americas.
41:57And I know this is a brief moment of time in the Americas.
41:58I want it.
42:02We've already got a 100% of power, so we've come to have to pass the Sims recipe.
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