1600's Spanish Outlaw Pedro Nevarez lost treasure cave in New Mexico
1600's Spanish Outlaw Pedro Nevarez lost treasure cave in New Mexico

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Cool . Nice story and the letters you came up with were awesome. :O)
These stories are only a little true. Sounds like the Padre La Rue.
AWESOME CONTENT BROTHER!!!! THANK YOU FOR SHARING ππΌππΌππΌ
Has anyone tried to find the old mining claim records?
Chato is used for people with flat and wide nose.
Appreciate the story !!
He Was Of Mexican Decent Yaqui Blood witch is Native Mexican witch Is Mexica native people of the land thatβs how the continent got its name from the native people for those of you who donβt know which is the majority Mexico did not start in the late 1600s because the natives already had the Mexican Name please learn North American history before you teach on it!!!π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―π―ππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏππΏ
Before the illegal gringos show up. Lol Mexican native American praud
I have heard of him, he was Apache.
It is very evident that Mexicans always get belittled or set aside from being the warriors that we always have been. He is Indian not Mexican okay his name is Spanish & so is his nickname but he is Indian make that make sence duhhhπ€£ππππ
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There certainly, were no types of guns other than black powder single shots of early Spanish order. And, not many at that.
Pronounced : Hornada del Muerta Translation: journey of death. Rich, poor, servant or master your chances of surviving the journey were equal due to the conditions. There are some great books on the subject.
Sounds like a n inside job?}
Sorry but Mexican or Apache β¦ Mexicans are native Americans just the same. We call each other cousins everyone assumes bcz itβs a Spanish lady name that your Mexican. Smh
Great that you are sharing this one. Your Lost Adams video was spot-on with one particular account, but this one is a bit mixed/crossed with what I’m familiar with. I lived down there and have been to Ben Brown’s hole, in the Organs, Caballos, etc. The cable Ben Brown used to climb in his hole is still there, attached to the Cedar (it is not cut down). You can see the scrape of his one-man bucket line operation on the lip of the cave. What only locals know is that there were other signs, including "king’s heads" in that same area. There is a very nice spring that had water and frogs even at the end of an 8-year drought one canyon over. The hottest gold mine in the county was actually a couple hills over. Nevarez and his bunch roamed a lot of local mountains. I have waybills for Organs, Caballos, and even into present-day Texas. When you say "mule" you really should be saying "string of mules" – an "atajo" is a whole group. This means the treasures are much larger than you may think. For someone who seems to not have lived down there for decades, you actually did a really good job. It’s just a whole ‘nother world to see some of this stuff yourself – but vids like yours can get the journey of research started! There’s a picture of the main Guadalupe glyph at Ben Brown’s hole in my book, as well as a complete Waybill translation for one of the sites (cut the gold with an axe).
Inspiration for the movie "Chato’s Land"?
Good, appropriate visual images provided synchronously with storyline. Β
Kudos for that… it is rare with informational videos.
The road along the Rio Grande is called Camino Real.