Land of the Giants | Return to the Sacred Spirit Canyon - Ep 1

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Land of the Giants | Return to the Sacred Spirit Canyon - Ep 1
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This documentary series follows Carl Crusher and his son Kyle Ryder into a remote canyon located on private property bordering Zion National Park. Known as Sacred Spirit Canyon, the area is filled with ancient pottery shards, stone tools, and the remains of primitive dwelling sites scattered across the landscape. Much of this evidence remains untouched and undocumented.

The location sits at the heart of a region surrounded by consistent oral histories and legends of giants. From the canyons around Kanab and the depths of the Grand Canyon to the red sands of Nevada’s Lovelock Cave and north into the Uinta Basin, these stories speak of enormous beings who lived among the early inhabitants of the land. In Nevada, miners in the early 1900s uncovered oversized bones and red-haired skulls in Lovelock Cave, tied to the Paiute legend of the Si-Te-Cah. In the Uinta Basin, petroglyphs show non-human figures with exaggerated features, often interpreted as supernatural or giant in origin.

These are not isolated stories. They are spread across thousands of miles and cultures, pointing to a forgotten chapter of North American history that has never been fully explored or accepted.

In this series, the goal is simple: investigate the land firsthand. With no crew, no script, and no staged discoveries, Carl and Kyle travel the old sand dune trails on a three-wheeler and ATV, checking alcoves, rock shelves, and collapsed structures for signs of ancient habitation. Every site shown in the series is real and located through fieldwork, not speculation.

The area remains largely unknown to the public and has not been excavated by mainstream archaeologists. The density of artifacts suggests long-term occupation, and the layout of certain structures raises questions about who lived here and why they left. The canyon's isolation has preserved much of it, offering a rare opportunity to document features that have not been destroyed or removed.

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