 Lagedo Gipai Matus, located within modern-day Brazil, is an incredible ancient site that just like Gornia Shoria within Russia, is of such a tremendous age and the stones incorporated into its structure are of such a huge size that mainstream academics passionately attest to the site being merely geological. However, the megalithic wall located at the site, which is uncannily similar to many others, each claimed as geological, yet the symmetry in the construction, the fact that the blocks are placed in what we now call stretcher courses, is a technique which can be seen within brick-built buildings all over the world. This unnatural, repetitive technique makes the walls the strongest possible using single-layer blocks to build with. It is highly unlikely that this repeating pattern would appear naturally, however, there are many other features at the site that not only prove it was indeed an ancient settlement, now all but eroded back to nature, dolmens of a similar age, which litter the site, are arguably proof of an artificial origin exposing what we have long claimed to have been a reality that a now hidden civilization's ruins are being actively dismissed as nothing more than geological features. The site is approximately 1.5 square kilometers, and is home to about 100 large rounded stones, each weighing up to 45 tons. Some of these stones have been placed upon tiny base stones, and others have seemingly been hollowed out from the base, making what is unquestionably some of the most intriguing ancient dolmens to be found anywhere on Earth. According to geologists who have explored the site, yet have seemingly ignored the evidence to suggest that many of these stones have artificial origins. The rock formation is the result of soil wear over millions of years due to natural cracks and large temperature variations. As aforementioned, the most curious and seemingly most famous block is the hollowed out dolmen, which is commonly known as the Helmet Stone. Additionally, along with the Neolithic dolmens which litter the site, on some of the stones there are cave paintings, which are attributed to the Carriere Indians who lived in the region about 12,000 years ago. Legend has it that later the site became the home of someone known as the Hermit Healer, an individual claimed to have lived in the region in around the 18th century. Many people from this area sought his consult, yet any concrete evidence as to who this individual was, or what they were capable of, has eluded modern understandings. We feel that due to the stretcher courses found within the megalithic wall, currently claimed as a natural formation, along with the evidence at the site of Neolithic dolmens, with surviving art which also dates from this era, are all compelling proofs of an artificial, advanced yet ancient and now hidden origin. Who built Legerogipaimatus? What was the site's original purpose? Just how old is Legerogipaimatus? Thankfully, the more people who explore the site and collect and compile photographic studies, the closer we will get to finally answering these burning questions regarding our past. It is a site which we find highly compelling.