 There are varying unexplainable ruins, which either due to their location or sheer enormity are almost universally known and recognizable. Yet nearly all possess hidden factors and layers of truth within, simply unexplainable by mainstream academia. Yet along with these tourist magnets, there are an equal number of ruins not well known, some due to their remote global position, but others due to being actively ignored, and it is these in particular which are of interest to us. As this motivation to ignore such sites must be based on an ulterior motive, this lack of academic funding to explore such sites, we believe, and also have discovered to be true over and over again, lies within their controversial and inexplicable nature. But like a set straight out of Indiana Jones, the claimed lost tombs of Mitla are of no exception. Hidden within the Mesoamerican sites of Mexico, it is indeed visited by tourists, yet many are left perplexed once they depart, this labyrinth of carefully constructed megalithic tunnels when looked at critically and honestly, baffle all who investigate the site. Unique factors include its unusual, yet impressive structural design, its competent, delicate stone-cut patterning, not even attempted to be attributed to being Mesoamerican, and simply the overall bizarrely unique method of construction. We feel it has been claimed, and either lazily or conspiratorially simply written up as a Mesoamerican ruin, with its location nestled amongst this enormous, magnificent complex of pyramids, a still-existing part of the lost ancient world, vastly helping in this attempt to explain away its origins. Some of the monolithic lintels employed in the passages of this site, some claiming as an ancient palace, while far more believing it to have once been the now lost tombs of Mitla, possesses a particularly large collection of stones. Known as the Columns Group, measuring six meters long, a series of solid basalt megaliths, with an estimated weight in excess of 30 tons. The stones came from quarries located a distance of over 10 kilometers away, carried from the lower side of a valley. As mentioned, the location has been coined the Lost Tomb of Mitla, yet the reality is that Mitla was not a person, but is a long-sought location for the burial of incredibly important historical figures. The name Mitla derived from the Nahuatl name of the same spelling, meaning the Place of the Dead or Underworld. Thus it must be noted that although this site is of an extraordinary nature, 9 miles away other megalithic tombs built from equally massive megaliths have since been found, shedding even more doubt on its true purpose being that of the tombs of Mitla. Yet regardless, to academic claims that it is a standard Mesoamerican ruin, we find such sites highly compelling.