HOW WAS GEOPLYMER MARBLE AND GRANITE MADE IN THE OLD WORLD?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 พ.ย. 2024
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ความคิดเห็น • 482

  • @CelticWa4rior
    @CelticWa4rior 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    I have been sculpting for decades and to find this in life size sculptures is a relief to me i thought i was mediocre as a scuplter at best. I now realize my work is a bit better than once thought. I will be making some polymer sculps now, with veins in the material.

    • @enki9006
      @enki9006 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Same, Ive been a stone mason for 30 years and this answers so many questions I’ve had over the years.

  • @scouterstu5856
    @scouterstu5856 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Fascinating !!! Visited some of India's majestic temples etc and later toured Eygpt, pyramids, Luxor etc. That was fifty five years ago and knew the copper chisels and drills tbeory was male cow manure and I have been puzzling how these extraordinary creations were made since then.
    Read many a academic papers, books by independent readers etc. Some interesting ideas but none of which made engineering sense. Whereas , this insightful gent from Essex has provided the most likely answer to that question.
    In fact he makes the mainstream academia's hypothesis (and what we're are taught in school) ridiculous and guilty of psudeo science. Worse they have been presenting their guess work as fact.
    Very impressed with this gentleman's in depth research and the clarity of his presentation. Two big Thumbs Way
    👍👍🖖

  • @mattyreardon3593
    @mattyreardon3593 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Like porcelain. Exactly what I've been saying. Soft as butter when wet hard as rock when fired. Everything has just been poured into a cast.

  • @verumpraevaleat8177
    @verumpraevaleat8177 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    well done , you have cracked another level in your personal growth. My aunty used to tell me this was how the pyramids , classical statues and other buildings were made ....back in 1974 ! I researched it further in 1995 to 1999 and found the work of Joseph Davidovits and the goepolymer institute. He had absolute proof of all this back then.
    So , yes , this information is purposefully hidden and you have to go looking for it as you have done. You are on a path of expanding awareness my friend and what you know now is to a grain of sand in a desert compared to what you have yet to discover. Well done. well done.

  • @chrislucy3778
    @chrislucy3778 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Perfect! Was questioning if those veil statues were like a 3D print polymer - now the nubs and giant ‘blocks’ all makes sense too!!!!

  • @SaganMalluma
    @SaganMalluma 2 ปีที่แล้ว +70

    They found Terrazzo floors in the 12000 year old site of Gobekli Tepe. They even used the term geopolymer in the academic papers describing it.

    • @kalebgullan4157
      @kalebgullan4157 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nonsense

    • @SaganMalluma
      @SaganMalluma ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @Kaleb Gullan not nonsense. Dismissing something just because you haven't seen the evidence is just ignorance and prejudice.

    • @ksp-crafter5907
      @ksp-crafter5907 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@kalebgullan4157 Was also skeptical then i checked it with an open mind (how everyone should do for themselves on every topic in general).
      He is absolutely right!

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      artificial re-agglomerated limestone? Joseph Davidovits and the Geopolymer Institute crew shows that only few people is able to rapidly and easily produce several tons of pyramid stone blocks.
      See his lectures on TH-cam

    • @aaronolson2234
      @aaronolson2234 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Fascinating! My only question is why what about the evidence left at the Aswan quarry? How does the geo polymer theory work with that evidence?

  • @mikc3305
    @mikc3305 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I learned that the magnetite in the stone is found in disarray in the pour. Rather than the crystalline magnetite are all pointing in the same direction towards magnetic North always found in natural stone. Re: Jason from Archaix. Very cool, Thanks.

  • @BigPoppieSeed
    @BigPoppieSeed 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Been in alot of the old school Palm Beach mansions (back in the day I lived that life) and there is lots of terrazzo floor art work with thick brass dividers.
    It is truly amazing and it is always cool....even on a 95° day

  • @DPH1M1M
    @DPH1M1M 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    So i have personally cut stone for the past 20 years. Granite, marble, limestone, sandstone, slate, large outcroppings and all sorts of concrete products, basically anything a customer wants to pay for. If we cant do it in our shop we also partner with other quarries. At this point we can get whatever you want in stone.
    The question is how were they able to cut megalithic size stones about 12,000 years ago? I would agree that you dont need electrical to have blades, grinders, sanders or drills, but the precision that was does as well matches or rivals what we do today. Then the issue of how did they move them?
    For myself we use a small crane with straps that can lift 3 ton in the shop to move pieces around, a forklift to move pallets and bring in slabs and good old fashion elbow grease, but never in lifting. Mostly you can walk pieces around and tip them. Only lift the small stuff. Rollers are a real thing but can buckle under large weights.
    As a byproduct of stone cutting wet, you get stone slurry. We have drainage bags to help filter our water, which collects the slurry. This could easily be used to " recast" the stone, however the crystalline structure of the stone would be different more like aggregate concrete than natural sedimentary stone. Limestone and sandstone you could get away with it, but granite would not look right.

    • @suziemacanas5238
      @suziemacanas5238 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Giants once roamed the earth...locations of giants remains frequently correspond with monoliths etc

    • @Susan70003
      @Susan70003 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@suziemacanas5238 Yes A lot of the pictures they left us show the giants. Giants lift and hold animals that are wild beasts to us. Too heavy and ferocious for our size.

    • @KisheaCrowl
      @KisheaCrowl 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The megalithic stones wasn't a solid hard mass. More like wet clay. The "not scoop marks", are scoop marks. There was hair found in a sample from one of the blocks on the pyramid.
      Nothing baffles science. Nothing mysterious with ancient builders. They mess with the facts to keep real information from people. Information is power. Power is key to rule an empire. The key is to keep people dumb and dependent.
      It's triple talking points. If they say carved? They aren't exactly lying. Something was carved. But also molded.

  • @Palsa-Achilleus
    @Palsa-Achilleus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    A few years back we retired our family's home remodeling business, normally we would do bathrooms and occasional kitchens, but we would often refer Bloomday Granite and Marble when our clients were in need of a counter top.
    Bloomday specializes in the manufacturing of artificial stone and granite, they come in all shapes, colors, styles, and are incredibly hard and durable.
    On one particular occasion we were working on a kitchen, and Bloomday brought in a counter top that had a shiny, reflective material inside of it that resembled pyrite, so we asked one of the employees installing it what it was. They told us that for the particular style they were installing, the company would buy broken mirrors, grind them up and add it to the mix. It was an artificial granite they were installing that day. Artificial stone has been around for ages, and we contracted with Bloomday for over 15 to 20 years, so I've seen a lot of it and have always had an issue with the narrative that the stones at ancient sites were "natural". Real stone are not pure with one color tone, as though it were pulverized and equally distributed, like concrete. It's also next to impossible, even if you can find a natural, pure colored stone, to find one the size of an obelisk or a Greek pillar, now imagine finding twelve of them that are all equal in size, with no striations or cracks going down them, the idea that they're natural stones being used at these sites is utter nonsense.
    I'd like to recommend looking at the channel Abandon and Forgotten Places, they explore old abandoned mines in the American south west, and also point out how the veins form underground. I think a lot of people nowadays have too simplistic of a way at looking at natural stone, they seem to think that it forms pure and in one color, much like concrete, but it doesn't, it has multiple colors all mixed together layer by layer, much like real marble, where it has to be drawn in for things like fake marble. While I'm no export on stone, if the stone looks pure, then it's probably been ground up, separated and sorted based on the different properties, and then reformed into a solid geopolymer.
    The late Philip Coppens, who used to appear as a regular on Ancient Aliens, theorized that the Pyramids of Giza were created with geopolymer, and had a video that I remember watching awhile back on Hulu that explained the process, and how it could be done in a short amount of time, where most of the Ancient Aliens crowd was suggesting it had to be "aliens", because the stone is "too difficult to work with". Unfortunately, he passed away back in 2012, so much of his influence on the subject died with him. Fortunately it seems more people are waking up to the truth about geopolymer through videos like yours, so keep up the good work Paul!
    On a separate note, I recommend looking at this particular art from Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720 - 1778):
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Piranesi-4037.jpg#globalusage
    I found this on a video from ART of DiNo, but the particular picture depicts an ancient wall that has a pillar like structure at the foundation, which reminded me a lot of the basalt columns at the Giant's Causeway, and I remembered that you did a video of how there are places where these columns seemed to be used underneath large megalithic stones blocks, which is what the picture seems to depict.

    • @vijaysuryaaditya9860
      @vijaysuryaaditya9860 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Great comment, thanks.

    • @michaelwilliams6431
      @michaelwilliams6431 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      For lack of knowledge people are easily swayed. Yeah we (the average guy) unless going to school and or working in your field or similar fields we would have know way of knowing honestly. Not knowing or "remembering" that all natural rocks and stone, (specially marbles and granites) are never the same solid color all the way through. If I Am not mistaken marble's definition has something to do with the different colors.
      Thanks for the info

    • @suziemacanas5238
      @suziemacanas5238 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Im obsessed wiv minerals and crystals and ur right about natural stone the variations amongst specimens of the same variety is vast makes ID tricky at times.

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you for the knowledge.
      The Egyptian great pyramid was covered in tiles made of limestone, so almost certainly molded. Underneath, much of a bodge job apparently even with wood between irregular blocks.
      Quite a few years ago I read it was built to perfect Pi. I believed it for a while but how silly of me to not check before repeating it, because it wasn't built that perfectly at all.

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 ปีที่แล้ว

      They seem to have changed what is in the link 😕
      One wonders why...or maybe one doesn't wonder. Something else they don't want us to know, I suppose.

  • @paulettesgoo
    @paulettesgoo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +62

    I know why "they" tell us that they were carved from marble .... its to make us feel stupid and never try anything, because we can't all sit down and carve a perfect statue from granite with a stone chisel and wood mallet!!!

    • @cassandra5390
      @cassandra5390 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      you're so right! and it's really that simple.
      the simple answer is always the correct answer. always.

    • @robinbadalucco
      @robinbadalucco ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Its to charge people who don't know alot of money, counter tops ,basins ect.

    • @mowburnt
      @mowburnt ปีที่แล้ว +5

      When I was about 5 I visited my Aunt and Uncles house in London. My brother was playing with the kids next door and they were yelling so loud and I couldn’t compete. It was only years later I found out they’d been using a speaker (I was only little) but ever since then I always question the “accepted” truths to see if they make sense. Kinda similar though process to you that people like to keep others in the dark while they laugh at the simplicity and get rich.

    • @carlos6126
      @carlos6126 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      what do you think about that notion's anti: you're meant to think that humans can't achieve that skill, and it's okay to sit around because the ancients did it with geopolymer

    • @paulettesgoo
      @paulettesgoo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We can do anything when we do it for the glory of God ... what we can conceive, we can create, with inspiration from the Holy Ghost.@@carlos6126

  • @kippnashleymiller3752
    @kippnashleymiller3752 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Paul, you are on a roll with busting out very solid information that everyone needs to be informed of. WOW is all I can say right now as my perspective has changed on many areas of our past. Just so many lies that we’ve been told and they just keep getting exposed. More lies than truths and that’s very troubling.

  • @0v4k1l
    @0v4k1l 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Always best guessed these megalithic stones must have been moulded but never knew how...until now. Thankyou so much for connecting some major dots!

  • @tradedocta
    @tradedocta 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Awesome video. Im a decorative concrete expert so this resonates with me. I stamp and/or carve walls and floors with a modified cement mix.... also carve thick concrete mix for retaining wall. After they are colored and sealed you couldn't tell the difference. Terrazzo is mix of cement and epoxy. Ground down with diamond embedded pads at higher grits. Meaning, different sizes of diamond "sand". In turn, past technology had to process stone, diamonds and oil for its resins... im narrowing down the mix to make basalt. Unfortunately, working doesn't let me experiment much... IMO... the knobs were done to allow excess liquid to leak out of stones. They were made with thick "basalt cement" mix... the workmanship shows stones were made fast and dried fast.

    • @Marcara081
      @Marcara081 ปีที่แล้ว

      So if they aren't quick enough the nubs harden and cannot be cut. So they leave them on. It's an interesting thought that they could not cut the stone - ever. So once the geopolymer hardens they have to use what they've got.

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว

      ❤️

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      artificial re-agglomerated limestone? Joseph Davidovits and the Geopolymer Institute crew shows that only few people is able to rapidly and easily produce several tons of pyramid stone blocks.
      See his lectures on TH-cam

  • @martingreen5192
    @martingreen5192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Paul, I totally agree with you about the geoplymer, I've been trying to convince people for ages that all the big statues and wall blocks were made with softened stone or geoplymer, they all just laugh; so don't expect an easy ride.
    Not so sure about the nubs, I thought maybe sinks and risers from casting but some are oddly placed for that.
    Good luck with your research

    • @noiamspartacus8965
      @noiamspartacus8965 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Maybe some mixes were wetter than others so they added nubs to direct sweating water drips away from running down the surface?

  • @niggel33
    @niggel33 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    What's a person called that works with stone ? And there you have your answer. 👌

  • @Soulseeologia
    @Soulseeologia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I remember 50 years ago some sidewalks and many of the subway steps in Chicago used to be Terrazzo like at 8:36 different colors perhaps but that’s the material. And I always marveled at how old it all looked, like the steps and sidewalks had been there for ages.

  • @alexd6399
    @alexd6399 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    Brilliant Paul!! I've a theory over how they cut blocks while the mix was still 'damp', probably the way a potter cuts clay off of a potters wheel, a piece of wire with wooden toggles on the end, cuts the clay very cleanly

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Your right there mate, there's so many different mixtures and techniques

    • @BeardedBarley1
      @BeardedBarley1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Or a big blade was used while it was still wet.

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว

      artificial re-agglomerated limestone? Joseph Davidovits and the Geopolymer Institute crew shows that only few people is able to rapidly and easily produce several tons of pyramid stone blocks.
      See his lectures on TH-cam

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว

      artificial re-agglomerated limestone? Joseph Davidovits and the Geopolymer Institute crew shows that only few people is able to rapidly and easily produce several tons of pyramid stone blocks.
      See his lectures on TH-cam

  • @mattyreardon3593
    @mattyreardon3593 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    An ancient way to reseal and get cracks out of cement is to use linseed oil. I think you have to boil it.

  • @niklar55
    @niklar55 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    😊👍
    There is a doorway, formed from irregular shaped stones, either Egypt or Peru, and the irregular shapes are identical on both sides of the door, (mirror image). Which I found incredible. The irregular shapes are used to withstand earthquakes. Any tendency for the stone blocks to move, is automatically stopped at the joints.
    This would explain exactly how it was achieved.
    When Norwich Cathedral was having some building work performed a few hundred years ago, a bricklayer got the job instead of the stone masons, because he was obviously much cheaper. The local stonemasons guild beat him to death!
    The Stone Masons were like the rocket engineers of today, and were very secretive, and still are. Knowledge is power, and power makes money. So, they have protected their secrets down through the ages. If a man, who had taken their oath of secrecy, divulged any secrets, they would kill him, without any qualms!
    There's a company in England called ''Redland Tiles'' and it was started by two brothers. They went to Holland where clay tiles were made, and pretended to be deaf and dumb. They got jobs at a tile making works, because the factory considered that being dumb they couldn't tell any of the secrets, (Everyone, except the rich, was normally illiterate in those days.) and after spending about six months there, they returned to England and set up their own factory.
    Prior to that, clay roof tiles were only available from Holland, by sailing barge.
    .

  • @cmajors4596
    @cmajors4596 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Oh my goodness! You just totally blasted a huge hole in the kingdom of mystery! FINALLY all this is making sense! Finally! You know, I just kept telling my husband that those massive stones that make up the walls of the Temple Mount and Balbeck have got to be concrete! They look like concrete! No way giants moved those stones! Thank you!

  • @All4Most
    @All4Most ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Incredible information you have found Paul. Your logic is spot on. There are now serious implications for all modern history:
    1. How do you test the age of a “marble” if it is just “dust” embedded in a polymer coating?
    2. What are the REAL ages of all the “marble” sculptures currently stored in all the world’s museums?
    3. Could the classical civilizations like Greece and Rome have existed in overlapping timelines?
    4. Have some of the artefacts been constructed to make fabricated timelines and false separations?
    During the recent “war in Iraq” the museums were raided and much historical high value items were stolen while the statues etc were smashed to pieces. If you look at the video footage of this destruction you will notice that the broken statues had hollow interior structures and even contained reinforcing rods that looked like metal. Also, when “ISIS” blew up the giant Bamiyan statues of Buddha in Afghanistan in 2001 it left reinforcing rods exposed and showed all the reinforcement holes in the surrounding mountainside that was used for their construction. How old is this stuff really? Are we being deceived by stuff that has also been re-constructed by archaeologists like modern “Stonehenge” has?

  • @brendanwood1540
    @brendanwood1540 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    There are actually several types of render used traditionally including:
    Scagliola, terrazzo, adobe, clay, cement, lime, acrylic, polymer, silicon, stucco, plaster, davco, natural stone, chalk, monocouche, synthetic stucco, tadelakt, mudwall, shuttered clay, clay and bool, masonry, and lime plaster.

  • @susanhowarth6670
    @susanhowarth6670 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    The Trafford Centre now called the Intu center which is very near where I live
    Is full of marble columns, stairs and over 200 large marble statues.
    When it first opened back in 1998 my thoughts were is it all real marble?
    I walked up to pieces to feel and yes it was cold to the touch.
    Years later ( it's not my kind of place)
    I was there shopping and as I walked past one of the large statues I noticed a chip on the corner of its stand, being nosey & curious I went to inspect it closely .
    True underneath the "Marble statue" polystyrene
    covered over with liquid marble.
    There's a lot you can read on the Internet
    About the "real marble" in this centre
    They even had tours 😆

  • @Beliefisthedeathofintellect
    @Beliefisthedeathofintellect 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    We use a stuff called rose create also. The finish is like as flat as glass. Its not hidden.

  • @bonsang1073
    @bonsang1073 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    to pump geopolymers in bags and molds it would require steam power at the very least and to get the powdered material in sufficient quantity and quality steel ball mill or at the very least hydraulic hammers are necessary. im now thinking that all the places with scratch marks had been faced off with terrazzo. massive amounts of terrazzo have been made in the past. its possible there was valuable material in it but its probably been removed to make it possible to sell the fact that we are the pinnacle of millions of years of evolution and that this sickly civilization is the best ever.

  • @jasonhooley8414
    @jasonhooley8414 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Yo fella, funnily enough I was alongside a fully graphic'ed van on the 406 today and they were specialists in marble and scagliola. Ornate mouldings in various mediums.... and that caught my eye as I'd never heard that word before. Now I'm home and I'm watching this ...

  • @denisemottley22705
    @denisemottley22705 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Fascinating, regarding the marble columns and the outer layer only being made to look like solid marble. So these old houses of the rich which have marble fireplaces, it could be the same process used. Wouldn't it be great to see the outer walls of Valetta in their former glory. Thanks Paul for more interesting information.

    • @angusmacgyver3673
      @angusmacgyver3673 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      i remember seeing something about a year back the outside 2 inches were marble and the centers were either iron/steel or wooden posts, which rotted away, leaving the marble, and around 75-100 yrs ago, archeologists filled them with concrete and are claiming that was carved from a single piece of marble to make each pillar. this video confirms what i saw about a year back about marble pillars.

  • @vijaysuryaaditya9860
    @vijaysuryaaditya9860 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Never experienced boredom in any of your vids! Been "sharing the granny" this week!!!

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's good the hear squire glad you aint bored Vijay!! 😅😅😅 that cracked me up

    • @vijaysuryaaditya9860
      @vijaysuryaaditya9860 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @James Cunliffe
      You Jack of All Trades!
      I'd stick to the camouflaged shelters myself at this point in time!
      'Dark City' is a film I'd like to see again. Divergent featured it earlier.
      Saw the latest Terminator film last night. Took a bit of following, but a good watch overall.
      Dune tomorrow! Stay well bro!

  • @ryankennelly3176
    @ryankennelly3176 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    awesome video!
    seek and ye shall find!
    now I get how the "Bust of Clyties" was created! thanks brother! good research!

  • @anne.christine
    @anne.christine 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Brilliant thank you Paul!
    And my theory is that they made those amazing statues with the geopolymer and some form of 3D printer with live models.

  • @DjMiLF
    @DjMiLF 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Mindblowing again! Thank you!! Now that we know, we should go visit the Channel “ wise up “. He is an archaeologist and he did work with Brian forester. Wise up guy Saw how Brian and his crew Saw this too, but kept on making money on ppl that has enough in the narrative story about Giza and many other places where Brian makes tours 😉 this is why wise up guy left the Brian foester team and been making videos to prove everything was build, not carved out, and much more

  • @ladyloucks
    @ladyloucks 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Nice show. I know the questions to ask if I ever get marble countertops. If it wasn't a one World society, there was at least one source for building instructions.

  • @DonaldHarrington-tr4qw
    @DonaldHarrington-tr4qw ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hardshell snap together geopolymer granite ion propelled craft assembled outside orbit using stone aggrogates from asteroids with low gravity density metal interior geopolymer granite hardshell and tethers for solar sails

  • @painbreedsstrength
    @painbreedsstrength 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you Brother. God Bless. I'm a Plumber as well,worked all over learned lots of cool stuff along the way.

  • @LogiForce86
    @LogiForce86 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    @Paul Cook I found a REALLY interesting documentary on Scagliola in German from official 3SAT television confirming what you say and showing you step by step how it's done! The TH-cam V code is (since links get deleted nowadays): O-dHKRN6jD0
    It seems it's a practice done by Plasterers actually. A plasterer in German is actually called a "stukateur" where "stuk" or plural "stuks" in older Low German (from which modern day High German is derived) means piece/pieces or chip/chips. Chips as you know in Italian mean Scaglia.
    There you go... even via the languages the circle comes to a close!
    Go and watch the video and put on the automatic translated subtitles, or better if you can find someone that can make subtitles for you... the better even. It's an honestly really interesting video, in which the art is shown by old masters in a rather dying art of craft (at least their type of plasterers). So a lot of inside knowledge is also presented as well, as they try to pass on the knowledge in this video for future generations to fall back on.

  • @bernardpower2930
    @bernardpower2930 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I live in Australia we have terrazzo everywhere old buildings modern buildings ,houses we have a big Italian population whose grandparents brought the skills of terrazzo with them from the old country

  • @BeardedBarley1
    @BeardedBarley1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    The interesting thing is that the walls inside the pyramids in Egypt had previously been lined or surfaced on the inside with alabaster. But it was taken out of the pyramids and buried not far from the pyramids and found by curious minds. In fact, the found misplaced and destroyed alabaster was featured on Bright Insight. I thought how did the crafters get it to mould up against the insides if it’s a natural stone? This process you showed in this video would explain it.
    Also, perhaps a reason for keeping this process secret was so that the powers that shouldn’t be/The Controllers could sell off those formed parts as authentic and make a ton of money off it like in a kind of underground scheme even. Look at how much people now want marble and granite and quartz even for just their countertops whereas, before a few decades ago, it was near impossible to get such great quantities of it at near affordable prices. Why the push to sell it now? Could it be because The Controllers knew the technique had been figured out by “the little people” and would make it somewhat worthless now?
    I was thinking that might be why there is a mad dash for gold right now in civilized (highly controlled) countries: It could be that gold is being manufactured now and, in fact, has been found to have been manufactured in the past, reverse engineering the found tech. And as a result, it has a kind of signature of it being made...like as if it’s too perfect. Also what if no one could tell the difference between the real and the manufactured gold until now except the uber specialists who were bought off and/or forced to keep it secret upon pain of death? On top of that, what if that’s part of how antiquitech made free energy...with gold and mercury, as you’ve pointed out previously, but with manufactured gold? Would that mercury have that signature of fake gold in it and thus had to be done away with? Wouldn’t then that make gold worthless now? I am reminded of a passage in the Bible that talks about how people in later times will throw out their gold and silver as if it is worthless. I always wondered why it would be tossed out if it’s a precious metal? This situation of manufacturing it would certainly explain why.
    So thank you for posting this video in showing how natural stone could be manufactured to look and feel real. It connected a lot more dots for me in forming a bigger picture on how The Controllers were able to become rich by hiding their true means of acquiring their wealth through manufacturing precious metals like gold and silver and LYING ABOUT IT to the masses. Hopefully, intelligent people will grasp these concepts and turn against and maybe even rage against this false system of built up phony wealth and subsequently The Controllers, a scheme invented by The Controllers to maintain illegal and deceptive power over people.
    ------------
    At this point, I would just like to point out to The Controllers, I gave you ample warning of how I would be party to destroying your falsely built and tyrannical and murderous and torturous society built on deception. And with the destruction of lies on how these pillars were formed, the pillars of your society have now been destroyed in the sense that your pillars of lies holding up this society has been exposed through the gifting God gave me (of research and writing). I warned you that I am not a violent person like you are and so would not use violence to destroy your oppressive civilization...where you tax people nearly 90%, all things considered now, and enslave the masses to pay those oppressive and debilitating taxes through your lies...but that I would do so, nonetheless. But you chose not to see what I was doing and saying. Turn about is fair play, you always say. Ahahaha!
    Again, you were warned. You had time to repent and turn to the Lord. Now you’re gonna have to pay the Piper. So when I warn you about something, perhaps you’ll listen next time. Deception doesn’t pay...except with the payment of death to those doing the deceiving when it involves oppression and the shedding of blood that constantly cries out to our Creator against the perpetrators. Maybe you should teach your children this lesson so that they will not fall into the same trap you did that you will be paying for throughout eternity. Just sayin’...never underestimate a country bumpkin. We may be smarter than you think though you went out of your way to dumb us down. Rolling my eyes at you!

    • @niklar55
      @niklar55 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The price of diamonds is kept artificially high by De Beers, but now artificial diamonds can be made, that to the naked eye, are indistinguishable from mined diamonds. De Beers, has spent huge sums of money on discovering methods of detecting them.
      Ultimately, it was the perfection of manufactured diamonds that distinguished them from mined diamonds, that always have microscopic impurities.
      I would imagine gold would be the same, or any other artificially priced goods.
      ...

    • @carteunu467
      @carteunu467 ปีที่แล้ว

      artificial re-agglomerated limestone? Joseph Davidovits and the Geopolymer Institute crew show how only with few people are able to rapidly and easily produce several tons of pyramid stone blocks.
      See his lectures on TH-cam

  • @mareebrazier878
    @mareebrazier878 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, thanks Paul that just incredible.

  • @mowburnt
    @mowburnt ปีที่แล้ว

    Fascinating - geopolymer suggests answers to many questions about how they may have formed complex megalithic monuments and engravings with such precision and ease and the odd “scoop” marks seen in the quarries.

  • @JubileeValence
    @JubileeValence 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Coade and Sealy, Lambeth, London 1769 relearned the geopolymer methods (Lithodipyra) and produced many fine huge sculptures still in place today. Photos abound online with historical notes also.
    Cheers!

  • @pietjemol3420
    @pietjemol3420 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Oh wow, I always found the granite one hard to explain, but if it is done like this, that would be a game changer.

  • @ChaseGartner
    @ChaseGartner 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dude the cloth handing part at 20:15 opened my eyes to such an insane level you have no idea, It all makes sense now

  • @luke_a_johnson
    @luke_a_johnson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    When I was studying ceramics I helped a stonemason make marble. It is as simple as grinding marble into powder and sintering it in a kiln. It is very dangerous until it absorbs water from the air. If a drop of sweat touches it it explodes. When it is stable just add a bit of water.

    • @kreeperfrm559
      @kreeperfrm559 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Whoa sounds cool , never knew that, how does it explode 😳

    • @luke_a_johnson
      @luke_a_johnson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@kreeperfrm559 not like igniting but because the water is removed from the powder in the kiln it is unstable to water. If a drop of water meets the powder it converts so quickly it reacts like an explosion and sends the powder everywhere if it touches skin it eats through to claim the water. It is like a chemical or acid burn. It has gone from hydrous to anhydrous. There must have been lots of accidents making these sculptures

    • @kreeperfrm559
      @kreeperfrm559 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@luke_a_johnson amazing info thanks🤙

    • @mothereartha7
      @mothereartha7 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      That is important information

    • @Susan70003
      @Susan70003 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Who was the Stone Mason that taught you?

  • @lukedewoody801
    @lukedewoody801 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    And those old statues was exactly what I thought of. (the man with the net and the Trident spear)

  • @kennyk4134
    @kennyk4134 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    geopypolymer also explains how they transported large blocks from quarrys just crush them up to transport then reform.

  • @dohadji17
    @dohadji17 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great work! As far as the scagliola marble and Carrara marble. There is a store in Las Vegas NV called Regis Galerie that sells marble columns and Carrara marble custom pieces from 18th century for many thousands of dollars. It became more famous because of Michael Jackson would by a lot of furniture, statues Ect, from this place as well. Definitely need to go to this place to see the work on this.
    Also the geopolymer granite, limestone. That was used for the pyramids process blew me away. And I not surprised by damn near anything anymore since I followed the path of truth.but you got me on that one.

  • @lauradesalvatore885
    @lauradesalvatore885 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Amazing…thank so much! You are solving immense and epic mysteries!

  • @timewilltell3098
    @timewilltell3098 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I worked for a terrazzo company in London called kengate

  • @MrToontuber
    @MrToontuber 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    9:45 looks like granito. kitchen countertop.

  •  6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Floor outside of pyramid. Limestone is diamagnetic and granite is patamagnetic. Two layers.

  • @markkolmorgan7728
    @markkolmorgan7728 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hey Paul, the knobs are a remnant left from the moving process. If you are going to use a whole village to move a multi-ton stone, you will need rope. Massive rope, made from twisting grasses together. Tie these ropes around your giant stone and start to pull, the stones slide along with relative ease, due to rounded cobbles set in the roadways, the flat surface of the heavy stone has minimal contact with the road surface due to it riding on the tips of the rounded cobbles, with less friction, less inertia is needed to keep it moving. But, at some point, your manpower needs to rest, so everyone takes a break. The ropes have now stretched under load, and when tension is removed, they fall to the ground. When everyone is ready for the next pull, the rope will need to be elevated to a center position on the trailing end of the stone or all the manpower will drag the rope under the stone. Once it's under the stone, the stone will not move until the rope rots away (hence the resting stones of Oyantetombo). But if you leave two knobs on the trailing end of the stone, the rope never falls to the ground and never gets pulled under the stone. With the amount of work quarrying the stones and moving them, keeping waste or wasted effort to a minimum is necessary.

  • @TimD77
    @TimD77 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    firstly Paul, brilliant video and commentary. Secondly, look at the level of engagement and insight in these comments! it is just as fascinating for me to read these and we are all making more sense of the nonsense we have been fed. The more people that awaken during this clown show the better.

  • @robertonegron7748
    @robertonegron7748 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hey Paul look into the old San Juan capital building in Puerto Rico it looks like the marble ur talking about. Luv ur works Godbless u.

  • @scottyscotty4558
    @scottyscotty4558 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi Paul. Yesterday I visited the Fitzwilliam museum in Cambridge, where almost everything inside appears to be marble. I noticed some chips on the dark marble columns at the bottoms and to my surprise the chips underneath were white and chalky. I shown my findings to my father, where he was very surprised, as he'd expected the chip to be smooth and similar colour to the exterior of the column.
    Also the marble was not cold, as you'd expect but instead warm.
    Separate point, the Fitzwilliam building is similar to other government buildings in America, all containing huge pillars and a triangle at the front. This would appear to be the doings of a one architect. Also these buildings all have huge doors, windows and ceilings, almost like a machine house.

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Interesting did you get any photos?

    • @scottyscotty4558
      @scottyscotty4558 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@pauliecook432 hi Paul, sorry mate but no photos, never occurred to me at the time. They are very easy to spot, as they are plenty should you decide to seek them out yourself. The chips range from 1 to 2 cm and are mainly at the bottom of the columns situated up the stairs. Most likely a careless floor cleaner has clipped them.
      I'm gathering more research into thes government buildings, where they all appear to follow the same blue print and have located one near to Ashby de la zouch, should you be interested.
      Great work Paul, love your videos.

    • @scottyscotty4558
      @scottyscotty4558 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@pauliecook432 just a suggestion, visiting this museum for yourself and taking some sly photos, could pave the way for a potential part 2 to this video.

  • @I_am_ka
    @I_am_ka 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Your research/channel is at a level beyond measure. I'm amazed how I just found this channel. YT's algorithm is hiding the gems for sure. Great work

  • @jontompkins1844
    @jontompkins1844 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Powder marble is available to mold modern statuary. I've said for years that may have been how many ancient things where built. It could also explain why some features seem like they could "melt" rocks.

  • @northernlights6459
    @northernlights6459 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A brilliant presentation, straight to the facts.A very compelling theory, it explains so much.

  • @leewilson741
    @leewilson741 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Paul this is one of your best videos to date my friend. Keep up the good work exposing the bastards bro...!!!

  • @Crosshatch1212
    @Crosshatch1212 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    So glad I found this .nubs ,mould making , I called it.I call them keys in moulding .

    • @Crosshatch1212
      @Crosshatch1212 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I hope you saw my comment about wrking with the French in the French consulate in 80”s doing the marble pillars , loving the vids bro ,

  • @MrBTBusch
    @MrBTBusch 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Was waiting 4 this one, thanx Mr. COOK!

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼☝️❤️🐅

  • @warrenjeapes3423
    @warrenjeapes3423 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    That was good. Expanding on it all the time.
    Shalom 🔥

  • @orpheuscreativeco9236
    @orpheuscreativeco9236 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    If the mix was wet enough you could cut it with a taught wire, sort of like cheese, explaining the wonky "cut". Just a thought. Great video!!! Thanks for sharing!!!

  • @vijaysuryaaditya9860
    @vijaysuryaaditya9860 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Mate, you certainly did not disappoint with that!
    I'm from Herts for my sins.
    Essex is named after Osea (important religious site like Portland), which in turn is named after Hesus, a powerful Druidical Deity.
    They use gypsum in beer!

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      😅💪🏼😎 love your comments mate with the little fact 😅💪🏼

  • @Sargon-Saccabee-III
    @Sargon-Saccabee-III ปีที่แล้ว

    The Inca stone walls were poured into fabric sacks in sand forms and that’s why they are so perfect looking

  • @kcsunnyone
    @kcsunnyone 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    This was all done in late 1700s by elite practicing new sculpting techniques probably w geopolymers. The rich people have always the newest techniques and have kept stuff for themselves. All these places are where they vacationed. Nasca lines were signs to be seen while using their hot air balloons, follies for friends and family.

    • @Ladymadonna007
      @Ladymadonna007 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, it is a deep subject
      Knowledge is within you and always was always will be there
      The elite misfits and dark controllers hide this from humanity and spoon feed disclosures of Ancient Tech to the hunger masses.
      Bless the rich and don’t condemn the poor.
      Unity is our only way out
      The bad ETs created the Nasca lines to mark their territory like a gang member tagging an LA neighborhood
      Love one another and Create.

  • @OttoChenault
    @OttoChenault 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You are a total bad ass Paul Cook!!!Much love, thanks for all the hard work you put in getting down to the truth. You inspire me bro!

  • @chrissansone3012
    @chrissansone3012 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Terrazzo floors are shiny and beautiful when polished! I can only imagine Paul what that originally looked like!

    • @chrissansone3012
      @chrissansone3012 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I can definitely imagine it though!

  • @pauloldman804
    @pauloldman804 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Dear Paul Loving it.
    I recently visited a site I really think you should check out - but its a bit of a trek. Recently I went up to Derwent Valley cotton Mills in Matlock Derbyshire. Amongst the early victorian mill buildings were some outcrop parts of 'natural' small cliff/rock hillsides which when looked at with the geopolymer technique in mind looked suspiciously like ancient blockwork to some sort of large walls/defensive structure - as you've discussed.
    What then got me really interested was the sheer verticality of the rockwork 'cliffs' surrounding/behind the mills and in the adjoining quarry ..... also the fact that the site has undergone the following 'masking methods' which youve mentioned which I think are there to hide that these 'cliffs' were ancient manmade
    1 - site is UNESCO - stopping exploration/excavation (stops excavation/manages site)
    2 - the adjoining site is a quarry (destroy the site and stop public access)
    3 - this quarry now has plans to make it into a water park (flood it)
    4 - next to the quarry is a large Army Memorial site (stopping any excavation).
    I will send you some photos and think this site would make a great programme. Let me know if you want to know more.
    Paul

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm planning matlock so this could be helpful paulexplores33@gmail.com look forward to seeing them

  • @lukedewoody801
    @lukedewoody801 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Well done, I have never herd of this i really liked this episode

  • @briang6119
    @briang6119 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great work Tiger! Let's keep tearing down the Matrix 1 brick at a time if we must! Not only does your work shed light on ancient history, it also sheds light on the lie we all have been sold! Easy Tigers!!!

  • @steandrew747
    @steandrew747 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When you see the large "Granite" stones in Egypt, I've always thought that the round holes were drilled while the stone was soft. Because if you look at the cutting marks, on the inside of the hole, they progress very quickly, which they would if the stone was soft at the time of drilling.

  • @Beliefisthedeathofintellect
    @Beliefisthedeathofintellect 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Most modern granite or stone kitchen work tops are a similar thing!!

  • @dj_dinner_plates7429
    @dj_dinner_plates7429 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I cannot express how stoked it get when I see you are dropping a vid....

  • @suziemacanas5238
    @suziemacanas5238 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Selenite has metaphysical qualities. It transmute negative to positive energy and connect with god/divinity.

  • @ancientartrevived
    @ancientartrevived ปีที่แล้ว

    Mate your a legend. Saw this video on a yandex search for “old Russian book on marble made from sulphur” and so glad I did! Well done on your research

  • @oakvick
    @oakvick 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Pennsylvania has lots of old graveyards. I rode my bicycle here and there in PA visiting them. Seemed that the earliest date of birth on a tombstone was around 1850 or so. Then we have man made stone made to look like natural stone. I enjoy learning about our realm via your work. Nothing like watching Pink Floyd’s audience-less concert in Pompeii banging out Echoes ... lots of imagery of what you described in this video in the Echoes video. Dots are connecting. I don’t think we’ve been around that long in this realm. It’s all a mind screw. Enjoy your work 👍🏻

  • @DonaldHarrington-tr4qw
    @DonaldHarrington-tr4qw ปีที่แล้ว +1

    All they needed was the raw dust materials for geopolymer and evaporate the mixing water enough dust = to a small mountains or pyramid would have to be cutt from a quarry using wood wheels and ropes to generate friction to cutt into rockfaces or cliffs they could of used natural acid to create enough quarry dust but I doubt they had a Olympic swimming pool of plant exstacy natural acid for breaking mineral bonds of natural quarry blocks

  • @miloaaron8388
    @miloaaron8388 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    your channel should have millions of views, i spread the word as much as i can

  • @Hadrada.
    @Hadrada. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Paul
    I hope this world can change and it will be recognised and give credit for what you are doing
    Your doing a fine job

  • @susanmoodie6426
    @susanmoodie6426 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love how you think. At last the nubs an explanation that makes sense!

  • @GalaxyJ-vm2rn
    @GalaxyJ-vm2rn 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Southern of Germany, Bayern, there is a lot of tradition in carving, sculpting and marmering, the artistic marmering in the baroque churches was paint on wooden pillars etc. The cast marble would be for the large churches, cathedrals and mansions, maybe in the bigger castles of Ludwig II. Schloss Neuschwannstein, the example for Disneys wonderland castle...

    • @GalaxyJ-vm2rn
      @GalaxyJ-vm2rn 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DJ-Brownie-UK truthbommette ! 💫🌼

  • @spekenbonen72
    @spekenbonen72 ปีที่แล้ว

    Best video about ancient stonework. Seriously.
    Geopolymers are all over the world.
    Now we only need to find the material(s) that bonds everything together.
    Most of the materials (be it granite, dolorite, alabaster etc.) don't look like the material these objects/structures are made of (in nature).
    Last obelisk at Aswan (marks of geopolymer/sand packing (packed earth construction leaves the same marks as what the pseudo scientists call "SCOOPS")
    H-blocks at Pumapunku (these have been researched. Volcanic rock WITH BIOLOGICAL traces (which doesn't occur by accident in the natural world))
    + subbed to this channel

  • @knallpistol
    @knallpistol 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    What about the quarry in Lebanon where there is still half finished hundreds of tons of stone, meant for obelisk and such lying around. Yes some of the new marble stuff in this millennia is maybe glued together. But not all of it in ancient times.

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Look at the pictures of the quarry mate.. it ain't a quarry and it's geopolymer being worked on.. the stand it's on is even a different material.. but check out the back ground it's no quarry.. few geopolymer houses.. no quarry.. please check it out 💪🏼

  • @jeandepainter2657
    @jeandepainter2657 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i`ve been watching a load of your video`s by now and i am not nearly ejucated like you on this subject but i`ve been thinking for years about the old structures in a sense like this , i was always thinking what if the starting materials of these huge structures were not stone but a sort of clay... but after hunderds of some even thousands of years turned to stone,,, but your insight made a little smarter on this subject , thank you for your effort , keep up the good work

  • @Jim-h7j
    @Jim-h7j 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Casting lead bullets for old calibers I learned about sprue and sprue cutters

  • @rallyvincent8803
    @rallyvincent8803 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This technique is called "stucco marble" and it is still made in the same way today. I learned it myself a few years ago during my further training as a restorer in the plasterer's trade.

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's called scagliola

  • @danielmoore3602
    @danielmoore3602 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I’m a tiler I specialise in natural stone mainly limestones but plenty of differing marbles….. it’s interesting how now we’re trying to copy these in modern day……. They did it before
    Much love keep up the good work x

  • @RickPotvin54
    @RickPotvin54 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The geopolymer blocs around 16:00 forward remind me of the obelisk on 2001:A Space Odyssey. Maybe Kubrick knew. The popular backstory on the obelisk is that he wanted a pyramid but had to settle for a commercially available piece of glass used in a promo that he painted black. Maybe that's an inane cover story for advanced material science you're presenting here.

  • @carrieg.4995
    @carrieg.4995 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very intriguing. Thanks Paul. Great work, much appreciated.

  • @MoonlightDuchess
    @MoonlightDuchess 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very interesting, and give some light on how many grand buildings for ex, were created. It’s truly an adventure, as one and then another piece of a giant puzzle reveals a picture. Thank you!🌻🕊

  • @wadada2522
    @wadada2522 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The real marble has electro-magnetic properties, I wonder if the polymer has that too? Fascinating stuff 😊

  • @ShawnStoffelRelicSeekr
    @ShawnStoffelRelicSeekr ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for your video explanation. Makes perfect sense that ancient civilizations perfected stone work. I wonder if they mass produced spear and arrow heads this way as well.

  • @pertinentparadigm1337
    @pertinentparadigm1337 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Does explain those enigma's very well, especially megalithic sized stone inside so many tight Ancient corridors. Is there a specific video over the conversation with this geezer?

    • @pauliecook432
      @pauliecook432  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      No but there's tons of stuff on you tube and online just type in scagliola

  • @johnloyd3996
    @johnloyd3996 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi, great videos.
    I expect it was kept a mystery so that "the ones in the know" could do it. If they let slip, then anyone could copy it and they wouldn't be able to charge as much. Its like many things now, before the internet, we all knew a lot less. People are gaining more knowledge every day.
    Also - did u know that they Egyptions used solar lenses to melt granite? I think possibly they also used to mold stone this way in casts via furnace blasting.
    Keep searching, many treasures buried still to be found.

  • @wyodino6245
    @wyodino6245 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Nice research Paul. Keep digging Thanks for sharing.

  • @jandancer33
    @jandancer33 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, feel like I'm spamming you today lol,
    LAST MESSAGE
    I'd ment to share this on a previous vid but got distracted & forgot (hence my multi comments today lol)
    I learned an interesting fact from a Michael tellinger video a few weeks ago, regarding granite. In both past times and modern, when they mine gold out of granite, the waste granite is left in a liquid, slushy form, that they tip into piles and leave. And when the miners go off site (holiday/weekend/moving to a new area) they get wild animals and birds mooching around the sites, and walking across the granite (waste) mounds, leaving tracks and foot prints, and this soft waste granite then hardens back up as it dries, becoming as hard as it was prior to the mining process, and you get mysterious tracks in solid rock.
    So this answers many mysteries regarding foot prints in solid rock.
    AND.... if they can turn granite to liquid to extract gold, you can bet they can turn it to liquid to make huge bolders, monoliths, stones....
    There is so much er don't know. And so much we can only guess about based on evidence, but one thing I feel sure about, it's all connected!!! Every lie and secret, from creation to current events, its all hiding the same secret, that they REALLY don't want us to know.
    Keep searching, and keep an open mind.
    And thanks Paul, much love and respect ❤

  • @deths1679
    @deths1679 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think a lot of this depends on the market forces at play when it is being made. Its not difficult to carve stone, but as demand rises for certain qualities of stonework, new processes will be developed to profit from that demand. Stone can be made, but it also has limitations. Natural stone has much, much cheaper cost until you start getting to very rare or very high quality stone and minerals.
    Cast stone also has a much higher “cost of entry”. It requires more equipment, more industrialization, and more logistics for it to become more profitable than natural stone.
    For example, semiprecious stones like turquoise are very common to see in both natural and geopolymer form today. The best mined pieces typically go straight into jewelery as natural stone. However the market for turquoise has increased so much that there isnt enough gemstone quality material to meet demand and making the nice gemstone quality pieces ends up discarding a lot of small chipped and ground turquoise. But with demand high, now all those chips and dust are saved and added to geopolymer mix along with color stabilizing minerals to press into cast bar or plate shapes for jewelers to use.
    What I’m saying is people find ways to get what they want, stone can be made, but that doesnt mean all the magnificent stonework from the past is geopolymer. Undoubtedly there are pieces that were, but I think huge stone monuments would be much easier to construct from mostly natural stone.

  • @user-nv4ru5em4j
    @user-nv4ru5em4j 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think they keep it quiet so they have something concrete to base their superiority complex on ;)

  • @stevemayer1396
    @stevemayer1396 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I wanted to reach out and thank you for the informative video you posted on geopolymers. As someone who is passionate about this subject, I found your insights and research very enlightening.
    Your video has helped me to better understand the complexity of geopolymers and their potential applications in various fields. I truly appreciate the effort and time you put into researching this topic and sharing your knowledge with the world.
    Once again, thank you for your valuable contribution to this field.