My Top SMOKING GUNS for Ancient Technology

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 ก.พ. 2021
  • Hello Hunters,
    I decided to make a basic video slide-showing all of the main evidence that convinced me that there is a serious possibility of a pre-history civilisation lost to History that is kind of just hiding in plain sight.
    You might not find out anything new, most of you guys are so well read on this, but it's a useful vid to maybe show your friends and family that are new to Ancient Tech theories :)
    Next week is back to the Chatty vids where I'm going to relay some of the stories told to me in Egypt about some experiments that have been done with these artefacts... just saying... It's pretty cool.
    I'm interested in knowing what your smoking guns are too! What evidence have you seen or found that has convinced you something isn't right about the mainstream teachings?
    Thanks guys
    JJ xxx
    #egypt #hunters #history #pyramids #ancienttech

ความคิดเห็น • 4.6K

  • @timdrinkard9060
    @timdrinkard9060 ปีที่แล้ว +541

    I’m a firm believer the Egyptian people found the remnants of an ancient civilization, which was far more advanced. Being so amazed and astonished, they adopted the ruins as their own. And attempted for millennia to copy it.

    • @ClearAdventure
      @ClearAdventure ปีที่แล้ว +55

      Exactly. It was lush jungle there before, imagine your tribe wandering through the jungle and you find the pyramids and nobody's home. It's just left there. Shoot, I wouldn't leave either, lol.

    • @REALLYRANDOMREVIEW5
      @REALLYRANDOMREVIEW5 ปีที่แล้ว

      these are more like from 11,000 years ago and the Tec is lost or hidden ! duno why we even pay archeologists because a fool can see this is more like graphiti than enscriptions and the egyptians obviously couldn't replicate this precice cuting with old copper tools copper and Granite doesn't equal a fair fight either and the mistakes are clearly circular cutting tools

    • @georgeswinford680
      @georgeswinford680 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      By. L

    • @BeatlesFan1975
      @BeatlesFan1975 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      I think this comment is correct

    • @PastarocketS-sb7nk
      @PastarocketS-sb7nk ปีที่แล้ว +11

      It's very possible.

  • @donmichaelcorbin4417
    @donmichaelcorbin4417 3 ปีที่แล้ว +895

    Y'all remember from around the age of 16 and through our twenties how we thought we knew everything and that anyone over 40 was so out of touch, backward, and ignorant of our modern ways? I think modern academia mistakenly views our ancient ancestors in much the same way.

    • @kanlamat1372
      @kanlamat1372 3 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      They invented Alzheimer to not allow our granpis to tell us what was up at their times...

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      Humans have been roughly as intelligent as they are now for the past 100,000 years.

    • @SifuHallyu
      @SifuHallyu 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      This is true, but as someone who is moving into their 40's next year I am out of touch.

    • @winstonmiller9649
      @winstonmiller9649 3 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Yes, our academia like we did, think they know it all like we did!! Yet in our delusion we still didn't have the lasting wisdom of the elders we derided in our youth. The young and dumb still feel that way today yet get into all kinds of avoidable crap. The world doesn't get wiser it still forms the same old erroneous conclusions about the past. Like one tv presenter said, "When you want to know about stone, ask a stone mason, not a theoretical physicist." Simple really.😊😂😉

    • @winstonmiller9649
      @winstonmiller9649 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@carbon1255 Yes.So why are we still making the same mistakes??

  • @arposkraft3616
    @arposkraft3616 ปีที่แล้ว +107

    For me the smoking gun is (or rather was and has been) is that "proper authorities" are more often then not unwilling to even allow proper investigation

    • @chiznowtch
      @chiznowtch 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's stupid

    • @thomasgilbreath1250
      @thomasgilbreath1250 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Underwater ruins off the Indian coast.

    • @Jamil1989
      @Jamil1989 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      *than

    • @siren8693
      @siren8693 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I so do agree, for example, I dug up for a short time about the mysteries of the sphynx, and when you look deeper into it, it only gets more confusing. Water erosion dates so much more back in time. Inproportions of the head compared to the body suggest the head was carved by the Egyptians so it fits more of their beliefs. There have been several researchers who have tried to go into the rooms that are in the Sphynx but have been turned down. Hard to pinpoint but there was a fella in the older times who went down there back in the days and toured it. Saying it's the entrance to a place which could rewrite the whole history of Egypt today. Supposed to be an underground city with more pyramids or even being just the roof decoration of a massive library or both. The big giveaway is the supposed slab between the statue's legs saying the sphinx was discovered by the ancient Egyptians, and that the head was the only thing above the sand.

    • @CLlNT0N_BODYCOUNT_RESSURECTED
      @CLlNT0N_BODYCOUNT_RESSURECTED 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Facts

  • @outbackgearforu
    @outbackgearforu 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    This is one of the things that I feel is so positive about the internet ,we can bypass “experts” and draw conclusions of our own and don’t have to accept the frame that “experts” handed to us in the past without question

    • @utubeballbag
      @utubeballbag 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yeah we can just make shit up and believe it. Love the internet for that

    • @askjdog
      @askjdog 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@utubeballbag😂 Trudeau

    • @CLlNT0N_BODYCOUNT_RESSURECTED
      @CLlNT0N_BODYCOUNT_RESSURECTED 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@utubeballbaglike so called experts do. Difference is internet gives evryone the ability to see and critic it. While so called experts just say believe me bro and show selective info, as has been proven thousands of times

    • @utubeballbag
      @utubeballbag 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CLlNT0N_BODYCOUNT_RESSURECTED opinions are like assholes bro. And the internet allows people who arent qualified to give them. Thats cool ,but to believe someone who writes stories for a living over science and experts. Well thats up to you.

  • @ciaran5588
    @ciaran5588 3 ปีที่แล้ว +243

    I actually paused the video to think about the cut gone wrong "you'd have to be making the mistake for days on end" For a craftsman then or now to do that doesn't make sense. Brilliant piece.

    • @toddsecki
      @toddsecki 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      There are a few very good examples of this "cut gone wrong"

    • @michaelcollisson24
      @michaelcollisson24 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I still wonder how an advanced technological civilisation makes mistakes with cuts and alike ?

    • @catsfpv603
      @catsfpv603 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@michaelcollisson24 The real world affects everyone equally :)

    • @michaelcollisson24
      @michaelcollisson24 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@catsfpv603 Doesn’t take much to stump me , and you my friend have left me dumbfounded. 😅

    • @teucap5965
      @teucap5965 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      this one was so good

  • @RubSomefastOnIt
    @RubSomefastOnIt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +501

    as a machinist, i would argue heavily against "we couldnt do it today" we have 5/6 axis CNC stone mills with diamond tooling that can make stone any shape you can imagine to within +/-0.001 of an inch.
    that being said i have no idea how they did it back then....
    those are 100% lathe tooling marks on the stone pots and bowls and circular saw marks on those stones so they definatly had tools and machinery we dont know of...
    egypt was deffinatly the epicenter of the recovery after the cataclysm, maybe many of the people that originally lived there returned after it dried up and attempted to rebuild.

    • @fredverkool5599
      @fredverkool5599 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      D-railed You are 100% correct.

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Those marks show typical irregularities oroving there were no machines involved. Stone manually worked with stones, wooden handles, arsenic copper. That's all.

    • @RubSomefastOnIt
      @RubSomefastOnIt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@hans-joachimbierwirth4727 those concentric lines in the stone bowls and pots 100% show evidence of turning on a lathe or wheel, Something mainstream archeology says was not invented yet...

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@RubSomefastOnIt You are denying the irregularities that are proof of them chiseled manually. Maybe you need glasses.

    • @RubSomefastOnIt
      @RubSomefastOnIt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@hans-joachimbierwirth4727 oh sure... i would definitely waste my time hand chiseling in perfectly concentric circles... that makes so much sense...
      Get out of here with that bullshit...

  • @86Smally
    @86Smally ปีที่แล้ว +162

    “We are a species with amnesia” - Graham Hancock

    • @antonjoubert6980
      @antonjoubert6980 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Everybody shitting on Hancock's theories are trying to claim he believe al kinds of weird things (which he probably do) as if that has any bearing on the facts and enigmas he presents, nobody actually addresses any of that.

    • @jayedatredes2890
      @jayedatredes2890 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@DailyTheme No way out of the rabbit hole dude!

    • @garymunro7561
      @garymunro7561 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Linda Moulton Howe is where he got that saying, she has a channel called earthfiles.

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      So profound coming from Graham Hancock who can comfortably forget anything about actual archaeological know how.

    • @tobyreed529
      @tobyreed529 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      ​@@kingspeechless1607 how about the geological, the archon astrology, the masonry, the origin stories, the deitys the art and the impossible technology, that EVERY single one of these civilisations have in common? Do you really think archeologists can deny all of this and live and die by theories made over a century ago? 😂😂

  • @timothyblazer1749
    @timothyblazer1749 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    The most advanced stone working company in Germany was contacted and asked how much would it cost to create a box like the ones at the Serapeum. They said "1 million to BEGIN RESEARCH", as they had no ability at that time to do so.

  • @timidchanteuse
    @timidchanteuse 2 ปีที่แล้ว +250

    Until two days ago, I was the person who would immediately turn away from anything labeled “pseudoscience” or “pseudohistory”…I have an enormous reverence for they way we acquire and document knowledge. HOWEVER, this seems to be one of the most blatant blind spots I’ve ever heard about. My mind has been completely blown by going down this rabbit hole. I’m actually infuriated that the institutions I’ve known and trusted have done nothing but discredit these ideas, even in the face of new knowledge. But all of our Bronze Age religions would have to be reframed if we took this seriously, as well as our priorities…if a civilization this advanced fell before…it can certainly happen again.
    Thanks for making this content :)

    • @lukecage3569
      @lukecage3569 ปีที่แล้ว

      Human history has been hidden and manipulated since before we were born. The fallen angels of Genesis 6 gave mankind forbidden technology and this is only some of the results. They also gave them weapons of war. The Hindu Mahabharata describes what sounds like a nuclear war incl. animals and people suffering from radiation fallout. Its thought to have been written around 900 or 800 BC. Sheets of glass have been found in the desert along w. background radiation. Puma Punku is in the very high altitude of Bolivia, has laser precision cut granite blocks that fit together like a puzzle scattered in ruins. Remember, the same institutions that deny these sites or try to explain them away w. ridiculous excuses teach evolution as a fact when it doesn't even abide by the scientific method.
      There's no way around it, history is a lie.

    • @wordup897
      @wordup897 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      Current civilization is failing now, been in decline for ages.

    • @williamwallace8535
      @williamwallace8535 ปีที่แล้ว

      I hate to break it to you but if you look deep enough into any modern institution you will find widespread blatant lies and malpractices. Politics, medicine, economics…….glad you’re starting to open your eyes though

    • @lukecage3569
      @lukecage3569 ปีที่แล้ว

      Human history has been hidden and manipulated since before we were born. The fallen angels of Genesis 6 gave mankind forbidden technology and this is only some of the results. They also gave them weapons of war. The Hindu Mahabharata describes what sounds like a nuclear war incl. animals and people suffering from radiation fallout. Its thought to have been written around 900 or 800 BC. Sheets of glass have been found in the desert along w. background radiation. Puma Punku is in the very high altitude of Bolivia, has laser precision cut granite blocks that fit together like a puzzle scattered in ruins. Remember, the same institutions that deny these sites or try to explain them away w. ridiculous excuses teach evolution as a fact when it doesn't even abide by the scientific method.
      There's no way around it, history is a lie.

    • @BlackKnight-ll8qh
      @BlackKnight-ll8qh ปีที่แล้ว +8

      It WILL happen again.

  • @JimAW63
    @JimAW63 3 ปีที่แล้ว +270

    I got stopped at a railroad crossing the other day. When the train went by, I noticed all the boxcars had spray painted designs all over them. Some of them were very intricate. I'm gonna assume the same people who painted those designs also built the boxcars. It's only logical.

    • @sidilicious11
      @sidilicious11 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Good one

    • @dane4265
      @dane4265 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      except there is other evidence available which would let anyone with half a brain to see that it wasn't the graffiti artist, marks on the carriages from the builder, then you also have evidence from the builder of what they built! You know written evidence, you know written evidence all over Egypt, most of it giving very good time line even letting us know what things were built for and who built them. if you focus on one thing you personally can't explain and use that as an explanation in isolation then yes you can make anything up, but when you look at lots of evidence from many sources then you get a better picture.

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@dane4265 PROOVE IT! IT WAS THE GRAFFITI ARTISTS... HAD TO BE!

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@dane4265 you know they have re-created alot of the techniques used to carve/move rock, right? You know these ppl are feeding you lies & bs right? No? Oh then you cant speak... go watch "world of antiquity" and your little half brain will be happier. I promise.

    • @bigcoryjones2126
      @bigcoryjones2126 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@dane4265 As to the Hieroglyphs. they're just stabbing in the dark. Is a best guess at best. There have been multiple Re descriptions of their meanings. Like The Rosetta Stone they make the assumption that all 3 languages say the same thing. It could be I the king of Egypt have come here for this reason. I the king of Syria have come here for this reason. I the king of latinville come here for this reason. Although I'm not an expert no one should take my word for it. I'm just not taking anyone else's word for it.

  • @spldrong
    @spldrong ปีที่แล้ว +9

    My favorite "fact" about the pyramids is that they dont really know how old they are, and that much evidence point to them being closer to 10k years old

  • @danielparsons2859
    @danielparsons2859 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    "on the wonk' is a new technical term that I learnt watching this. Great video.

  • @robdog7516
    @robdog7516 2 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    I am a wood turner and what you said about the lids not matching is accurate in my view. I make the lids of my vases, boxes, etc out of the same material. In fact. I cut it out of the top of the same piece so the grain matches exactly. It is laughable that they think the same people made 2 obviously different levels of craftsmanship on these items.

    • @turkdubstep
      @turkdubstep ปีที่แล้ว

      Curious tho where the actual lids are tho 🤔

    • @robdog7516
      @robdog7516 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@turkdubstep you lost me with that question. I was saying my lids are made out of the same material. What are you asking?

    • @turkdubstep
      @turkdubstep ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah I was just wondering why the second culture had to make lids. What happened to the first lids. Like you said normally you would make a lid by cutting the top from the same piece. Just curious is all lol

    • @turkdubstep
      @turkdubstep ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Maybe they were like flower pots you wouldn't necessarily need a lid for that I guess.

    • @andyharpist2938
      @andyharpist2938 ปีที่แล้ว

      How do youi "turn a vase" with two delicate handles on each side?

  • @patrickosullivan4354
    @patrickosullivan4354 2 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    The stone pots are so compelling. They look like they have perfect classical forms. I don't think I've seen anyone do an artistic appraisal of the stone pots. Everyone focuses on how machine-made they are, but in each and every vessel I can clearly see the hand of an artist. These might have been made on a lathe, but I think they were made one at a time and obviously with great care and intention.

    • @mch000
      @mch000 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      As a woodworker and woodturner, this is an excellent observation. There are shapes and forms that look clunky and shapes and forms that look beautiful. Examine the outside curves of the bowls & vases: no flat spots (that I can see), and curves that fit the rule of thirds (think golden ratio) and are aesthetically pleasing.... the vases sometimes end "above" the table surface, so that the piece seems to "float" above the table. This is an effect we strive for, as artisans. I agree wholeheartedly - these stone pieces were turned on a lathe by an accomplished turner with an advanced "artist's eye" for shape and form, and lots of experience... and tools that match state of the art tools in use today.

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Determination & patience.

    • @patrickosullivan4354
      @patrickosullivan4354 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I have a suspicion that the stone pots are made from large diameter core drilling that has been seen elsewhere across Egypt. All those Stone cylinders that pop out of the core drilling would be useful scrap for making artistic items. I can imagine the Builders of the pyramids competing with each other to make the finest Stone jars in their spare time. But as we don't know what the culture was like for those building the pyramids I can't say with any certainty, but it does feel to me like those jars represent work done in leisure. Work done for the sake of pride and artistry versus done at the command of slave masters or whatever

    • @brockdelorenzo1120
      @brockdelorenzo1120 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Could have been metal pot…..and petrified…..

    • @patrickosullivan4354
      @patrickosullivan4354 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      While I like your creative thought process, I have to disagree that these are metal pots vitrified into stone. Some of them are Alabaster some of them are granite some of them are schist. And many of them show large Crystal formations as what would form in natural geological Stone. While we can grow crystals in the glazing process while firing ceramics, I just don't see how a metal pot could vitrify into stone and create large crystalline structures without changing the elegant shape of the pots. Plus there's still machine marks visible on the stone surface which I don't imagine would survive any vitrification process that I can imagine. Not for nothing there's clearly ancient technology that we don't understand involved in these ancient Landscapes so who knows

  • @maryxlent
    @maryxlent 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This is the first video of yours I’ve ever seen and I just wanted to say, I friggin love you. I feel like I just listened to myself talking and walking around Egypt for 15 minutes 😂 I only recently got exposed to this stone work madness through watching UnchartedX and oh my dayzzz I can’t even deal with how exciting it all is!!

  • @itsdangeruss3868
    @itsdangeruss3868 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I can't help but think that these boxes stored some sort of power source. The locations are so puzzling too. I'm glad you are drawing attention to this type of precision.

  • @Jagdtyger2A
    @Jagdtyger2A 2 ปีที่แล้ว +152

    Having worked cutting granite that hard, I could build one of those boxes with CNC diamond tools and lasers using only two blocks of stone, one for the box and one for the lid. The hardest part would be the perfect inside corners. I estimate that it would take a few weeks. But I'll be damned if I could figure out a way to haul it into place inside a shaft/tunnel

    • @gopherstate777
      @gopherstate777 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Or, you could just pour some granite or limestone concrete into a mold?

    • @beavisjones1831
      @beavisjones1831 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Levitation

    • @Jagdtyger2A
      @Jagdtyger2A 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@beavisjones1831 Nice theory, now all you need to do is show us how that is done

    • @beavisjones1831
      @beavisjones1831 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@Jagdtyger2A i was thinking dude who made coral castle 🏰 in Florida took the secret with him

    • @stanwashighski3553
      @stanwashighski3553 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Now throw away you modern tools and give it a try.

  • @TheDoomclaw
    @TheDoomclaw 3 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    I had never noticed before how some of the structures were so blatantly different such as the obelisks surrounded by early egyptian buildings. To me it's painfully obvious they were built around them. I imagine many other structures follow similar suit. Thank you for pointing that out to us!

    • @richardramirez2557
      @richardramirez2557 ปีที่แล้ว

      Egypt is 3000+ years with multiple falls in between. So much of the stuff you see is simple reuse by subsequent generations, these people moved whole cities. They also demonstrated power and wealth by essentially wasting energy, specifically on logging of stone and construction from stone. stealing and re carving other pharaohs stone was constant.

  • @michaelhagler395
    @michaelhagler395 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    JJ- I HAVE TO SAY....ONE OF THE BEST, IF NOT THE BEST VIDEO ABOUT ANCIENT TECHNOLOGY! I AM A FIEND FOR ANCIENT TECHNOLOGY AND I HAVE NEVER THOROUGHLY UNDERSTOOD WHAT THE PRESENTERS OF PAST VIDEOS ARE SAYING. YOU WERE SPOT ON WHEN IT CAME TO EDITING AND THE PLACEMENT OF THE NARRATIONS IN THE VIDEO. I JUST CANT THANK YOU ENOUGH FOR THIS OUTSTANDING VIDEO. FIRST TIME WATCHER...LONGTIME OBSERVER! MIKE

  • @mralowen
    @mralowen ปีที่แล้ว +60

    Am I the only one who, while intrigued beyond belief, is also incredibly terrified by the implications of this?

    • @sammyjones3500
      @sammyjones3500 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      We could find ourselves at the mercy of the Aliens influence on our landscape and genes or survival.

    • @grahamcomstive9179
      @grahamcomstive9179 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      Why be terrified ? It's obvious that our documented history is either a blatant lie or just poorly understood. To me, evidence such as this is so exciting and I hope we find the answers in my lifetime .

    • @mralowen
      @mralowen ปีที่แล้ว +16

      @@grahamcomstive9179 right, absolutely. What I find terrifying is that what ever happened back then could happen again.

    • @jjbees7911
      @jjbees7911 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@grahamcomstive9179 be terrified because obviously it was aliens. They did it before, they'll do again.
      And the lizard people are stealing humans for food. They probably farmed us too much and caused everything to collapse.
      Arm yourself, don't at your own peril! They are returning!!!

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      It's a bit spooky and scary. Especially when looking at the black granite statues with perfect cuts and polish, machine like, and the expression on the statues is that they just slightly smile. The sheer confidence the statues displays is just, who were this people, almost god like, almost like this people new that future generations would see them as magical people.

  • @byronlovesdrifting1
    @byronlovesdrifting1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Ok @10:55 what your talking about is so clear its crazy in reference to the saw mark mistakes. As a contractor I've worked with all different kinds of stone and masonry and that's exactly what you said it was, a mark where the blade went off course and the worker stopped it and moved backwards to continue. Also probably means the work started above that point and progressed down, probably removing the cut off pieces in sections. Just found your channel great stuff so far 👍

  • @samcs06
    @samcs06 3 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    I hope when I cross over to the other side, I can go back in time and see how/who made these works of art and what was their purpose.

    • @donmega6687
      @donmega6687 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      You said they found a bone in your last video and this video the pots are machine made I'm gonna get rid of you If you don't stop listening to other people put a tracker on me I'll throw my device in the sea

    • @shottyboik4555
      @shottyboik4555 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@donmega6687 da fuq ?

    • @ImTheZr
      @ImTheZr 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      1). The angels of god before adam and eve sinned, the heaven was on earth and this devices were in the use of some sorte of energy producing device.
      2). The "Gods", "thor", "zeus", "Amon ra" and etc the "fictive mythology gods" ( they are the sons of god (the angels that betrayed god) , the fallen angels that interbreed with the daughters of man(human females) ) and they have using the heavenly knowledge and technology for the purpose of longer life expectancies for then or maybe to impress the fallen humans so they can be deceived to go in hell for believe in them instead of god.
      All of this is before the flood thats in the bible. Read the bible folks, that book is not a joke, its the purest truth of truth trust me!

    • @shottyboik4555
      @shottyboik4555 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ImTheZr the bible has been rewrote many many times plus the oldest one we have I the king James written in Arabic 1500 years after Jesus?? How can you belive that come on humans have rewrote that shit 100s of times

    • @shottyboik4555
      @shottyboik4555 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ImTheZr but I do hope there is a god and an afterlife and I do not believe the bible clearly man made with all the hate and women stuff etc

  • @barnygogl
    @barnygogl ปีที่แล้ว +51

    Hi, thank you for this Has anyone ever taken a look microscopically at the dust particles retrieved from those saw kerf's to look for industrial type diamonds or pieces of them that might be still imbedded in those kerf's? hmmm, I wonder

    • @gohrt9139
      @gohrt9139 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Good point

    • @ForburyLion
      @ForburyLion 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@gohrt9139 Literally, a diamond would be a good point.

  • @DadBodDrumming
    @DadBodDrumming ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I have always said that the Egyptians took over a culture they found. This is why the Sphinx head is small. It was sticking out of the ground and they reshaped it. Not until a thousand years later did anyone uncover the complete Sphinx and reveal the body.

    • @mikeklein7931
      @mikeklein7931 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You sure? Because I've read that the Egyptians restored the sphinx like three times over the 4000 years they inhabited the area.

    • @ResQRaces
      @ResQRaces 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@mikeklein7931 These are both correct according to the evidence. There is evidence that the head has been reworked far more than the body and base, but not just once. So yes, the head was found, but the body was discovered a bit later

  • @Sonders_spirit
    @Sonders_spirit 3 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    It never occurred to me that ancient Egyptians could have taken artifacts from other groups and “tagged” them. 🤯 We do it all the time why wouldn’t ancient people do the same?

    • @airthrowDBT
      @airthrowDBT ปีที่แล้ว +3

      They would destroy cartouches and deface out-of-favor Pharoahs after death, they were constantly re-writing the literal history, in many of the stone work the "scratches" are low quality graffitti placed onto extremely high quality pieces...

    • @drdeath9835
      @drdeath9835 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      They moved in alright thats why that dont have anything about how it was built

    • @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812
      @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It's a real possibility that Egyptians actually inherited the area that they are from. And things like the pyramids and the sphinx were already there.

    • @airthrowDBT
      @airthrowDBT ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 You're probably right but that just means the Dynastic Egyptians took over the monuments and probably decorated them. Literally GLOBALLY all far ancient stonework is superior in craftsmanship to the nearer-ancient stonework. This to me indicates a globally connected group of cultures and possibly cataclysm of some kind.

    • @airthrowDBT
      @airthrowDBT ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 And we do see tons of evidence of shittily done hierglyphs on very fine stone-work which means that the person doing the writing was appropriating the stonework for their terrible scrawls which basically amount to graffiti.

  • @DarkNookShop
    @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +81

    Egyptologists 100 years from now: "That building was clearly built by someone called Banksy."

    • @annadariel8489
      @annadariel8489 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      LOL 😂

    • @Jbickley00
      @Jbickley00 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Pseudo historians 100 years from now: “The people who built the Empire State Building didn’t have I phones or computers! There’s no way they could have made anything that complex.”

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Jbickley00 Might make sense as an argument if iphones or computers were required to build the empire state building... or even comparable levels of technology. Now if people were claiming that the builders of the empire state building only had wood hammers... then the question of how the hell did they drive steel rivets into steel beams, would be perfectly valid.
      But you bring up an interesting point... only a few decades after the empire state building was constructed, our design and building tech is so much more advanced, that the ES building seems practically primitive by comparison. To be analogous to what happened in early dynastic to late dynastic, we'd have to currently be building wood framed mud huts. Because building and construction techniques got worse over that time period, not better. But then our development was built on the infrastructure of previous development... it was not outside information introduced to a population that did not understand it, and lacked the developmental infrastructure to sustain it.

    • @Jbickley00
      @Jbickley00 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DarkNookShop not quite. No one is suggesting the late dynastic only had wooden tools. The late dynastic Egyptians had methods of working various stone materials with some precision. They also may well have had access to iron tools likely meteoric, but archaeological evidence places the availability of Iron earlier than previously thought. So the challenge is not throwing up out hands and saying “dues ex machina” but rather rethinking our assumptions about what may have been available. The disconnect for me is that no one imagines the Greeks needed previously unknown civilizations to help them build the Parthenon (an incredibly co plea and precise structure). So why is it we think the Egyptians needed them? The technological distinction between 480 BCE and 2500 BCE are just not that great.

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Jbickley00 No, they are suggesting the early dynastic period only had copper and some brass tools... that are far softer than the stone they were supposedly being used on.
      Also the odd bit of iron from a meteor was a prized symbol of wealth and power... not the basis for a labor's tools. Even if they did craft a heretofore undiscovered tool set from meteoric iron, it would not have existed on the scale needed to supply the masons doing the massive level of stonework that was done.
      And we do not question the greek methods because we know they had cement, and built in stages. The greeks were not pulling 1000 ton solid blocks of granite out of quarries... supposedly by banging them with diorite rocks... then moving them hundreds of miles and carving intricate incised right angles into them to fraction of a millimeter tolerances.
      ...then somehow forgetting how to do it as time passed.

  • @davidwatkins1734
    @davidwatkins1734 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just found your channel yesterday, blown away.

  • @susanburney1071
    @susanburney1071 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    When I saw the Staffordshire Horde, I was stunned. It was simply incredibly beautiful. Talking to some of the Museum caretakers, they said that Master jewellers had looked at the gem work and were stunned because they had no idea how somebody in the 10th century was able to create something they could not do in the 20th century without computers.

  • @joshlemke735
    @joshlemke735 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    A lot of those pots have evidence of machining done. As far as I know, every single kind of stone in Egypt was used to make these relics. Including granite. Try making one of those pots out of granite with nothing but primitive copper tools and let me know how that works out lol.

    • @richardramirez2557
      @richardramirez2557 ปีที่แล้ว

      Abrasive powder and time is all you need. And you realise a softer material can be used to shape a harder material right? The tool just wears out and the bigger the difference in hardness the more time and tool duration are an issue.

  • @Alan62651
    @Alan62651 3 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    The Inca admitted that they found their monolithic architectures and "added to them," and it shows. It follows that the Eqyptians did the same.

    • @geraldfriend256
      @geraldfriend256 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Herodotus claims that Egyptian priests told him exactly that..the pyramid was already there.If so that explains perhaps why the ' copies' got weaker and weaker.hmm

    • @Mastordant
      @Mastordant 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Would you have some video or other source that talks about that? I would love to know more

    • @matthewjohnson1891
      @matthewjohnson1891 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Also there is greek texts that talk about them going under the sphinx and witnessing motion sensing lights turning on. I think I heard graham hancock talk about that

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@geraldfriend256 they didnt they got better & better... hahahahaha omg you ppl... sry that is my ego talking... and how i dont believe that statement to be true. Nothing more... & i dont know tbh. Im no scientist etc. But as far as i know the pyramid building got better & better with time and a lot more is to be said after that as well.. so... i was being rude, sorry.

    • @jr1648
      @jr1648 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@KurticeYZ the 4th dynasty is supposedly responsible for the most impressive ancient constructions. The stonework absolutely declined in quality over subsequent dynasties.

  • @timrader1260
    @timrader1260 ปีที่แล้ว

    @ Funny Olde World near the end of this video when you are mentioning the cra cra 😂😂 bats, did you say that tunnel was going under the fermamant ??
    Not sure how I've never came across your channel. Love what you are doing 😍 can I come on the next Trip. I'm a little cra cra 🤣 so it will be all good

  • @stuartgwilliam970
    @stuartgwilliam970 ปีที่แล้ว

    Loving your videos and your energy Jahanna. Keep it up, fantastic work

  • @ronschmidtling
    @ronschmidtling 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Hey, Jahannah- I love your stuff. I also went to Egypt and saw the same things- perfectly carved granite artworks with chicken-scratch writing on the top. Clearly not the same technology.
    And anyway, even among Egyptians, they carve their names on an older pharaoh's stuff, and then claim it.

  • @Nturner822
    @Nturner822 2 ปีที่แล้ว +118

    Palaeontologists: “less than 0.001% of animals become fossils! There’s so much to learn”
    Mainstream archeologists: “we know everything”
    Just found your channel thanks to Joe Rogan and Randall Carlson. Love your work

    • @visjesvanger
      @visjesvanger 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      ye so funny thinking about putting strange objects in the ground so that the people after us will definitly know we are being dumbed down

    • @lanenorthcutt349
      @lanenorthcutt349 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Go Joe ROGAN !

    • @penelopehunt2371
      @penelopehunt2371 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Which explains why really ancient humans haven’t been found

    • @CelluliteYogaPants
      @CelluliteYogaPants 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@penelopehunt2371 If you read about stuff like Denosivans … they were only discovered by DNA… they found one pinky bone or something. ( I think more bones might have been DNA tested now since that initial discovery). There are absolutely things we don’t know and have not yet found. Every civilization has oral traditions of a great flood.. ( Atlantis, Noah, Pandora’s Box etc ) If you consider that civilizations tend to be near oceans and rivers, a great flood would explain why stuff has been “lost”. Things under water would have decayed or been “buried” under sand. I think it’s entirely possible that a more advanced society existed but some natural disaster like a world wide flood took them out. If people were specialized like today, they could pass on all the knowledge of how to do stuff. I would have no clue how to pass on electricity or most modern things to my kids if there was a cataclysmic event today. I wouldn’t know how to mine iron or even where to get it. I could forage for things and those items would be highly prized as they couldn’t be easily gathered. If we all lost electricity tomorrow in a cataclysmic event… in 20 years our cars would all be melted down into basic plow shears or basic tools needed for survival. Survivors wouldn’t necessarily be able to “pass on” how to make an iPhone or how to make gasoline or anything to their kids. The oral tradition might be passed on of what our generation had but it wouldn’t be possible for them reproduce that same level of lifestyle. I would hope we would not regress to complete pre-industrial civilization but starving people are not going to have time to make paper, ink, and write books.

    • @srenette82
      @srenette82 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Not a single archaeologist says that "we know everything" .. where are you getting this stuff? Archaeologists are the first to explain how much more there is to discover, especially in the fight against constant budget cuts for research funding and employment.

  • @andybrooke1961
    @andybrooke1961 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I agree with you in that I think there were far more capable craftsmen with tool knowledge that has been lost to us. Back in the 1990’s the space shuttle took radar scans of the Sahara desert and located cities and even one pyramid that was buried when the land went from a wet savanna to a desert. My thought is that all these people who lived there had to move to where the water was, the Nile. They would have brought there technology with them. It could have been more advanced then the local technology of Egypt. You had a video of “Pot Belly hill” in Turkey. The archaeologists who are working on it now said that the much deeper construction is far more advanced then the newer works. Again technology that became lost.

  • @julesmadjar4400
    @julesmadjar4400 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've not been focusing on all this recently but randomly just found out about the Kaimanawa Wall, and as always when i find out about these things thought of you, Jimmy, Randall etc. There's just so much stuff out there, and as Graham, bane of Academic archaeology said, everything just keeps getting older. I'm no youtuber, or researcher, or archaeologist, but my long term plan is to one day write and produce songs about it. I'm not in the creative headspace at the moment to write songs (family etc) but one day when i've got my creativity going am hoping to be making a sound about all of it! Will be in touch about content for the Copper Chisels lol - is that band a thing yet?

  • @TrueWeej
    @TrueWeej 3 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    I honestly think if this was widely accepted in academia, that we have a forgotten chapter of history. In which we had access to high technology. It would make us more conscientious as a whole species. More inclined to look to the future and leave things for this who come after.

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I think in the next 50 years we might make it to this conclusion

    • @wanderingtallguy6849
      @wanderingtallguy6849 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Right. The only thing that saddens me is the fact that 98% of the population is absorbed on soccer,netflix and does not give a huge F aboutthose kind of things. Also because we got the "big" countries that keep what they discovered fro their own vantage, they kicked out Tesla's work out of the radar and still keep us enslaved in this money and religious driven society.

    • @TrueWeej
      @TrueWeej 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@wanderingtallguy6849 bear in mind we don’t know what motivated the ancients to built these wonders. It could have been religion or something similar. Hell it might have been because their team won the World Cup 🤷🏼‍♂️ what we need to take away is they came and went and here’s what they left. What would we leave? A few dams are big enough to last 10,000 years. Not much else. Our mortality is defined by what we leave behind. I think we’d understand these wonders more if we had a similar minds. More spiritual, more focused on the Miracle of life. Not religion, a desire to understand our small corner of the universe. Building, creating, with dignity to inspire those who come after.

    • @wanderingtallguy6849
      @wanderingtallguy6849 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@TrueWeej I like to think it is a message, what kind? i do not know, but i think they knew the asteroid was coming hard.
      Probably what hit us was a leftover of what detonated Mars and the Moon.
      We got lucky i must say .

    • @hypercc1
      @hypercc1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I get the feeling that some official body somewhere (maybe a government or the church) does actually know that an advanced human culture existed on this planet before us and we are not the first (maybe not even the second) to reach the point of high civilisation but is keeping it under wraps (sorry, I know that sounds a bit tin foil hatty). As a society we have this arrogant belief these days that we're almost untouchable and we can sort any problem with our knowledge and technology. Imagine our society suddenly finding out that an ancient civilisation on a par with us got wiped out practically overnight and even with all their knowledge still couldn't save themselves.

  • @bensun432
    @bensun432 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I'm excited to have found this channel, even more excited to see history unfolding before our eyes!

  • @billferguson2364
    @billferguson2364 ปีที่แล้ว

    The closeups are the best I've seen. Good stuff!

  • @aalexander928
    @aalexander928 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love your videos - you have a wonderful approach to the subject & illustrate your point simply & precisely.
    Thank you so much for sharing all your hard work.

  • @douggoble9695
    @douggoble9695 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I am so glad that you send a post so I can set my reminder bell - ON. Thank you,Jahannah James 🙂

  • @holmesautomationcomponents9476
    @holmesautomationcomponents9476 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Great video Jahannah. I agree completely. I have been following this "stuff" since I was a kid in the '70s. I've have always thought that the sphinx and pyramids are much older than what the Egyptologists tell us. Far too many inconsistencies.

    • @cassyvorster466
      @cassyvorster466 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      My great grandfather was an archeologist in the 20s and he said the sphinx was clearly covered in water at some point. That dates them pre flood , along with the pyramids.

  • @nicotreize5938
    @nicotreize5938 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Bonjour,
    Je viens de découvrir votre chaine TH-cam et je dois dire que j'adore ce que vous faites. Je suis entièrement d'accord avec tout ce que vous dites et pensez à propos de l'histoire d'Egypte, on ne nous dit pas la vérité. C'est valable même pour l'histoire du monde en général, on nous ment à tout point de vue. Certains ont les réponses à nos questions et ne comptent pas nous les donner...Merci à vous pour ce que vous faites. ;)

  • @monadamus42
    @monadamus42 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    7:01, whoa! I've seen so much Egyptian stuff but I've never seen those giant tombs. Has to be the major inspiration for the Tomb of the Giants in Dark Souls! Great video, thank you!

  • @mblack3450
    @mblack3450 3 ปีที่แล้ว +118

    Zahi probably scratched all the names on the oldest bowls and statues. I can see him with him with his pen knife sweating away in the cover of darkness

    • @davidpowell6098
      @davidpowell6098 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      So he could screw more money out of his "Secret" buyers.

    • @TheEarl777
      @TheEarl777 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      So glad he’s gone. He should be biffed in jail for holding back important history.
      Thank goodness for the internet that has allowed the sharing of these obvious high tech objects.

    • @phillipbenson7624
      @phillipbenson7624 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Nah, he did it with a dremel tool.

    • @JimAW63
      @JimAW63 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I'd like to know what's in Zahi's private collection.

    • @waynegoddard4065
      @waynegoddard4065 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      He’s like the guy who used to run FIFA.

  • @jasonbailey9302
    @jasonbailey9302 3 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    Essentially, the conclusion is, that the Dremel Tool is much older than previously thought!

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      aha dremel tool- as opposed to the oldest abrasive tool ever- the rock.

    • @MrBonners
      @MrBonners 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@carbon1255 proof of concept prototype

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@carbon1255 I think the point is you'd need a high speed grinder of some sort to create that error... because if you were doing that with a diorite rock, you'd have to be f-ing up for weeks or months. Oh yeah we noticed last week it was ground down too far... so we're going to stop grinding it in another week or two. It's like you're painting a line down the center of a 4 lane road, and notice that you're off center only once you've hit the shoulder.

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DarkNookShop probably a better explanation for it than that.

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KurticeYZ I think the comparison is made to a dremel because that's just a commonly understood reference point for a tool that does that kind of grinding. The key point is speed. Whatever method they were using, it would have to be considerably faster then any methods currently attributed to them.

  • @buddyhell7100
    @buddyhell7100 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm so glad I stumbled across you're channel

  • @sonny-rush1388
    @sonny-rush1388 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The curius being has some amazing theories on the pryamids. Honestly the best explanation for the the original purpose of the pyramids ive ever heard

  • @alaneddy4575
    @alaneddy4575 2 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    If you look at the casing stones covering the channels around the Sphinx, you see solid machine perfect granite on one side, but the hidden underside is perfectly contoured to fit the bedrock it covers. A virtually impossible task now. It would take a precision 3D scanner combined with a computer controlled grinding arm to come close to this. Some of the pots you describe are, according to mainstream narratives, hand carved slowly over decades. Those narratives just do not make sense. If you look at the massive earthquake proof structures in Peru and similar sites you see stones carved and locked together in an almost matter of fact way to the builders, and yet again our best computer guided cutting techniques would struggle to equal let alone improve on. Many believe the ancients had stone working techniques based upon the effect of finding the right resonant frequency. A way in which otherwise extremely hard stone could be softened with sound and then worked while in that state.

    • @389293912
      @389293912 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I think the Peruvian/Incan polygonal, jigsaw walls were actually poured material, concrete, geopolymer, made partially from ground up material from nearby quarries mixed with a binder, hardener, so the chemical composition matches real rock. The liquid was poured into long horizontal beds, molds, with separators of thin, decomposable, organic, material like big leaves, with long wooden planks on the bottom sticking out to later be used as levers, and left the harden. (The "nubs" on some of the blocks was the material starting to harden when poured from a large spigot and had to be cut off sometimes even). After the bed hardened, the entire wall was raised 90 degrees all at once by hundreds of men using the underlying wooden planks as levers.
      It's either that, or aliens.

    • @zackmoon592
      @zackmoon592 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@389293912 I've often considered it being poured like concrete - and in certain cases it might have been - but in many circumstances they lack any sort of imprints, deformities, or striations that would have been left by the mold. Also those stones weigh thousands of pounds and would snap any wooden lever. Metal levers might have worked, and one could consider the possibility of using pullies - however as far as we know older types of rope would break too, so they would have to have invented something similar in strength to metal cables which were invented (or reinvented) in 1800s

    • @zackmoon592
      @zackmoon592 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Supposedly Nikola Tesla invented a sonic resonator machine that could match the resonant frequency of the material, and hooked it up to his shop to test it. According to Tesla, it shook the building so violently from this little machine that it caused a small earthquake and nearly destroyed the building, until - being unable to get it to turn off - he smashed it with a sledgehammer.
      Sonic frequencies have been shown to be able to vibrate the air in ways that can put out fires and levitate small objects on an air cushion. It's not a huge stretch to think a more advanced version of this could move stone

    • @mikemcleroy8265
      @mikemcleroy8265 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@zackmoon592 good point about the air cushion idea.

    • @cake-face
      @cake-face ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@389293912 I like this theory, better than what is generally accepted, but if the polygonal stones in Peru were poured using molds; why aren't there many stones of the same size and shapes? Unless they made a new mold for every single poured stone...

  • @gemeraldrex3313
    @gemeraldrex3313 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Hi JJ, I would love to show you around Cornwall. As a native Cornish woman, I know some amazing sites, we are told the tin houses are from 200 years ago, I think the mines and ruins go much "deeper".
    Cornwall is a fascinating and powerful place, and I think that recently we have been lied to on a massive scale.
    GGx

    • @gemeraldrex3313
      @gemeraldrex3313 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Granite is everywhere down here! fyi i learned about you from Randall on Rogan.

    • @nikscott6644
      @nikscott6644 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Love Cornwall ❤️ my step dad is from Falmouth and we used to visit his family all the time, fantastic place with great people.

  • @hattrikswayz2695
    @hattrikswayz2695 ปีที่แล้ว

    I truly love the merch. I remember being in middle school thinking how primitive Egypt was and things like the Magna Carta, but only to look back and remember thinking that how something as simple as running water for the ancients must have been challenging

    • @BartvanderHorst
      @BartvanderHorst 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Egypt was different not primitive

  • @maggiehoness
    @maggiehoness 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    awesome channel,bucket list stuff for me x

  • @brienfoerster
    @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +269

    Nice job Jahannah

    • @loloolollll
      @loloolollll 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Your the best Brien!

    • @brienfoerster
      @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@loloolollll Most kind of you.

    • @douggoble9695
      @douggoble9695 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Egypt tour October 2021 Oh yeah ! Can’t wait 😊

    • @brienfoerster
      @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@douggoble9695 You coming Doug?

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Cheers Brien!!!!! 🤗🤗😎😎

  • @HypnoticChronic1
    @HypnoticChronic1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    My argument/explanation for most of these in particular the tooling is simply.... hydro power.
    Not quite sure why people seem to think Egyptians couldn't come up with the concept of a stone mill clearly given what they built something such a that would not be beyond their capability, I mean they have the Nile right there to supply any of the hydro power via a water wheel they would need.
    Now my other argument for why we don't see the level of detail in later works... technological regression we have the same exact same thing happen after the fall of the western Roman empire, people went from living in pretty large well developed cities with grand architecture and constructions, fresh running water, paved and well drained roads to... mostly living in villages and some "cities" which where little better than large towns, using stagnate well water if they are lucky, and traveling on dirt (I'm hard pressed to call them roads) paths with no drainage.
    It wasn't until 18th-20th centuries that we started to get back what we lost with Rome, its fall put us back easily a thousand years who's to say Egypt didn't suffer something similar be it via external invasion like in Romes case, civil war killing off those talented people, a natural disaster or multiple ones etc. any number of things could have caused them to loose their technological know how.

    • @gopherstate777
      @gopherstate777 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Or you could just pour some Limestone/Granite concrete into a mold?

    • @HypnoticChronic1
      @HypnoticChronic1 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KittyBoom360 I made that comment over half a year ago but if I recall in the video I believe they were making the argument regarding the tooling marks on the stone and stating how manual labor would not be able to both cut through and make such precise cuts without deviation along with the man hours it would take to do so.
      And like today when human labor cannot do something to the requirements we like we turn to the mechanical instead and hydro power provides both the precision and consistent labor that would be required to cut into that stone along with the water needed for the task being a stones throw away in the Nile.
      Now you're making the argument that we cannot achieve such a task today and I believe that argument to be false given both the tools and technology exist to manipulate granite in any form we wish so it is not out of the realm of possibility however, what it really comes down to would be demand.
      To my knowledge there is next to no demand for large granite boxes today so why invest the time, machinery and manpower to make something nearly nobody wants? When the same result can be achieved from fastening multiple slabs together and have those very same slabs be useful for any other project involving granite somebody could want.

  • @rosieclarkson4064
    @rosieclarkson4064 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    When I was a child in the 1960s my Dad subscribed to National Geographic. I remember seeing articles about Ancient Egypt and thinking how modern it all looked. I was only seven years old but this anomaly struck me even then. I think I was right to question and I enjoy the content trying to seek the truth.

  • @justinmathias2495
    @justinmathias2495 ปีที่แล้ว

    The everything inside me channel also speaks alot about ancient technology keep up the good work on shining the light on true history

  • @peterszar
    @peterszar 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You have got some pretty cool videos of places and objects I had never seen before. Man am I intrigued by your site, I'm glad I subscribed. After seeing the older documentaries about this subject, I too believe there has to be a better explanation for these remarkable works of antiquity.

  • @michaelstiller2282
    @michaelstiller2282 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    The boxes had to be "time capsules" or like a "safety deposit box." The precision cuts on the inside probably fit what ever was placed inside to an exact dimension, causing the object to float down into place while the air escaped. Making the content extremely hard to remove, as in attempting to remove it causes a vacuum. I bet that the lid was laid with the same premise, as in, it was held in place with a vacuum seal. I don't think it was fear of treasure hunters, it was time. Long periods of time. Like, if you were an ancient civilization that understood there was a cycle of life and death on this planet, and you wanted to leave a relic for the next society.

    • @charliebates9098
      @charliebates9098 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think the boxes along with the pyramids, the obelisks and many other things there were meant to power the city!! Like Tesla power ... The obelisks were the towers that received the energy just how Tesla envisioned!! The box inside the king's chamber PERFECTLY match the dimensions of the ark mentioned in the bible! I think the ark is what powered it all ... I believe Akhenaten was actually Moses and was one of the few who knew how to use the box!! You read of what the ark did to people and it was obviously electrical and had radioactive properties!! .... I believe Sitchen was right and Akhenaten was the last of the hybrid Kings!! ... Just a theory but it holds a lot more water than the mainstream theory!!

    • @harrywalker5836
      @harrywalker5836 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      wrong,very wrong.. no one has done an analysis, of the stone,granite, to see what has seeped into it. or, they have, but are not saying.. averything leaves residue..they were not for burials, thats egyptian bs..

    • @williamroberts5716
      @williamroberts5716 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Many of those big underground boxes contained black sticky residue at the bottom like they contained some chemical that evaporated.

  • @jeremyburk6694
    @jeremyburk6694 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I haven't read through all the comments, so maybe I missed it already being mentioned but the earliest Greek mariners had "stone pots" that they would submerse in the salt water as they sailed. They would draw the closed pots out to drink fresh water.
    I just wondered if there's any similarity to these pots.

    • @bob_btw6751
      @bob_btw6751 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      First mention I have seen about those stone pots that filtered out the salt from seawater. Have you a reference? Perhaps that would be something to send to UnchartedX for them to do more research about those pots.

  • @michelleochinero1813
    @michelleochinero1813 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You have got to talk to Praveen Moan in India. The temple pillars in some temples are definitely the work of some kind of lathe. Human eye and hand cannot get items so perfectly carved but a machine can. Love you videos and your witty humor.

    • @jrreid3429
      @jrreid3429 ปีที่แล้ว

      Totally agree with your advice, Praveen shows some amazing feats of building large structures throughout India and the surrounding countries which indicate a more advanced civilisation was on earth before the common view of current archaeologists

  • @luckyme7611
    @luckyme7611 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I love all your content.. Every video is different, full of entertainment and knowledge. Excited again lol!!

  • @TimPQF
    @TimPQF 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I love your energy and genuine passion for this stuff. Keep up the good work!

  • @dg8708
    @dg8708 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The stone pots and jars that defy reason are beautiful, but has anyone had a memory of a time where we used oils, sand, cloth and strings to finely shape stonework? You can put a cup of rocks into a tumbling device with enough grit and time, they come out as shined river rocks. Smooth and pretty, and they'll last as long as their environment will allow. My point is, stone lasts for thousands of years. As will pottery and jars that were constructed in the way I think I remember. If grit and time can carve the Grand Canyon... What I'm getting at, is that in any technologically advanced society, there are still artisans that are commissioned by their patrons to construct a memorial representation of their achievements. Stone memorials seem to be the best at standing the test of time. There may have been skyscrapers and interstellar transit points all over this earth 20,000 years ago, for all we know. What we have left is stone structures that have been vandalized by whatever was left of what we became.

  • @fredryno3100
    @fredryno3100 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I use power tools with diamond blades, at a massively small scale. For one to cut these huge stones would have been on a gigantic scale. And to believe for one moment that they used some sort of chisel and hammer you would be the type of person that would buy some grade a property in the swam lands in Florida.

  • @jzeerod
    @jzeerod 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    one other thing i would like to point out, after watching this for the 2nd time is "the squatting man" geoglyph, petroglyph. one interesting fact is they are found all over the world in prehistory. another interesting fact is that they are separated by tens of thousands of years. once you see this thing, you cannot unsee it, and you will begin to see everywhere. rongo rongo, the nazca plain. as well, it is drawn from a certain point, as if the artist is behind cover, drawing what he is witnessing.an outcropping, a mountain.
    the plasma theory is that this is plasma z pinch or synchotron radiation event emanating from the poles. perhaps the earth passed through a high energy area of the galactic plane, or was hit by a wave of energy as dr paul laviolette, now they refer to it as a "galactic current sheet" because the galaxy is spinning it takes on a pinwheel shape as it is discharged from an active galactic center.
    what i mean to say is, if the earth was passing through one of these high energy events, bathed in energy for thousands of years, teslas wireless free energy would have been reality. in theory we could coil some wire, leave a gap and whammo, we could power a saw to cut the limestone blocks for the pyramid. when the earth left this area, the machines died. no more power from the atmosphere. their civilization probably collapsed overnight.
    the point of all this is we dont understand, we cant fathom this because the high preists of established sciences will not let thier learned friends pursue such nonsense, but is it nonsense?

  • @lightseeder358
    @lightseeder358 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I'm glad you talked about the granite pottery. It's one that fascinate me the most and is barely ever talked about.
    After all the things I've read and seen through the years, my opinion on this is I think they had access to technology allowing them to use sounds and frequencies to change the structure of stone itself, making it more malleable and possibly lighter. That would explain how they were able to make shapes so perfects, and how they moved the stone around so easily.

    • @colarb5276
      @colarb5276 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree. It would also give a good explanation of why there are Knubs on some of the stones. See Harvey Turners youtube video, It's in the Math and the Science.

    • @lightseeder358
      @lightseeder358 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@colarb5276 Wow thank you! That was very interesting and I didn't know anything about this. It really add to the theory.
      As Nikola Tesla said "If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration."

    • @Hovercraftltd
      @Hovercraftltd 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      'Possibly lighter' is an interesting avenue - Palaeontologists are finding land creatures so huge they could not have moved let alone thrived in our gravity which fits with the idea that gravity is variable - One idea for variability is that its strength depends on the electric charge of a planet which is variable - We know what gravity does but we do not know what it is so all options remain open!

  • @harryelliott6945
    @harryelliott6945 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    for the geopolymer argument, you would still need computing technology to make a perfect mold

  • @phelimridley6727
    @phelimridley6727 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @8:21 Abusir is amazing.
    Recorded in Classical times as Taposiris Magna it is located about 50 km south of Alexandria city.
    As of 2009, it was also suspected to be the burial place of Cleopatra and Mark Antony. Inspired by the description in the writings of Plutarch, an archeological excavation of a Temple of Isis has produced interesting finds.

  • @N3m3sis43
    @N3m3sis43 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Really enjoying your work, the Egypt trip looked like a once in a life time event, but I bet you'll be going again - I know I said work, but it looks like you had a lot of fun making this content to share with us all. I think between you, Ben and Jimmy us lucky viewers have all the bases covered as you all offer different perspectives. Looking forwards to Sundays video. Thank you

    • @runs_through_the_forest
      @runs_through_the_forest 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      i can't speak about Jahannah's content as this the first video i'm watching of her's, but i can tell you Ben has some top quality video's indeed. now Jimmy i'm a bit less convinced about, with some of his video's he seemed to be guessing and that's not what we need in this "information war with the accepted academics views" if you will..
      have you seen Ben's talk with Randall Carlson?
      at the end Randall asks Ben if he knows anything about petroglyphs and some of the obvious and very interesting similarities, around the world. surprisingly he doesn't know about them or he's not keen on the subject..
      and my point is, these petroglyphs and the conclusions we can make based on the very detailed work of Anthony L. Peratt and some other people he worked with, is the most ignored thing next to the content of this video..
      i'd recommend reading some of Peratt's papers, it really is an eye opener..
      "Characteristics for the Occurrence of a High-Current
      Z-Pinch Aurora as Recorded in Antiquity" Parts one and two is what they are called and as links in comments here are possibly auto-deleted i won't link you up here sorry..

  • @ZechNinjamunky
    @ZechNinjamunky 3 ปีที่แล้ว +99

    When I was a youngster, running around the woods, there was a creek that had washed everything away down to the bedrock. I was curious as to how the very hard bedrock had pits and holes sunk into it, so I watched mother nature do her work. The leaves would fall into still water pools during fall, and the acid from the leaves would leave the hard stone soft as putty. Once the stone dried, it would return to its natural state. Do you think the ancients could have employed this technique in their creations?

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      using some acid etching technique might be plausible... however that kind of process leaves chemical fingerprints. Also, the stone you observed, being a sedimentary river bed, means it was most likely composed of minerals formed through a process that would make it more susceptible to certain solvents. Limestone for example. In egypt we're talking about granite. Now you could use hydrofluoric acid to dissolve the silica in granite, but you'd still have the calcites that would make calcium fluoride, which is insoluble. Which while softer than granite at a 4 on the mohs scale... is still harder than the copper or brass tools... a 3 - 3.5 on the scale. That and hydrofluoric acid wasn't discovered until 1771, and takes some pretty advanced chemistry to produce.

    • @ZechNinjamunky
      @ZechNinjamunky 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@DarkNookShop Wow, thank you for the reply. I have been curious about the viability of what might have been observed in nature, so now I know that isn't really a valid option. Thanks M8 =D

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@DarkNookShop copper/brass tools dont cut rock. They assist in cutting. the abrasive material (like sand) did the cutting

    • @DarkNookShop
      @DarkNookShop 3 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      @@KurticeYZ Not only is abrasive cutting very very slow... far slower than the time frames attributed to the construction of things like the pyramids. But, it also generates heat, that would make copper and brass tools even softer. Oh and abrasive cutting leaves very identifiable tool marks and striations. But hey go grab a brass tool and some sand, and try to cut an incised right angle into a slab of granite. Let me know how that works out.

    • @DilbertMuc
      @DilbertMuc 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      The pre-Incas and the Incas used plant acids to soften the stones for their famous walls. Check out "Ancient Architects" on TH-cam for that. Even the Spanish Conquistadores documented the procedures with plants and minerals that the Incas used during their time there.

  • @alexmccormick9800
    @alexmccormick9800 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How have I not come across your videos before? You ask the correct questions. What was or who was their befor. How were these things accomplished and what for.

  • @jamesmaloney2396
    @jamesmaloney2396 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for showing us the "pottery" And boxes that were stashed in saqqara. I had always heard about them, but was never shown; I must unearth why? This is the first time I've been made aware of the merch hid at said step pyramid, and it's a real eye opener like when Helen Keller learned what water was.

  • @eclecticjon1019
    @eclecticjon1019 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    A beautifully sculpted work of art with what looks like almost the equivalent of children's scrawl on the side of it. To assume that this scrawl is the signature of the artist who created the sculpture is just ludicrous. For the whole Egyptian dating system to based on these assumptions poses so many questions. There is clearly more than one culture going here and it would seem that the oldest one held all the secrets.

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dif dynasties not cultures imo whatever idk either but... scientists are narrowing it down. No need to get super theoretical imo

    • @jking4020
      @jking4020 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KurticeYZ wrong! Stop "text typing" when commenting you child. And open up that closed mind of yours. You can learn a lot.

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jking4020 I was brain washed by that fake science for years... now your telling me to go back after learning about how wrong they are? And how they've been proven wrong time & time again? I think I'm open minded enough. That's just another way of saying "gullible" in their money hungry lie telling minds.

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jking4020 there is no shame in believing in this stuff, I don't judge you for that, nor condemn you as a person.i just want you to know I don't think it is correct. Nothing more. There is true information out there, for years I loved this ancient alien or whatever ancient tech stuff, but it only makes me appreciate the reality of it more now that I know they really used a lot of man power & ingenuity and time. It's incredible, even more incredible than ancient tech that doesn't exist, if it did exist.

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    From my writer's imagination:
    Once upon a time there was this very advanced civilization. This civilization had a home planet, but also colonies on planets like Earth where they mined and created (among other things). But then, a combination of war and a tailor made disease killed every last one of them off-even the colonies.
    An eon later, along comes a civilization that has attained space travel capabilities. They find the ruins of this advanced civilization, and in studying their charts find the colonies. They then fly out to the colonies, but only to recover the left behind machinery (there is a market for it). However, in their greed they also find the virus that killed off the original civilization and unknowingly share that virus.
    Or.....
    The second civilization takes away most of the machinery, only leaving some behind and Earth is like a resort for them. They use the indigenous people as manual laborers, but then their Astronomer warns them that a comet is headed towards Earth and they bug out, taking everything with them.

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Technically speaking, there does exist a possibility that any one of your fictions are factual. The odds are admittedly low, but not zero.

    • @al2207
      @al2207 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      one point : civilization with space ship will not be in danger if a comet appear as they had the means to change the course of the comet , no problem at all

  • @stirlingbartlett6546
    @stirlingbartlett6546 ปีที่แล้ว

    “On the wonk” 😂 love it

  • @Eat_31415
    @Eat_31415 3 ปีที่แล้ว +78

    At the start of the video i thought "wow a talking Camel" then i realised it was a talk over, 🤣 🐪 great video as always, Jahannah

    • @MichaelTillotson
      @MichaelTillotson 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      😂 After seeing your comment I had to go back and watch the beginning. And yeah, right as the camel head shows up, it's like "Hi, I'm Jahannah." 🤣

    • @planzed463
      @planzed463 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      😂😂 ditto

    • @che4568
      @che4568 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      🤣🤣

    • @signorare1559
      @signorare1559 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @bgrowsmars3918
      @bgrowsmars3918 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This cracked me up!!! Smokin joe camel

  • @xanbell7723
    @xanbell7723 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I recommend visiting Ba'albek in Lebanon, its so beautiful. If you look at the bottom stones ie the oldest, you realize they are not only the most impressively cut and placed but they are also incredibly large. One of the blocks was abandoned and just left sitting near the site, and It's 20 meters long and over 1000 tones. Just how.

    • @joemachine4714
      @joemachine4714 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      yes an underrated site i've been there. quite huge complex

  • @lagunafishing
    @lagunafishing ปีที่แล้ว

    Incredible precision nicely photographed in high definition for us to see. 👍

  • @Unknowable_Void
    @Unknowable_Void 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "It's like finding a Ferrari where a wheelbarrow should be.."
    -John Anthony West
    Great video explanation and clear examples of these lost arts

  • @hollyhines1
    @hollyhines1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Oh those few boxes were totally “glyphed” on!! 😂😂😂 I love the way you explain things

  • @R0bobb1e
    @R0bobb1e 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    What better way to communicate with a "lesser" society than your own, than through pictographs? Honestly, I am convinced, or at least, very, very intrigued and openminded! :) Only found your channel today, and I am captivated. It does, however, make me incredibly sad to see the evidence of war on these (and any) relics. People need to appreciate these things, no matter how, or when, they were made!

    • @jjbees7911
      @jjbees7911 ปีที่แล้ว

      Or you could accept the general idea, which has prove behind it, that pictographs were the first writing and then turned into the alphabet and kanji characters of today
      .
      But who needs proof? It was the aliens showing us through pictures.

    • @ralphgreenwood2469
      @ralphgreenwood2469 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Pictographs aren't a lesser form of writing/communication.They have a particular form and purpose.Other forms of writing were used by the Egyptians also

    • @R0bobb1e
      @R0bobb1e 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@ralphgreenwood2469 Did you not notice the lesser was in quotes? I was implying it wasn't really lesser, but rather, often perceived that way...

  • @meeruisland
    @meeruisland ปีที่แล้ว

    I enjoyed watching this, and the way it was presented with enthusiasm, I believe that some one somewhere knows the answer to all of these questions

  • @RawWithIt
    @RawWithIt ปีที่แล้ว

    Absolutely incredible and I am so glad I found this video. I could talk to you for a million years about this stuff. How could I get on a trip like this with your group?

    • @richardramirez2557
      @richardramirez2557 ปีที่แล้ว

      $7000. Not worth it. You can do most of the stuff they are doing with a driver. Plus I guarantee you after 5 days you will be of the view that actually, there is nothing inexplicable here. Do your own observation and come to your own conclusion, don’t go on a mysteries of Egypt tour sold by somebody with a vested interest to discover the truth

  • @drew8256
    @drew8256 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    One scenario would be that most of the machine shops were located on the coast, for a ready supply of water and transportation of heavy objects. After the Younger Dryas event, sea level rises of more than 28 meters, most would be under water today. After 12,000 years underwater, very little would be left.

  • @DallasGunther
    @DallasGunther 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I've worked on swimming pools for the last 20 years and have dealt with materials like granite on occasion. There is no method I can fathom that could produce inside corners like that. The ancients who built those boxes not only had technology but it must have exceeded any that we currently hold.

    • @RubSomefastOnIt
      @RubSomefastOnIt 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      as a machinist... there are 5/6 axis CNC gantry mills with diamond tooling that could make those boxes in a day, to within +/- 0.001 of an inch.
      in-fact any shape and size you want to build the machine to really.
      th-cam.com/video/6utic73skbQ/w-d-xo.html
      these machines can give you a "polished" finish on granite quartz and marble depending on how you want to run it and how fast you want to get parts out...
      that being said, I have no idea how they did it back then, definitely not with soft metal chisels...

    • @harrywalker5836
      @harrywalker5836 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      alien tech,, they had tools harder than anything we have today. there are no records, or tools left or found anywhere, why,, there not on earth.. theres core drill holes with a cut rate of 2mm, in granite,,we cant do that..

    • @DallasGunther
      @DallasGunther 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@RubSomefastOnIt that video was interesting aside from the low budget soft core smut movie music. Nevertheless, that was definitely some current tech that could handle such tasks. At least it appears to be capable. But also like you said, bronze chisels aren't capable, especially in granite. I once got a couple steel chisels and a chipping hammer bit or two lodged in a naturally occurring granite boulder that was in the way of where some of the plumbing was supposed to run in a pool I was working on building. We ended up going around the goddamn thing.

  • @markmy2881
    @markmy2881 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    NO way that the Egyptians made this Granite Box ☑️, NO WAY...

  • @LovelyBaseballEquipment-lt7ox
    @LovelyBaseballEquipment-lt7ox 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video. I think Saqqara is THE place to go in Egypt. The Serapeum is awesome. Can you tell me in which pyramid is the most precise box that you showed? I missed that one and will try to see it on my next trip. Next year, inshallah.

  • @everettmenard4834
    @everettmenard4834 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I love Egypt so much. I'm 54 now and I can recall as far back as I remember I have always been fascinated with the culture etc...I still find it absolutely exciting and it fills me with awe. Love the channel.

  • @Slavigrad
    @Slavigrad 3 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    My new smoking guns are now the Indian Barabar caves :) Reminder On!

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      yeah they kind of blow everything out of the water

    • @ulfhedtyrsson
      @ulfhedtyrsson 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yeah that shits nutz

    • @dazuk1969
      @dazuk1969 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Those granite caves have to be seen to be believed...they are awesome. Peace to ya.

    • @robsan52
      @robsan52 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Did I understand correctly that there's an electronic device that measures flatness and the distance between those two flat surfaces?

    • @ulfhedtyrsson
      @ulfhedtyrsson 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@robsan52 lasers

  • @STICKSANDSTONED
    @STICKSANDSTONED ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The guy scratching the precise box with a brush handle...get out. Never come back.

  • @rayraman3243
    @rayraman3243 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm fascinated by Egyptian pyramids and the technology behind them. It would be incredible to go on a tour with someone as passionate as you seem to be about them. Thank you for sharing this video.

  • @rickshaw8926
    @rickshaw8926 3 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    Egyptian Archeology would date the construction of The Empire State Building based on the graffiti in the alley or the trash in the dumpster.

    • @dergutehut3961
      @dergutehut3961 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      First of all...Graffiti was a thing since the dawn of modern mankind...and no...its usually not used to date the age because Archeologists can mostly tell apart a scripture..done by the builders....because most graffiti artists in all times where in a hurry...and did not had as much time and resources as sculptures...and scholars are well aware that Graffiti is usually added AFTER the building was built.
      Graffiti would probably not be the thing that survives in the first place...but IF something survives..it would probably be used to date the time when people stopped maintaining the building or when the policy about graffiti-removal changed.
      Also Graffiti wouldn't be the worst way to date something. They often refer to current events or their style changes with time. So...if we would find a "Trump won" graffiti we can assume that the building must have been built prior to 2016. So lets say civilization goes downhill in 50 years and the graffito found are the latest...than the graffiti would be about 140 years older which would be a relatively accurate date for a civilization over 5000 years ago.

    • @hunterlupcho3976
      @hunterlupcho3976 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Nice analogy

    • @pfrodriguez
      @pfrodriguez 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@dergutehut3961 calm down I think it was a joke!

    • @oXahusTz
      @oXahusTz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@dergutehut3961 yea not gonna read all that for a joke 😂

    • @glMILAN9800
      @glMILAN9800 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dergutehut3961 You wouldn't be writing all that If you got what the guy and the video are trying to say

  • @AneudiD78
    @AneudiD78 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I find it fascinating that during the walks through the tunnels, within the lit LED tunnels, there aren't any kind of burn marks from torches. What kind of lighting did the ancients use to keep lit those tunnels?

    • @paulchamberlain8355
      @paulchamberlain8355 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      The society that built them knew of electricity. Sooooooo many vids on this subject.

    • @ronj9592
      @ronj9592 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Any culture advanced enough to build these works would not be using torches dipped in pine tar. That doesn't mean they used electricity - modern kerosene lamps don't smoke either.

    • @jwall62
      @jwall62 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ronj9592 my ceilings would beg to differ, they do leave a film that needs to be cleaned. Depends on your wick.

    • @TT-wu5zq
      @TT-wu5zq 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      There are oils that dont leave soot.

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      They used the same magic lamps we use in coffins.

  • @IlsuemOkosch196
    @IlsuemOkosch196 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Really nice content 🙏👍 I like that it's controversial and reflecting what I found out about it so far. I haven't been there myself, like you, but, I've seen tons of media claiming this, showing these "sarcophagis"(I think that was the English plural) and other structures you recorded.
    But what I really enjoyed about your video, is the really high quality video footage of it, with the laser, you can actually hear what the guide is saying and stuff like that, really immersive and interesting.
    I am ofc convinced that they had incredible technologies long time ago. I even could find some possibilities, how they did it. There is some hints in India, for example, a rock, which makes sounds and resonantes, when you tap it like an xylophone. Legends said, that this was used to lift and or "melt" rocks, so they could bend them.
    You can in fact manipulate materia with frequencies, that's what we know today and it is in fact possible to melt rocks.
    And maybe you've heard of the tibetian monks, being able to letting a stone levitate, with those giant horns they blowing in with this loud deep bass like frequency.
    And look at Indian temples, they are incredibly detailed and overwhelmed by carvings, underground temples where they precisely cut into the bedrock, sometimes they did not even ever find the remains of the rock they would have had to carry of the site.
    And there is patterns carved in some temples, which could be cymatic patterns for certain frequencies they used. So on so on.
    If you keep digging down the rabbit hole, you start seeing dots connecting.
    Our modern rulers didn't do a perfect job on covering up the history.
    And they in fact do know way more about this than we know, I even go so far saying the governments, their secret armies, agencies and so on, got some of this technology already but keep it hidden at all costs.
    Why?
    Well, I am German, I am at the root of na.zi history, and I've seen things about them trying to find the origin of the arians, which are in fact not blue eyed blonde germans, more likely a older civilization, which traveled through Eurasia, middle east upwards to Europe and they left their trails all over the place in languages and so on.
    Some russian scientist said the closest living relatives to them today are the nomads in the north African desert, called "berber" something like that.
    Yeah whatever, they searched for the Arian origin and went to India, for example, and I saw pictures and documents about them finding a building plan for a rocket, then, the germans invented the rockets.
    And that's not a hoax, it's said the arians came from Antarctica, which haven't been frozen but due to a major pole shift, they had to leave because of that, went through Russia and one of their first stops had been modern day India, the "brahmans" in India, still speak some sanskrit, thr language which has GERMAN words in it, like many other languages they traveled through, so it's more likely Arian words, that's what they claimed. And they teached the Indians in a lot of stuff, what led to records of batteries, made with berry juice, some mud jars and copper bars, yes, there is thousands of years blueprint for an ancient battery. They built "Vimanas" which have been flying machines and these are hard facts. There is an ancient book in India, which is a few thousand years old, describing our solar system, and they measured the diameters of the planets nearly as precise as we do, with all those satellites and telescopes, computers and other modern day technologies. It is so incredible.
    I could go on even more.
    Last but not least, I am sick of arguing with people about this topic, who never... ever... spent a second on looking up on those things, just repeating the mainstream beliefs. Because it is soooooo easyyyy to see, they just would need to watch this video for 16 mies once, for example.
    So, thx for your video, keep going, I definitely coke back to check out more videos of your channel!!!
    Keep searching, you'll find it eventually.

  • @danf4447
    @danf4447 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    another point i have wondered about: they must have had some advanced machine capabilities to be able to spare the tens of thousands of workers to do all this in stone and still have enough people left over for farming, planting, carpentry, staffing of armies, weapons makers etc. without some machines you would simply not be able to have house and feed enought people to put the time into doing what they clearly did do

  • @hunterkc8794
    @hunterkc8794 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Can’t wait. This channel is now one of my favs. Good work Jahannah

    • @KurticeYZ
      @KurticeYZ 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I love being lied to too! So fun!

    • @hunterkc8794
      @hunterkc8794 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KurticeYZ lol calm down mr serious.

  • @christoforospaphitis4090
    @christoforospaphitis4090 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Interesting view especially with the mismatches, However precision was one of the ancient's core attributes. I wouldn't necessarily call them smoking guns but there is evidence from literature that prior civilizations existed before the big flood

  • @johngring765
    @johngring765 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great presentation!!!. 👍 Finding the truth about the origins of the artifacts shown here would no doubt change the world as we know it. Someone or something does not want us to know the truth. Keep up the outstanding research Jahannah!!!

  • @PBJORKE
    @PBJORKE 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I can say with 100% certainty that stone vases and bowls were made with machinery and tooling very similar to our current level of technology. I am an artist that works in stone and have fabricated many hard stone bowls. It simply isn't possible to make fine objects without power equipment, precision bearings and diamond tooling.

  • @larsfrosznielsen3536
    @larsfrosznielsen3536 3 ปีที่แล้ว +40

    Wow.... Imagine me going around in the Louvre with a stack of "post-it" or just a pencil and tag all the Picasso´s, Leonardo da Vinci´s and so on.... that does NOT make them mine (I guess)... that is roughly what has happened whith the Egyptian statues and pots I think

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      If I carved my face on the sphinx, it wouldn't mean that it was made in my honour a few years ago.....

    • @kingcosworth2643
      @kingcosworth2643 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Depends, if the people who own everything in the louvre are dead, no wills and no authorities to seize them, then you absolutely could walk through there claiming items