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Another amazing episode Danny awesome stuff I love it ❤😊 you know another huge important fact about the 6 day Israel war is when June 8th 1967 Israel purposely attacked and killed and committed a huge amount of war crimes against Americans and it right after JFK and LBJ reversed everything and done they’re hardest back than until now to suppress the truth about the USS LIBERTY and LBJ and both Israel and American intelligence agencies done everything in they’re power to cover it all up great guy to check out on TH-cam is Forgotten History and he’s a vet and an author
There’s also a TH-cam video out there that I’ve watched before on science about the analog computer and how there’s a team that’s designing and making a new analog computer that will have more power that the digital ones you’ll have to watch it to understand it. The channel name starts with a V it’s like a smarter everyday channel or the Mark Rober one of those science channels
Amazing as always. If some people claim that these objects are fake modern ones. One would ask, when were they made? When did we in modern era got technology to make these objects. I don't know the answer. If someone only got hands on these vases 20 years ago and put them into mainstream since, then they could be modern. If these objects were discovered like 70+ years ago, then probably there is no way that they are modern. Catching my drift? Sry for my poor English. I would advise that the proper way to debunk debunkers would be to go and actually do a similar object with top of the notch 2024 tech. And then comapre and ask these top notch tech folks when did they get their hands on this type of hi-tech. Catching my drift x2? Lov ya.
Hello, it just so happens that I'm a certified journeyman stonecutter/sculptor... People largely have no idea of what it takes to do this & you are totally correct. I agree w/you
What rock have you been hiding under.Everyone with a switched on brain knows the tools disappeared overe time.I never leave tools on site,maybe the Annunaki took them back when the jobs were finished or nearly finished...either that or they are being hidden in the Vatican or some other place.One of the ancient texts,maybe the emerald tablets or Mahabarata mention craft the size of cities with whole civilisations inside descending on humanity with massive Metallurgy foundries inside.I believe we are a breakaway civilisation and what is happening here on earth with the wars and other shit has happened before,again and again and again.Earth is a prison planet and some of these uap are the wardens,hence why they keeps switching our nuclear weapons off.
Another video and the comment clown was telling me practice makes perfect. He doesn't understand the complication of creating the inside to perfection by hand. I doubt even one is possible.
@@GoHomeKamala the handles on the outside are also quite perplexing..... as if some modern mill did it, cause you sure couldn't do that on any old lathe...... lots of things about egypt relics don;t make sense when you look at them through the glasses of a modern day machinist, stone sculptor, mechanical engineer, and yeah, those tool and die makers, who may be the best at thinking about things backwards, upside down, and inside out.
Being that some of you see these in myriad ways... What is y'all's speculation of function? I suppose land of chems notions of chemical / gas use edit*
Danny I've enjoyed ur podcast for a long time. But these past couple months uve been having some really epic freaking conversations. Keep killing it man
I actually like this as opposed to my idea which would probably appear more threatening to the academics. I theorised the vases in the museums go under CT scans to prove they aren’t as accurate as the private collection “fakes”
I absolutely adore Matt. He is a shining example of what leadership should be. Humble, kind, and so wise. He is changing the game, and I believe his work is going to cause some history rewrites.
@@Dan-s1d4v Oh the irony of someone that doesn't understand the importance or significance of something like this trying to claim that someone who does is simple. Lmfao Thx for the laugh m8
Y'all can chill. 😂 Even if he dropped one, the odds it would break are slim. The guest even told Danny to spin one ffs. I believe Danny has the money to cover it if he breaks one .
I never would have thought I’d enjoy listening to retail/department store culture as much as I did with this podcast. Matt is such a cool guy holy shit.
The craziest thing I saw at the Cairo Museum was a perfect 3-D rectangle maybe 1"×2"×4" of pure blue lapis lazuli. If you looked at it from the top or front (I assume also from the side, but where it was in the case that wasn't an option) it looked 2-D. That's how perfectly parallel and sharply cornered the faces were.
I love how the consensus among people that work in every industry that would have its hands on a product like this agree that you need advanced tools to make it, but yet still the so-called scientists try to debunk it
This man is super smart , super rich and super humble as someone said . I’m thinking that we are all so lucky to able to see these vases up close . I never knew some were so small and I’ve been watching all sorts of podcasts for years . Thankyou for this opportunity Danny , I’m in complete awe of this topic and this microscopic information you’ve found out . I would listen to anything this gentleman has to say or what hes seen or knows all day . 😮 also my heart has been in my chest for 2 hours that these vases were so close to the side of the table . You both have some trust in yourselves and life or something 😮the story about the weight thing , made up inside one half to balance brought tears to my eyes .
Danny seems like he has a good humble attitude and a genuine curiosity, been really enjoying these talks, I can see him learning in real time because he's not ashamed to ask any questions and over time he's asking better and more specific questions, keep it up man
So happy i discovered Matt Beall. Hes such a breath of fresh air in this crazy world we currently live in. Keep doing what youre doing both of you, thank you!
As a guy from Texas that spent a lot of time in Beall's as a kid in the late eighties and nineties, I was blown away when at the end of the episode by the reveal of Matt being the family heir to the Beall's stores. He seems like such a genuine guy. Definitely checking out his podcast! Danny, as always, I appreciate your work greatly! Not every guest is a banger, but I greatly respect your willingness to hear out someone in good faith regardless.
love your pod casts dude, i used to work for parker hanafin making parts out of titanium using cnc lathes and the level of detail on these items is mind blowing to me
Love Matt, he's the perfect guy for the task, and even though we're just at the beginning of this particular research/battle of the mindsets, I'm 100% positive he's gonna be instrumental to the whole process with his jaw dropping collection and expertise. Go Matt, go buddy 👍🏻🖤🏴☠️
“Archaeologists aren’t machinists or engineers” Ok, so why are they being touted as “experts” in fields of which they have ZERO expertise???? When it comes to the designing and construction of artifacts and structures shouldn’t engineers and machinists be exactly the experts we need to be telling us how these things are made?????
@@GroberWeisensteinthey do not. Generally, they only ask for them to provide speculative methods, given the tools, materials and objects. We know this because ZERO archeologists have done these measurements, to this precision. The vase that was scanned last January was the first in history to be scanned with a structured light scanner. They have never taken precise measurements. At all. The best measurements we have are from the 19th century.
@@GroberWeisenstein Uhhh, sure, when I want to build a rocket ship to fly me out of Earth’s atmosphere without killing me, I will have a “consult” with experts in farming equipment and mountain climbing gear! Surely they are all experts so they should easily be able to tell me exactly how to construct such a thing????? 😱🤣🤣🤪🤷🏼♀️
This is not just evidence, it's irrefutable proof. Anyone who has ever built anything that required high tolerances understands that these vases are completely impossible to be made by hand
It's non sense. The handles are uneven in their individual shape, but also in relation to each other. This could easily be done on a lathe and with sanding. The youtube channel Night Scarab has done a thorough debunking on the claims made of this vase. If youre intellectually honest, I really suggest you check it out to hear the refutation of the claims made on this vase.
@@darienkinne1347 "easily be done on a lathe with sanding" let's see you do it then? how can you actually explain how to precisely make these vases out of hard stone? It's not just the outside of the vases either
@@coreyblais7459 the channel I reccomended does a thorough refutation of the claims made on this vase. Much better than what I could provide in this message, so I suggest you check it out. One thing that should be pointed out, is that the handles are inconsistent in their individual shape and uneven with each other. This destroys any idea of advanced machining. A lathe could be used to hollow out and shape the outside of the vase. The spot between the handles a lathe could not be used, so it would be chiseled to an appropriate shape, and sanded for uniformity with the rest of the vase. The uneven handles clearly indicate hand tooling.
@@darienkinne1347i worked in a metal shop there it was my job to make the mental pieces flat/even… You need some form of machinery. The precision alone requires something that is already flat/even. It requires a sequence of precise tools/instruments.
@@thenamesleo1625 I think a lathe was used for shaping the interior/exterior, and chisels for shaping the handles and carving out the space between them, and then sanding for the space between the handles and the rest of the vase. I dont believe the lathe is attributed to the Egyptians at the time of this vase, but I could find it plausible. Certainly more so than advanced technology and 3d design software
@@mericanwit No, they say "sticks and copper" were used in the manufacture of ancient Egyptian stone vases. The vases this guy has had measured are not proven to be ancient in the first place.
Ancient lathes would need to have near zero runout (axial wobble) for a simple circular shape to have 1/1000 mm, as well as rigid holders for both cutter and material. Tough to get that today for most projects unwilling to spend aerospace type money
Good point, since the handles were the last thing to be done they probably used them to even them out. Also would explain why the "good" handle was always more polished next to it, maybe once they did the 2nd balancing handle they had to shave a tiny amount off the sude at the first "good" handle to balance it even more precisely.
This was a truly fascinating podcast episode. Matt is awesome and I literally just watched his 2nd Tom Grant episode which was great! You should definitely have him on!
Flint looked like a child playing dress up wearing his dad's work attire, walking around the house with a magnifying glass pretending to analyze random objects to determine if they are ancient or not
Amazing! THAT Beall….we go to his stores all time…and he is into these! Wow! Amazing, amazing! I thought it was a great episode before… but now one of my all time favorites….thanks to Danny and Matt and everyone else!
Thanks Danny for bringing Matt on with all his vases they are just so bloody cool would love to check one out closer and yes there out of my price rang now .. Do love Matt's pod cast have been watching it since the start and I have also been under the stepped pyramid and seen and handled all the broken ones with Ben van Kerkwyk tour , these vases and all the precise granite and hard stone workings around the world is fascinating a skill that has been lost for sure .
Amazing to see all of Matt's vase collection in one place. Love how super chill and relaxed he is bringing them over to your pod and allowing you to get hands on with them. These vases are the smoking gun evidence for a lost advanced civilization. Fantastic episode!!! Nice one Danny
The inheritance guy who is completely fascinated with archeology. You know he's awesome because his fulfillment comes from with other people getting the chance to physically interact with objects that is only photographed and then experiencing genuine excitement is what he wants. Super cool dude.
Matt is so personable and humble! Great episode and as my first exposer to this man I can say his work is amazing and contrary to what he says he appears to be quite the expert on these objects. Danny, you are spearheading the broadcasting of these alternative thoughts on ancient civilisations and alternative science and machines research! Thank you for your continued questioning of these amazing ideas🫡
@@Leeside999 I suspect you’re the expert then? Spending thousands out of your own pocket and sending them off to be CT scanned to observe actual data points to make real world conclusions???
@@DazaTheKing Never said he wasn't rich and can buy whatever he wants, or pay people to take measurements. My point is that he isn't an expert and that's obvious from what he has said in this podcast.
What an incredible collection! The measurements on these are so insane. It's a shame these weren't tested on the inside for residues when they were just found. Anyone thinking these were done by hand really has no idea what they're talking about. It's one thing to make a perfectly circular object, it's totally another thing to hollow it out to this perfection, AND on top of that the perfection between the handles. Couple ideas for more tests: there's a lot of talk about resonance now, so tests where they're exposed to certain frequencies might give some insights. Or maybe tests where they could produce or amplify sounds.
It wasn't mentioned here, but I like the theory that these objects were "test run" pieces for their milling machines before working on large scale projects. Maybe so many geometric relationships were built into these vases to test various capabilities of the cutting apparatus. This could explain why extreme precision is found in some dimensions of a given vase while other measures are not so precise. As for the handles being offset? Who knows, but it could be an at-a-glance "visual tell" that these were functional or even reference pieces so they couldn't get mixed up with normal vases.
I think they are mainly pieces of art, I think the precision is the point maybe. These are not common and in general use I don't think, and I think they are extremely old, and most come from the same place.
They are solid stone, even that thin one, its not going to break from a human punching it, imagine trying to snap a thin stone you find outside, it's not going to happen.
Bro he literally meant the complete opposite 😂 he said it reference to how little time has passed since he dedicated time to researching the market of replicating the precise artifacts. Meaning no one had successfully made any of the vases in 2023 and it hasn’t been long since then, thus it probably still hasn’t been done
He did say that's when he started, and the price has increased since. You fucking guys will argue over NONSENSE. Dudes got some bread. He can acquire a decent collection in a year and a half. Keep up and stop your bullshit. 🤣
I totally support this dude. I live in MN so I don't know Bealls. I've been to Florida once. Just happened to be the Bradenton/Tampa area. It was Xmas time. Saw tons of Manatees at the sanctuary near the power plant. Amazing experience 😊
@@WhereIsTheSpartan certain stones have been known to retain moisture as well as conduct electricity, so a stone vase could be shown to sustain plants and other organisms at a more efficient rate...I believe in understanding, not magic
Some of the scanned and metrologically measured vases has shown incredible CONCENTRICITY and with the same inner/outer wall-thickness CONSISTENCY all around!
I'm only 10 minutes in and this is another amazing episode thank you to Matt beall Danny jones Chris and Alex dunn and Ben kerkwyk for bringing this to light
The vase and vessels aren't nearly as thin or precise as the unchartedX affiliates would have you believe. Don't forget that even in alternative media its still up to the view to do their own research.
@@wombatjack3995 bullshit the structured light scans and the CT scans they referenced in this video prove you so blatantly wrong it's not even funny they demonstrated one with 2mil thick walls that light shines through frankly it's pathetic that you've never even bothered to look into it at all cause I in fact have and it's not just 2mil thick in one spot it's 2mil thick all the way around
You're totally wrong the structured light and CT scans blatantly prove you wrong they even demonstrated one that's so thin light shines through it fact is ik for a fact you haven't done a second of research cause I in fact have
Yes granite is hard, but the real difficulty is the fact that there are different types of crystal in the stone. The different tensile strength of the various minerals would make carving with such precision, using the inferior tools we are told they had, almost impossible.
Stone masons work the bonds, not the individual minerals. The weakest bond in the grain's matrix fractures first and takes the rest of the grains with it.
@@GroberWeisensteinyou spend a lot of time going through every other comment thread…wondering where you get the time and what is the goal. People are perplexed, all the videos you have talked about don’t disprove anything. It’s still up for debate, just let people be. But if this brings you joy then get back out there and get back to work! There will be plenty more perplexed people to refute!
@@GroberWeisensteinI know you’re not a bot because your grammar and vocabulary are better than most people that you are opposing 😂. You do make a lot of sense so hats off to you for being dedicated.
@@PneumanaBreathwork Since a infamous jew who has the largest collection of artifacts was mentioned it flagged Mossads internet division to get to work.
@mattbealllimitless The first time I saw Ben's original vase video, for the first time in my life I intuitively and instantly realized that we are not the most enlightened humans to ever exist, and that is a scary yet awesome feeling. It seems like your spirit was hooked just like mine. KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK BROTHER.
I was waiting for Danny to drop one. He needs to work on his handling of priceless artifacts... I was sweating bullets, I bet Matt here was freaking out
Has he dropped an artifact before in a previous episode or something? I've seen like a dozen comments saying essentially the same thing you stated, and I dont understand why? It doesn't appear he's being careless when handling them in any way, so why is everyone so worked up about it?
I think everyone thinks this because our ceramic and glass is so fragile today. These are literally STONE and untold millenia old. They're not going to break. lol
So cool. I bet something to do with sound or frequency and resonance. Danny was fascinated with the small one and I couldn't help but blurt out "frequency"
35:35 I'm thinking, what if the discrepancy is made by something like a fingerpring fat? Or a microscopic layer of some fungus or any other microorganism invisible to human eye? The differences are so incredibly small that the factors I noted above could play a role!
For anyone asking where the tools are in the archaeological record that would have been used to build these, try going to a pawn shop and look at how many tools are there. Tools are the first thing stolen from a job site because they are typically small and worth a lot. Whoever came after the people who built these vases probably repurpose the tools upon finding them because they would have been made out of advanced metals etc
@@funkymunky7935you’re using a false equivalent of a pawn shop and stolen tools to equate to machinery not existing in the archeological record. I’m sorry you don’t see that as a strawman.
@aaronriddle9278 OK, let's use this for an example. Of the millions of cars that have been produced in the past 100+ years how many old cars do you see in a typical day? Not many, they've all been recycled into something else or rotted away into nothing in some farmers field. Now 4000 years from now how many model T ford's do you think will exist??
So one thing has always bugged me about the handles (being closer together on one side and having consistent holes) and also them being able to spin when on a flat surface. I think they were designed to be mounted/hung and not set on a flat surface. Not sure if that was ever considered?
That is incredibly interesting. These people did everything for a practical reason. The holes through the handles would seem to indicate that something was meant to be put through the handles.
They're literally components of an ancient machine. (think todays resistors capacitors etc) It's the more recent culture that inherited them that created the lids to merely use them as containers. lol
We had ancient machines that could carve to 1/1000th of a millimetre… what should we make? “Vases… like 40,000 of them. “ “Anything else? A wheel? Something more useful for the general population to live?” “Nah bruh. Vases. Just vases.”
If I were Matt, I would NOT let Flint Dibble handle these precision artifacts. I wouldn't put it past him to "drop" one. *But if he decided to let him handle them, I hope it would be recorded and livestreamed.*
@@AustinKoleCarlisle Exactly! they are polished and shaped on the outside to fine tune the resonance. I got this Idea when Chris Dunn mentioned the Seripeam boxes are polished on the inside for resonance.
@@ColoradoSatellite some people think these are hemholtz resonators, i think that's what we just described. i'm not sure if Matt has performed any resonance tests for the precision vases. are you aware?
The groups involved in the conferences like the one he mentioned could probably pool their resources and contacts, and set up a lab for everyone to scan anything for a couple of days. The technology isn't new so there's some out there that have been retired for hospital use but could be safe for materials. It would be like antiques roadshow but for relics and uap parts.
Banger episode. The reason they made the bottoms round is so that you can mix the contents without sticking something in them to stir them. This would have avoided contamination of spoilable products, also would avoid damaging soft metal tools if stirring caustic chemicals like aqua regia 🧐
Good point. Makes sense. Also, I had envisioned an easy swirling of contents. Red wine carafes have a rounded bottom and hold by the neck to swirl for aeration of newly uncorked aged wines. They also cannot be knocked/bumped over as easily. And to set into hot sand or water would be a nice even heat conductor. But the precision spin that that these vases can do like a top is a whole next level. Crazy wonderful.!
I like the theory that these vases are similar to today’s 3d printing “Benchy”. It’s an object they used to calibrate their tooling that was used for greater purposes. I also like Ben’s “precision was easy for them so it was applied everywhere” sentiment.
Maybe they’re helmsholtz resonators for a musical instruments. That would explain the shape, the need for precision, the lack of lids and the different sizes. The similar handles suggest they were all assembled into a frame.
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Another amazing episode Danny awesome stuff I love it ❤😊
Another amazing episode Danny awesome stuff I love it ❤😊 you know another huge important fact about the 6 day Israel war is when June 8th 1967 Israel purposely attacked and killed and committed a huge amount of war crimes against Americans and it right after JFK and LBJ reversed everything and done they’re hardest back than until now to suppress the truth about the USS LIBERTY and LBJ and both Israel and American intelligence agencies done everything in they’re power to cover it all up great guy to check out on TH-cam is Forgotten History and he’s a vet and an author
There’s also a TH-cam video out there that I’ve watched before on science about the analog computer and how there’s a team that’s designing and making a new analog computer that will have more power that the digital ones you’ll have to watch it to understand it. The channel name starts with a V it’s like a smarter everyday channel or the Mark Rober one of those science channels
Amazing as always. If some people claim that these objects are fake modern ones. One would ask, when were they made? When did we in modern era got technology to make these objects. I don't know the answer. If someone only got hands on these vases 20 years ago and put them into mainstream since, then they could be modern. If these objects were discovered like 70+ years ago, then probably there is no way that they are modern. Catching my drift? Sry for my poor English. I would advise that the proper way to debunk debunkers would be to go and actually do a similar object with top of the notch 2024 tech. And then comapre and ask these top notch tech folks when did they get their hands on this type of hi-tech. Catching my drift x2? Lov ya.
Is matt actually you from the future?
Matt Beall is such a humble & genuine guy. I'm very grateful to call him a friend. Can't wait to see his vase research go far.
I want to swap my grey hair with his. Just for shits and giggles
🙏 I appreciate you Luke! 👊🏼
Please put these in a protected foam box and don't take them out on a table to be knocked off or dropped, sheesh!
Love your channel Luke been hooked on the Olmec stuff, amazing presentation.
And because his are cooler
This guy is so likeable, so humble, cant believe he owns 650 retail stores. Down to earth doesn't even begin to give him his dues
I am a master tool and die maker. My opinion is that these vases required tools that have been lost to time or concealed from public knowledge.
Hello, it just so happens that I'm a certified journeyman stonecutter/sculptor... People largely have no idea of what it takes to do this & you are totally correct. I agree w/you
What rock have you been hiding under.Everyone with a switched on brain knows the tools disappeared overe time.I never leave tools on site,maybe the Annunaki took them back when the jobs were finished or nearly finished...either that or they are being hidden in the Vatican or some other place.One of the ancient texts,maybe the emerald tablets or Mahabarata mention craft the size of cities with whole civilisations inside descending on humanity with massive Metallurgy foundries inside.I believe we are a breakaway civilisation and what is happening here on earth with the wars and other shit has happened before,again and again and again.Earth is a prison planet and some of these uap are the wardens,hence why they keeps switching our nuclear weapons off.
Another video and the comment clown was telling me practice makes perfect. He doesn't understand the complication of creating the inside to perfection by hand. I doubt even one is possible.
@@GoHomeKamala the handles on the outside are also quite perplexing..... as if some modern mill did it, cause you sure couldn't do that on any old lathe...... lots of things about egypt relics don;t make sense when you look at them through the glasses of a modern day machinist, stone sculptor, mechanical engineer, and yeah, those tool and die makers, who may be the best at thinking about things backwards, upside down, and inside out.
Being that some of you see these in myriad ways...
What is y'all's speculation of function?
I suppose land of chems notions of chemical / gas use edit*
Danny I've enjoyed ur podcast for a long time. But these past couple months uve been having some really epic freaking conversations. Keep killing it man
Agreed completely
55:00 Smart play offering them back. They have to provide proof of them as artifacts, thus giving them validity as being genuine. I like it.
Smart guy
I’m surprised the Ministry of Antiquities isn’t knocking on his door.
@@OneRudeBoywell they don’t want ones that are scanned because that would throw off the archeological narrative & them ‘being right’
@@jnxythemouselol, nah. Fun fan fiction story though.
I actually like this as opposed to my idea which would probably appear more threatening to the academics.
I theorised the vases in the museums go under CT scans to prove they aren’t as accurate as the private collection “fakes”
Literally a normal non spooky person following his passion . One of Your best guests
Lmao
There are a few guests that glow a bit too much lol
I absolutely adore Matt. He is a shining example of what leadership should be. Humble, kind, and so wise. He is changing the game, and I believe his work is going to cause some history rewrites.
I'm just glad these truly ancient artifacts ended up in the hands of someone that will give them the care and respect that they deserve.
and will share them!
@@Dan-s1d4v Oh the irony of someone that doesn't understand the importance or significance of something like this trying to claim that someone who does is simple. Lmfao
Thx for the laugh m8
All I can think when watching Danny hold those vases is "STOP WAGGLING THAT THING, PUT IT DOWN, OMFG"
The guest looks a little uncomfortable everytime he picks one up lol
Y'all can chill. 😂 Even if he dropped one, the odds it would break are slim. The guest even told Danny to spin one ffs. I believe Danny has the money to cover it if he breaks one .
Me too...Thought the same thing...ugh
@@aaronmiller7954 not the brain for handling one though.
Spinning that thing like he's about to slam dunk at the NBA
Danny! You’re bringing all the BEST content to my feed!
I never would have thought I’d enjoy listening to retail/department store culture as much as I did with this podcast. Matt is such a cool guy holy shit.
The craziest thing I saw at the Cairo Museum was a perfect 3-D rectangle maybe 1"×2"×4" of pure blue lapis lazuli. If you looked at it from the top or front (I assume also from the side, but where it was in the case that wasn't an option) it looked 2-D. That's how perfectly parallel and sharply cornered the faces were.
Dude holds his breath every time Danny picks one up 😂🤣😂
I love how the consensus among people that work in every industry that would have its hands on a product like this agree that you need advanced tools to make it, but yet still the so-called scientists try to debunk it
This man is super smart , super rich and super humble as someone said . I’m thinking that we are all so lucky to able to see these vases up close . I never knew some were so small and I’ve been watching all sorts of podcasts for years . Thankyou for this opportunity Danny , I’m in complete awe of this topic and this microscopic information you’ve found out . I would listen to anything this gentleman has to say or what hes seen or knows all day . 😮 also my heart has been in my chest for 2 hours that these vases were so close to the side of the table . You both have some trust in yourselves and life or something 😮the story about the weight thing , made up inside one half to balance brought tears to my eyes .
Great Job, really enjoyed this chat and love to see more developments around this topic. Thanks Danny
I’m ready!!! Been waiting for more of these
Danny seems like he has a good humble attitude and a genuine curiosity, been really enjoying these talks, I can see him learning in real time because he's not ashamed to ask any questions and over time he's asking better and more specific questions, keep it up man
So happy i discovered Matt Beall. Hes such a breath of fresh air in this crazy world we currently live in.
Keep doing what youre doing both of you, thank you!
Youre my boy Danny, been watching you on and off for almost 3 years now. Good job, keep on truckin :)
As a guy from Texas that spent a lot of time in Beall's as a kid in the late eighties and nineties, I was blown away when at the end of the episode by the reveal of Matt being the family heir to the Beall's stores. He seems like such a genuine guy. Definitely checking out his podcast! Danny, as always, I appreciate your work greatly! Not every guest is a banger, but I greatly respect your willingness to hear out someone in good faith regardless.
Great episode. Fantastic that Matt bought these to analyze and release all this information
Yes!!!!
Been waiting on the Matt Beall episode. Dudes really fun to listen to. Been following his podcast since it started.
👊🏼🙏
@@mattbealllimitless good morning Matt!!
Thanks for everything, you really have made quite the impact.
Have a good weekend!!
@@ImEnemy608 👊🏼🙏
Fantastic podcast, thanks for sharing Danny. Matt is a hidden gem within the ‘alternate’ history side of things.
This is the right guy for the job. He is intelligent and seeks the truth. He also does not require funding. We are lucky to have him.
love your pod casts dude, i used to work for parker hanafin making parts out of titanium using cnc lathes and the level of detail on these items is mind blowing to me
This dude looks like Danny in 30y. Timewarp
🫡
Haha I kinda see it now😂
Holy Spock Batman... you ain't lyin
@@Dan-s1d4vspeak*
I was thinking the same damn thing haha
Thank you for sharing, very knowledgable, nice and humble person.
And blissfully courious which in the end will help humanity greatly, I hope.❤
Love Matt, he's the perfect guy for the task, and even though we're just at the beginning of this particular research/battle of the mindsets, I'm 100% positive he's gonna be instrumental to the whole process with his jaw dropping collection and expertise.
Go Matt, go buddy 👍🏻🖤🏴☠️
Danny, your platform and the guest you bring on are changing the world thank you brother!
This is game-changing stuff! Make this go viral.
“Archaeologists aren’t machinists or engineers”
Ok, so why are they being touted as “experts” in fields of which they have ZERO expertise???? When it comes to the designing and construction of artifacts and structures shouldn’t engineers and machinists be exactly the experts we need to be telling us how these things are made?????
Archaeologists liason with experts in many many fields and consolidate data into information
@@GroberWeisensteinthey do not. Generally, they only ask for them to provide speculative methods, given the tools, materials and objects.
We know this because ZERO archeologists have done these measurements, to this precision. The vase that was scanned last January was the first in history to be scanned with a structured light scanner.
They have never taken precise measurements. At all. The best measurements we have are from the 19th century.
@@GroberWeisenstein
Uhhh, sure, when I want to build a rocket ship to fly me out of Earth’s atmosphere without killing me, I will have a “consult” with experts in farming equipment and mountain climbing gear! Surely they are all experts so they should easily be able to tell me exactly how to construct such a thing????? 😱🤣🤣🤪🤷🏼♀️
@@kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126 not sure how that's a fitting analogy you may want to work on that one?
@@GroberWeisensteinlol
This is not just evidence, it's irrefutable proof. Anyone who has ever built anything that required high tolerances understands that these vases are completely impossible to be made by hand
It's non sense. The handles are uneven in their individual shape, but also in relation to each other. This could easily be done on a lathe and with sanding. The youtube channel Night Scarab has done a thorough debunking on the claims made of this vase. If youre intellectually honest, I really suggest you check it out to hear the refutation of the claims made on this vase.
@@darienkinne1347 "easily be done on a lathe with sanding" let's see you do it then? how can you actually explain how to precisely make these vases out of hard stone? It's not just the outside of the vases either
@@coreyblais7459 the channel I reccomended does a thorough refutation of the claims made on this vase. Much better than what I could provide in this message, so I suggest you check it out. One thing that should be pointed out, is that the handles are inconsistent in their individual shape and uneven with each other. This destroys any idea of advanced machining. A lathe could be used to hollow out and shape the outside of the vase. The spot between the handles a lathe could not be used, so it would be chiseled to an appropriate shape, and sanded for uniformity with the rest of the vase. The uneven handles clearly indicate hand tooling.
@@darienkinne1347i worked in a metal shop there it was my job to make the mental pieces flat/even…
You need some form of machinery.
The precision alone requires something that is already flat/even. It requires a sequence of precise tools/instruments.
@@thenamesleo1625 I think a lathe was used for shaping the interior/exterior, and chisels for shaping the handles and carving out the space between them, and then sanding for the space between the handles and the rest of the vase. I dont believe the lathe is attributed to the Egyptians at the time of this vase, but I could find it plausible. Certainly more so than advanced technology and 3d design software
Very passionate and articulate individual. Halfway through I'm enjoying this guest quite a lot. Good work Danny and Matt
How can any so-called experts dare to say these were carved by hand, It is absolutely ridiculous.
They say a stick and a piece of copper made these😝🤣🤩
@@mericanwit Plasma displacement cutting tool.
@@timothyappleseed2986 Coherent gamma ray cutter.
@@mericanwit No, they say "sticks and copper" were used in the manufacture of ancient Egyptian stone vases. The vases this guy has had measured are not proven to be ancient in the first place.
3d stone printer!
Shout out to Danny.. man come along way and STILL bringing epic pods . Thank you. Love from Southern California
Ancient lathes would need to have near zero runout (axial wobble) for a simple circular shape to have 1/1000 mm, as well as rigid holders for both cutter and material. Tough to get that today for most projects unwilling to spend aerospace type money
we have difficulty achieving those tolerances in uniform materials, let alone something like granite.
Thank you Danny for spreading the messages these people bring. You have a very approachable persona
The offset of the handles could be a method of ballansing the final product. We use that method on jet engine disks.
Good point, since the handles were the last thing to be done they probably used them to even them out. Also would explain why the "good" handle was always more polished next to it, maybe once they did the 2nd balancing handle they had to shave a tiny amount off the sude at the first "good" handle to balance it even more precisely.
QUIT HANDELING THE GRANITE!! you're freaking me out and gonna drop it!
He's spinning that thing like he's about to slam dunk at the NBA
Imagine making it 5,000 years (or more) and being broken from a single drop 😂
Lol, its granite!
Anyone else nervously jumping outta their seat when Danny was swinging around that giant baby-vase?😅😂
Love matt, his project and podcast are amazing! Keep up the great guest pickin'!
Alright Danno you got me for the next 1 hour 53 mins …well done
Just started myself what's the first hour like
This was a truly fascinating podcast episode. Matt is awesome and I literally just watched his 2nd Tom Grant episode which was great! You should definitely have him on!
"You're talking about Flint Dibbles, I mean, Flint Chizzles."
😂😂
Flint “my dad“ dibble
Underrated comment
Perfect comment. Lmao
Flint looked like a child playing dress up wearing his dad's work attire, walking around the house with a magnifying glass pretending to analyze random objects to determine if they are ancient or not
Amazing! THAT Beall….we go to his stores all time…and he is into these! Wow! Amazing, amazing! I thought it was a great episode before… but now one of my all time favorites….thanks to Danny and Matt and everyone else!
@freddybaggins8713 👊🏼🙏🏼
Matt beal is like the 10 year older version of Danny Jones who went all the way down the rabbit hole😂
Ha mate it’s uncanny no you said that
His future self hilarious
More like 20 lol
Thanks Danny for bringing Matt on with all his vases they are just so bloody cool would love to check one out closer and yes there out of my price rang now .. Do love Matt's pod cast have been watching it since the start and I have also been under the stepped pyramid and seen and handled all the broken ones with Ben van Kerkwyk tour , these vases and all the precise granite and hard stone workings around the world is fascinating a skill that has been lost for sure .
Well done Matt, fantastic episode
Great to have people like this on the team/thanks Danny
Amazing to see all of Matt's vase collection in one place. Love how super chill and relaxed he is bringing them over to your pod and allowing you to get hands on with them. These vases are the smoking gun evidence for a lost advanced civilization. Fantastic episode!!! Nice one Danny
The caliber of guest that you host on your channel is far superior to most. Absolutely top-tier!!!
The inheritance guy who is completely fascinated with archeology. You know he's awesome because his fulfillment comes from with other people getting the chance to physically interact with objects that is only photographed and then experiencing genuine excitement is what he wants. Super cool dude.
👊🏼
Proof of ancient very technological civilization
That's exactly right 👍🏻
This only proves that the ancients were smarter than us.
Yes one that supplanted an older more advanced people.
Its just proof they could carve basic stone vessels. They are not that special, beyond these were likely created for wealthy patrons.
You and I have different definitions of proof
Matt is so personable and humble! Great episode and as my first exposer to this man I can say his work is amazing and contrary to what he says he appears to be quite the expert on these objects. Danny, you are spearheading the broadcasting of these alternative thoughts on ancient civilisations and alternative science and machines research! Thank you for your continued questioning of these amazing ideas🫡
_" he appears to be quite the expert on these objects."_
He may appear to be but he certainly isn't. Far from it, in fact.
@@Leeside999 I suspect you’re the expert then? Spending thousands out of your own pocket and sending them off to be CT scanned to observe actual data points to make real world conclusions???
@@DazaTheKing Never said he wasn't rich and can buy whatever he wants, or pay people to take measurements. My point is that he isn't an expert and that's obvious from what he has said in this podcast.
@@Leeside999 I can see your angry at the world, and I pray for you. I encourage you to take up arms and be the change in the world you long for. ☺️
@@DazaTheKing Eh, what? Stop projecting, bro.
What an incredible collection! The measurements on these are so insane. It's a shame these weren't tested on the inside for residues when they were just found.
Anyone thinking these were done by hand really has no idea what they're talking about. It's one thing to make a perfectly circular object, it's totally another thing to hollow it out to this perfection, AND on top of that the perfection between the handles.
Couple ideas for more tests: there's a lot of talk about resonance now, so tests where they're exposed to certain frequencies might give some insights. Or maybe tests where they could produce or amplify sounds.
Anyone who can do them by hand can't be human.
what a delicious guest!!! entertaining, wittifull, intelligent, curious. please ask him again after a few months and see where he is on his travel!
It wasn't mentioned here, but I like the theory that these objects were "test run" pieces for their milling machines before working on large scale projects. Maybe so many geometric relationships were built into these vases to test various capabilities of the cutting apparatus. This could explain why extreme precision is found in some dimensions of a given vase while other measures are not so precise. As for the handles being offset? Who knows, but it could be an at-a-glance "visual tell" that these were functional or even reference pieces so they couldn't get mixed up with normal vases.
Interesting hypothesis.
I think they are mainly pieces of art, I think the precision is the point maybe. These are not common and in general use I don't think, and I think they are extremely old, and most come from the same place.
So cool I am so behind haven’t even been able to listen at work too busy but I have to catch up this one looks awesome
Anyone else holding their breath when they're manhandling those artifacts?
They are solid stone, even that thin one, its not going to break from a human punching it, imagine trying to snap a thin stone you find outside, it's not going to happen.
It would be nice if they were in a museum.
Nah, ain't my Money.
I can’t believe they put them at the edge of the table like that.
@@75SakoHunter you mean hidden away and not available for study like the others? lol
Great Interview! Really eyeopening!
He say I started back in 2023 like that was a long time ago 😂😂😂
Yea what an expert…probably stolen items or fake
Bro he literally meant the complete opposite 😂 he said it reference to how little time has passed since he dedicated time to researching the market of replicating the precise artifacts. Meaning no one had successfully made any of the vases in 2023 and it hasn’t been long since then, thus it probably still hasn’t been done
No he said that’s how long it’s been since they’ve tripled and quadrupled in price. Pay attention dingus
He did say that's when he started, and the price has increased since. You fucking guys will argue over NONSENSE.
Dudes got some bread. He can acquire a decent collection in a year and a half.
Keep up and stop your bullshit. 🤣
yeah lol also known as last year
I totally support this dude. I live in MN so I don't know Bealls. I've been to Florida once. Just happened to be the Bradenton/Tampa area. It was Xmas time. Saw tons of Manatees at the sanctuary near the power plant. Amazing experience 😊
Would be interesting to have a study on the effects these vases have on water and plants, etc.
Interesting speculation.
What effects do you expect? They are made out of stone not magic.
@@WhereIsTheSpartan certain stones have been known to retain moisture as well as conduct electricity, so a stone vase could be shown to sustain plants and other organisms at a more efficient rate...I believe in understanding, not magic
Some of the scanned and metrologically measured vases has shown incredible CONCENTRICITY and with the same inner/outer wall-thickness CONSISTENCY all around!
Probably your best podcast yet.
Loved seeing the vases, they deserve more coverage!!
Thanks guys
Yay, Matt Beall! So cool to see him here!
I'm only 10 minutes in and this is another amazing episode thank you to Matt beall Danny jones Chris and Alex dunn and Ben kerkwyk for bringing this to light
The vase and vessels aren't nearly as thin or precise as the unchartedX affiliates would have you believe. Don't forget that even in alternative media its still up to the view to do their own research.
@@wombatjack3995 bullshit the structured light scans and the CT scans they referenced in this video prove you so blatantly wrong it's not even funny they demonstrated one with 2mil thick walls that light shines through frankly it's pathetic that you've never even bothered to look into it at all cause I in fact have and it's not just 2mil thick in one spot it's 2mil thick all the way around
You're totally wrong the structured light and CT scans blatantly prove you wrong they even demonstrated one that's so thin light shines through it fact is ik for a fact you haven't done a second of research cause I in fact have
@@wombatjack3995they even blatantly demonstrate these scans on this very episode if you bothered to watch it you'd know
@@wombatjack3995but you won't cause you're just a fed stalker troll
For me this is the best channel for podcasts love the content 👍
Yes granite is hard, but the real difficulty is the fact that there are different types of crystal in the stone. The different tensile strength of the various minerals would make carving with such precision, using the inferior tools we are told they had, almost impossible.
Stone masons work the bonds, not the individual minerals. The weakest bond in the grain's matrix fractures first and takes the rest of the grains with it.
@@GroberWeisensteinyou spend a lot of time going through every other comment thread…wondering where you get the time and what is the goal. People are perplexed, all the videos you have talked about don’t disprove anything. It’s still up for debate, just let people be. But if this brings you joy then get back out there and get back to work! There will be plenty more perplexed people to refute!
@@GroberWeisensteinI know you’re not a bot because your grammar and vocabulary are better than most people that you are opposing 😂. You do make a lot of sense so hats off to you for being dedicated.
@@PneumanaBreathwork The goal is to discredit their studies
@@PneumanaBreathwork Since a infamous jew who has the largest collection of artifacts was mentioned it flagged Mossads internet division to get to work.
@mattbealllimitless The first time I saw Ben's original vase video, for the first time in my life I intuitively and instantly realized that we are not the most enlightened humans to ever exist, and that is a scary yet awesome feeling. It seems like your spirit was hooked just like mine. KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK BROTHER.
Thanks brother. Also, I appreciate the logic you’re bringing to the comments section. 🙏🙏
How they turned the areas in-between the handles is the real question. You can't get up any speed to remove the material
Exactly. You can’t make a rotation there but the dimensions stay true. Pretty much impossible
This is amazing! Let’s go Matt!!
Hell yes buddy!! Cant wait to watch this
Nice interview guys , matt is such a awesome guy would love to chat with him one day 👍👍
I was waiting for Danny to drop one. He needs to work on his handling of priceless artifacts... I was sweating bullets, I bet Matt here was freaking out
Has he dropped an artifact before in a previous episode or something?
I've seen like a dozen comments saying essentially the same thing you stated, and I dont understand why?
It doesn't appear he's being careless when handling them in any way, so why is everyone so worked up about it?
I think everyone thinks this because our ceramic and glass is so fragile today. These are literally STONE and untold millenia old. They're not going to break. lol
So cool. I bet something to do with sound or frequency and resonance. Danny was fascinated with the small one and I couldn't help but blurt out "frequency"
YES! this gonna be a classic!
It felt like a goose walked over my grave glancing at the thumb nail. I honest to God thought that was Anthony Bourdain and about had a seizure lol.
35:35 I'm thinking, what if the discrepancy is made by something like a fingerpring fat? Or a microscopic layer of some fungus or any other microorganism invisible to human eye? The differences are so incredibly small that the factors I noted above could play a role!
Amazing guest and topic Danny. Legendary
For anyone asking where the tools are in the archaeological record that would have been used to build these, try going to a pawn shop and look at how many tools are there. Tools are the first thing stolen from a job site because they are typically small and worth a lot. Whoever came after the people who built these vases probably repurpose the tools upon finding them because they would have been made out of advanced metals etc
That is such a weak strawman hahah.
@@aaronriddle9278 Strawman? You obviously don't know what the term means
@@funkymunky7935you’re using a false equivalent of a pawn shop and stolen tools to equate to machinery not existing in the archeological record. I’m sorry you don’t see that as a strawman.
I guess you missed the fact we would need a computer to reproduce them. The entire point is they can't be created by hand!
@aaronriddle9278 OK, let's use this for an example. Of the millions of cars that have been produced in the past 100+ years how many old cars do you see in a typical day? Not many, they've all been recycled into something else or rotted away into nothing in some farmers field. Now 4000 years from now how many model T ford's do you think will exist??
1:04:09 "Carry your purple with you." - I caught that Matt. Ammon's in all our heads now.
So one thing has always bugged me about the handles (being closer together on one side and having consistent holes) and also them being able to spin when on a flat surface. I think they were designed to be mounted/hung and not set on a flat surface. Not sure if that was ever considered?
That is incredibly interesting. These people did everything for a practical reason. The holes through the handles would seem to indicate that something was meant to be put through the handles.
They're literally components of an ancient machine. (think todays resistors capacitors etc) It's the more recent culture that inherited them that created the lids to merely use them as containers. lol
I was thinking levitation
We had ancient machines that could carve to 1/1000th of a millimetre… what should we make?
“Vases… like 40,000 of them. “
“Anything else? A wheel? Something more useful for the general population to live?”
“Nah bruh. Vases. Just vases.”
When these artifacts are confirmed pre flood, your collection could be worth 100 million dollars!
i honestly would keep these behind lock and key until we find out more answers, lol
By flood you mean 12,500 years ago at then end of the Ice Age.
If I were Matt, I would NOT let Flint Dibble handle these precision artifacts. I wouldn't put it past him to "drop" one. *But if he decided to let him handle them, I hope it would be recorded and livestreamed.*
@@jim-ce5ktacademics aren't smarter they just study stuff, they are not necessarily bad either
Great interview, thank you Matt for buying these and having them measured, I'm sure Hawass is having conniptions
My theory on these jars is they are resonance frequency tuning devices designed to be hung from string in a room.
maybe they "hummed" when the room got to a certain resonant frequency as it was being excavated.
@@AustinKoleCarlisle Exactly! they are polished and shaped on the outside to fine tune the resonance. I got this Idea when Chris Dunn mentioned the Seripeam boxes are polished on the inside for resonance.
@@ColoradoSatellite some people think these are hemholtz resonators, i think that's what we just described. i'm not sure if Matt has performed any resonance tests for the precision vases. are you aware?
@@AustinKoleCarlisleYes, I don't know if any testing has been done.
@@AustinKoleCarlisleI think it's more likely to be related to Chris Dunn's theory, or Jeff Drumm's theory.
The groups involved in the conferences like the one he mentioned could probably pool their resources and contacts, and set up a lab for everyone to scan anything for a couple of days. The technology isn't new so there's some out there that have been retired for hospital use but could be safe for materials. It would be like antiques roadshow but for relics and uap parts.
Banger episode. The reason they made the bottoms round is so that you can mix the contents without sticking something in them to stir them. This would have avoided contamination of spoilable products, also would avoid damaging soft metal tools if stirring caustic chemicals like aqua regia 🧐
still they have to produce some exquesite spatulas
go away
Good point. Makes sense. Also, I had envisioned an easy swirling of contents. Red wine carafes have a rounded bottom and hold by the neck to swirl for aeration of newly uncorked aged wines. They also cannot be knocked/bumped over as easily. And to set into hot sand or water would be a nice even heat conductor. But the precision spin that that these vases can do like a top is a whole next level. Crazy wonderful.!
interesting point
Or to levitate
Matt Beall has a great youtube channel called LIMITLESS that dives into many topics of the ancient mysteries.
I like the theory that these vases are similar to today’s 3d printing “Benchy”. It’s an object they used to calibrate their tooling that was used for greater purposes. I also like Ben’s “precision was easy for them so it was applied everywhere” sentiment.
yes absolutely. maybe the vases were test-runs to see how precise their machine was.
@@AustinKoleCarlisle Pure mental retardation.
@@AustinKoleCarlislesee how precise their machine was, 40,000 times?
Thank you Danny Jones and Matt Beall.
Maybe they’re helmsholtz resonators for a musical instruments. That would explain the shape, the need for precision, the lack of lids and the different sizes. The similar handles suggest they were all assembled into a frame.
😲🔥
NOTHING but bangers bruh 👊🏽
Has it occurred to anyone that these vases may not be vases, but parts to a much larger machine?
test-run pieces.
Great episode thank you Matt .!!!!