The Mystery of the SCHIST DISK at the Cairo Museum

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @agmsmith4079
    @agmsmith4079 2 ปีที่แล้ว +406

    I’m a sound engineer and an acoustician. Sound is pressure, almost like wind in a way. That is why atmospheric pressure effects sound. The pressure can travel at different speeds and amplitudes through different medium. But it isn’t necessarily anti-gravity. It’s air pressure, no different than air pressure pushing a wing up into the sky. If you can create a thing called a standing wave you can increase the amplitude of the sound pressure without having to increase the power of whatever is generating the sound. We can hear this all the time, listen to hip hop and the. Walk around your room. Notice in some spots you hear a ton of bass and others you hear no bass at all? These are room nodes and modes that amplify or attenuate the sound as it reflects back on itself. If given enough amplitude, a standing wave can create about pressure to give lift. It could be spinning the disc creates tons of standing waves reflecting back and forth inside the lobes before they escape out. With each reflection back on itself it increases its amplitude by 6dB. So if the pressure wave ping pongs inside the lobes of the disc enough times before it escapes back out it could be powerful enough to generate lift the same way a wing of a plane does.
    This would be similar concept to how doctors break up kidney stones using ultrasound. They beam two different ultra high pitch and loud sound waves at the kidney stone... each wave by itself doesn’t do anything but when the two are crossed at a specific point inside the body, they create a standing wave right at the crossing point powerful enough to break the stones without effecting any tissue around it.

    • @MelbaOzzie
      @MelbaOzzie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      OK but given the materials of construction of the disk, a standing wave of anything more than minimal amplitude would shatter the disk.

    • @sgt.cricket7365
      @sgt.cricket7365 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Your mistake here was to talk science my friend. If you talk “energy’s” and how things “feel” you’ll get a better response in these channels. They don’t want to know or see experiments and scientific data. They want to imagine or “believe” that there was some ancient culture with more advanced technology than we have today, rather then get the facts. It’s more like a religious belief tbh than a search for truth and facts for many of these people.

    • @Appalachianasshole41
      @Appalachianasshole41 2 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      @@sgt.cricket7365 you do realize that we can't replicate the majority of structures etc from the ancient world. So how is it that a less advanced people built the pyramids gobekli tepi etc and yet we can't replicate them even with modern science. I'd they were so primitive how did they have such a mastery of astronomy and mathematics? Your belief and views are essentially your religion and you hold fast to them like a zealot.

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Long ways to go, to say it will fly. The thing will lift on it's own from just the spinning. Spinning provides lift. This thing is shaped like the firework called "satellites", it's basically a mini schist disk..made of foil tho..with little lips/wings bent inward like this disk. A firecracker is attached underneath. Light it, it starts spinning, when it's going fast enough, it lifts straight into the air and zips off. Falls back to the ground once the firecracker pops.

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@MelbaOzzie Have you ever seen childrens firework called "satellites"? They are small FOIL disk, shaped just like the schist disk, but with a firecracker underneath. You light it, it starts spinning on the ground and when going fast enough, it lifts off. This, is just a scaled up version of that, and it's made of thin foyil, and isn't ripped to shreds when it lands either.

  • @dougwedel9484
    @dougwedel9484 3 ปีที่แล้ว +164

    The schist disc is amazing. The best way to figure out how it was used is make a few thousand of them and sell them to people to see what they can do with them. Make them out of different materials, maybe different sizes. Try them as frisbees, fans to blow air, make covers, stack them back to back to each other. See what people can do with them. Make it a crowd funded experiment.

    • @jeffreyking7242
      @jeffreyking7242 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      I get the feeling you're some sort of super-villain bent on chaos.

    • @dougwedel9484
      @dougwedel9484 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@jeffreyking7242 we never know for sure what this disc was used for, for good or evil. Reproducing it would let us find out.

    • @GWAForUTBE
      @GWAForUTBE ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Make it electricly conductive. Its tri lobe shape bends the magnetic poles into one another. Then spin it. It might fly away.

    • @Waynesification
      @Waynesification ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Make it out of the original materials to the original structure. Unless it is some symbolic representation of an original object, you should get some result out of it.

    • @erad05
      @erad05 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Good idea. 3D printing would be a possibility for public research

  • @raymondperry5046
    @raymondperry5046 ปีที่แล้ว +65

    I think the Schist Diak is for makind rope. You start with a single rope in the middle and add 3 ropes on the sides through the holes. Then spun the disk to wrap the rope together and slide the disk along to make rope 4 times stronger than one.

    • @tul5124
      @tul5124 ปีที่แล้ว

      🧠🧠🧠

    • @BKDenied
      @BKDenied ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Looks like an MIT Tauroidal propellor, and given the ancients immense understanding of vortex mathematics, they may have been intricately aware of how this would move air. I want to see the vortexes this would produce if rotated at high speed

    • @peterlarkin762
      @peterlarkin762 ปีที่แล้ว

      I've always leaned towards the rope winding tool theory. It certainly could be used that way and it's hugely time consuming to twist rope and fibres together by hand.

    • @tay7366
      @tay7366 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think you are spot on

    • @thisguy35
      @thisguy35 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      it would break. it's made of stone

  • @brienfoerster
    @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +508

    According to geologist Suzan Moore, who has explored Egypt with me 7 times along with Yousef Awyan, the schist disk is made of siltstone, not schist. Siltstone is a clastic sedimentary rock that formed from grains whose sized between that of sandstone and mudstone. It can found different environmental conditions different color and textures. Siltstone generally are red and gray color with flat bedding planes. Darker colored siltstone have plant fossils and other carbon-rich matter. It is hard and durable and do not easily split into thin particles or layer. Although often mistaken as a shale, siltstone lacks the fissility and laminations which are typical of shale. Siltstones may contain concretions. Unless the siltstone is fairly shaly, stratification is likely to be obscure and it tends to weather at oblique angles unrelated to bedding. Mudstone or shale are rocks that contain mud, which is material that has a range of silt and clay. Siltstone is differentiated by having a majority silt, not clay.

    • @theforgottenbrawlers
      @theforgottenbrawlers 3 ปีที่แล้ว +76

      The man, the myth, the legend. Thank you, for this brilliant clarification.

    • @brienfoerster
      @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +57

      @@theforgottenbrawlers Schist can separate in layers and thus would be no good for a spinning object.

    • @steve-o6413
      @steve-o6413 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Where would Silestone be found in fresh water Rivers, Ponds, Lakes, Oceans or Dormant Volcanoes?

    • @brienfoerster
      @brienfoerster 3 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      @@steve-o6413 Siltstone; native to Egypt.

    • @henryhewitt1571
      @henryhewitt1571 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Thanks Brien. You remind me of Petrie. Steady as she goes.

  • @ksp-crafter5907
    @ksp-crafter5907 3 ปีที่แล้ว +320

    If a future civilisation (with the closed mindset of our society) discovers the ruins of the chernobyl reactor in its shielding "sarcophagus", they will say it must have been the tomb of a great king... and the radiation would just be a defense against grave robbers!

    • @eclecticjon1019
      @eclecticjon1019 3 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      They won't know that it's radioactive, and as everyone who visits it dies, they'll say that it's cursed!

    • @TheMetahedron
      @TheMetahedron 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      LOL. Chernobyl is actually the tombstone of the USSR...

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Your reply assumes that there would be no records of Chernobyl anywhere in the world. I agree that "must have been" deductions are most often an expression of "The fallacy from ignorance", in that there might be unknown explanations no one has considered.

    • @Squig96
      @Squig96 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      And then they would open the sarcophagus and see they were wrong, as it was a nuclear reactor all along.

    • @hoefkensj
      @hoefkensj 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      and they wouldnt be entirely wrong , they'll probably find some human remains when they start digging aswell

  • @kualabear
    @kualabear 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I visited the Cairo museum in 1989 and it was amazing . It was all very jumbly and haphazard and dusty (they’ve since renovated it). It was just like being in the Tin Tin comic story which takes place in Cairo.

  • @annmaria608
    @annmaria608 3 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    Abd’el Hakim Awyan was from Khem, a Khemite who studied engineering and archeology. He came back to his place and was respected wise man, a wisdom-keeper. He successfully blended both worlds. He passed his work to his daughter, Shahrzad Awyan. His son, Yousef Awyan is well-spoken, as well. How wonderful for you to learn about how the disc worked! Thank you for your video.

    • @markerf16
      @markerf16 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thought that he is mentioned many times in a book called the Land of Osiris.

    • @davidaguillon8551
      @davidaguillon8551 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Forgive me if this has been mentioned earlier, but Mr. Awyan was featured in the Pyramid Code which was on Netflix for a time. I found his contributions informative, inciteful and above all heartwarming. As he's since passed. The series was dedicated to his memory.

  • @Gwen34900
    @Gwen34900 3 ปีที่แล้ว +76

    I've always thought it looked like a hubcap. Can you imagine if milenia from now they put a hubcap in a museum and called it a ritual vase or something?

    • @rosscronkhite9722
      @rosscronkhite9722 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Well it's part of a car .Wouldn't be too out of line .

    • @flyop312
      @flyop312 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      its a hubcap from one of the chariots

    • @Gwen34900
      @Gwen34900 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@flyop312 maybe!

    • @JSB103
      @JSB103 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      So, have four Schist-Disk-like hubcaps made for your car. Maybe you'll hit the discovery of the millennium!!

    • @hannuseppala2684
      @hannuseppala2684 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You make a thick rope using it by rotating it. You need three thinner ropes for it. Or you don't.

  • @LucyferSkyles
    @LucyferSkyles หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    How does she not have over a million subs. Honestly a real shame more people don't see her. She is fantastic.

  • @pagliaccisghost269
    @pagliaccisghost269 3 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    The first time a working archeologist sees Indiana Jones for the first time, they always laugh at the end when the Ark of the Covenant gets put in a box, and wheeled into a huge warehouse room, to be put on a shelf with thousands upon thousands of boxes. They laugh, because that part is kind of true...

    • @harrowgateguy
      @harrowgateguy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Who knows what other pieces of the puzzle are stored away kept from the public. There are many rumors that the Smithsonian Institute’s purpose is to gather up the artifacts that contradict the official story of man’s past and keep them from the public eye.

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah. You know where these treasures are kept. and why. SHOW US!!!

    • @harrowgateguy
      @harrowgateguy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@jelink22 we don’t know where the artifacts are hidden that’s the point. They are kept from public view. “SHOW US” is what we are also saying.

    • @InteleVision-Vic
      @InteleVision-Vic 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jelink22 Vatican of course.

    • @chuckleezodiac24
      @chuckleezodiac24 ปีที่แล้ว

      yeah, man. the guvment hides all the stuff like Telsa, alien space ships, Atlantis secret mind control tech, Bigfoots, clones, seeing the future machines, time travel machines, magno energy, sound vibration machine for to make energy all over, cure for cancer stuff, cow mutalators, Shitler's Brain, the body of the Jesus and wormhole teleporters becuz the billinaires wants all the money.

  • @hannibalbarca6308
    @hannibalbarca6308 3 ปีที่แล้ว +545

    Every single dude in the alternative history world just found their soul mate 😅

    • @celio8751
      @celio8751 3 ปีที่แล้ว +29

      Man, you should have invaded Rome.

    • @hannibalbarca6308
      @hannibalbarca6308 3 ปีที่แล้ว +29

      @@celio8751 if i had the siege equipment/support from home i would have

    • @TexanUSMC8089
      @TexanUSMC8089 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@celio8751 LOL

    • @EmptyNesterWellnessSociety
      @EmptyNesterWellnessSociety 3 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      I sent her videos to my boys and told them to fight it out because I want her for a daughter in law!

    • @aryarish
      @aryarish 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I have lots of competitors I see. No worries, like my forefather Cyrus the Great, I will prevail !

  • @josephlloyd9636
    @josephlloyd9636 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    There's so much in the Cairo museum I spent a whole day there on my 35th Birthday and I'll never forget it.. incredible place to visit.

  • @dondon747x
    @dondon747x 3 ปีที่แล้ว +51

    I would be curious if the disk had marks left by winding wire around it as a brushless DC motor. That thing reminds me of a wring harness for a electric motor, or a three phase generator.

    • @ryanjones7681
      @ryanjones7681 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Kinda looks like an alternator

    • @jamesearly718
      @jamesearly718 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If wired as an alternator, it could be electrically linked or harmonized to other equipment.

  • @timdaviscreations1724
    @timdaviscreations1724 3 ปีที่แล้ว +71

    Acoustic levitation is definitely a real thing-I've seen it myself on a very small scale at an engineering co-op. A consistent, specific vibration held a piece of tissue paper in place in the air between two sound emitting sources. There was no trickery. I was able to turn it on and off and handle it from all angles.

    • @leojamesiii7938
      @leojamesiii7938 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Hutchinson effect, Canadian researcher, I believe, first revealed sound levitation. There is a stone in shivapur? India that can be lifted by fingers and chant. Cool stuff.

    • @MrShermin12
      @MrShermin12 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Destin from ‘Smarter Every Day’ did a vid on Acoustic Levitation: th-cam.com/video/0K8zs-KSitc/w-d-xo.html. Fascinating!

    • @beasthunt
      @beasthunt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes, acoustic levitation is real but the rest doesn't add up.

    • @harrowgateguy
      @harrowgateguy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What can be done on a small scale can be done on a large scale. John Hutchinson has levitated objects as heavy as a bowling ball.

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@harrowgateguy SHOW US!!!

  • @williammckeever4790
    @williammckeever4790 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I think everyone is overthinking this. It is nothing more than a Lazy Susan commissioned by someone wealthy enough to afford it. A center piece to show off at dinner parties. As far as the sound tests go, project sounds at any uniquely shaped stone carving and I would be surprised not to get back some unique results. The simplest conclusions are usually the correct ones. Maybe not the most exciting theory, but much more plausible than many others I have heard. At any rate, it is truly a masterpiece of craftsmanship at amazing to look at.

  • @Chukairi
    @Chukairi 3 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    I'm really happy you talk about the energy that is in the tomb and in the museum and how draining it could be. I thought I was feeling that myself when I went to museum and saw ancient artifacts. thank you for this! it's really cool to know this.

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes, Emily....energy just sits around a tomb....and how draining it all must be for all that energy just sitting around of thousands of years.....I think you ought to ponder all this on your yoga mat.

    • @Muhahahaaaaaaa
      @Muhahahaaaaaaa ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jelink22Larry I can tell you get no action

    • @crissycrisa7438
      @crissycrisa7438 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      This is why our civilization is so backwards... People are closed minded and don't understand the reality of the universe in which we live.

  • @N3m3sis43
    @N3m3sis43 3 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Excellent topic, looking forwards to Sunday - It's surprising that this is still on open display in the Cairo museum, although their explanation for it's possible function is laughable - can't wait to hear your take on this amazing artifact.

  • @briendraper4818
    @briendraper4818 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I love watching your videos. You put so much energy into them. Thank you. Keep up your great work!

  • @TomTwain
    @TomTwain 3 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    I think the Schist disk was a smoothie maker... probably mass produced and undervalued at the time... so they just tossed them into a massive landfill 😇 !
    Oh... and Jahannah... you look bomb in your thumbnail !!

    • @gimcrack555
      @gimcrack555 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      First time I lay eyes on that Schist disk. All I can think of, it could be used as a nacho chip bowl, add a center dish in the middle for the sauce.

  • @5Dworld
    @5Dworld 3 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    "..and I dont like people."
    Agreed.

    • @francischambless5919
      @francischambless5919 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      lmao, 2nd that.

    • @howiegruwitz3173
      @howiegruwitz3173 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      People are gay

    • @thiefofheartss5677
      @thiefofheartss5677 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      We are at the antisocial era. We are told to keep our distances and be afraid of people because they are carriers of deadly pathogens.
      Well this is a culture that will get us nowhere. Those who keep their nose stuck on a screen 24/7 will live pathetic lives and die soon. The part of society that builds communities, activities and families in the real world, will survive this. You'll see :-)
      I like people, even those not in the same wavelength as me.

    • @elevidence8380
      @elevidence8380 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@thiefofheartss5677 no one survives. death comes for all. its all pointless entertainment. and will repeat.

    • @thiefofheartss5677
      @thiefofheartss5677 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@elevidence8380 No one survives, yes. But the journey matters ! And I choose a journey WITH people. WITH family, WITH friends and to the extent that I can, WITHIN a certain society-culture. We all need a home. And isolation is not a home.

  • @CaseSensitive101
    @CaseSensitive101 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This is used as an air diffuser for a basic air conditioning system. The discs are stacked on poles and place in ventilation shafts and then filled with water airflow passes through the disc disturbing the water and spinning the disc diffusing the air droplets in the air creating a drop in temperature like a "Swamp cooler" does.

  • @LukeA1223
    @LukeA1223 3 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    We keep thinking ‘copper chisel’ is what they were saying when, in actuality, ‘kaparcshile’ is a word that means ‘I don’t have the faintest idea’.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      For a real comparison view Sacred Geometry Decoded I was surprised.

  • @zuzannavee9558
    @zuzannavee9558 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I am so glad you are addressing the concept and importance of 'feeling' within this subject. THANK YOU! No, it's not scientific, thank goodness, because that just keeps one where we've always been... not knowing anything but what the so called 'experts tell us. Love your work!

  • @michaelj2536
    @michaelj2536 ปีที่แล้ว

    I could listen to her for days .....weeks perhaps lol....captivating lady + interesting compelling subject matter = this child blown away

  • @Jasmijn25
    @Jasmijn25 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Thank you for doing the vids on Egypt. Love them! As one female to another I can say its refreshing to see a female talk about the "stuff" like this. Love the humor and the female touch to it. I had the same kind of thoughts when I was back home from Egypt. I can so relate to how you feel on the energies in Egypt. I wanted to go there since I was 8, all my school projects were on the old archeology and history like Egypt, Sumeria, Peru. Already then I was convinced its was not just like archeology told us, but much older. No idea who planted the idea in my head, it has always been there ;-) 16 years ago I finally went to Egypt myself and I am still in awe about how I felt visiting the great pyramid and the king's chamber. Had to run for a ticket at 6 in the morning then, only 150 a day lol. The kings's chamber sound and vibration was out of this world. We chanted...In fact I felt so rejuvated that the whole 2 weeks I wasnt sick for a day, while the rest that didnt run for a ticket were sick from heat & food. The Cairo museum is really heavy with energy and drained me too back then. Hope you do some more trips in the future, or with Brien? Would love to see your reactions on other old sites of our world.

  • @Stevil935
    @Stevil935 3 ปีที่แล้ว +179

    This is probably going to sound nit-picky, but the phenomena you're describing is called "acoustic levitation" and not "anti-gravity". It's a real phenomena whereas anti-gravity is considered to be para-science.
    Love your channel though. Not trying to be a dick.

    • @montysmythe579
      @montysmythe579 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Anti gravity is a "para science" 😂😂😂 you just made that up, go read about electro gravitic propulsion and clue yourself up Einstein 😉

    • @Stevil935
      @Stevil935 3 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      @@montysmythe579 Electrogravitics are also considered to be pseudoscience by mainstream science. I'm not telling you what to believe, but I do think we should be careful when adding in further speculation upon an already fringe topic. And again, the phenomena she mentioned is considered legitimate even by mainstream science so there's no need to invoke a controversial theory in the first place.
      Also, not that Wikipedia gets everything right, but a direct quote:
      Anti-gravity (also known as non-gravitational field) is a hypothetical phenomenon.
      ^This is legitimately how mainstream science views this topic.

    • @JacK-vk8iu
      @JacK-vk8iu 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@montysmythe579 It's interesting to check the work of James Clerk Maxwell vs Einstein. Consider their works and the debate at the time between their theories, and also remember that we derive much from Maxwell's work. He was a very insightful man.

    • @martinuso7446
      @martinuso7446 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@Stevil935 Staying within the grasp and limitations of 'mainstream science' is a way to not go beyond some borders. However beyond those borders is where the answers are to be found. The manipulation to stay within 'mainstream science' is there only to keep us within certain parameters and a limited belief system which will bring us no insights that will propel humanity forward.

    • @Stevil935
      @Stevil935 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      ​@@martinuso7446 As stated above the phenomena she mentioned is considered legitimate even by mainstream science so there's no need to invoke a fringe theory in the first place. I'm not looking for a debate on the contestability of mainstream science, as such a debate would be pointless for both of us. Though I should point out that if it wasn't for the confines of mainstream science we wouldn't even be having this conversation.

  • @spiralmind9216
    @spiralmind9216 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Im interested to know what is the radius of the disk? Spinning it at a particular phase, then hitting it orthogonally with a vector of frequencies produced fascinating results. I’m sure more than likely, the device was used to build rope. Three curved aperture could generate a solid spin ratio for rope. Fascinating.

    • @tomcollins5112
      @tomcollins5112 ปีที่แล้ว

      If you had the metal tools necessary to make a schist disc, then why wouldn't you just make it out of metal? Why go through the difficulty of carving it from stone?

  • @lannvannoy5350
    @lannvannoy5350 3 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    I look forward to your take on the disc. Knowing that it’s made out of “Stone“ makes it an even greater mystery. Having worked with a lot of stone/rocks, creating something like this disc is still impossible for us to do today. I also find it interesting that the further back in time you go, the more sophisticated the technology. Clearly this is a pre-dynastic Artifact

    • @RubSomefastOnIt
      @RubSomefastOnIt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Not impossible today at all... we have 5/6 axis cnc stone milling that can make that quite easily to a +/- 0.0005 of an inch in tolerance.
      But how the did it back then I have no idea.

  • @danielc7657
    @danielc7657 3 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    Could this be part of the machine that moved the pyramid rocks? Imagine dozens of these discs working together to move rocks. 🤔 Just a thought.

    • @sgt.cricket7365
      @sgt.cricket7365 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Physics much?

    • @stefaniamirri1112
      @stefaniamirri1112 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Feel the same, even possibly used to cut the stones

    • @faragraf9380
      @faragraf9380 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂 i see them flying, stone under them.

  • @megret1808
    @megret1808 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was in the old Cairo museum just looking around on my own when I came upon a dusty cabinet. There, inches away, was the disc. It’s about the size of a medium pizza, laughably labelled as a flower vase. As a designer, I was fascinated.

  • @rh8216
    @rh8216 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Someone needs to reproduce that disc test. Incredibly interesting if true.

    • @stevecampkin8613
      @stevecampkin8613 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      th-cam.com/video/ABjRnSYw-4k/w-d-xo.html

    • @nexpro6985
      @nexpro6985 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@stevecampkin8613 no schist disc in that vid. Lots of electronics.

  • @jimmagnus1200
    @jimmagnus1200 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have never been to the Cairo Museum and probably never will. But I have seen the King Tut exhibit when it was in Chicago. You just can't describe the beauty, the detail and the quality of these objects. Seeing them on TV or on the internet doesn't come close to the impact of seeing them in person.

  • @mysterycat394
    @mysterycat394 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I'm so glad you picked up on the energies at these sites without knowing about the intentional design of structures in ancient Egypt to affect the visitor. Mainly this was used in Temple design. So, the Temple of Hathor, for instance, was designed to bring out the emotion correlated to the archetype being displayed through the art and architecture. John Anthony West and Schwaller de Lubicz go in to detail on this subject. The "symbolist interpretation" of ancient Egypt may be of particular interest. Check out "The Serpent in the Sky", by J.A.W

  • @MisterPeanutButter1
    @MisterPeanutButter1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Acoustic levitation is a thing, it's not as mind blowing as you seem to think. What you're describing is the resonance frequency for the particular rotation speed somehow makes an upwards compression wave (acoustic levitation). What I don't understand was the infinity symbol. Was that something they saw on an oscilloscope, so just Lissijou (sp?) figure?

  • @HellCatt0770
    @HellCatt0770 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Having been following Hancock, Carlson, Ben UnchrtX, Foerster, snake bros and more... I am l❤️ving having a female to watch in this field! Bonus jewellery recommendations woohoo! 👏👏❤️

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      For holistic ideas try Sacred geometry decoded.

  • @chrishoo2
    @chrishoo2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Apart from your loopy presentation which is, however, refreshing instead of the usual older guys like me, you told me & showed things that I’ve never come across before so- many thanks for this & please carry on!

  • @jacksimper5725
    @jacksimper5725 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The "Sawn" granite is something ,so far, I have never heard any Egyptologist even refer to . Thats a snippet of educating information to remember .Thank you.

  • @newffee
    @newffee 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Tanks fer findin me bread mixer attachment! I was wondering where that got to? Just send it to me through the post lol. That is a strange object isn't it. Now how they made it is even stranger.

  • @jmbbao
    @jmbbao ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In the war thousands of years ago some pieces of the machinery damaged had to be rebuilt and in lack of the complicated mixes of metals not available, some pieces were built with other materials. This disc was part of an antigravity generator.

  • @Roy-ie5op
    @Roy-ie5op 3 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I continue to be thoroughly entertained, while learning a new light on history. I am hooked on your channel in more ways than ever.
    You are now a delightful part of my evening Jahannah.
    Your investigations, I hope, will become more widely heard in the academic world.
    Keep up the wonderful work.
    May your enthusiastic personality and captivating smile continue to excite others as you have me.
    Kindest Regards, Roy.

  • @neitzche1245
    @neitzche1245 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    The disk is interesting. Like the meteor knife in King Tuts tomb, I think it came from another civilization as a gift because it is so different from anything else in Egypt. All around the world people are buried with objects not from their culture because they put such value on them. Something so different would definitely be valued enough to be buried with a High ranking person.

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Fer f*ck's sake: iron meteorites have been found in many places around the world. Tut's knife was shaped FROM an iron meteorite . It did not land as a ready-made knife. Yes, it would have been considered special, but no it doesn't have to come from another culture.
      p.s. do you think the Black Stone in the Kaaba in Mecca comes from another culture?
      As for the burial sites you mention containing objects not from their culture: so what? We find many cultures burying their high-status people with, for example, gold items which had to come from far away, as there were no local mines. In the case of the schist disk, the material it's made from does NOT come from far away.

  • @petermorgan338
    @petermorgan338 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Saqqara Serapeum
    Fascinated by the knowledge you TH-camrs have of ancient Egypt and history in general.
    As a complete amateur in the field, (a semi-retired Graphic artist) I am drawn particularly to the theory of an advanced civilisation prior to the Pharaohs and the Old Kingdom as presented by various luminaries.
    The Saqqara Serapeum is particularly intriguing as the technology and methods used to manufacture the granite ’boxes’ (sarcophagi?) are unknown as the tools said to be available to ‘the Egyptians’ of the Old Kingdom were inadequate for the working of Granite to this quality.
    The sheer size, weight and distance from the original quarries for this material are in themselves daunting.
    The method of construction of the boxes has not to my knowledge been explained.
    The perfection of line and polished finish are impressive in themselves but to scoop out tens of tons of really hard granite from the centre and finish the interior of the box so perfectly and in one piece is mind boggling!
    Allow me to ask and propose the following regarding the practicalities of construction:
    a) What happened to the stone excavated from each core of the box?
    b) Was the material chipped out piecemeal in fragments or somehow extracted in a single useable piece or pieces?
    c) I would think it likely that the valuable material would be used to create sculptures as seen in the Cairo museum!?! Or even those incredible vases and containers, not wasted as rubble!
    d) Also, what’s the method of extraction of the centre contents in making ‘the box’?
    e) Surely if the creators of the boxes could cut out the centre in one piece it would be problematic to leave a base but to cut right through leaving a cuboid void!
    f) This would allow for the cutting of a thinner flat section of the extracted centre to re-insert to the box as an interior floor?
    If this is the case as in f) has anyone investigated the inside base of the boxes to see if they are in one piece or have a join/fit along all 4 sides?
    If in one piece, base/floor included then the above is mostly academic! But what a waste of granite in the circumstances.
    Hope this us understandable!
    Peter Morgan

  • @mudiusp6050
    @mudiusp6050 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I'm really diggin' this fun person! Love your energy love the verve. Love your efforts in making Yusef much more prolific.
    If ever the chance occurs and I find muself on an Egyptian tour with this lovely person, I'd consider that a high point. And gold looks good on you girl!
    I caught the bug when I was seven. Mum took us to see the Tut exhibit when it toured the states. Palace of Fine Arts in San Fransisco.
    Keep up the good work kiddo! You are definitely entertaining. Had me chuckling a lot!

    • @guillaumebrodeur9642
      @guillaumebrodeur9642 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      She is the kind of girl that makes everything she wears beautifull. There is people like that haha

  • @TrollBot.
    @TrollBot. 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Dam, you really make me want to go visit these places now! Amazing, thank you for sharing your experiences!

  • @CheefSmokealot64
    @CheefSmokealot64 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    There is a much simpler explanation to what the schist disc was used for. When I saw the schist disk in the Cairo museum I thought of when I was in southern France. In southern France they still grow Hemp for rope. The disc they used to wind smaller rope fibers into larger rope looks exactly the same as the schist disc from ancient Egypt. You attach three or four strands and spin the disc. The smaller fibers twist into a larger rope. The schist disc was for making Hemp rope.

    • @allipopsprincess9199
      @allipopsprincess9199 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      That is a nice theory, only the disc is made from a very brittle slate/schist material so any pulling on the thin fragile plate would snap it. Consider the effort it would take to make this disc from a single block and then use it to spin hemp? It would be far easier to use a wooden wheel to do the same.
      There's no denial the disc is aerodynamic in its shape which suggests it was used to pass either flow of water or air/gas to cool it, or generate electricity.
      Check out this experiment m.th-cam.com/video/ImCMKINkjbk/w-d-xo.html

    • @r.j.g.9301
      @r.j.g.9301 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@allipopsprincess9199 Schist is not the same as (brittle) slate; the hardness depends very much on the mica (quartz) percentage and its age. (Biotite, chlorite & muscovite levels determine the overall hardness.) But I don't think this was used for rope either. 😉

    • @THIRTEENTH13TH
      @THIRTEENTH13TH 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@r.j.g.9301 it is made of slate but it is called the schist disk for some reason, if you go the guide himself will tell you it is made of slate not schist

    • @r.j.g.9301
      @r.j.g.9301 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@THIRTEENTH13TH The "Guide"? What guide?

    • @THIRTEENTH13TH
      @THIRTEENTH13TH 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@r.j.g.9301 the guides at the pyramids themselves

  • @Ratnoseterry
    @Ratnoseterry 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Egypt used to be the Orient and this is something that has changed in our time. It was the Orient because of this multicultural hub you speak of, old maps used the great pyramid as the central point of projection, hence Orient-ation. Stellar video ✌

    • @Bobg425
      @Bobg425 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Orient just means 'east', from the French 'Oriental' . People from eastern England were said to be from the orient in the 14th century. East moved as we discovered lands further east and the name Orient with it.

    • @RalphEllis
      @RalphEllis 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Ha, ha, ha - orient just means ‘east’.
      The opposite of occident or the ‘west’.
      R

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Eh?
      Arguable to say the least.
      You can call it part of the Mediterranean in the north, the Levant in the East, and Africa in the south and west.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Bobg425 "as we discovered lands further east"?
      Did people just forget about Alexander of Macedonia making it all the way to India before the Roman's even became an empire?
      India was known in legend in the west even before that, which is precisely why Alexander was so curious about it.

  • @levitation25
    @levitation25 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    My favourite part in this video is when you were talking about the feel of a place. I suppose a good modern example would be the completely different atmospheres felt in an empty football stadium and a cemetery.

    • @sibyl9124
      @sibyl9124 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It made me think of how midnight and noon feel very different.

  • @paulslater9061
    @paulslater9061 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Such a brilliant presentation by this lady so refreshing

  • @robertm9490
    @robertm9490 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great video! That object is definitely a curious piece of history. Man I would love to see the test that they ran on it back in the 70’s-80’s!!

  • @KinkyJalepeno
    @KinkyJalepeno 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Main thing you’re missing is what frequencies were tried and what did they make the replica out of?. Nice vid 👌

    • @KevinCoisy
      @KevinCoisy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I was gonna ask the same thing. It could then be reproduced. It could also explain ancient cultural/ritual chants if possible to produce using human's vocal cords.

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @mike d Face it: you're crazier than an outhouse rat. "Very well could".....I'm guessing that.." .. YOU CALL THAT SCIENCE???

    • @jamesearly718
      @jamesearly718 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Acoustic levitation saw, using ‘trapped’ objects attached to a saw?…there is potential for using wave troughs to suspend cutting implements (diamonds, etc) for eroding or cutting other stone. One could potentially vary the speed of the rotating disk, the frequency applied, and the mechanical connections / designs of the cutting tools to achieve different cutting effects, depths, angles, amounts of force (vary the waves to oscillate, suspending a larger hollow ball -in the wave trough- to a cutting blade or similar attachment to the ball, to cut stone with oscillating diamond attached to a ball being mechanically driven by wave forces.) very similar to acoustic levitation. (Reference Physicist Chris Benmore sp? With Aragon National Labs.)

    • @jamesearly718
      @jamesearly718 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Also check out TH-cam NightHawkInLight’s video “Acoustic Energy & Surprising Ways To Harness It”

    • @sciencemansandera
      @sciencemansandera 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      If it's Anunnaki which I would believe it probably is because the whole Egyptian story is a lie the frequency might be a7 or a major seventh I play guitar and some synthesizer, that seem to be very popular frequency with them. Not sure that might be around 400 Hz They also used Crystal almost exclusively in many things they did I'd be curious if there was any magnetics to the disk or if it contains any form of Crystal. I do understand how they got their zero gravity craft and much of the technology I've been tracking down their ancient scriptures for about 18 years now I've uncovered a lot of the story of Egypt and broken some of the code and found the true books of life i'm slowly working on a book on it I'm not exactly the greatest writer. Our government has covered up a lot in Egypt supposedly our CIA is even involved with the operations of the great pyramid I know the real story behind that pyramid and it pertains to every person on this planet. If a brown I believe I could restart it but it might get us all killed. Anunnaki have not totally vanished I have proof. They do not approve of wicked people and even said they would kill society with the plague periodically calling it of the wicked yeah it could very well be what call with 19 years there were some very suspicious circumstances A cloud came all the way from the great pyramid to the southern United States and then they were all infected with Covid going thousands of miles across all that humidity a dust cloud that's really bizarre I think there might've been some kind of godly element behind it. That's just my opinion but I found the whole story the Anunnaki are our Creator GodThe Bible has been all gacked to Hell and they threw out like 45% of it

  • @robcavenagh8908
    @robcavenagh8908 หลายเดือนก่อน

    She had me at "dee doo, dee doo." I will absorb my science here. Thank you. These videos are always riveting.

  • @colarb5276
    @colarb5276 3 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Now that places are starting to open up again, you may soon be able to visit the British Museum Egyptian Sculpture section and maybe talk to one of the curators. It would be interesting to see how open minded ( or not ) they are on things like the schist disk and the boxes in the Serapium.

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      i am literally waiting for the opening day

    • @HorribleOracle
      @HorribleOracle 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Warning, last time I went they were not that open minded

    • @asashoryuLapisphilosophorum
      @asashoryuLapisphilosophorum 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@FunnyOldeWorld hi there Mrs James, 😊
      Hi jahannah, thanks for the genious data,
      That's real, told knowledge, you must be a special person if the aijans( sorry don't know the name) Told you this!!!!
      Would fit my gravity theory, the disk is anti vibrational,
      Gravity is the balance of vibrations, the more gravital object is trough mass more dence, less vibrating, now the action is activ, in the room/ether now the more vibrating/less gravital object moves Activ towards the more gravital to balance the vibrations, lol so funny it's like the waves vibrations of the object swim in the eather,
      First I did think the shisk disk does stop the vibrations with its form at the moment I am at work and can't think it trough
      Greetings and best wishes
      Your sincerly

    • @nexpro6985
      @nexpro6985 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Please don't bother them.

  • @DaddyKratosOfTheShire
    @DaddyKratosOfTheShire 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Yousefs dad was so knowledgeable about ancient Egypt and kemet that its ridiculous. He will be missed.

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have never been to the Cairo museum but I have spent a lot of time at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago and I have seen King Tuts exhibit back in the 1970's when I was a child and again when it returned to the US a few years back and I was amazed and definitely want to visit Egypt. My property in Louisiana was the location of a very large Caddo Indian town who were part of the Mississippi Mound Builder's and we have found countless artifacts. I'm trying to get the historians from the Poverty Point area to come check it out.

  • @meekle8891
    @meekle8891 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I've never heard this story! I'd love to see more discourse on it, and definitely more evidence.

  • @davidmcguire4210
    @davidmcguire4210 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I'm an anthropologist who admires a keen mind, an open mind. This girl blows away any notions of a feminine mind needing to be stoggy and rigid in speech and manner. Enthusiasm and joy in seeing and visiting and feeling ancient sites brings curiosity and new vigor back to a dusty museum. Johannah will reinvigorate my chosen field of interest. I want to kiss her hand and thank her.

    • @kayakMike1000
      @kayakMike1000 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah. Just discovered her channel. It's so refreshing to see someone who is super passionate about something that isn't a selfie.

    • @audryhaynes3277
      @audryhaynes3277 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      She's proof that we should have started listening to women a long, long time ago. Didn't Adam throw Lilith out of the garden because he didn't like that she was his equal -- intellectually and otherwise? So God cloned a woman for him (he made her from a rib -- genetic material) and we end up with Eve. This girl is a daughter of Lilith.

    • @adamstar7516
      @adamstar7516 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Weiiiird

  • @criscastro6684
    @criscastro6684 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m in love with!!! Keep up the good work. Had me dying expressions. Lip curl, and such.

  • @Slavigrad
    @Slavigrad 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Looking forward to it, I am curious about this disk, reminder on! :)

  • @chriskelly2939
    @chriskelly2939 3 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    maybe it’s a tool for making rope. The strands are placed in each section and spun

    • @Ryy86
      @Ryy86 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Boom! It was used to make Khufus rope, that he used to pull the 60-80ton blocks up HIS RAMP to build his TOMB LOL
      I don't believe that btw, it was white westerners with Stihl Saws and Generators contracted in to build all these great mysteries. Either that or a lost civilization from 20-40+ thousand years ago that was atleast as advanced as us, or Alienz👽 bro
      One of those 3 options are correct.
      The Ancient Egyptians we are taught about were just really bad graffiti artists, they did build some pyramids (there the ones crumbling to pieces now) and they made some shitty clay lids for those granite pots lol. But the lion (Sphinx) the 3 great pyramids, and that serrapeum? Damn my spelling, but that place is amazing, Baalbek and the Peruvian megalithic structures etc were created by literal GODS.

    • @howinteresting2
      @howinteresting2 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Isn't that just the 'official' story...? ...I meam about the rope making. Still dont know how they made the disc.

    • @Stevenchefjones
      @Stevenchefjones 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think the same its for making rope. That would be advance technology for them instead of making it by hand.

    • @howiegruwitz3173
      @howiegruwitz3173 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Duh

    • @rhetoricByEric
      @rhetoricByEric 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Of all the ways to make a rope wrench, why go to the trouble of making something so elaborate and fragile?

  • @kevynlacey
    @kevynlacey 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Love your channel, you have very similar views to Egyptian history as myself. I remember hearing and maybe watching a video that there was a view that the Schist Disc was used to nullify gravity so they could move the huge granite blocks!!

  • @angelusrufus7479
    @angelusrufus7479 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I don't like people too. But I like your videos more with every next. :-) In that one you show that unfinished statue - I've never seen that before! Thank you!

  • @steve-o6413
    @steve-o6413 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Seems your a Hit, hope to celebrate your 25,000 subscription mark by Sunday or shortly thereafter, love your style and format Dear, best of luck on Sunday this should be interesting...

  • @konvikted_fellin8253
    @konvikted_fellin8253 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I JUST STARTED WATCHING YOUR CHANNEL YESTERDAY AND AM VERY FASCINATED IN BASICALLY EVERYTHING IVE SEEN SO FAR AND THATS A FEW ALREADY LOL. I WANTED TO SAY THIS IS WHAT THEY PROBABLY MOVED THE BLOCKS OF PYRAMIDS WITH.. I WISH I COULD GO TO EGYPT WITH YOU THAT MUST BE AMAZING!! HEY KEEP DOING WHAT YOUR DOING YOU GOT THAT IT YOU NEED FOR PEOPLE TO SMILE LAUGH BUT ALSO REALIZE YOUR SERIOUS AND I AM AS WELL PLEASE CONTINUE BRINGING ME YOUR INSIDE EGYPT KNOWLEDGE EVEN IF ITS ONLY THINGS MAYBE YOU MIGHT NOT THINK ARE IMPORTANT BUT FASCINATING YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN THE SPARK WILL CLICK FOR SOMEONE WATCHING.. 😁

  • @zacharymilos392
    @zacharymilos392 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Oh I get to watch you on my bday 😊 what a great gift! 😅

  • @kevinwilliams5092
    @kevinwilliams5092 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Totally forgot Yousef's father's experiment! If he gives you the details of the experiment, we need to find find some to 3D print a schist disc to repeat it. Cheers! And great video!

    • @howiegruwitz3173
      @howiegruwitz3173 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      STAY IN SCHOOL KIDS

    • @donmega6687
      @donmega6687 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Is this QVC you look in black tees

    • @rowey1992
      @rowey1992 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I would think you need to make it out of the same material. Sound waves react differently with different materials. They must have used siltstone for a reason, otherwise they would have made it out of pottery, which would have been so much easier and quicker to do.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Sacred Geometry Decoded give detailed analysis.

  • @weststarlubricantsinc.4010
    @weststarlubricantsinc.4010 ปีที่แล้ว

    I can not quit watching you! Im so struck on ancient egypt and especially sehkmet statue.. there is so much more there then we know or there telling us..

  • @jambykool
    @jambykool 3 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I think you and Jimmy and Brien have the most interesting videos and I'm always left pondering the wondrous mysteries of history. History is open to interpretation and that is not a trifling matter. Thank you Johanna. Keep bringing your videos past the skeptical checkpoints set up by trolls.

    • @KlausJepps
      @KlausJepps 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You forgot Ben! :)

    • @natalie8956
      @natalie8956 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KlausJepps who’s Ben?

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I want you guys to hook in to the Ancient Architects dude too. He's just an encyclopedia of this stuff.

    • @KlausJepps
      @KlausJepps 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@crhu319 Yes, he's informative too, though I get annoyed by the way he talks. Also cfapp7865 has a lot to offer. Right now I'm going though Randall Carlson Podcast which is very in depth geological.

  • @vtwinflyer4215
    @vtwinflyer4215 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    “Depending on how thick your neck is ...” haha you make me laugh. The schist disk sorta looks like a device you put on the end of a drill to mix paint up with. I doubt that’s what it was for. It’s an odd piece that’s for sure. Made of stone too, that’s impressive with all those compound curves.

    • @howinteresting2
      @howinteresting2 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes I thought paint mixer (and they must have needed a lotta paint sometimes...) .. but maybe its just part of a siren that called everybody underground at 'meal times'...

    • @clownindan
      @clownindan 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Stone age speaker.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Try Sacred Geometry Decoded if you wish for a holistic view.

  • @jimgriffiths9071
    @jimgriffiths9071 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very well done Jahannah, with a tremendous delivery. You have a future in this topic, please keep it up!

  • @andrewvictor2502
    @andrewvictor2502 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    There was a study in Japan on ultrasounds that levitated objects just like this avoid those.

  • @Barchordwitter
    @Barchordwitter ปีที่แล้ว +4

    When you talk about how things and places make you feel, listen to those feelings. They are real. Like when you described how walking around in the big pyramids made you feel mechanical or industrial, you nailed it. The guest you interviewed later who had figured out how they made chemistry was mind blowing. I think the smart government people know this but don't talk about it. Come over and take a look at our ancient sewer system.

  • @Curt-r9d
    @Curt-r9d 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Spectacular, both the subject and presenter. I visited the Cairo Museum in the mid 1970’s. There was a room for King Tut’s artifacts amazing. The entire museum was a combination of an out body experience and Riply’s Believe It or Not.

  • @douggoble9695
    @douggoble9695 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    You sure stirred the dust up , on this one ! 🙂

  • @robertholland6012
    @robertholland6012 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Always a delight to see your shows JJ

  • @janduivenvoorden
    @janduivenvoorden ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have no experience in this area, but at first glance, the disc looks more functional in an industrial sense than anything else. I ran a clear image of it through Google Image search to see if it resembled anything, and the initial results showed propellers, fans, and parts of pumps. Some of them looked eerily similar, so the idea that the disc is part of some fluid-driven mechanism doesn't seem too far-fetched. The fact that it's not made of wood or copper might indicate that it was intended to withstand higher pressures for a long time without degrading or deforming too quickly. Perhaps having to replace this part of the mechanism would be a nuisance, requiring the entire machine to be halted and disassembled. One would expect to find more of these discs, in various sizes and materials, if they were commonly used apparatuses. Unless there were very few of these machines in general, that is. I bet some experts in the field of engineering would be able to recognize its possible functions immediately.
    Of course, some evidence of hydraulic structures, buildings, or tubes would need to be found to make this plausible. A water-driven pump could potentially generate a continuous, rapid up-and-down movement that could be transferred to a polishing tool or a table saw, for example.
    But then again, I have no experience whatsoever.

  • @ellamack4110
    @ellamack4110 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    has anyone thought that it might make a great design for a gear type system? with this if you had a second gear with teeth that hooked into those folds it would help cut down on wear and tear on the gear system and prevent gears from slipping.

    • @GWAForUTBE
      @GWAForUTBE ปีที่แล้ว

      3 gears on a 2ft dia anything isnt overly smooth. Smooth in gearing makes eff

  • @mevenstien
    @mevenstien 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    🙂 been wondering about this one for a long time and still am, yet can offer you an interesting tid bit to think about. Regardless of what it's function was ,the skill of carving something this delicate out of this type of schist is also found on another continent,around Columbia or Peru, in some other delicately carved ,similar looking schist also skillfully made in prehistory . Not the same wheel but a disc with symbols and some items that appear as implements of some sort.
    If your can sit through his theories ,the vid on TH-cam is one of Eric Von Doneken's vids. Really the same stone ,
    the same delicate carving, same from prehistory ,
    same nobody knows what they really are.
    Might help or might dig the rabbit hole deeper ,either way right up your alley 🙂 and even though I refer you to TH-cam vids allot it just for ease of access , I've known about most all this kinda stuff before TH-cam was invented.

  • @Jim-fy2qf
    @Jim-fy2qf 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I remember from a long time ago reading how Pyramid shaped models if placed over old fashioned razor blades overnight actually sharpened them and how a sound wave horn was built that when blown had the ability to damage the stomach. Echoes of the Walls of Jericho perhaps, I would recommend “Supernature as a starting point by Lyall Watson a South African Botanist. He wrote many books “The Romeo Error”. Heavens Breath” for example.

  • @earthexpanded
    @earthexpanded 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Hey Jahannah, for what it is worth, I do strongly feel that I discovered the theory of everything, a single unifying model to explain physics observations, in 2014 (working on it since) and it stemmed entirely from some fundamental realizations relating to the Figure-8 pattern. Seriously. So. I am most definitely interested in this device now and will spew my opinion into the ether now. :D
    My take on the schist disk...for sure it looks like its meant to spin on an axis for a purpose. It is as if when it spins, it causes particles which are centrifugally being forced outward to then travel along the curvature of the walls and travel upward and inward. Perhaps importantly, there is an infinite spectrum of ever smaller particles, and the smaller they are the more abundant they are. Any advanced technology is likely not just influencing what we call "atoms" and so on but is tapping into the depths of energy available in the underlying infinite abundance. I say that because perhaps somehow by causing the flows of larger macroscopic particles to occur in this manner, underlying layers are also caused to flow with them to a degree and it has a sort of whiplash effect through the layers. I have wondered if it is possible to influence lower layers in a cascading effect sort of way to ultimately tap into "zero-point energy" by moving atoms in some fashion.
    If the center of the Figure-8 was positioned above the rotating device, maybe the Figure-8 itself is emergent from the presence of a sort of concentrated energy at where the flows coming off of the disc converge due to being forced to travel outward to the disc but then upward and inward along the upper edge along the inside of the three blades. And with the rotation of the system as a whole, this concentrated energy above the device would also be rotating. Rotation is critical for causing a magnetic field, because larger macroscopic objects rotating cause more subtle ethereal particles to be pulled into a vortex around them in a Figure-8 structure. So, if somehow this disc were to create a concentration of rotating energy that then caused a larger vortex about it, it may then interact with water and sound in ways that the structure is observable similar to iron filings in a magnetic field.
    That is the best I can come up with. Though I am not sure if a wide spectrum of materials would function where a replica made of a sufficiently different material would still produce the same outcome, but I have no doubt that the story is sincere and perhaps even really pointing us to what this disc was made for. I would definitely be curious if the material is significant, just as in any other design the materials used for the schist disc may be the most optimized and thus have the most pronounced effect. I am certainly significantly interested in this object after having heard the story.
    I would add, while it is rock, it looks molded. I am not so sure that there wasn't a time that the Earth was much wetter and things we think to be ancient--rocks--were still drying out after, erhm, a global flood that brought these materials in a still malleable form, internally saturated in ways rocks cannot become any longer, for a short while until they hardened fully.

    • @Dandan-tg6tj
      @Dandan-tg6tj 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      This, right here, shows a sharp mind open to possibilities. Respect.

    • @benh6452
      @benh6452 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Can I buy drugs from you

    • @earthexpanded
      @earthexpanded 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Dandan-tg6tj ;D

    • @Dandan-tg6tj
      @Dandan-tg6tj 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@earthexpanded I wasn't making fun. An open mind can literally perform miracles.
      I can heal my daughter and my wife when they are having a cold or a flu. I can take the headache away for both of them.
      First time when i did it, my wife thought I am making fun of her or perhaps I was gone crazy.
      I can do that since childhood when I didn't know that a human can't do that.
      I can smell when a woman is in heats since I was a boy and this way I had easy access to women.
      I didn't know that humans can't smell when a human female is in heats so i managed to sense that specific scent.
      Like I said, when the mind is open, it can do wonders.
      If everybody around you is saying that it isn't possible or that you can't is only because they can't and for them it is indeed impossible. But for you, things are very much different and you can do whatever your own mins doesn't tell you it's off limits.
      There's a story of a mathematician who was only a student at that time, one day he was very late for class and the teacher already presented two impossible math problems. The guy who was late, copied the things from the boards believing it was the homework for the next class. Went home, solved both unsolvable problems and came back to next class leaving his teacher speechless. Real story.

    • @earthexpanded
      @earthexpanded 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Dandan-tg6tj hey thanks, I didn’t think you were and I appreciated your response, I just didn’t want to affirm my own degree of open mindedness…but I agree. Though of course I have my own areas of thought where I remain close minded. Too frequently ideas are dismissed ideas are dismissed in our pursuit for actual truth. I’m glad to hear your story, much needed! It helps with areas that I know myself to be close minded but also see the logic and reason and basis to be open to. To hear your candidness certainly helps me in areas I am less developed, as I do believe your story.
      I’ve been having jaw and tooth pains, and other health issues, and I’m fairly certain I am subconsciously inducing them by conscious focus on any imbalances and envisioning fears rather than healing.

  • @Dybicus
    @Dybicus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I'm not surprised. A not too uncommon theory (that mainstream Archeologists frown upon) is that ancient Egyptians used sound technology for construction/manufacturing. There's still very much to learn in Egypt. And I hope we do too. BTW, that statue at 11:56 looks finished to me ( but what do I know). Everything is nicely smoothed down and it doesn't look like they were going to add anything to it, at least not to the "head and face" part of it. Kinda looks like how ancient people would display something they don't understand. In this case, maybe a spacesuit or some kind of hood with a breathing apparatus. Funny, yeah. But I'm open-minded. Sue me.

  • @themuilover
    @themuilover 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love your videos. You are absolutely delightful. Funny, witty, and very entertaining. I liked and subscribed.

  • @JacK-vk8iu
    @JacK-vk8iu 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    That's the first time I've heard that story of the Schist Disc. Do you know if they made a 1:1 replica of the disc? Any idea how accurate the copy was and what it was made of exactly, spun by hand, or used a motor, rpm etc. Any more details you can grab would be nice to know, if you are still able to check. Thanks for another great video While I remember, while the Schist disc appears to have few counterparts, I'm sure I saw a reference to either Emery or Petrie finding many broken pieces of what may have been similar items at one of the sites they worked on, but I cannot find that reference now, sorry.

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      These are the details i am getting!

    • @faragraf9380
      @faragraf9380 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@FunnyOldeWorlddifferent people did copies.

  • @thekailbrothers
    @thekailbrothers 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great job Johanna! Refreshing to see a ancient historian that is upbeat and genuine. Do you have the cad drawings or design of the Schist Disk? I would love to make one

    • @cameronbartlett6593
      @cameronbartlett6593 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      wo wo wo...you can't just jump into that kind of fabrication..keep sniffing your own farts and try making a shit wisk first. Shist disks come later.

  • @troysmith420
    @troysmith420 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’m watching all of these videos because I love ancient history. Not lusting over ancient history, it’s love.

  • @mikejohnson-dl7vt
    @mikejohnson-dl7vt 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I thought this was a Cooking Show "How to make Schist on a Shingle"🤣(seriously though, fine work,Hon)😎👍

  • @Cyclopsonlyseeshisdeath
    @Cyclopsonlyseeshisdeath 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Jahannah, I think I said this before, but I find your videos not only interesting but your personality shines through on these and I find you to be a really entertaining presenter, no doubt thanks to your (unseen here in Australia) other claim to fame..acting. Please bring out more content. It's so good to hear someone who actually has presentation, vocal skills that include modulation and a sense of humour. If I have to listen to one more guy droning on about ....probably something very interesting, I'll weep into my big book of conspiracy theories.

  • @hxthead
    @hxthead ปีที่แล้ว

    I totally LOVE your accent! Your videos are great and I enjoy how silly you are! keep up the good work Ill be looking forward to more videos from you!!

  • @jhnndrs8832
    @jhnndrs8832 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This video has everything I like! Mysteries, humor, and gold jewelry. Well done Jahannah, well done!

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I freaking love gold jewellery! I’m part pirate

  • @jamescarter7882
    @jamescarter7882 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Oh my god. I'm in love.

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      You see light.....Sacred Geometry Decoded.

  • @slapcanister
    @slapcanister 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love your videos! You've opened a serious rabbit hole for me here, in a really fun way. Thanks sista!

  • @christophermichael.w.7577
    @christophermichael.w.7577 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I think it looks similar to a spinner used in agriculture to spread seed and granular fertilizer.There are also similar discs used on trucks that salt the roads in the winter.

    • @LampLighter
      @LampLighter 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, I totally agree with your opinion! You got it! 👍😎

    • @cjbrenner13
      @cjbrenner13 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I dont believe its made from schist either

    • @thehoarsewhisperer1929
      @thehoarsewhisperer1929 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Good shout, but its quite large for that application. Seed perhaps but doubt they would have had solid fertiliser back then. With slave labour, would it not be as easy to sow seed by hand as depicted in their artwork?… no real incentive to mechanise these agricultural processes.

  • @aloneandscared1
    @aloneandscared1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Imagine if our civilization is gone and we are judged by our graveyards. this is how we are evaluating the Egyptians

  • @hamiltonparker6543
    @hamiltonparker6543 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have watch a couple of your videos and I find them very interesting. Thank you.

  • @ronlawrence342
    @ronlawrence342 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thanks very interesting and well articulated material . Love you’re excitement and passion, you seem like you really love the ancient mysteries which is contagious. That Schist disk , hmmmm? I’ve heard a lot of theories about it , but we really just have no idea . I’ve heard “ fly wheel” something perfectly balanced when spun moves freely and is used to create energy like an alternator . I have know idea. Just the design which is perfect to a zillion th of an inch and the strange flaps curving perfectly inward seems to imply a very , very specific purpose that required a highly specialized tool. Most every day items , their purpose is obvious because it is so commonly used . Bucket, fork, house, toilet, clothes, devices to make food , or wagons or sleighs to carry things . But if somebody found a circuit board in 4,000 years , or a computer sensor for your Ford truck in a grave they could rack their brains and not figure it out.

  • @what76485
    @what76485 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Resonant frequency. Everything has a certAin frequency it resonates at. you can levitate stuff with it. You can destroy buildings with it. It's pretty well known.

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I knew someone, who after the 2nd ww, used explosives to blow up stuff, as far as I can remember the explosives used several " bangs " to build up a resonance, that was far more effective than one big bang. Then of course there's Tesla's earthquake machine.

    • @isee7668
      @isee7668 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      it's not!

  • @Seawolfaka
    @Seawolfaka 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Find somebody who has a 3-D printer and have them print you out one make a cast of it and have somebody casted in iron or steel and do it yourself see what happens if it’s not free then why not try it

  • @bizzango57
    @bizzango57 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The so called "Shist-Disc" is just a water-divider for a fountain.
    It flows in, from the middle and out of the 3 shovels.
    Maybe rotating...

    • @jramir2
      @jramir2 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I was thinking its a weaving machine to make ropes.

  • @warsane1
    @warsane1 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    The utter most beautiful everything. Your heart shines through

  • @jamesb9767
    @jamesb9767 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Well this woman has an intoxicating passion! Oh, and good looks as well.

    • @Armageist
      @Armageist 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Intoxicating looks, intelligence, passion, personality.
      Dudes in the alternative history/travel field are lucky!

  • @aBrightDarknessHD
    @aBrightDarknessHD 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    As an engineer, would be very interesting to her Yusef or yourself elaborate on this “infinity symbol” of energy.🤔

    • @footballdrills3434
      @footballdrills3434 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Some kind of focal or null point?

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      For engineering try- Sacred Geometry Decoded.