The Unfinished Pyramid of Zawyet

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  • @PopsBarnCatMafia
    @PopsBarnCatMafia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +115

    GRANITE IS A resonator... Have you ever walked into a granite lined room and heard the echo? Now, look at the slope of the ramp and the placement of the "Tub & Sealed lid". Have you ever seen an old speaker and how it works? How about a tornado or old air-raid siren? Now look at that room as a big speaker... or the beginning of one. I can assure you that if you were to strike the lid of the "Tub", which is hollow like a drum... and the whole room or "Pit" was totally covered with "Whatever"... you would hear the sound for miles coming out of that ramp. You even mentioned how smooth the walls and everything are... Like I said... maybe resonance and the purpose of that is key? Just a thought.

    • @christianvachon2235
      @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Granite is conductive by it really concentrate EM energy. That is what the stone does, because of the high amounts of quartz present.

    • @MATLOCKE269
      @MATLOCKE269 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Interesting.. super intriguing... Have you ever seen the video with the sound the step pyramids make in South America (I believe)? When the guide makes a noise, the reflected sound sounds like s bird 🐦

    • @colt2312
      @colt2312 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Piezoelectric effect can be produced from sound waves as well as other forces.

    • @lydiasusan
      @lydiasusan 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@christianvachon2235 HIIIIIII

    • @JabranImran
      @JabranImran 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Look into thermo acoustic resonance. Pyramid literally means house with fire inside. Even they didn’t use the pyramids as an acoustic generator it could very easily be one by just lighting a fire and running water in the right place.

  • @andrewelliott123
    @andrewelliott123 2 ปีที่แล้ว +173

    There is no way that a bunch of people got to gather with copper chisels and made the structures. There was a grand idea and an exact plan for a projected outcome and function.

    • @IMmortal_mike
      @IMmortal_mike 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Have you tried doing it?

    • @andrewelliott123
      @andrewelliott123 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @IMmortal mic I was a construction manager for many years. No project goes that refined and exact scale without being well thought out. Not to mention machine marks all over the place. They were far more advanced than what they were being given credit for. I have built many large-scale projects and developments for many years. We need to take a real hard look at the evidence at hand. Anyway that's my thoughts.

    • @christianvachon2235
      @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@IMmortal_mike I did construction also, including advanced woodwork that uses similar techniques required, and I agree with Andrew - there is signs of advance machining everywhere (and this is granite which is as hard as it gets!). Some things seem also seem to even involve tech beyond us. I once had the idea that they may have superheated the stone to "soften" and used ultrasound or other precise tools to carve out and then cool or even tempered it like you would with metal shaping. The level of polish borders on vitrification in places.
      The biggest key factor is the kinds of marks left - they suggest diamond-tipped blades and drill bits (or some kind of metal that would be that hard), but there are signs of grinding and other things as well - some of the drilled holes are so smooth that they would require something other than a standard drill. Chisels and bashing leave certain kinds of marks even in the background that are just not present there - they would leave traces under the polished surfaces that are just not there.

    • @ThatTieDyeGuy
      @ThatTieDyeGuy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      I say that Hawass and cohorts should put their copper chistles where their mouths are and prove that they could create the things they claim the egpytians did with copper tools. If not, we need toss that dumb notion out and figure out how it was really done. I respect the work of the great archeologists, but if they were mistaken they were mistaken; it does not take away from their dedication and work.

    • @marcelstpierre267
      @marcelstpierre267 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Copper chisels my ass. They credit copper chissels with everything..I heard that it was Professor Plum in the library with a copper chisel. It's absurd.

  • @supplanterjim
    @supplanterjim 2 ปีที่แล้ว +66

    That a *_military base_* managed to end up surrounding this site seems rather _peculiar._

    • @kiriltzenev5955
      @kiriltzenev5955 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      INDEED! A waste depot in a military Base , WTF ? What waste needs military to guard it ?

    • @ajkaajka2512
      @ajkaajka2512 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I was thinking the same, why military base exactly here???

    • @ryanparker4996
      @ryanparker4996 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      And theyre using it as a landfill? Very sus and quite maddening

    • @kevanstreeter2431
      @kevanstreeter2431 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Perhaps, as alluded to in your videos/research, this place doesn't 'fit' current Egyptian history and the lucrative tourist market could be lost if the truth go out.

    • @delblodgett8894
      @delblodgett8894 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That is what I'm thinking 🤔 then they allow it to be filled with trash tells you they don't respect the structure but the country wants to control what you see when you go visit these ancient sites..

  • @weldybren
    @weldybren 2 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    My 2p: The “sarcophagus” present in every pyramid is some kind of reactor. Chemical or otherwise. The “shafts” are some kind of ducting.

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      For what? Heat? Ionized air? Perfumes?

    • @Platerpus7
      @Platerpus7 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@crhu319 most likely electricity.

    • @gitmoholliday5764
      @gitmoholliday5764 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      maybe to make super strong ceramics and fiber.. that would be quite useful for them to work on stones and make strong ropes.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boron
      the element Boron was already used in China and it wouldn't surprise me if Egypt also found a way to use Boron to make super strong tools and abrasives... b.t.w. it can burn, it stinks, it can be poisonous, and also leaves a sticky dark shiny slush, just like found inside many boxes at the Serapeum and even burnmarks like at Inca walls in Peru / Bolivia.

    • @cara-seyun
      @cara-seyun ปีที่แล้ว

      And the bodies inside them?

  • @spencerrollins7582
    @spencerrollins7582 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    I was journaling while listening to whatever the TH-cam algorithm decided to bring up; the JRE podcast with Randall Carlson came up. He mentioned an actress who was doing investigative work into the mystery of Atlantis. That led me to find this channel and I sincerely appreciate the scrutinization of the worlds wonders. It’s absolutely fascinating to assimilate the possibilities of our ancestors.
    There’s no possible way that humans were as primitive as modernist and scientists claim. For some reason, the belief that humans have always methodically revolutionized technology as time progresses seems completely incorrect. What I find interesting about this channel is the attention to detail. The investigative work surrounding humanity and its history is amazing. I’ve thought these things before, so it’s nice to see others ascertaining knowledge of our distant ancestors. Thank you for asking these questions and consistently finding the time to investigate the claims of which have been made to dismiss antediluvian humans and their intelligence without automatically claiming “ALIENS” like our History Channel theorists.
    You can learn an incredible amount of information from history, and it’s so cool to come across channels like this that bring revisionist history to the forefront and question it in the pursuit of preservation and knowledge. Keep on keeping on!

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx ปีที่แล้ว

      "There’s no possible way that humans were as primitive as modernist and scientists claim"
      Primitive has both relative and absolute terms.
      Scientists do not claim them to be primitive - not in the absolute term.
      Early hominins were likely primitive millions of years ago in the absolute term.
      But the Egyptian cultures were already farming the Nile valley and Faiyum oasis at least 6,500 years ago - hardly primitive.
      Even the hunter gatherers that built Gobekli Tepe thousands of years earlier were not primitive despite not famring their food - they could work limestone and move + place large stone monoliths.
      Relatively the ancient Egyptians WERE primitive compared to modern post Cold War era technology.
      Relatively the builders of Gobekli Tepe were primitive compared to the experienced farmers of dynastic ancient Egypt.
      "which have been made to dismiss antediluvian humans"
      I don't dismiss antidileuvian humans - I dismiss the deluge altogether.
      It's a religious myth seen all over the world because floods are relatively common by one source or another.
      Just in the last 20 years I have witnessed at least 2 major tsunami events in the east - and 2 major river floods in my own home county in England happening only 6 years apart, both of which exceeded anything seen for decades.
      When you mix those facts with the naturally occuring effect of escalation in oral tradition you get smaller, localised flood events being transmitted centuries or millennia later as "world ending floods", because to the ancients the world encompassed a much smaller area compared to our modern perception influenced by global air travel.

  • @moonbear1st
    @moonbear1st 2 ปีที่แล้ว +69

    love your sense of humour it just carries the whole serious side of egyptology and makes it more palatable and fun. and great 1st stream thankyou..

    • @ghoulunathics
      @ghoulunathics 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      couldn't have said better :)

    • @pbhendrix
      @pbhendrix 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You could read the phonebook and I'd be enthralled. Could you be more adorable!?!

  • @-C.S.R
    @-C.S.R 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    *J.J* keeps knocking it out of the park!

  • @johnd.hollandivd.c.4449
    @johnd.hollandivd.c.4449 2 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    The vat wasn't empty! It had a layer of '"black goo" at the bottom that I believe was sampled. A report on the results would be great!

    • @DieNetaDie
      @DieNetaDie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      xeno..?

    • @RasCricketSmallAxe
      @RasCricketSmallAxe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I always heard it had something in it.

    • @trentonbrewer1100
      @trentonbrewer1100 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The black goo is fallen angel dna

    • @cankhovich1796
      @cankhovich1796 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      results were: "bitumen", but "inconclusive as to further (unknown) substance...

    • @cankhovich1796
      @cankhovich1796 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      too far out for conventional analysis

  • @soapghost007
    @soapghost007 2 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    Also, I agree with the Pyramids being energy harvesters. And I think they transmitted energy to the surrounding obelisk (receiver) in each city. 🤓✨

    • @andrethegiant22
      @andrethegiant22 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Problem with that: transmitting antennas are tall and thin, while receivers are flatter. The pyramid is equally good at both but obelisks aren’t gonna be good for receiving.

    • @ThatTieDyeGuy
      @ThatTieDyeGuy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree that this is possible, the way to prove it is that we construct a few smaller test structures at try to recreate the effect. It is the only way I can think of to get the reductionists to not point and laugh at these ideas. This kind of stuff is testable, and we should be testing it.

    • @christianvachon2235
      @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The pyramids were energy producers/amplifiers. They amplified and created energy. I also think the obelisks received and distributed also (relayed would be more accurate). The thing is that you have to think of distribution in a wireless system (like Tesla had in mind). The obelisk was grounded so received the wireless transmission (think of a relay station).

    • @christianvachon2235
      @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ThatTieDyeGuy That sounds like a great idea!

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So how does ‘rock’ gather ‘energy’ then transfer it to obelisks nearby. How the hell does that work then? How exactly do rocks gather energy? Then pass it to an obelisk? Honestly you people talk some dose of rubbish. Metal conducts electricity. Not rock. They had metal, a far better conductor. If the pyramids ‘gathered energy’ they would STILL be doing it? They’re still there? So where exactly is all this energy? Ridiculous.

  • @Baasicstuff
    @Baasicstuff 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This stuff makes me wish I was 20 again and studied this, I may go back to school, this stuff just blows my mind WOW!

  • @ATFstein
    @ATFstein 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    You are the funnest and most pleasant ancient history Channel by far. Love your content and love your personality and genuine excitement for these topics. I know you're an actor too but THIS is perfect for you don't ever stop.

  • @PLAtime365
    @PLAtime365 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I have seen countless videos and lectures on these subjects. It is crazy that I have never seen the backs of the Easter Island statues or heard about the twin brother of Jesus before finding your channel. You bring new light to a subject I already love. Much appreciated!!

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx ปีที่แล้ว

      I'd warrant that you still haven't seen the twin brother of Jesus.
      Having a hypothesis is not the same thing as having PROOF (or Jesus or the twin brother).
      As for the backs of the Moai statues I suggest you stop hanging around TH-cam videos and actually research the subjects you are interested in directly through the mountains of published material.
      If you expect to always get significant information out of readers digest material like this you will only end up perpetually disappointed.

    • @PLAtime365
      @PLAtime365 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mnomadvfx As there is no proof Jesus existed let alone accurate portrayals of his image, of course I have not seen his alleged twin brother. No one has. No one has seen Jesus. That is a ridiculous question.
      Go back to your propoganda....I mean historical theological fact books

  • @elvacoburg1279
    @elvacoburg1279 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Missed the live stream and have just watched the video.
    Having been to Egypt nearly twenty years go, the strange thing for me is that people cannot visit this site, when every other historical site in the country is exploited as much as possible to attract tourists. Yes, they have the excuse that it is in the middle of a military camp, which raises the question of why build a military camp there, and we know that the military camp must have been built after 1954, as that was when the film Land of the Pharaohs was filmed which used the site for one of its scenes (the ramp leading down, but only for 5 seconds of film). And then they go an use it as a rubbish dump!!! To me the whole thing suggests that there was something there that they do not want people to see, possibly something that suggests that the site pre-dates the establish time line of ancient Egypt.
    The site has been excavated 3 times; between 1842 and 1846 by the German egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius; between 1904-1905 by the Italian archaeologist Alessandro Barsanti; then between 1911-1912 by Barsanti again. But no investigation into the site since, and from the 3 investigations I have only been able to find 7 photos and a few hand drawn sketches, but no photos dating after 1912. To me I would have expected a lot more photos to be taken, 7 photos to cover both the 1904-1905 and 1911-1912 excavations does not sound right.
    I did find another u-tube video on this structure (th-cam.com/video/FlY2szeb_FQ/w-d-xo.html), though it does not add much more information.

    • @johnjiv5790
      @johnjiv5790 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      If I remember correctly , much of the remains of the ancient city known as Heliopolis is also under a rubbish tip in Cairo . I remember watching some video connecting it with ancient Babylon . As you say , it's like the authorities (Egyptian and 'global') purposely do not want anything further investigations there .

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You over estimate the intelligence involved on all sides of this equation.
      The current population of Egypt are largely Islamic and whatever their ethnic origin feel little connection to these monuments beyond the value they possess for tourism and academia turning up in the country and pouring money into the economy.
      Back in the mid 20th century there was only a tiny fraction of the modern tourist flow in Egypt and the military simply did not want to dig a giant new hole to use as a rubbish tip.
      So they used a pre existing one.
      Plain and simple - just like ISIS carving up half of what remains above the surface of ancient Mesopotamia during their occupation of the middle east.
      It's nothing more than a 'make money from old sh1t we don't want from people who do want it' ideology that the west taught to them so well over a century or 2 of abuse for their oil.

    • @bob_btw6751
      @bob_btw6751 ปีที่แล้ว

      The production studio archives of the film company likely has photographs of the location. There are people called "location scouts" who looked for good backdrops and such. Perhaps offsping of the location scouts for thre movie have a scrabbook in family possession.

  • @wearenotamused6455
    @wearenotamused6455 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Good morning from Florida USA... glad I caught this to start my Monday off proper

  • @oldsoulrebel
    @oldsoulrebel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    The film was "Land of the Pharaohs", 1955, starring Jack Hawkins and Joan Collins

  • @bluedog7222
    @bluedog7222 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Incredible cut, Lid and Tub, Amazing.
    PS: The Copper Chisels..🤣. Best BAND in the world

  • @solaris025
    @solaris025 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Yes it's frustrating these important monuments to lost history are being gate kept so hard. I ditched my degree because of it, I was planning to be an archaeologist, a dream of mine since I was a small child. Then I got to university. Then I realised that they don't know what they are talking about and that much of what academia was pedalling could be traced back to the same group of old men in a dusty uni board room making assumptions over 150 years ago. I was so angry. Then I began to question my lecturers and got punched so hard, I didn't understand, Uni was supposed to be about critical thinking and questioning everything. Apparently not. The usual response was "you don't know enough yet, so you don't understand" - oh you mean I haven't read enough of the other "assumptions?" - thats the point ITS ALL ASSUMING in a massive display of a historical bigotry of low expectations! For example "They couldn't have, they didn't have anything other than copper." No, we just haven't found alternatives yet so how about stop trying to explain it from the limited information. Just say WE DON'T KNOW, there is nothing wrong with saying "WE DON'T KNOW!" Because what SCIENCE tells us is that COPPER could NOT DO IT so stop trying to change the physics of metallurgy to suit your egos!
    Further investigation led me to discover pHD's who had tried to challenge the establishment and what happened to them, lives and careers ruined. Sidelined into humiliating obscurity and I realised that this "education" was not worth the $$ or the paper it was printed on. Unless I was prepared to publicly "toe the line" I would never have access to important sites and I would never be permitted to investigate what I found interesting because of all the gate keepers. You have to be affiliated with these garbage institutions much of the time to gain access. I realised I could still research as a private person, go as a "volunteer" on digs if I wanted to and not buy into their "club," satisfying my passion and curiosity without feeling hobbled and oppressed by the status quo garbage explanations. Who says we need to "explain" anything anyway? Why can't we just discover, record and leave the subjective opinion out of it?!?! So I dumped the degree because continuing meant I would have been required to contribute to the same misinformation campaign, writing papers etc that they would find acceptable. Im not saying people shouldn't try, the world seems to be changing thanks to people like Jahannah and many others who are spotlighting the travesty of academia. Maybe soon more people like me will be able to get that accreditation by exercising their intelligence and not being forced to sacrifice their integrity by repeating academic dogma, one day people may be permitted to carry out important work without being minimised or suppressed. One day.

    • @MelbaOzzie
      @MelbaOzzie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      OK. Now try exposing the sheer idiocy of "The Darwinian Theory of Evolution".
      Anybody with more than two functioning brain cells can demonstrate the ridiculousness of that theory; but see how long you will have a pay cheque if you mention that in academia.

    • @theshounfiles7898
      @theshounfiles7898 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      We should be friends. I bet we would get along

    • @wozslater7695
      @wozslater7695 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In the beginning was an omnipotent omnipresent angry invisible Abrahamic deity 🙂

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx ปีที่แล้ว

      "much of what academia was pedalling could be traced back to the same group of old men in a dusty uni board room making assumptions over 150 years ago"
      Gee wiz, it's almost like archaeology didn't start in earnest as a field of study until the 19th century eh?
      Do you think that the average astronomer gets p!ssy about old men having started the study in the 16th century?
      No wonder you skipped out on it - you're not the greatest critical thinker by any means going by that commentary.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MelbaOzzie Darwin is only used as a starting point for evolutionary biology.
      It's well acknowledged that he was not the be all and end all of the subject and what he contributed tot he study while vital represents a mere drop in the ocean of academic study that his occurred since he published.

  • @colinrobinson4233
    @colinrobinson4233 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Another great video.
    Thanks Jahannah 👍
    …btw, that movie was Land Of The Pharoahs (1955).

  • @whatdoiknow7836
    @whatdoiknow7836 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Ah, slept in on a holiday and missed it. :( But enjoying the replay.

  • @salacca2297
    @salacca2297 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Glad someone mentioned the mic wire. I noticed it at 0.00 and was immediately distracted.

  • @anthonyarashnia1934
    @anthonyarashnia1934 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    from the research I have read it is believed that it was not a pyramid but it was indeed a reservoir of some sort and the black residue is believed to be coal or charcoal because it would take the bitterness out of the water and make it more sweet.

  • @greenknight2829
    @greenknight2829 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My first thought is that maybe the top part was removed when meltwater pulse 1B caused cataclysmic destruction like the channel scablands. But that would mean it would have to be old enough as in 12,000 years old for that to happen

  • @krazykillar4794
    @krazykillar4794 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    It's refreshing watching videos about Egypt presented by someone who doesn't claim to know everything about the pyramids.
    So many people claim they know how the pyramids were built .

  • @PeterLohmannWeiss
    @PeterLohmannWeiss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Jahannah, you rock! Love the way you present all the exiting topics 👍

  • @Slavigrad
    @Slavigrad 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Hey, nice video Jahannah, I could not join the live show.
    I recommend you also to dive more into some physics TH-camrs like Arvin Ash, ScienceClic, Plasma Channel to learn more about energy, electromagnetism etc.
    It will be useful for you it you dive more into physics when you are learning about ancient technology topics.
    You are smart, in time you will understand it more and more.
    Technologies based on electromagnetic energy are Wi-Fi, Tesla Coils, Light bulbs, internet, telecommunications... this are not different energies.
    Electromagnetic waves are the same kind of energy but with different wavelength and frequency (hertz):
    Radio waves (FM, Wi-Fi, Microwaves), infra-red, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, Gamma rays).
    So pyramids could actually use some unknown frequencies and wavelengts of electromagnetic waves that we do not understand yet.
    Energies that are different are heat energy, electromagnetic energy, potential energy etc and we can transform one energy into another.
    Like Piezoelectric Effect - which is the ability of certain materials to generate an electric charge in response to applied mechanical stress - we transform energy from mechanical stress into electromagnetic energy.
    I am an IT guy and I work in telecommunication sector so this is naturally my kind of topics.

    • @scotthester1688
      @scotthester1688 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If any Egyptologists was willing to really look into the use of these huge projects would they be chastised for not following the rules like other scientists have.

    • @Ness2Alyza
      @Ness2Alyza 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Top comment :)

    • @Ness2Alyza
      @Ness2Alyza 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm a physisist and I'll gladly help out :)

    • @nat7x7
      @nat7x7 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The possibility that lots of ancient relics have something to do energy is super fascinating. Also the possibility that they used energy, perhaps as created by sound, to melt/shape stone (as demonstrated by Сергей Балденков - look up his video titled "How to "melt" stones sound").

  • @Hat6000
    @Hat6000 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    A fascinating mystery in a land that is full of them. I had never heard of this one, thanks!

  • @Xero1of1
    @Xero1of1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Sorry I missed the livestream. I watch all your videos though, so keep 'em coming! :D

    • @Xero1of1
      @Xero1of1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      1:30 Whoa, whoa... you threw me for a loop there... you said 'DINE-asty' not 'DIN-asty'? How positively American of you! lol. XD :P
      (Also, yeah, I'm American... so... lol)

    • @Xero1of1
      @Xero1of1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      13:25 Hmm. Blackish liquid... granite box. I seem to remember a video with Yousef Awyan about high-voltage electricity and certain characteristics of the materials used to build the pyramids... what if this blackish liquid was a sort of battery and the tub was sealed because if someone got too close to it, it would discharge into them, killing them? And then with the most likely different sort of stone covering the pyramid, you'd 'complete the circuit', so-to-speak, and would have a power source that could be tapped into with ease? Golden capstone to connect to the ions in the air, limestone to transmit along the casing, and the granite to connect to the ground and the liquid to store the power?

  • @BkB5870
    @BkB5870 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I saw you on Kosmographia. Thank you, your channel should awaken people in a very positive way. For at the end of the age ancient wisdom will be screamed from the rooftops.

  • @markkenny8639
    @markkenny8639 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Sound energy! They were never tombs, they were power plants using sonar energy. The empty "tombs" are devices for resonating frequencies

    • @0neIntangible
      @0neIntangible 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      "Sing to a stone,
      and never be alone"

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yep! You’ve single handedly solved the secret of the pyramids. Congratulations. I hope you get the fame you deserve for coming up with this solution. National geographic front page I’m sure.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Here's a basic question for you.
      Why?
      Why would any sane person use sound for energy when the river is an INSANELY abundant source of kinetic energy - and it's literally right on the pyramids doorstep.
      As evidenced by the Egyptian govmt currently sh1tt1ng a brick because Ethiopia just harnessed the Nile to create a 6 gigawatt hydroelectric dam upstram, thereby diminishing the flow of the river everywhere downstream.
      A mere waterwheel connected to a small diverted waterway could provide more return in generated power (including mechanical force to cut stone) than any of these inane piezo electric ideas that these con artists come up with to sell books to the naive armchair archaeologist.
      To say nothing of requiring a tiny amount of the effort compared to building a giant stone pyramid just for generating electrical power that their is no proof they needed.
      "The empty "tombs" are devices for resonating frequencies"
      All sound frequencies 'resonate' with something to varying degrees based on size and material composition.
      You would do well to learn some basic physics first rather than polluting your mind with too many of these videos from people largely ignorant about it.
      The term you are looking for is a 'resonant cavity'.
      They are used in speakers (especially LFE subwoofers) for sound, and lasers for light - but just because a stone chamber gives off a nice echo doesn't mean it was designed for that purpose, it just means that the stone absorbs less sound than it reflects back at you, an effect which can be found in many a modern concrete tunnel too.
      Does that mean that the Illuminati built concrete tunnel road underpasses to reach higher enlightenment?
      😑

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@mnomadvfx well said. It
      pisses me off all these clowns talking about ‘resonance’ and ‘piezo electric’ it’s over and over again constantly. Talking about how granite under so much pressure will produce ‘electrical charge’. So it should be measurable then?? ‘Well, the rest of the parts are not there’
      Haha very convenient that. What a bunch of idiots. People actually go into the kings chamber and HUMM. While their tour guides grin to themselves. This stuff is all you ever hear about the great pyramid in a comments section. They say the pyramid generates ‘energy’ which then travels to nearby ‘obelisks’ haha how the hell does it do that then? ‘Well, the system is not complete now’. Idiots! And Dunn’s theory about people pouring hydrochloric acid down the pyramid shafts (from the top of the shafts!) is the craziest theory ever!

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mnomadvfx thanks clearly correct.
      No question that kinetic energy came from hydro differential, we know Khemet built huge dams and canals and reservoirs.
      It's clearly the other way around, any sonic or static feature was generated BY moving water and then maybe had its resonance shaped, like the plug shaft in the "unfinished chamber" under the Great Pyramid.
      That energy could well have purified water as we use ultraviolet light today. That was a huge problem for Egypt, waterborne parasites, almost as much as regulating Nile level would have been.

  • @mbuch2464
    @mbuch2464 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I love these old photos… unfortunately I’ve heard it said the military has been using that whole thing as a garbage dump. Love your content, educational and entertaining is a nice combination:)

  • @GladiusOstentis
    @GladiusOstentis 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    There was an ancient history buff named Chuck with a channel by the name of cfapps7865 and he did a series of videos about the Egyptian pyramids in which he included these "unfinished" Pyramids. I think he found 15 of them in total (I could be wrong on that number). Some are buried and all you can see is the outline. There is one located up on a hill that you are able to visit with permission. Sadly, we lost Chuck a few months ago. He used Google earth and supporting websites to take you to sites of interest all over the world and was always informative. Many of his videos were the first on TH-cam for their respective archeological sites. He will be missed!

    • @MCCRITTERS
      @MCCRITTERS 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I agree, I miss Chuck too. His research and videos on Ancient America , Egypt and other sites were, and still are, top notch.

    • @jardosipox1470
      @jardosipox1470 ปีที่แล้ว

      What happened to him?

  • @jamesmattoon9479
    @jamesmattoon9479 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Cracking ! Love your style and of course all the info ! Cheers, J

  • @MrJento
    @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Ok. Everybody likes to make a guess. Here is mine. I know low voltage electronics. I know high voltage power. In industrial applications.
    Big granite boxes with tight lids. We make a device called a capacitor. It’s an air tight container with alternating layers of metal foil and paper. It’s job is to store electric energy that trickles in, then release it in a big burst. Used in conjunction with a bridge rectifier it converts AC to DC and boosts the voltage.
    Granite is a natural insulator and that box with its lid could be a whopper cap. I dont know where the current came from, but if you were getting some very low voltage static electric current from [whatever], such a cap would store up enough to give you some serious current for a brief period.
    Alternate possibility. Transformers. You see those cans on every other power pole. An air tight insulated van full of coils of copper wire, filled with heavy oil to cool and insulate the coils. Transformers step up or step down voltage thus giving more or less current for [whatever]. Again a big non conducting box would be dandy. And after you run one for a few years the heat cooks the insulating oil down a bit leaving.....drum roll....black gooey sludge in the bottom.
    Where does the current come from? Where does it go? Whats it used for? Beats me. All I know is those big old boxes could make a dandy cap or transformer, depending on what you stuff inside. And copper wire or sheets were valuable. The first thing they’d steal when they got in.
    Just thinking here...fox out.

    • @yeabuddy6070
      @yeabuddy6070 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Damn. This makes quite a bit of sense.

    • @mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299
      @mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Lets not also discuss the outer coatings on the pyramids that would keep the energy focused inside or how some pyramids connect to the underground reservoirs of water which could create pressure from steam like a nuclear reactor if powered.
      The mystery is how easy it is to create free energy through vibration of certain minerals put in close proximity to one another. I found John Hutchison work quite interesting when it came to this.

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299
      Ok. I dont quite know how all this vibration/resonance stuff actually works. I must have slept through that part of physics 301 and electrical engineering. I’ve yet to see anybody break it down for me or show a working model. But I’m ready! Give me a trickle of power I’ll store it in a cap, or step it up or down with a transformer. I’m like a hammer. Everything looks like a nail to me. Maybe your a screw driver or a wrench? You twist it, I’ll smack it.
      Fox out.

    • @mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299
      @mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MrJento “If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.” Nikola Tesla.
      432 hz, is supposedly the frequency which the universe, our plane of existence vibrates on.
      I am in the same boat as you I don't know a lot about how it works but I there is evidence of something scientifically viable to this. We just have to be open to new ideas/perceptions.
      A hammer is not only good for destroying things but building things also ;P

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mr.mammuthusafricanavus8299
      Yep. I’m a friendly hammer. My way of saying I’m a bit limited in some areas. Ok Nick Tesla was cool. Talked a good story. But never delivered. Now did he really? If it’s in McMasters Industrial Supply catalog I’m you guy. But I looked. Really. Trust me. The sonic whatcamaspoonit energy goose is not listed there. Or the golden egg one either. So....I have no clue how, if or when. I just see how things might work based upon what I know.
      Fox out.

  • @lastfirst8437
    @lastfirst8437 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Okay you are just the best! So much good info.... keep going my friend, you are gonna take over the internet!

  • @peterrichardson4192
    @peterrichardson4192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    These boxes are clearly not sarcophagus's. But i think they are some kind of battery storage for electricity. Granite rock is a good conductor of electricity .And the pyramid would accumulate static.

    • @kiriltzenev5955
      @kiriltzenev5955 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's also heat resistant. They could have been nuclear fuel containers

    • @emmadoheny8319
      @emmadoheny8319 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Good theroy

  • @dukekaboom5788
    @dukekaboom5788 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very refreshing to see a new face and prospective I love it 😍

  • @jeffreyliles2448
    @jeffreyliles2448 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This reminds me of those giant sarcophagi that were found with the mucky black goo in them. The Osiris Shaft also comes to mind. I wonder what it’s location is relative to the Osiris Shaft?

  • @kevinalexander5408
    @kevinalexander5408 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love your Feed. Hailing from Vancouver Island, Pacific Northwest Canada. Hope to catch your live feed.

  • @Futtefan
    @Futtefan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You are awesome

  • @lexmtaylor
    @lexmtaylor ปีที่แล้ว

    Loved the interview you did that suggested that the pyramids could have been chemical processing plants. That makes sense that the size of the pyramids could’ve been necessary to the process.

  • @davidjarvis316
    @davidjarvis316 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Always a great time, watching your videos! Love the content and your personality.

  • @redhawk1497
    @redhawk1497 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the video started watching when ya'll were in Egypt. Love the videos 📹. Look forward to your next one.

  • @Vibe4ant
    @Vibe4ant 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The black layer talked about in the tub, is that the same stuff found at the Serapeum boxes that also have black goo?

  • @tnhuckleberry01
    @tnhuckleberry01 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent find! I have never heard or seen this pyramid. I bet there are other buried that still have not been found. Good job, love you live.

  • @jeffceriotti
    @jeffceriotti 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    if it was damaged instead of unfinished, what powerful force could have done that kind of damage given the strength of the materials used to build it? Mystery upon mystery either way.

    • @marksadler4104
      @marksadler4104 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      An idea, if the tub is sealed as was opened at the time of an "apparent force", microscopic debris of sort for chemical analysis for example.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx ปีที่แล้ว

      It was damaged.
      The guy who first documented it tore it to bits looking for an entrance or something, perhaps thinking that there was a room underneath the bath tub.
      Like Heinrich Schliemann he was another individual who ought better to have never been given such authority.

  • @raquelennis3584
    @raquelennis3584 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I can not believe it took me this long to find you. Loving all your fresh ideas. Bravo 👏

  • @photorealm
    @photorealm 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Every since I watched one of your videos on the stones and their precise cutting and moving I have lost sleep wondering how they manufactured those huge stones and placed them. I googled people's solutions but I found none that really sounded 100% like the solution. Now its driving me crazy, if I just hadn't watched your video I would be well rested and content :)
    You have been there, seen them, touched them, and felt the awe that they must inspire.
    Do you have a favorite solution of how these feats were accomplished???
    My apologies if you already said this in another video.

  • @ScrewdriverTUNING
    @ScrewdriverTUNING ปีที่แล้ว

    🐍I’d love to see you rehash these videos from last year with these eyes⚡️🧬 Great job at the summit glad you are a part of this community. Keep at it. You got this.!!🐍

  • @christianvachon2235
    @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    They originally found a substance inside the box, but it was removed and lost so we don't know what it was.
    This looks clearly technological; the black thing means heat or chemicals or some kind of process. Curiously, they also found traces of a black band at a water line inside the newly excavated tunnel under the Pyramid of Quetzalcoatl at Teotihuacan in Mexico.
    Though it may have the underground part of what looks like a pyramid, it may never have been like a pyramid, but another structure on top. There is no other pyramid that I know with an underground chamber made of granite, but here they say that the round vat was covered with limestone blocks so is there something under the floor of the subterranean chamber of the Great pyramid for example?!

    • @FunnyOldeWorld
      @FunnyOldeWorld  2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      ohh love this

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Ok. Black “bands”. There are lots of them. Younger dryas, comet impact theory, physical evidence. Comet smacks Greenland, maybe smaller comets smack Siberia and other places. Anyway. Greenland. Smack instant fireball of immense energy. So intense it melts glaciers, causes flooding and sets every tree and bush and blade of grass in North America and Western Europe ablaze. The melting glaciers put it out as it’s burning down. The evidence? American mega fauna go extinct at this point in time. Lot of people too. As in the geological record......the infamous “black band” or carbon soot layer. It extends over the burn area, and because it was a “biblical pillar of smoke” it bloomed up into the stratosphere where it was carried world wide. Subject to the process of serial dilution. It also shaded the earth and gave us about a 2000 year long cold snap. All this is recorded in ice and ocean sediment cores.
      Now for years this black band was used in America and europe to date various events found in the geology. The band was big and bold. Three maybe four inches. Or one inch. Until you get to the orient, east Africa, the pacific basin, South America. It was assumed that the soot did not make it. But it did! Remember serial dilution? It’s there just in tiny tiny layers. Along with all the tiny tiny impact diamonds and polygons and rare earth elements associated with cosmic impact events. But you could not see the band in day Brazil. But you could sample the sediment and run it through a mass spectrometer and identify it. Carbon has a unique “fingerprint” based upon its source. That’s how we know which ship in a busy harbour spilled oil...they take samples in the harbour and ships bilges.....gottcha! A match that stands up in court.
      Ok. So what. Right. Well that black band is world wide. Sometimes obvious to the naked eye. Sometimes only to a gas chromatographic mass spec. But it’s a datum line in time. Now. In South America there are pyramids. In most cases they sit atop the black line layer. Thus post younger dryas. But a few have a faint black band on them. A couple got analysed. Guess what? They are apparently pre younger dryas! Cant be so let’s ignore that data. Egypt. At least one, and possibly two pyramids seem to sit below the faint “black band” in that area. Accidentally discovered when sub surface soil samples adjacent to the pyramids were analysed for another purpose. Whats this black band carbon trace on my mass spec output? Matches the younger dryas carbon trace? At a level higher than the sun base of the pyramid? Pyramid older than younger dryas? No way. Ok. No more samples! Keep out. Ignore that data.
      So here we sit. Hints and clues, if you know where to look. While those who could and should be looking play the three monkeys “hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil”. And others, like Johanna and Kayleigh and their crews, sit and wonder.
      Cynical Fox, out.

    • @christianvachon2235
      @christianvachon2235 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@FunnyOldeWorld Thanks! Love the video and your material! I had never heard of that "pyramid" before; really interesting.Cheers!

    • @tamarasivertson333
      @tamarasivertson333 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@MrJento Totally concur! Baffled me in school, never ever believed their sanctimonious rhetoric. I felt very much alone with my thoughts and questions (argue aloud with mainstream historians on the telly ;)...so grateful to have found this open-minded community. Anyways thank you for connecting some more dots, can see a bigger picture now. Reminded me also of a pyramid(?) I saw online awhile back; which had a window above internal stairs. The middle of those granite(?) steps where light hit looked as tho they had been turned into lava for quick spell and then cooled shortly thereafter. Definitely a world cataclysmic event but I do think they knew it was coming hence underground cities and burying Ankor Wat along with God knows what else we haven't found or haven't been told about.
      The only thought that makes sense to me is them being free energy sources/harvesters/ healing centres. I don't feel we were as "one time use" materialistic as we are now. Regardless of how they were created, their pride of workmanship is evident and that will always come from love, not money nor accolades and most definitely not by force. I so do wish we could get back to that state of being and seeing more & more likeminded souls gives me hope that we can...blessings!

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@tamarasivertson333
      Well, pard, most of your comment is above my pay grade. Except that melted stair way to wherever. It was not some A-bomb or cataclysmic event. The outer building is intact. Only that stair was melted. Obviously melted. And we could do that today. Actually rather low tech compared to an A-bomb.
      Look up Occam’s razor. The simplistic solution is usually right, he says. Look up a solar oven and a frenzel lens. Two different was to concentrate sun light to the point it melts steel, or quartz, or....well most things. Put it on a pivot outside the window melting stuff, don’t ask me what or why, and old bozo Bob lets it get away and point through the window on his break.
      Go to any indoor gun range. Look at all the bullet holes in the ceiling, walls, anyplace but the target butts. If Bob’s descendants can do that with a glock, imagine the damage with a solar lens.

  • @lindamactavish6658
    @lindamactavish6658 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Interesting video and curious to know more!

  • @nickkastros8324
    @nickkastros8324 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I’m here for the speculation, and Johanna’s witty humor, but mostly speculation. So why in the world do they build a military base around an unfinished pyramid?

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      This one I can answer!
      Egypt, and every other state in this region is a police state, by definition people in America, Europe and the UK just don’t get this, even if they have been there.
      Worse, the army does not talk to the Air Force. Or the civil police, or the religious police. Each one does its own “thing”. They have their “places” and they don’t make any tactical or strategic sense to anyone except them. So I don’t know why that cite is a military zone, but I know how.

    • @nickkastros8324
      @nickkastros8324 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MrJento Great response and I think you’re onto something. Your comment sparked my curiosity into the nuances of a police state. I hadn’t considered such governments so fragmented. It’s fascinating to me that it sounds as if they almost have an “info war” going on with the allies in their own state! Would that be an accurate assumption?

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@nickkastros8324
      Ummmm.... not exactly. I think it is more a function of the traditional political structure. Kings with absolute power are in effect a police state. Total control. Kings have sons. In a state where polygamy is legit, as it is in most islamic states, lots of sons. Lots of princes. Lots of sibling rivals.....go read the Bible. In places like Saudi Arabia it right there out in the open. One Prince gets the SA Air Force, another the army, yet another the coast guard, so forth and so on. Snd each one is jealous of his “turf” and only the king can tell them to cool it. And he’s too old to care.
      But Egypt has a prime minister and parliament. And several thousand years of kings and princes. So the PM is the “king”. Ministers of the army, Air Force, pyramid guards, antiquities and so forth think like princes, squabble like princes, do their own thing, etc etc. Only the PM can tell them to knock it off. But he’s too busy watching out for the next assassin or Arab spring to care about some English socialite that wants into some military off limits area. Sound about right?
      Fox out.

  • @darellnewsome4459
    @darellnewsome4459 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is simply amazing and yet I had never heard of it. Thank you for bringing us this video and enlightening us as to this place and it's amazing existence. .

  • @Vibe4ant
    @Vibe4ant 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    2pm your time is 6am mine, if you go live at 5-6pm your time that would provide a wider viewing audience for you in the future.

  • @bobrobertson6514
    @bobrobertson6514 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice work Jahannnah, what an interesting video. You put such an entertaining spin on these predynastic megalithic sites.

  • @NewYorkSenorita
    @NewYorkSenorita 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Remember that weird Stargate SG-1 episode when they "filmed" Wormhole Extreme? I think they were trying to tell us something about the actual show. Maybe something lived in the sealed tub that got out when it was opened... and now it runs the world.

    • @Ness2Alyza
      @Ness2Alyza 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I love that show

    • @aok4128
      @aok4128 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Seems like they were sealing something invisible or spiritual, since all the sarcophagi in all the pyramids were empty?

    • @Ness2Alyza
      @Ness2Alyza 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@aok4128 maybe the boxes weren't for mummies

  • @jamesholland5761
    @jamesholland5761 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very good job Jahannah!! Enjoyed very much!

  • @russellwiitala9733
    @russellwiitala9733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I'm quite sure that the pyramids are older than they claim and were used to concentrate power. If you put a pyramidal shaped magnet under a ferro cell you can see how the vectors of the magnetic field converge, creating a greater power at the apex of the pyramid. So, it wasn't just for style they chose that shape. They also chose the location, for I believe they stuck it on a demarcation line of a vortex field. Now for the really strange part; I have frequent and profound contact with sasquatch and in extension ET. They have guided me to esoteric information on magnetism and vortex fields. I asked my sasquatch teachers by placing three stones in a pattern that represented the Great Pyramid. They answered by placing a white crystal, in the shape of a glowing figure above the pyramid. Soon after, I went to a UFO summit and asked three sensitives what they thought? I gave them very little information about the crystal before placing it in their hands. One of them said it represented a very ancient being coming through a portal into our world! Was that coincidence? After all I've been through the past few years, I would say "NO!"

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      A pyramidal MAGNET will of course affect things around it.
      But that doesn’t mean a rock pyramid will have ‘magical properties’ too just because of its shape. That’s like cutting the shape of a car out of rock and expecting to be able to start it up.

    • @russellwiitala9733
      @russellwiitala9733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TheGreatest1974 I disagree. I would recommend you read a book by Nick Nelson called the Golden Vortex. Nick has studied magnetism for decades and probably understands more about magnets then anyone on earth. He did some experiments with pyramid shapes and found that even a cardboard pyramid shows electromagnetic anomalies. I'm not talking about sharping razor blades or hydrating plants. Besides that, scientists have taken an EMF up on the apex and detected an uptick in electromagnetic power on top of the great pyramid. It maybe that is caused by the location of the pyramid, or it may be the shape itself. I think it is interesting that many have witnessed UAPs that are pyramid shaped. Perhaps ET is taking advantage of this geometric phenomena. We can agree that the greatest was the Greatest in many ways.

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@russellwiitala9733 very interesting. But the razor thing you could test at home? I don’t believe that. Making a razor sharp again etc. But I do commend you on your very good taste in heavyweight champions!
      💥🥊💥🥊👍👍💥🥊💥

    • @russellwiitala9733
      @russellwiitala9733 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheGreatest1974 I meant to say "I'm NOT talking about sharpening razor blades, or..." LOL I don't believe they can sharpen razors either. Also, I'm not talking about his prowess in the ring. That just made him visible.

  • @vickymcdonoughart6838
    @vickymcdonoughart6838 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    My youngest child has just started watching you after I watched a couple of your videos. She absolutely loves anything Egypt and has told me she would love you as a teacher. Hahaha 😍

  • @busbyboy73
    @busbyboy73 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great content as usual Jahannah.!
    I’m officially a member of the copper chisels fan club now & I have a t-shirt to prove it!
    I like to imagine you on lead vocals, Yusef on guitar, Ben on drums & Jimmy on DMT dancing round the stage like Bez from the Happy Mondays!

  • @singesinge23
    @singesinge23 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Joe Rogan - Randall Carlson brought me here. Tks! Now I'm subscribed, will just copy paste this message and like every video I watch to feed the TH-cam algorithm. Tks again, great stuff here. Love from Quebec, French-Canada.

  • @bryan-nz
    @bryan-nz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Here's some woo-woo for you: the "unfinished pyramid" pit was filled with rough stones. This passage from Book of Enoch sounds eerily similar:
    "10:4 And again the Lord said to Raphael: 'Bind Azazel [basically the devil] hand and foot, and cast him into the darkness and split open the desert, which is in Dudael [Cauldron]. 5 And fill the hole with rough and ragged rocks, and cover him with darkness, and let him live there forever, and cover his face that he may not see the light."
    The book of Tobit says that this pit where the devil is buried, is in Northern Egypt!

    • @nephtari
      @nephtari 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      My first thought was Pandora’s box. Like your comment, interesting stuff!

  • @maxmcc8785
    @maxmcc8785 ปีที่แล้ว

    i LOVE YOU JJ! Keep up the amazing work!

  • @coralblake9868
    @coralblake9868 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Sorry I missed the live. I’m getting the tingling sense that the tub might be part of a tuning bowl. Tuning the crystals in the quartz to a perfect pitch. Thanks for you’re update.🇦🇺❤️

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ‘Tuning the crystals in the quartz to a perfect pitch’. That sounds like something YOU could try at home. Good luck with it.

    • @shaynegaudet6131
      @shaynegaudet6131 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Cant tune something that evaporates. Its also like fuel, when it runs out it stops. Granite is porous this was acting like an hourglass.
      This pyramid has a winding coridor which i believe all of this type have as well. None appear to require much maintaince and look to be make to function for a very long time.

    • @TheGreatest1974
      @TheGreatest1974 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@shaynegaudet6131 also, it seems every pyramid passage is only about 4ft tall. Not very wise of the architects to make it near impossible to get a funerary procession through, let alone ‘grave goods’. Anyone designing a tomb for a king where people couldn’t even stand up and walk in would’ve been put to death. I’m assuming the architect could’ve easily designed the passages at 6ft with no problems at all IF they were meant for people to walk in. Obviously though, they weren’t tombs but something else entirely. The lack of hieroglyphs etc also points to a different use. The valley of the kings tombs (true tombs) are absolutely covered in heiroglyphs.
      But what with the narrow shafts in the great pyramid, the copper handles yet no electric cables, the fact that the queens chamber shafts we’re blanked off invisible from inside the chamber, by specially shaped blocks, and the whole pyramid is a mystery at the moment that no one to my knowledge has satisfactorily figured out. The things are a mystery.

  • @gofanatico3495
    @gofanatico3495 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have never heard of this. Very interesting indeed. Thank you for your great content!

  • @yeabuddy6070
    @yeabuddy6070 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I think we all can agree that we are sick of evil people constantly hiding the truth from the masses.

  • @tatianap428
    @tatianap428 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hey girl!!! So glad to catch you live!!!! Love your videos!

  • @yungpep
    @yungpep 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Missed this by 3mins

  • @luke4428
    @luke4428 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ms James you are sooo interesting.......keep up the good works........

  • @GreenyX1
    @GreenyX1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Those nubs are a mystery. You'd think they're used as handles to move blocks, sure but some blocks don't have any. Then one would say well they don't have nubs on blocks that are not going to be moved, then you find foundation megalithic blocks full of nubs, and no nubs on higher blocks etc etc.
    The builders didn't leave comments or instructions like a bunch of dispassionate asshats which is why I think aliens are involved. 😂

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      No! More like the IKEA furniture people. Complex design, clearly fits together, but no instructions and the 800 help line is disconnected.

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Nub-ology 101. Who knows? The Greeks knew. In the marble quary where the blocks for the temples came from there are blocks that were cut but never used. Blocks in the temple have no nubs, but faint cut marks in the right places. Then they spot a few blocks in the back still wearing a couple nubs. Friday. Closing time. Never came back and got them off. It’s a union thing. Don’t ask. The stellar conclusion was they had something to do with roping them up to move. Or what ever. But they seem to have had a purpose. Like the nub on the bottom of a coke bottle.

    • @GreenyX1
      @GreenyX1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@MrJento Nub Science.. I think we should build a Nub Super Collider to figure it out once and for all. 🤣

    • @Miss-Tori
      @Miss-Tori 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      perhaps it was a geo polymer and the nubs were where they were poured and left the nub there almost as if concrete set up before they could knock it off. Or was left in order to mount art or interlocking blocks to each other. Earthquake prevention... maybe.

  • @TarnTarn-zv6cp
    @TarnTarn-zv6cp 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    JJ, Randals shout out was well over due, you worked your nuts off dude , the 10k subs are deserved

  • @andymelendez9757
    @andymelendez9757 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Well this is a surprise! Obviously purpose built but why? I do think part of the answer lies in some of the unique characteristics of this granite.

    • @colt2312
      @colt2312 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Piezoelectric effect

  • @number6705
    @number6705 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fantastic information - great job, thank you! Never heard of this, ever.

  • @jamesdeath3477
    @jamesdeath3477 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I think these start to make sense if you consider they were once (ceremonial?) wells. There's a similar bathtub in the basement of the step Pyramid of Djoser, where all the finely cut jars were found, that was also possibly not a sarcophagus. Was there something in the tub to purify the water? The movie you were thinking of is Howard Hawks "Land of the Pharaohs". Pretty decent flick actually. Shame the Italian guy who dug the place ripped the floor up.

    • @ericdollarhyde3296
      @ericdollarhyde3296 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think these really dont make sense at all as "ceremonial" were talking about a highly organized civikization with advanced mathematics and agriculture and seafaring and lenses and antibiotics and surgery!! They didnt build all this for joojoo voodoo wack a doo!! Its got a purpose.anything else would be highly inefficient and pointless and thats not who they were

    • @jamesdeath3477
      @jamesdeath3477 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ericdollarhyde3296 Yes, it has a purpose. It's a well. As I said.

  • @davidj8065
    @davidj8065 ปีที่แล้ว

    I enjoy these vids, love your enthusiasm

  • @kawasakikev8905
    @kawasakikev8905 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    how do they think they were going to build a pyramid over a massive hole like that ,it was never going to be a pyramid ..the film was Land of the pharohs it shows a good view of the decending slope . Covered up with rubbish and in a military compound so no one can look at it ,and they don't have to try and explain what it was ,because they clearly didn't know what it was when they found it .

  • @bigc7t
    @bigc7t 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great stuff Jahanna, loved it, thank you beautiful.

  • @erobwen
    @erobwen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This site fits badly with your "dig down and hide" theory, as a cataclysm would surely flood the site, and it is too wide to build a strong superstructure to cover it. So this site was probably not for storing things. Maybe it had another purpose, like technical, communal or ceremonial. I think some have speculated that this could have been a natural spring at one time, so it was lined with stone to prevent the water from mixing with mud/sand, and provide a nice place where the people could go and fill buckets with water. There are similar wells in India. The huge tub could have been a tub for coloring cloth, but if so, why only have one tub? Only one color? Or they might have had other smaller tubs also that were placed on top of the stone, that are now gone. Perhaps they had this huge tub for just their favorite color? But then again, if it was just a coloring bath, why have that huge lid? The lid does not make any sense in that context.

  • @franklinmallory2005
    @franklinmallory2005 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It sounds like a huge capacitor or transformer and yeah they blow up some times and are quiet impressive as in loud beyond belief for a standard transformer the size of a shop vac can be heard a half mile off imagine what one the size of your bath tub could do that big they would have heard it in Italy.

  • @maggipetty7047
    @maggipetty7047 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Pyramid literally means fire in the middle. Christopher Dunn believes they were power plants. If one of these power plants went off balance or had the wrong ingredients added...boom! That's my hypothesis.

    • @jimijamesjowitt
      @jimijamesjowitt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes

    • @Vibe4ant
      @Vibe4ant 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      An air blast makes much more sense for the scale of melted rock.

    • @circlebodo991
      @circlebodo991 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Who told you Pyramid means fire in the middle? Someone told me Maggipetty means head full of air

    • @doctormarazanvose4373
      @doctormarazanvose4373 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Pyramid comes from the Greek pyramis - meaning a "kind of cake of roasted wheat-grains preserved in honey."
      Fire in the middle? It's this kind of non-sensical, fictional, delusion that people like you spread and just muddy the waters and stop people from getting to the truth.

  • @shannonmarshall7843
    @shannonmarshall7843 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi there! You’re a big inspiration to me :)

  • @rivdottir
    @rivdottir 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I kind of feel sad that we do not know that much how or who did all of these magnificent creations…I do not understand why we learned that regular people did this, it make no scence at all..we have nothing today that is done today like this..have we? But if we did all of this as humans, why did we get less intelligent is the question XD

  • @Scanner7759
    @Scanner7759 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    You take a chill pill ,lots are going to try and discredit your high octane info,
    Love the way you play it out 😉🤣💖🌹🛸👾👽,
    Love from Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @christopher9136
    @christopher9136 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    4:20am and I had to watch this twice! First time I was busy falling in love and the second time for retaining a little info😅🛸

  • @myvoiceismysword5484
    @myvoiceismysword5484 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    this is really great because now we can see for the first time that the knobs nubs are in place there to keep the granite box sarcophagus from falling into whatever that hole is in front of it. It goes into that hole and those Nubs at the side of it basically hold it flush so it won't fall in .

  • @thewalkingdude7464
    @thewalkingdude7464 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This woman has it all, looks, intelligence, work ethic, and an inquisitive mind. I hope you go far and have the best life ever. 👍

  • @GiffysChannel
    @GiffysChannel 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Damn, I missed the stream. Glad to see you're still focusing on Egypt.

  • @alancook9102
    @alancook9102 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks J. Looks like was abandoned. Simple as that. Unfortunately can't help with cause. Keep digging!

  • @connylehtonen4328
    @connylehtonen4328 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    quark particles Catcher maybe, simular as as Cern The Large Hadron Collider

  • @funnyriverred2501
    @funnyriverred2501 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very cool episode

  • @curtismurphy1263
    @curtismurphy1263 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Awesome show, I learn so much watching your stuff.

  • @edbooth946
    @edbooth946 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    You're right: clean it out, lidar scan it, photograph it in as much detail as possible and preserve it while we can.

  • @wrongshot2142
    @wrongshot2142 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m so glad I found your channel! You are definitely the Randall Carlson Whisperer and by that I mean your ability to summarize his research for us younger people. I highly encourage you to take a peek at the science fiction story Assassins Creed. The story has an interesting idea about the first civilization known by many names. The names include the Gods, the nphylem, the ancients, and the ISU. I’m not saying this story is the missing link. It’s just a cool take on the idea of a lost ancient first civilization. Anywho keep up the great work and can’t wait to watch more videos.

  • @nancyM1313
    @nancyM1313 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Missed the live. But am enjoying the video. Knew about this place. (very little😂) thanks Jahannah🎬

  • @sunshineinarizona1726
    @sunshineinarizona1726 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It could be a docking platform for a giant aircraft/ship/UFO. Maybe some of the pyramids were also used for docking, like in South America, where there are stairs.

  • @farranger275
    @farranger275 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The tub, and whatever its contents were, could have been a ceremonial offering to consecrate the site. Then it was sealed because it was never intended to be opened again - a permanent offering to whatever deity they were honoring. I read somewhere that there is a theory that it was never intended to be 'finished' as a pyramid. Instead, it is finished and was used as a way to sight the position of the stars, the sun, or the moon by looking up the ramp and maybe at certain markings or stones along the upper edges. I'm not sure that idea makes any sense either, but then I'm not really an ancient Egyptian either, I just walk like one. Cool video, thanks for posting.

  • @peterrichardson4192
    @peterrichardson4192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Fill it with lemon juice put a anode in one side a cathode in the other then you got yourself a battery. the queens chamber acts as a capacitor, put a crystal on the top. And you got yourself a transmitter. Those tall pillars they made act as receivers.

  • @DP2369PD
    @DP2369PD 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think it’s a water reservoir that fills from the bottom through tunnels. As the seasonal water table rises to its high point the “bathtub” inlet can be plugged and the water retained. As the water recedes/ is used, more and more steps are revealed. Once the water table no longer reached this area it fell it into disuse and the whole area was eventually abandoned. The steep walls help slow evaporation. The pink granite, once saturated would hold water relatively well

  • @adamad1958
    @adamad1958 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amazing personality, love it.

  • @Hat6000
    @Hat6000 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    There is something more utilitarian about the greatest pyramids in my view. The fact that they are not decorated with many pictographs, hieroglyphs, the typical self glorifying statements and cartouches of all the other dynastic monuments, temples and tombs speaks to this. I've heard those "nubs" called leverage bosses, part of how they were levered into place. Some have been ground down afterwards at some point, many left. I think these without all the decorations are much much older than the later highly decorated places.

  • @confucious_of_babbel8481
    @confucious_of_babbel8481 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The black ring in the tub possibly left over from the mummification process. Maybe it’s where they were mummifying people?

    • @confucious_of_babbel8481
      @confucious_of_babbel8481 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Also it was probably the great deluge that destroyed it. If you look at the pyramids of Giza you can see the line where flood waters eroded the pyramids except for the capstone portion of kufus pyramid.

    • @confucious_of_babbel8481
      @confucious_of_babbel8481 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Maybe they used chemicals to cut the megalithic stones, they were alchemists learned in the ways of chemicals, we know this because of mummification of bodies.