Is This the Largest Block on the Giza Plateau? Massive 450 Ton Stone!

Ойын-сауық

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On this channel in the past, we're talked about some pretty darn big blocks of megalithic stone, found on the famous ancient sites around the world, particularly those in Egypt. Most of these examples, obelisks or statues, are found on sites that are generally attributed to the later periods of the dynastic civilization, the middle and new kingdoms.
But what about the actual Old Kingdom sites? Places like the Giza Plateau, with its mighty stone pyramids, where most, if not all of the architecture and artifacts are attributed to the oldest periods of known history, and not to later periods of the Egyptian Civilization? Are there massive, almost inconceivably heavy, single piece stones found in these locations?
Well, in today's video, that’s the topic we're going to get into, because in the last couple of years, my good friend Yousef Awyan and I have found what, at least to our knowledge, is the largest single piece stone found at the Giza Plateau, and I wanted to share it with everyone. We'll also take a look at some of the precision machining features of the megalithic structures at Giza, and the unique combinations of stone types that are found in these locations.
Executive Producers for this Episode:
Matt Beal
Gabriele Knecht
Anthony Frasca
WhiteSky Communications, LLC
Marco Berenger
Sean Lenoarch
Marc Forquet
Allan Stuart
Karen Lundmark
Thomas Violante
Associate Executive Producers for this Episode:
Shiona Webster
Mt Van der Ploeg
Paul Thomson
Bard Buell
Cortez Studio
Jared Kolb
Casey Nunes
Referenced Video Links:
Ancient Engineering on the Giza Plateau: • Ancient Engineering on...
Colossal Statues of Ancient Egypt: • Lost Ancient Technolog...
Evidence for Ancient Machining: • Evidence for Ancient H...
Granite and Basalt Stone Cutting: • The Mystery of Ancient...
Inside the Sphinx Temple: • The Mystery of the Sph...
Massive Statue at Tanis: • Ancient Tanis, Ramses ...
Karnak and Luxor Temples: • MASSIVE Tube Drills, O...
Ancient High Tech, Quarrying and Logistics: • Quarrying and Moving A...
Aswan Quarry: • The 1100 ton Unfinishe...
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0:00 Introduction
3:40 Tours and Channel Update
5:45 Great Pyramid of Giza
9:07 Middle Pyramid of Giza
12:47 Middle Pyramid Causeway, Temples
13:47 Valley Temple
17:17 Mortuary Temple
22:42 Largest Block on the Giza Plateau
27:02 Lifting, Transporting Massive Stone Blocks
29:02 Casing Stones and Erosion Damage
32:07 Precision Machined Granite Block
35:56 4th Dynasty Building Styles, Techniques
38:54 How did they do it?
42:00 White Calcite and Channeled Blocks
43:22 Differences in Erosional Damage
45:09 Conclusion, Thanks

Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @UnchartedX
    @UnchartedX6 ай бұрын

    Spaces available for Egypt tours in Feb and March of 2024! Feb 7-22, 2024: unchartedx.com/egypt2024/ March 3-18, 2024: unchartedx.com/site/marchtour2024/ Watch Ancient Civilizations Season 5 on Gaia here: bit.ly/bvk_AC5 Sign up for your 7 day free trial here: bit.ly/bvk_gaia-free-trial UnchartedXLive channel: www.youtube.com/@unchartedxlive Eclipse at the Canyon (April 6-9, 2024): www.eventbrite.com/e/eclipse-at-the-canyon-tickets-733419546607

  • @j-nish3570

    @j-nish3570

    6 ай бұрын

    What technology did they use to move the largest Obelix in the world from Egypt to Rome? It was done in the 4th century AD and weighed 450 tonnes... Is this also lost ancient high technology?/

  • @TheZepone

    @TheZepone

    6 ай бұрын

    I’d absolutely love to go ! Greetings from uk Ben, and thanks for the new upload !

  • @bulzeram

    @bulzeram

    6 ай бұрын

    Would you ever debate the World of Antique guy? Or know anyone who will? He raises a lot of interesting points.

  • @notsocrates9529

    @notsocrates9529

    6 ай бұрын

    Have you guys done any research on what Solomon's shamir was or how it worked? >>In the Gemara, the shamir (Hebrew: שָׁמִיר‎ šāmīr) is a worm or a substance that had the power to cut through or disintegrate stone, iron and diamond. >>King Solomon is said to have used it in the building of the First Temple in Jerusalem in the place of cutting tools. For the building of the Temple, which promoted peace, it was inappropriate to use tools that could also cause war and bloodshed

  • @MJIZZEL

    @MJIZZEL

    6 ай бұрын

    Great job Ben. Keep questioning and pressuring the Skerptards

  • @TimeSpectators
    @TimeSpectators5 ай бұрын

    The sheer size of this 450-ton stone block at the Giza Plateau is mind-boggling! It's a marvel of ancient engineering and craftsmanship. To think that such a massive stone was moved and placed with the technology of the time really challenges our understanding of the past. What are your thoughts on how this enormous block could have been transported and set into place?

  • @scotch_onrocks1876

    @scotch_onrocks1876

    5 ай бұрын

    Most likely by a technology we do not use. The precision and size of each block makes 0 sense in terms of efficiency for us. We use concrete and bricks that can be laid by hand. The precision of the blocks is something we reserve for our most necessary works. And we only use that type of precision on small scale because we use CNC machines.

  • @finley.h

    @finley.h

    5 ай бұрын

    Of course, your comments are great, but 700 likes in just one day is as mysterious to me as the mystery of the pyramid. 🙁 Perhaps you must be a celebrity. ✨🙏🏻

  • @ScorpionXXXVII

    @ScorpionXXXVII

    5 ай бұрын

    ​​@@scotch_onrocks1876amazing what humans can accomplish given enough time, wealth, manpower, Power. I find it very sad that so many people think so little of humans and our potential.

  • @phoenixophury

    @phoenixophury

    5 ай бұрын

    @@scotch_onrocks1876 then we would’ve found evidence for that technology. You mean to say methods we do not use. As we have better methods today.

  • @kenshiman90

    @kenshiman90

    4 ай бұрын

    chatgpt comment...

  • @user-oz7hi3yk1s
    @user-oz7hi3yk1s6 ай бұрын

    Ben we love how you never compromise on a video. When you put one out, it's above 30 minutes and has amazing detail and accuracy to your standards. Thanks ben.

  • @TheBelrick

    @TheBelrick

    6 ай бұрын

    Those blocks with all that erosion looks like rock under oceans to me. Dissolved.

  • @user-oz7hi3yk1s

    @user-oz7hi3yk1s

    6 ай бұрын

    Under water sure, but I assume something like a massive ass tidal wave did that over a thousand years due to the middle being more erroded, that's why they fall off.@@TheBelrick Maybe the casing stones was stripped due to the fact it showed erosion...

  • @drutter

    @drutter

    6 ай бұрын

    Video begins at 22:45

  • @solgoodman730
    @solgoodman7306 ай бұрын

    I'm a crane operator & mate I'll tell you that you'd need a bigger crane than a LTM1400. As much as the machine works in shaping the stones fascinates you, the transport and lifting fascinates me. I've worked in heavy shift n lift for years and the gear needed for a 1000t is colossal

  • @DomingoDeSantaClara
    @DomingoDeSantaClara6 ай бұрын

    One of the most surreal moments in my life was standing in the kings chamber of the Great Pyramid. The workmanship and sheer scale of it all is breathtaking, the whole place has an "air" about it that I've never felt anywhere else.

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    Beautiful. When were you there? How much time did you spend there? Where else have you been to compare?

  • @DomingoDeSantaClara

    @DomingoDeSantaClara

    6 ай бұрын

    @@handroids1981 I was there around 20 years ago, I've been to most of the sites in Egypt and also to Stonehenge and lots of other sites around Europe, but nothing stuck in my mind like the great pyramid.

  • @martyvirtue4051

    @martyvirtue4051

    6 ай бұрын

    @@DomingoDeSantaClaraStonehenge is a hoax. You know that i hope.

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    @@DomingoDeSantaClara Thank you for the response. This is interesting. Can I ask how much the "General opinion." has changed on these fascinating sites?

  • @peterjones5254
    @peterjones52546 ай бұрын

    When you're quarrying, cutting and transporting stones in the 1 million kg+ range, you are effectively displaying that your capabilities are beyond comprehension. Great work again. Keep it up Ben. 👍🇭🇲

  • @TheBelrick

    @TheBelrick

    6 ай бұрын

    A reminder to pseudo scientists. Lack of evidence is NOT evidence for non-existence. Thankyou for understanding the narrow lens we look at the past with

  • @Nineteen1900Hundred

    @Nineteen1900Hundred

    6 ай бұрын

    @@TheBelrick Just curious, which pseudo-scientists are you referring to? Who is claiming evidence for "non-existence"?

  • @peterjones5254

    @peterjones5254

    6 ай бұрын

    @@TheBelrickNice triple negative, now please explain if your English will allow.

  • @DARKSEID76

    @DARKSEID76

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Nineteen1900HundredHe’s quoting a popular quote used in the ufo community. But in this context it means that a lack of evidence for machine tools being used on these stones, does not mean the tools didn’t exist at some point.

  • @Spectre-wd9dl

    @Spectre-wd9dl

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@DARKSEID76there is also zero evidence that the pyramids were built by slaves. Zero evidence as to how they did it. In fact there is more evidence to show that they had a technology we don't understand. People that use that quote are not seeing evidence they are denying evidence right in front of them.

  • @leonardosoto4603
    @leonardosoto46034 ай бұрын

    The heaviest object ever transported in modern times is often considered to be the Troll A platform, a natural gas platform in the North Sea. This platform has a total weight of around 1.2 million tons, including its concrete base. It was towed from Norway to its current location in the North Sea in 1996. The engineering feat required for such a move was monumental, showcasing the capabilities of modern transportation and structural engineering techniques.

  • @dragineeztoo61
    @dragineeztoo616 ай бұрын

    What always gets me is that the stones we're looking at were even bigger when they were moved into place. The final shaping and smoothing took place on-site. As large as they are now, the work done to place them was reductive. The original piece was even larger and heavier. This is seen over and over again. It never fails to boggle my mind since I have no explanation. I like seeing so much video from our tour. Seeing the people my wife and I took this adventure with is fun. It's like meeting old friends.

  • @nielsthorson5102

    @nielsthorson5102

    5 ай бұрын

  • @mikelee9886
    @mikelee98866 ай бұрын

    This made my day! Was JUST thinking "Man, when is Ben gonna come out with a new video?", I hit the KZread "home" button and BOOM, brand new video from Uncharted-X. Thanks Ben, this is beyond entertainment and curiosity at this point, you've demonstrated that there are VERY BIG questions that are going unanswered, and your digging up amazing clues that could lead to an answer. You're basically crowd-sourcing archaeological mysteries, and the collective of minds who watch and talk about these clues you dig up are bringing results. Excellent work

  • @newphaze4t370
    @newphaze4t3706 ай бұрын

    Amazing presentation. That Yusef is still finding surprises illustrates the depth of the mystery. A thought experiment (rather than question): If Giza had no "narrative" How many ages/epoch does your intuition tell you are represented by the erosion patterns?

  • @tex7432

    @tex7432

    6 ай бұрын

    The combination of erosion and past human activity probably makes it impossible to say anything definite unless new areas are excavated and able to be carbon dated

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    Yusuf is definitely a gem amongst all other, "[so called Archeologists]:" & gets my vote for not only Head of Antiquitys there, yet for President of Egypt itself! Egypt 🇪🇬

  • @ijmobile

    @ijmobile

    6 ай бұрын

    carbon doesnt date stones, and whatever you find on top that can be carbon dated, doesnt necessarely come from the same timing of the stones, unless its between them @@tex7432

  • @Nobbie248

    @Nobbie248

    6 ай бұрын

    Imagine if people like Yusef where head of antiquities. Egypt would be mostly understood by now. Its a damn shame

  • @holladiewaldfee7518

    @holladiewaldfee7518

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Nobbie248 you want a liar in the government? 🤣🤣🤣

  • @FuryOfTyphon
    @FuryOfTyphon6 ай бұрын

    I work as a Landscaper, and the amount of time and effort it takes to move boulders/pavers/stone in the 100+ kg range is ridiculous. Working in the 100+ TON range is unfathomable.. Especially without machinery, or even ropes/metal capable of lifting/levering such weights.

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    The Egyptian Pictograph, of this is hilarious 😂 350, slaves, & 20 Giants hooked to one rope & then to a100 TON Megablock! Lol, good thing they had Santa's sled!🛷

  • @farmpite

    @farmpite

    6 ай бұрын

    Nobody is suggesting they were working without the help of ropes and levers

  • @limehawk4989

    @limehawk4989

    6 ай бұрын

    They had ropes? It's impressive but not magic

  • @JennySimon206

    @JennySimon206

    6 ай бұрын

    Concrete. Some carved, some poured in place. The outside blocks are all magnetically aligned w Earth.

  • @mattwebb7603

    @mattwebb7603

    6 ай бұрын

    Jenny. Your the first comment I seen that someone speaking sense.

  • @VeraldoAncodini
    @VeraldoAncodini6 ай бұрын

    It's time to accept that very advanced civilizations existed before the Younger Dryas event. Cataclysms like that would also send what little would remain of our civilization back to the caves.

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah I don't think anything we have now would survive the Younger Dryas event PLUS 13.5 _thousand_ years.

  • @sickbastard82

    @sickbastard82

    6 ай бұрын

    ​​@@handroids1981 all we have would turn to rust and then to dust

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sickbastard82 Exactly. So why are the "Experts" saying human beings for hundreds of thousands of years, NEVER advanced beyond sharp rock and sharp stick? In Africa. Welp, that seems kinda racist.

  • @sickbastard82

    @sickbastard82

    6 ай бұрын

    @@handroids1981 because they are no experts and they know nothing 😂

  • @lxdead5585

    @lxdead5585

    6 ай бұрын

    well, they at least left granite structures. what our civilisation left behind? plastic and buildings of steel and glass? their remains would disappear after less than 200 years.

  • @katep23
    @katep236 ай бұрын

    Absolutely bloody fascinating, as always! Thank you. How anyone can suggest these things were made in the Old Kingdom (or whenever) with just stone/copper tools, is beyond me! Clearly more ancient, made with some lost technologies.

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep, agreed. Also chicken scratches on flawless marble. Where they frequently run out of room for the hieroglyphics??

  • @Vision_2

    @Vision_2

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Why should we take into account 200 years worth of academic study of direct and contextual evidence? Ignore all of that and instead believe in lost civilization and technology for which there is zero evidence.

  • @holladiewaldfee7518

    @holladiewaldfee7518

    5 ай бұрын

    „Clearly“ …. with ZERO evidence 🤣🤣🤣

  • @seltonk5136

    @seltonk5136

    2 ай бұрын

    The evidence is the artifact ya spoon ​@@holladiewaldfee7518

  • @khashy87
    @khashy876 ай бұрын

    I am a civil engineer with more than a decade experience of constructing infrastructures in Australia and I am loosing sleep over how they build this.

  • @oocloudoo1549

    @oocloudoo1549

    6 ай бұрын

    We are not the most technologically/scientifically advanced humans in history. We are only the most advanced in recent memory.

  • @kelborhal2576

    @kelborhal2576

    6 ай бұрын

    God they were just smarter than you and you can't figure out their super simple solution big dumb dumb! /s

  • @phoenixophury

    @phoenixophury

    6 ай бұрын

    @@oocloudoo1549 then why is there 0 evidence pointing to a more advanced human civilization before us? If they were more advanced then why are we here today instead of them? Simply put none of that is true.

  • @oocloudoo1549

    @oocloudoo1549

    6 ай бұрын

    @@phoenixophury these videos are proof. Walk around the Giza plateau as proof. You could be the most technologically advanced and still die out as a civilization. Humans aren’t immortal. Solar flare, volcanoes, super virus, societal collapse, etc alll the same things we deal with today. So not only are you underestimating our ancestors. You’re overestimating them as well!

  • @oocloudoo1549

    @oocloudoo1549

    6 ай бұрын

    @@phoenixophury another point I’ll make is that if we were to end civilization with nuclear war. We would be sent back to the Stone Age. And after just a couple hundred years the signs of our advancements will be almost gone. Then after 1,000 years plus. You wouldn’t even be able to tell we existed at all! Only rumors about “an advanced civilization that harnessed the power of the atom”

  • @JJFX-
    @JJFX-6 ай бұрын

    There's few channels these days that truly excite me when a new 45+ minute video is posted.

  • @mattbealllimitless
    @mattbealllimitless6 ай бұрын

    Unbelievable. Those granite casing stones are insane dude. Well done, another incredible video Ben, cheers!

  • @handsworth101
    @handsworth1016 ай бұрын

    The 'mortuary' temple is so fascinating, it's clearly a contemporary of the Sphinx, the causeway and the middle pyramid. Together these structures are thousands of years older than the 4th dynasty. Hancock & others suggestion of 11,000 - 12,000 seems about right given the sever erosion

  • @nickh2541

    @nickh2541

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree. Super prez Ben. The mortuary temple erosion needs a dedicated video imo comparing it alongside existing evidence provided by geologists (eg Colin reader). I was there a month ago and it felt like it was very, very old. I would put forward a theory, that the plateau was built west to east (with modifications over generations). West to East is the logical format of rebirth in ancient Egyptian spirituality. This might explain why photo luminescence dating of the menkaure pyramid is at least as old as khufu's. Then I would say that the sphinx (though not the temple) came almost last. Per initial photoluminesce / carbon dating, that could put us back up to 1000 years for the pyramids, with the temples and subterranean structures being older still. But I would love to see Ben do a video or two on the dating finds, plus how that could come together for development of the Giza site as a whole. Thank you!

  • @seltonk5136

    @seltonk5136

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@nickh2541u r exaggerating. I don't have any pics of my life

  • @paulboucher806
    @paulboucher8066 ай бұрын

    The detail gives me a kind of child like sense of awe and the mystery behind the construction, use and age of these megaliths. What I love the most is no-one knows anything except that they are here as evidence

  • @Diz_XS
    @Diz_XS6 ай бұрын

    Your hard work and dedication is admirable mate . These are always excellent . 👌🏻🇦🇺

  • @holladiewaldfee7518

    @holladiewaldfee7518

    5 ай бұрын

    „Hard work“ 🤣🤣🤣

  • @hereIam1965
    @hereIam19656 ай бұрын

    We're so fortunate to live in this age with advanced tech' to learn of these fascinating places , brought to us by people like Ben.

  • @user-cw3gw3ms3l
    @user-cw3gw3ms3l6 ай бұрын

    The groundworks needed to do before any blocks is laid is off the charts..

  • @anthonygiesbrecht7299

    @anthonygiesbrecht7299

    4 ай бұрын

    They built half base into bedrock, Locking the base into the bed rock to stabilize it….that’s engineering on an earthquake scale

  • @seltonk5136

    @seltonk5136

    2 ай бұрын

    Don't exaggerate

  • @bigmike1850

    @bigmike1850

    Ай бұрын

    @@anthonygiesbrecht7299no that’s called building on sand

  • @workmatic3763
    @workmatic37636 ай бұрын

    Top drawer stuff as usual! Thanks Ben!

  • @dubselectorr345

    @dubselectorr345

    6 ай бұрын

    Agreed 👍

  • @andynichols9476
    @andynichols94766 ай бұрын

    I think the polgonal pattern foundation piece blocks are literally an enigma on their own, absolutely mind boggling 👏

  • @KingJones77
    @KingJones775 ай бұрын

    This kinda stuff is the most interesting stuff in the whole world to me! Thank you soo much Ben for giving us your insights on the subject! Much appreciated botha!

  • @Chuck8541
    @Chuck85416 ай бұрын

    GAIA made my dude wear a blazer! haha Keep up the great work, Ben! 👍

  • @johnboyer9176
    @johnboyer91766 ай бұрын

    Has any research been done on the placement and positioning of all these stones as to point to what would have caused them to be displaced, toppled, destroyed, etc? More than anything when I watch these videos is asking the question... how did that stone get to where it is now? Clearly something on a massive scale caused it. Great work as always!

  • @whitewolfo2480
    @whitewolfo24806 ай бұрын

    There are just so many unexplainable features on this plateau. Thanks Ben for this amazing video !

  • @chrispiper6269
    @chrispiper62696 ай бұрын

    Amazing production as per usual mate, love your work! Staggering how mainstream academia ignores these glaring facts.

  • @davidcoles1688
    @davidcoles16886 ай бұрын

    Happy Holidays Ben. Thank you for producing so many great videos of Ancient Site’s. The wonders you have revealed about the stone vases are mind blowing. Respect man…your work most definitely will be attacked by the mainstream scientists, which I’m sure you’ll deal with. ❤

  • @SalvadorButtersworth
    @SalvadorButtersworth6 ай бұрын

    Yes but what if someone spent a year to roughly carve a stone jar with jagged edges? Wouldn't that disprove everything you're saying?

  • @redwoodcoast
    @redwoodcoast6 ай бұрын

    Ben, there's another factor to add to the prohibitively great drag coefficient of friction from a sled on bare ground, and that is the factor of stationary inertia. It is very difficult to overcome the heavier an object is. It does not want to move even though it will move once it has been forced to move and that's because of the other law of physics that says an object in motion will tend to stay in motion. But a colossal object "at rest" will stubbornly stay at rest and will take maybe three to four times the force of pulling it to just get it to start moving. So there is more to moving such stupendous weights than the lesser force needed to pull them along since they had to get the things moving in the first place... without wheels. That violates basic logic and strongly suggests that a lot of technology was needed that is not even being imagined when contemplating how such massive objects were moved.

  • @mark0077777
    @mark00777776 ай бұрын

    Great video. Were those scattered granite blocks around the middle pyramid ever scanned to see if some computer program can piece them together like a virtual lego, to see where some might fit back on the structure itself?

  • @lundysden6781
    @lundysden67816 ай бұрын

    Ben, as a geologist who worked in karst limestone regions for years I can tell you this is not only water based erosion for the most part but it was happening for a long time. limestone is chemically dissolved out about at the same rate it can be deposited in the reverse conditions, about 1cm3/100 yrs or so. so when you see a feature eroded 10 cm back your looking at approximately 1000 yrs. of erosion, in areas with moderate rainfall. Of course acid rain in the last 75+ yrs has increased this rate. Anyway food for thought. oh yeah, there are ways to see where those channeled tunnels go! If your interested? jer

  • @DGreatAwakening

    @DGreatAwakening

    6 ай бұрын

    Excellent info! Interestingly, the Giza plateau area usually only has 2 or 3 days out of an entire year with any rain. And it amounts to next-to-nothing. We'd have to go back nearly 10,000 years to find a time when the climate was more tropical and rainy in that area. Throw your limestone erosion math into the equation, plus the time to build such structures, and it's not out of the question that some of this stuff could have been put in place over 20,000 years ago. Chew on that idea for a minute.

  • @livingbehind661

    @livingbehind661

    6 ай бұрын

    If u know how to c the tunels and over 40 , i would care .....

  • @Antonocon

    @Antonocon

    6 ай бұрын

    Keep in mind that this limestone was covered in granite to begin with. Also, that where we see other evidence of this ancient granite block work, the seams appear to be quite tight making it even more difficult for the rain to get in and erode the limestone. I think it's very difficult to argue that these limestone blocks were not exposed for quite some time during the African Humid Period which ended a while before the 1st dynasty of ancient Egypt. Given the above points, who knows how long they have been there. It seems that it would be at least thousands of years before the 1st Dynasty. Especially given the lack of comparative erosion of the confirmed dynastic limestone block buildings.

  • @Poppetje75

    @Poppetje75

    6 ай бұрын

    @@DGreatAwakening You are absolutely right, many of these structures must be much older than we have been taught. Unfortunately, mainstream Egyptologists stick to their guns even though there is much evidence that they are wrong. Hopefully younger archaeologists have a different and more evidence-based view of this.

  • @docker4671
    @docker46716 ай бұрын

    how can anyone walk past these temples made from bus-sized blocks and not just stop right there, in awe, wondering how any of this stuff is possible. the sizes of those things in the sphinx temple are impossible to overlook but yet you never hear anyone speak of them, especially how insanely eroded they are

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes indeed, & charts on Geo-Time-Dating, & Erosion rates are still absent from the Geologists, & Archeologists tool kit?

  • @steveo5295

    @steveo5295

    6 ай бұрын

    I wonder if anyone ever came up with a shopping list of what it would take to build the Giza Plateau..?

  • @handroids1981

    @handroids1981

    6 ай бұрын

    OMG. It's very simple. They used copper saws to cut through granite, marble, dollarite. Rolled those 1000 tons bad boys on bits of wood. Hundreds of miles. And/ or floated them on reed boats down the Nile. Then a couple of ropes and BOOM! You got yourself a pyramid!

  • @MerwinARTist

    @MerwinARTist

    6 ай бұрын

    How crippled we all are in our minds .. when several bits of information like this is left out of our every day education. Here is something else I am interested in .. for reasons I explain. One of my interests is the area of the Pyramid Plateau .. as well as all the other ancient stones and structures that make up the site. One of the issues that represent many 100's of years of misrepresentation .. of a time zone that our educational system imposes a narrative that doesn't make sense. It is spelled out very well in this video. If you want to know something about Moses .. then look at these stories written in stone .. because they would have been in the mind of Moses .. in a condition that is more whole than what we have available today. This speaks to the level of control that the upper class establishment have had on the minds of many centuries of people. When we learn something new .. and it totally unravels something we believed before .. then we need to mark that imperfection .. because it helps correct our direction. Things like that the Great Pyramid is lined up perfectly with the North, East, West, South (NEWS) .. or to learn that it has 8 sides .. not four! Of course there are many many more things .. good questions need to be imagined .. so we can find better answers.

  • @Kiyoone

    @Kiyoone

    6 ай бұрын

    sadly, most of the people that visit there are completely oblivious to that... they travel for selfies.

  • @Sevenigma777
    @Sevenigma7776 ай бұрын

    i have always thought one of the most intriguing mysteries to Egypt other than the building of the pyramids and how they managed stone of 100's of tons is why wasnt it documented. They left behind so much information about their civilization like government documents, royal bloodlines, love poems and even customer complaints about scammy merchants but it seems not one word was left or found about any of the processes involved with the building of these megalithic structures and ive always wondered how and why that is.

  • @itzakpoelzig330

    @itzakpoelzig330

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, the ancient Egyptian culture, as we understand it, was definitely just the johnny-come-lately on the scene. They moved in onto the ruins of a previous, and far more advanced culture, and usurped it as best they could. Many of the sculptures that are supposedly portraits of this pharaoh or that pharaoh are actually just repurposed. They found the statue, and then had their artisans carve their name into it. You can tell, because the level of technical skill on the carved names is like chicken-scratch compared to the level of technical skill displayed in the sculpture itself. They did the same on temple walls and stone sarcophagi. I don't believe we have any examples of the writing system of the earlier civilization. All heiroglyphics seem to be from the later culture.

  • @drgunsmith4099

    @drgunsmith4099

    6 ай бұрын

    @@itzakpoelzig330Amen 🙏

  • @drgunsmith4099

    @drgunsmith4099

    6 ай бұрын

    Absolutely 👍

  • @adrianbohancanu7862

    @adrianbohancanu7862

    5 ай бұрын

    @@itzakpoelzig330 very few precision-built megaliths around the world show any information conveyed through carving. One example that pops into my mind is a snake figure on a megalith in South America, and it is in relief meaning that the whole face of the block had to be carved around it which is very impressive. It's easy for the mind to jump to conclusions such as these civilizations having storage devices akin to our computer drives today, especially if they used technology which eerily looks like it was computer-guided in many instances, such as the granite vases and statues. My head is swimming with questions the closer I look into all of this, and past the smoke and mirror bullshit of the mainstream academia & Wikipedia.

  • @frankjacob3538

    @frankjacob3538

    2 ай бұрын

    Way older than the erosion on the Sphinx. Our time line goes off the chart.

  • @jamesn.economou9922
    @jamesn.economou99226 ай бұрын

    Great work, once again! The camera work, was terrific, and so was the sound! You never fail, to deliver the goods Ben.

  • @UnchartedX

    @UnchartedX

    6 ай бұрын

    i was annoyed with my audio recording, my p's were popping, i'm gonna fix that

  • @gregbrown5473
    @gregbrown54736 ай бұрын

    Awesome video as usual Ben that erosion dose blow me away especially when you see it built up against the middle pyramid onto the Granite casing stones , maybe you will show that in your next video 🙂🤙

  • @ChrisWashburn
    @ChrisWashburn6 ай бұрын

    25:03 To get anywhere near this level of weathering of limestone with chemical dissolution (that sponge look) takes hundreds of thousands to millions of years, often hastened by rainwater which results in a smoother but sponge appearance. Weathering can also occur on a more immediate timescale due to factors such as water submersion (lake, pond, be it salt water or fresh) or fertile soil activity. Example, blocks exposed to fertile soil may undergo biological weathering from trees and vegetation over time. A possibility for example the 7m colossal megalithic block may have been in place for an extended period, accumulating approximately 8 meters of soil, or enough to cover it-a process estimated to take between 160,000 and 300,000+ years according to USDA statistics. It's essential to note the structures were already in existence and had been destroyed long before these natural processes began, adding another layer of complexity.

  • @ZeesNature
    @ZeesNature6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for everything you do, Ben! I remember back in the day footage and content like this was just a dream.

  • @steveo5295

    @steveo5295

    6 ай бұрын

    It has taken him years and alot of hard work to achieve this level...

  • @andrewgordon9588
    @andrewgordon95886 ай бұрын

    Love your work Ben huge fan. Wish you had more content I'm so astounded at the beauty and mystery in these ancient sites

  • @UnchartedX

    @UnchartedX

    6 ай бұрын

    making it as fast as i can, these long form scripted videos take time

  • @andrewgordon9588

    @andrewgordon9588

    6 ай бұрын

    @@UnchartedX Right on brother that's why your videos are the best in the business 👍

  • @BramBiesiekierski
    @BramBiesiekierski6 ай бұрын

    I moved a partially loaded 40' sea container by hand, mounted on wheels, using a chain block. The container was approx 10ton loaded according to the sideloader that delivered it. 10 ton was managable. I think i could maybe have moved 20 ton using the same chain block method. I cannot even imagine moving a 450+ ton mass.

  • @carlosdenevier9538

    @carlosdenevier9538

    5 ай бұрын

    so, you alone moved 10 tons and could move the double - and yet your imagination is poor. you are contradicting yourself mate. lol

  • @BramBiesiekierski

    @BramBiesiekierski

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@carlosdenevier9538 Yes I alone moved a 10 ton 40' shipping container. But I used a chain block, and I put wheels on the container so it could roll. The effort needed on the chain block to move the container was about half of my strength.

  • @BramBiesiekierski

    @BramBiesiekierski

    5 ай бұрын

    And yes, I can also imagine moving a 450t load. I have worked on 1200t crawler cranes before as an auto electrician. And seen them operate at a concrete bridge pre-fab yard. I just could not imagine doing it in ancient times without complex machines, mechanical power plants, hydraulics etc.

  • @lukecaverns
    @lukecaverns6 ай бұрын

    Incredible. Always packed with new info. Nice job Ben!🧱

  • @lindamckenzie4543
    @lindamckenzie45436 ай бұрын

    Many thanks, Ben. Appreciation and Merry Christmas, from New Zealand 🥰

  • @Gnarlee517
    @Gnarlee5176 ай бұрын

    Ben, I love the long form content. You’re doing great things and sharing this wonderful knowledge with the masses. Thank you

  • @illuminum87
    @illuminum876 ай бұрын

    Someone should try to build the whole plateau in unreal engine as it truly would have looked with its casing stones etc.

  • @abbynormalbrain8301
    @abbynormalbrain83016 ай бұрын

    Myself always wondered, what could destroy 1000 ton statues/monuments? Pretty thoroughly destroyed

  • @sergeyt2947

    @sergeyt2947

    6 ай бұрын

    massive flood

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    Metorific, Megadisaster that wiped out this Megolithic Society, Worldwide!

  • @Tubemanjac

    @Tubemanjac

    6 ай бұрын

    A 1000 ton block is nothing compared to natural and cosmic forces.

  • @rustycarpenter1219

    @rustycarpenter1219

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@sergeyt2947add plasma

  • @JasonAtlas

    @JasonAtlas

    5 ай бұрын

    Have you guys seen the way stairs in castles get worn away just by people walking on them. That's 400 years of exposure and those are inside and sheltered. Those statues have been outside for 1000s of years.

  • @findkip
    @findkip6 ай бұрын

    I forgot how wild it sounds in the kings chamber. Sound is energy waves and how a tone could energize that chamber then the entire thing

  • @sancho8521
    @sancho85216 ай бұрын

    ...I must say it again; There is no freaking way that The Great Pyramid was constructed in 20 years ! No Way 🎉 Thank You, Ben 😮❤

  • @darkgreenrifleman4871

    @darkgreenrifleman4871

    6 ай бұрын

    I believe it was built much faster. Using harmonic activated anti gravity Devices to move the stones. Harmonic drilling for the cutting and quarrying and 3dimensional printing/cutting,shaping of the stones once they were brought on sight. 🤷🏿‍♂️ We have the mechanical ⚙️ advantage,leverage, and electric ⚡️ bias that we don’t consider that we are actually working “harder “ and not smarter. The wheel is a bad idea made good.

  • @holladiewaldfee7518

    @holladiewaldfee7518

    5 ай бұрын

    No way??? 🤣🤣🤣🤣 why not, even with easy 2. class math you can prove, that its no Problem for an organized Civilization like the Egyptians…

  • @MyVinylRips
    @MyVinylRips6 ай бұрын

    Can't believe my eyes when I see all that trash people throw around this place.

  • @bjornark
    @bjornark6 ай бұрын

    Got the Laphroaig and Staropramen ready! And the day tomorrow off. This is awesome. Thank you for what you do.

  • @AdventureswithAixe596

    @AdventureswithAixe596

    6 ай бұрын

    Laphroaig is also one of my favorites - even if it’s a bit of the pharmacy compartment of whiskeys ;) It was mentioned in a Travenian book and I tried it. Great!

  • @BCTGuitarPlayer
    @BCTGuitarPlayer6 ай бұрын

    If we were given the ability to go back in time to see the builders & their technological methods, it would leave us breathless. If only...

  • @marie5517
    @marie55176 ай бұрын

    Since these blocks were moved/lifted in different structures thru time it wasn't an experiment or luck. To start the building process they were confident they could move/lift these blocks. They could also lift/move the obelisks evident by the abandoned one. Being able to do move/lift such mass, something we'd find difficult today, was no big deal to them.

  • @northeden8661
    @northeden86616 ай бұрын

    Beyond the seemingly impossible feats of engineering and precision that it took to build everything, the thing that baffles me the most is that a one point in the very, very ancient past a group of beings built everything and then just didn't bother to leave a record explaining how they did it all and they also seem to have packed up all their tools and technology and vanished to parts unknown all the while never bothering to explain the purpose of these megaliths in the first place. It's like a Vogon Constructor Fleet was contracted to build everything. They came down and fulfilled the requirements, got paid and took away all evidence that they were ever there.

  • @adrianzmajla4844

    @adrianzmajla4844

    6 ай бұрын

    Why would they leave equipment and real knowledge to their slaves?

  • @paulmcneill2666
    @paulmcneill26666 ай бұрын

    Amazing stuff yet again . Definitely at least 50 thousand years of erosion. They where definitely made for a really important reason. Full power to you brother . I know the answers are sometimes hard to believe. The technology and tools are one thing . Transport is another . Who would even suggest that the whole complex was built with hand tools and man power ? Keep up the brilliant work . Thanks .

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, only add about 300,000 years onto that 50,000 year date!

  • @Hoobz01
    @Hoobz016 ай бұрын

    Amazing again. Love it that we see a vid and more stuff from you, then life gets busy and your topics unfortunately go to back of mind. Then you bring out something else and we get brought back to your world with wonders like this and we get blown away again. Thanks again for doing this for those stuck in normal real life 😅

  • @travisj.936
    @travisj.9366 ай бұрын

    Great work! Look like that flood did a number on the whole valley! So much to uncover an discover out there in this massive world!

  • @darkgreenrifleman4871
    @darkgreenrifleman48716 ай бұрын

    Uncharted X = The edge of Mystery

  • @Parabola001
    @Parabola0016 ай бұрын

    The more I look at these heavily eroded giant limestone blocks, the more I feel like they must have been under water for thousands of years.

  • @WilliamZunigaWill
    @WilliamZunigaWill6 ай бұрын

    Thank you Ben for these wonderful and informative videos.Such an amazing place and people still leave their trash all over that site.

  • @East10Outpost
    @East10Outpost6 ай бұрын

    It never fails to amaze me the hubris involved in academia. The old world was so sophisticated. We dunk on them as primitives meanwhile the average man of their time could tell you celestial movements in the cosmos 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @phillcantrell9060
    @phillcantrell90606 ай бұрын

    As an consultant industrial chemist the drill and saw marks fascinate me. To explore what type of metal/s made these cuts you could use a portable XRF (X-Ray Fluorescence) machine. These give you an immediate read out on a display what metals are present, the tool is light, compact, easy to use and resembles a hair dryer. Traces of the metal cutting materials should be embedded in the stones cutting face. Also, I have found cutting rock with a saw using sand abrasive and/water is far less rapid than using an oil water emulsion or just oil, give it a try. Thanks for your great show it gives us all food for thought.

  • @zaphodbeeblebrox2817
    @zaphodbeeblebrox28176 ай бұрын

    IMO, Some unknown entity built(around the world) underground safe spaces so humans could survive the flood. The boxes underground held food/supplies, the pyramids were machines, HVAC, light, water, sewer pumps. If you stacked up several layers of the disc of sabu(schist disc), rotate each layer 120deg, put it in a tube of the same diameter, it looks like a Tesla Valve. Move it up and down in the tube and it could be a pump for air or water. If they could manipulate stone so well I imagine they didn't create any artificial material, everything they made was of natural material so now everything is disintegrated or taken. It seems to explain all the evidence, al least to me.

  • @iamAwesomo1994
    @iamAwesomo19946 ай бұрын

    Hard to think how anything but insanely large, complex and powerful machines or straight up breaking the laws of physics as we know them could have possibly moved or created these blocks...simply mind boggling

  • @matthewbarrios1028
    @matthewbarrios10286 ай бұрын

    Been following you for years buddy and love seeing a new video drop. Thanks!

  • @gijoe3717
    @gijoe37175 ай бұрын

    I find these videos absolutely fascinating,, the most frustrating thing is we probably will never really know truly how when or why these amazing structures were constructed!!! 😢

  • @Shaneedward42
    @Shaneedward426 ай бұрын

    No way bronze age people built these.

  • @sailingwinifred
    @sailingwinifred6 ай бұрын

    I would agree that moving these huge stones over land would be impracticle to impossible. But over water - it would be very possible. Perhaps we could hypothesise that the water levels, rivers and seas boundries were completely differend in these ancient times allowing marine transportation of these rocks for a majority of their journey? If only we had a time machine and could journey back to these times and see for ourselves the reality behind all of these ancient mysteries!

  • @limitlesspower7172
    @limitlesspower71726 ай бұрын

    watching since 2018 and still learning.. Thanks dude!! Hope to make the tour soon!

  • @ambiguousUndertones-

    @ambiguousUndertones-

    3 ай бұрын

    If you haven't worked it out for yourself by now, you never will.

  • @edwardbishop1176
    @edwardbishop11766 ай бұрын

    I have never heard anyone explain how these underground passages and spaces were light.

  • @UnchartedX

    @UnchartedX

    6 ай бұрын

    me either.

  • @seltonk5136

    @seltonk5136

    2 ай бұрын

    I forgot to explain this , I am working two jobs cut me some slack

  • @elemenz888
    @elemenz8886 ай бұрын

    Are there more Lidar studies around and below the pyramids? Did they dig tunnels into the lowest chambers or were the pyramids built from that low level basement up entirely? Also knowing they might be over 12,000 years old, was the terrain once much lower before the mega floods possibly covered it all in mud and sand? Get a team to make some proper 3D models of the pyramids below ground, would be nice.

  • @UnchartedX

    @UnchartedX

    6 ай бұрын

    There are some good 3d models of the plateau that include the internal passages of pyramids, there's definitely one for sketchup that I have somewhere

  • @seltonk5136

    @seltonk5136

    2 ай бұрын

    I could turn the tables and ask you the same thing

  • @CarsCatAliens
    @CarsCatAliens6 ай бұрын

    One of my very favorite channels ! I'd love to meet Yusef. The man is a walking wealth of knowledge

  • @pytheus
    @pytheus6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for another great video Ben!! So many more questions than answers. Maddening to not know.

  • @steveo5295
    @steveo52956 ай бұрын

    Seeing those channeled stones reminded of the channels on a lathe keeping the material straight and centered. I wonder if this was part of the building machine, then after it's usage was accomplished it was incorporated into the building sight with another function...

  • @chrishagan9366
    @chrishagan93666 ай бұрын

    The amount of rubbish on the ground absolutely astounds me... at such a magical location..😔 Another great video Ben 👌 ❤🇦🇺❤

  • @johngaither9263

    @johngaither9263

    4 ай бұрын

    Bins for rubbish while a noteworthy idea would soon be overflowing. The native culture frowns upon men participating in such work and forbids women for doing so. You'd think it would be contracted to people who are willing to do such work but the Egyptian Antiquities people are unwilling to spend the money. The Giza plateau and adjoining structures is nothing but a huge cash cow for the powers that be. It's all about the money.

  • @inalaboyy
    @inalaboyy6 ай бұрын

    Deadly video bro, always love to be educated & learn new things. No better way than watching UnchartedX 🙏🏽 Merry Christmas from Brisbane brother 🇦🇺

  • @taylorfinn3823
    @taylorfinn38236 ай бұрын

    Happy you made it in the show bro. Congratulations and keep pushing forward 🤙

  • @SamSeth
    @SamSeth6 ай бұрын

    Nice job Ben. Keep it up -Each time you mention Chris Dunn in your videos I'm happy to look up to his books sitting on my shelf. As far as i'm concerned his books prove that a certain advanced level of machinery was required to execute the early works

  • @dunnobagels
    @dunnobagels6 ай бұрын

    Hey Ben, I've been up and down on ancient history stuff lately. I got depleted when seeing certain things about certain ancient artifacts that disproved most ancient history stories I've had. But Egypt is the one weird one where not everything can be explained and I appreciate your continued efforts to prove what you believe even with naysayers out there. I have been really negative about some of Jimmy's videos lately but this video really brought me back to center and made me remember that there are still so many unexplainable things and even if one thing gets debunked I don't have to throw everything out the window.

  • @hiboostchosh

    @hiboostchosh

    6 ай бұрын

    The vases alone are more than enough proof dude.

  • @dunnobagels

    @dunnobagels

    6 ай бұрын

    @@hiboostchosh Cool? I'm not going to go through and mention everything that he has done. And just because you find something conclusive it doesn't mean that it's fact or that everyone agrees. But I said "so many unexplainable things."

  • @kamalraj4456
    @kamalraj44562 ай бұрын

    Worked on Aircraft’s for 13 years ,so I have a deep appreciation for Engineering feats period.. I’m completely blown away with the ancients Knowledge & creativity in their construction of works in Egypt. I love hearing the wide spectrum of theories and hypothesis . Great show !

  • @JohnLRice
    @JohnLRice6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for another excellent video, Ben! Merry Christmas to you and yours!

  • @Eye_Exist
    @Eye_Exist6 ай бұрын

    note how the limestone erosion looks rather like acid corrosion (the concaved bubbling pattern) than water or wind erosion. ps. the painting at 39:51 could just as well be a depiction of the Egyptians telling fables or trying to understand how the massive statues they found already in place were moved. it comes with multiple interpretations; a painting is not scientific evidence for an event or method. it doesn't suggest this was the method they used to move the stones or that they moved them, especially considering how little amount of workers it depicts compared to the size of the statue.

  • @recoilrob324
    @recoilrob3246 ай бұрын

    Thank you Ben! Every video you produce leaves me astounded and just dumbfounded as to how all of the work could have been done. It all had to have been planned to be executed so well and today such planning would have a semi-trailer full of working prints to accomplish. Wonder how they did it? Makes my brain ache from being so dumb that I can't figure it out.

  • @elizabethlockley5861

    @elizabethlockley5861

    6 ай бұрын

    We still can’t do any of this even today

  • @markmacthree3168

    @markmacthree3168

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@elizabethlockley5861it's poured on site and fossilised stone no one carved them 💯%

  • @BigBagg69

    @BigBagg69

    6 ай бұрын

    Alien levitation technology??

  • @AD-vh9mt
    @AD-vh9mt6 ай бұрын

    My favorite KZread channel and it isn’t close at this point. You the man Ben!

  • @richmondraider716
    @richmondraider7166 ай бұрын

    I always take away so many more questions than answers from your work. Brilliant content.

  • @ScrewdriverTUNING
    @ScrewdriverTUNING6 ай бұрын

    Very great video Ben. I think those U shape blocks were the release of fresh water. I think those temples MT and VT were salt removers. Very similar to reverse osmosis. Obviously the membrane is missing. Durring the dry season the lower elevation temple provides the fresh water. Durring flood season the higher temple provided water to everyone visiting. Yes I think flood season made it easy to sail rite into the sphinx enclosure or up to. They were able to fill and drain the platue at will Im still in search of the filling mechanics or input but I’m sure the drain back to the Nile is plugged. “Mud pits” happen when drains get plugged.

  • @mikelee9886
    @mikelee98866 ай бұрын

    I think when we are talking about the machines that were used to make these extremely precise by gigantic blocks and statues, what we need to consider is that the main thing separating us from the past in terms on technology is the assembly line, or mass production. Their machines wouldn't be built like ours intended on being made for consumers, they would have been purpose-built, in place, for their specific jobs, and then disassembled, for their parts to be re-used in other locations. As far as what powered their machines, it's possible that they used gear reduction techniques and the machines were actually human or water powered. I think the reason we don't see the wheel implemented in everyday life here should be obvious.... wheels are worthless in sand without some kind of internal power supply. Even today, a modern vehicle is almost completely useless in deep sand unless it's specifically designed to deal with sand, using large, wide tires with aggressive tread, weight distribution to maximize traction, and compact, high horsepower engines, all mounted to an ultra-light, rigid chassis with long-travel suspension. Anything less is practically useless. So they could have understood the concept of a wheel in things like machines, but have had absolutely no use for the wheel when it comes to things like making carts to transport people and goods, they lacked the sufficient material science and mass-production to build those kinds of machines. But, they COULD make very large, one-time use machines that utilized internal wheels and gears, powered by things like water flowing over a wheel and being gear-reduced to do what they needed it to do. They obviously had some kind of advanced technology, my hypothesis though is that their idea of a machine would just look much different than ours, not being made to be used for many years in a shop or something, but built in-place, and then disassembled after they were used, which is why we don't see them around anymore.

  • @fennynough6962

    @fennynough6962

    6 ай бұрын

    A roadway is needed to move Megablocks, & we see here 450 TON Polygonal Stones placed directly into the Bedrock! Wooden sleds are a joke: (even in sand). The fact that Ramsey pillaged these Rose Granite Blocks from Egypts Sacred Pyramids; (shows disrespect, & dissolution of creating his own)!

  • @Tubemanjac

    @Tubemanjac

    6 ай бұрын

    Maybe we should partly step out of thinking in terms of traditional machining and rethink physics science out of box. Perhaps there exist physics and/or chemistry "laws" we haven't discovered yet. Still our defined four fundamental forces model at work in the universe isn't a zero sum "equation".

  • @Tubemanjac

    @Tubemanjac

    6 ай бұрын

    Maybe we should partly step out of thinking in terms of traditional machining and rethink physics science out of box. Perhaps there exist physics and/or chemistry "laws" we haven't discovered yet. Still our defined four fundamental forces model at work in the universe isn't a zero sum "equation".

  • @joepro6785
    @joepro67856 ай бұрын

    Love the level of description you reach, another profound video 🎉

  • @Dannyfromnewquay
    @Dannyfromnewquay6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the videos mate,I genuinely look forward to them,,you have taught me so much about history, thanks

  • @Voltar78
    @Voltar786 ай бұрын

    Incredible video. Dark red granite case of Chafre Pyramid, tremendous level of erosion...

  • @jasonbuxton3358
    @jasonbuxton33585 ай бұрын

    Hey dude I love your content. Always find myself coming back for more!

  • @anchorpoint5871
    @anchorpoint58716 ай бұрын

    One more stone in the already heavy boat of official history...to be honest im now asking how many civilizations over how many thousands of years and..were they even humans?

  • @MickAngelhere
    @MickAngelhere6 ай бұрын

    The problem with archeologists and historians is they are very much stuck in the nineteenth and twentieth century mindset of the superior modern European culture. They cannot even understand or want to know that history isn’t just a neat and tidy linear timeline of human experience but one that where parts are known as there are written documentation from down the centuries. But there is the unknown that comes before the world of writing and that is what happened before the Younger Dryas. We have myths and legends that have been told throughout history of a time before in all cultures, myths are based on a real history but told in a manner that is easily understood and remembered. Great video and it is wonderful to see the Giza Plateau in a way that is not shown in mainstream documentaries, its as if they don’t want to show the world, what is really there and it’s importance to world history. It’s seems to me that they are hiding something

  • @jerimiehall
    @jerimiehall6 ай бұрын

    Merry Christmas, brother. Thanks for the great content.

  • @PhilipCockram
    @PhilipCockram6 ай бұрын

    Excellent as always Ben . Thanks . Merry Christmas 🎄

  • @inmyopinion6836
    @inmyopinion68366 ай бұрын

    Thank you for being someone who brings us more than old stale news of this wonder of humanity. My mind is racing thinking of the erosion dating of Schock and others. The granite casing stone below the heavily eroded limestone wall that Yusef showed was the first time I got it. There IS actual evidence leading to the prehistoric possibilities of the origins of this place. GIANTS ??? Quite possible, in my book! Too much is historic writings to discard the idea, and it would explain a lot.

  • @thehairywoodsman5644
    @thehairywoodsman56446 ай бұрын

    the ancients moved the huge megaliths by using domesticated sauropods the same way people use mules or oxen. a team of 6, 50 ton creatures could easily pull a 500 ton stone.

  • @Kayluv101

    @Kayluv101

    6 ай бұрын

    They could’ve used mammoths 🦣

  • @thehairywoodsman5644

    @thehairywoodsman5644

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Kayluv101 mammoths in Egypt ?

  • @sonnylambert4893

    @sonnylambert4893

    6 ай бұрын

    Surely you jest as you smoke that chronic 😂

  • @thehairywoodsman5644

    @thehairywoodsman5644

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sonnylambert4893 don't panic it's organic .....no jest brother....

  • @Valkyrie_71
    @Valkyrie_716 ай бұрын

    @14:26 the sheer look of joy on Jimmy's face hey? haha

  • @ChrisMaveric
    @ChrisMaveric6 ай бұрын

    Very compelling points at the end...fascinating video!

  • @Eye_Exist
    @Eye_Exist6 ай бұрын

    It's comical to see the reaches of just how far the people are willing to go to ignore this evidence and explain it with simple bronze age methods, even though the idea of stone and bronze age origin isn't even supported by any evidence.

  • @steveo5295

    @steveo5295

    6 ай бұрын

    There is nothing simple about the Giza Plateau. Just trying to put together the pieces of the puzzle after erosion, repair and re-purposed materials is a daunting task. Anyone claiming otherwise doesn't have a clue of what went on...

  • @bluesky6985

    @bluesky6985

    6 ай бұрын

    There was a first earth age

  • @IcelanderUSer

    @IcelanderUSer

    6 ай бұрын

    It just shows how advanced some aspects of ancient times were. They were experts at moving and working with extremely heavy and hard materials. I find it disturbing how easily recorded history can be lost.

  • @adrianwalker8054

    @adrianwalker8054

    6 ай бұрын

    Not a chance in hell they built any of it with basic tools , it’s laughable

  • @Eye_Exist

    @Eye_Exist

    6 ай бұрын

    @@IcelanderUSer no it doesn't. extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, which you (they) must prove in order to make the theory of stone and bronze age builders even worth considering. both that it would even be possible AND that they in fact did build them, because i'ts two different things.

  • @greghelms4458
    @greghelms44586 ай бұрын

    Ben. Have you done a video on where all of the repurposed stone went and or where it is now? If not has anyone that you know of? It’s has to be able to be tracked because of its composition doesn’t it?

  • @UnchartedX

    @UnchartedX

    6 ай бұрын

    Haven't done a video on it, but we know where some of the granite went, to what sites. There are also plenty of stones from ancient sites in Islamic Cairo, I'll do a video on that one day.

  • @greghelms4458

    @greghelms4458

    6 ай бұрын

    @@UnchartedX very cool. Thanks.

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