Oldest Technologies Scientists STILL Can't Explain

Ancient flamethrowers? Eternal swords? Computers older than Jesus?! It's time to take a look at some old technology the scientists still can't explain.
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Пікірлер: 654

  • @sureshwaran-zs1wt
    @sureshwaran-zs1wt6 ай бұрын

    5:21 it has proven many times that "stair" is a farming land that was build like stair to get more sun light and easy farming

  • @DMPB-fi2ir

    @DMPB-fi2ir

    2 ай бұрын

    ya they narrate this to sensationalize and mislead the fools so they tell more to come its anothr form of click bait " misinformation "

  • @istantinoplebullconsta642

    @istantinoplebullconsta642

    Ай бұрын

    I see your misunderstanding here. This channel is clickbait. Honesty is not a priority for content pumps like this one.

  • @walterrutherford8321

    @walterrutherford8321

    Ай бұрын

    Terraced farmland is found all around the world anyplace people live on mountains. It’s just common sense to flatten the land to make it easier to walk on (it’s easier to work on flat ground than on a hill) and to retain water rather than have it all just rush downhill.

  • @dealarr

    @dealarr

    Ай бұрын

    Can you find another video that shows a rice paddy or terraced rice field that looks like what the video shows.

  • @user-mu6pw6gb4p

    @user-mu6pw6gb4p

    Ай бұрын

    Yea, it's called terraforming.

  • @tiffanynajberg5177
    @tiffanynajberg51776 ай бұрын

    The first computer is still in use in the DMV, and accounts for its stellar efficiency.

  • @ruth_southernstar

    @ruth_southernstar

    6 ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @DravenGal

    @DravenGal

    6 ай бұрын

    This comment should be pinned!

  • @ruth_southernstar

    @ruth_southernstar

    6 ай бұрын

    Patty and Selma take too many fag breaks 🚬

  • @19bishop56

    @19bishop56

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m laughing so hard, it’s SO TRUE! Sadly😕

  • @DravenGal

    @DravenGal

    6 ай бұрын

    I think they share it with the post office during the holidays.

  • @jus10lewissr
    @jus10lewissrАй бұрын

    Our ancient ancestors have been grossly underestimated. Unfortunately, some discoveries require such a large rewrite of human history that they're literally ignored and swept under the rug.

  • @rynneivarsson751

    @rynneivarsson751

    Ай бұрын

    In our rush to declare ourselves the "most" advanced, we've forgotten more than we can ever re-learn as a species.

  • @user-xk1ff4gp7k

    @user-xk1ff4gp7k

    Ай бұрын

    Those great civilizations swept their own history under the rug if they were truly intelligent why won't they have t o l d us goodbye

  • @rynneivarsson751

    @rynneivarsson751

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-xk1ff4gp7k Well.. let's think about that. If I bury paper, parchment, leather, even clay tablets for 5K years, in most cases there will be nothing left. Stone carvings are the most durable. Also, our structures, our highways, everything... if there was no one to maintain them, the land would start reclaiming them in a few decades. By 10K years later, there wouldn't be much left at all. There was a series on I think Discovery a few years ago that examined this, that we will leave very little to indicate we were ever here. We build no solid stone megaliths... Concrete erodes... Trees come back... freezing happens... If you add to that continental drift and cataclysmic natural events, what would be left of US? Our plastic gadgets will form into stones over time, the metal in them will corrode, the cases surrounded by slurry/mud. How would they write us a message? What medium would tolerate time if buildings would be gone in a few hundred years? How would future generations find it? What if it's in a location that gets hit with a volcanic eruption, flood, etc. For more info, look up "Homo Naledi", the caves are pretty interesting. As far as advanced civ's go, Puma Punku, Gobleki Tepi and newer research on the highways on the ocean floor.

  • @d.henderson1347

    @d.henderson1347

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-xk1ff4gp7kLots of things were told and written down for history but like stated things get swept up under the rug and/or hidden from the masses so they can search for and test things in secret goofball it’s not that hard to put that together doofus smh lol

  • @ernestmac13

    @ernestmac13

    Ай бұрын

    Ancient people didn't have the distractions we have today; and they had plenty of time with which to innovate. Anthropologists have debunked these so called forgotten knowledge; showing how the technologies present at that time.could.build.these structures.

  • @patriciaposthumus6684
    @patriciaposthumus66846 ай бұрын

    One of the ancient technologies that I wish we still had today is Roman cement. That stuff is crazy strong and still stands today thousands of years later. We can barely get a cement sidewalk to last 5 yrs before you start to see cracks in it.

  • @DharcDuke

    @DharcDuke

    6 ай бұрын

    We already found a way to make roman cement since last year

  • @louisfivaz1367

    @louisfivaz1367

    6 ай бұрын

    No secret anymore, but expensive for the microscopic moisture absorbing crystals in the mix.

  • @rogueascendant6611

    @rogueascendant6611

    6 ай бұрын

    Most of Roman infrastructure like paved roads, plumbing, aqueducts, and concrete buildings were originated from the Etruscans. The Estruscans was the most developed society at the time before the Romans came into power. All those things that was built by the Roman Empires as they grow and expanded were all stuff from the Estruscans. What happened to them? The Romans with their growing power completely conquered and destroyed the Estruscans civilization. They looted and taken their technology and wonders for themselves. There were no define unity between the Estruscans as they were city-states. So it was an easy conquest for the growing power of the Romans to take upon themselves.

  • @theodoreroberts3407

    @theodoreroberts3407

    6 ай бұрын

    The funny thing about Roman concrete is it got harder in water. That still makes me wonder.

  • @patriciaposthumus6684

    @patriciaposthumus6684

    6 ай бұрын

    @theodoreroberts3407 Yeah, but not just any type of water, though. More specifically, salt water. In the last couple of years they have made great strides in trying to find the right formula that the Roman's used, and to be fair they have gotten really close to it, but the fact remains they have yet to figure out the exact formula. This is a forgotten technology that we in the 21st century have yet to recreate.

  • @darkwarrior03352
    @darkwarrior033526 ай бұрын

    Those lines cut in the stone column look like something that I would do to practice using a scroll saw. Maybe it had no purpose, and was just someone learning how to use the saw, and practicing by cutting lines through a scrap piece of stone.

  • @weatherwitchandfelinefamiliars
    @weatherwitchandfelinefamiliars6 ай бұрын

    This was fascinating. I studied British Prehistoric Archaeology and it is incredible what our ancestors could do, especially when compared to today. Stonehenge as we see it now with the stones was the final part of what took several thousand years to build. You have the earthworks, the avenues, the causeway enclosures all rich around there. The UK is so rich still with phenomenal structures and so many other countries have their own magnificent structures too 😊 Great viewing, thank you very much 😊

  • @lucidfangirl1030

    @lucidfangirl1030

    20 күн бұрын

    True. We only taught abt stonehenge and post-medieval and Roman feats, i bet theres more

  • @andrewobrien8325
    @andrewobrien83255 ай бұрын

    Something I remember Mike Loades saying during a documentary with Tony Robinson on the Peasants Revolt was something to the effect that "Historians loved recording what happened but not the how it happened" in the example Mike and Tony were trying to explain how the Peasants during the revolt got to London in the time they did. I think this comes from people back then thinking that something would be universally understood later but not accounting for changes in technology, geography and other factors.

  • @kentworch
    @kentworch6 ай бұрын

    Definitely liked this one. Very interesting stuff here. I think I might know how a couple of these things might've been done, but definitely very interesting to say the least. Thank you for the awesome video.

  • @TCAPChrisHandsome
    @TCAPChrisHandsome5 ай бұрын

    Stonehenge makes sense. Never doubt the power of human boredom.

  • @Shikaku2
    @Shikaku26 ай бұрын

    Expanding on the glass dichromic nanotechnology, I think they were on to something with nanotechnology. Roman concrete uses techniques similar to carbon nanotubes to give it it's extremely long lasting properties. Maybe it was 2 coincidences because the formula just was lime, volcanic ash and seawater, which seems simple enough for anyone to do however.

  • @roderickmurdoch5264
    @roderickmurdoch52646 ай бұрын

    Fun fact one of the gates at Stonehenge points directly to another neothaic site in New Hampshire.

  • @fburnsDubstepEnderFox
    @fburnsDubstepEnderFox6 ай бұрын

    Okay but the giant stairs are actually terrace farms. Traditional farming wasn't possible where they lived thus terrace farms. 😅

  • @02biddee

    @02biddee

    6 ай бұрын

    This is the answer. If they were steps made for giants, why would the giants also make human sized steps?

  • @sik7476

    @sik7476

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@02biddeemaybe because there were humans as well... ya think? Sik

  • @sik7476

    @sik7476

    6 ай бұрын

    ...but it was possible to carve stone with bronze, huh? 😂 Sik

  • @everx7

    @everx7

    6 ай бұрын

    this is the thing, we explain things we see now as we know what they should be NOW, but were those steps really used for farming or some type of garden, . or just really steps, but steps for whom? Giants? of course not, but why? well thats the part were no one knows. Yes the most obvious answer is, terrace farms, like we see in asian countries predominantly , but are they really? I think unless someone finds some carving or something, we wont know for sure

  • @bunyipdragon9499

    @bunyipdragon9499

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@lylecoglianese1645there are human size steps running the full length alongside the terraced steps.

  • @wandapease-gi8yo
    @wandapease-gi8yoАй бұрын

    This is the best of these BE AMAZED I seen.

  • @musharrafkhalil8506
    @musharrafkhalil85066 ай бұрын

    I am addicted to your video intro, especially the "WOW" part.

  • @MikeP2055
    @MikeP20556 ай бұрын

    The Ancients don't get nearly enough of the recognition and respect that they deserve. It seems bonkers to us for a people to drag enormous monoliths 100+ miles on wooden runners from a quarry to a specific site, only for them to set them upright and atop one another. But one thing I always keep in mind is WHAT ELSE ARE THE GOING TO DO? Obviously they have to keep themselves alive with clothing, shelter, and food from hunting, gathering, farming, etc. Aside from that, there were no streaming services, video games, or even books (in many cases) to keep them entertained day in and day out. Instead, they carefully watched the cycles of earth's seasons, the moon's phases, and the movement of the stars. Over and over. Every single day. For their entire lifetime. I have a feeling that their perception of passing time was very different from ours. The giant "steps" were almost certainly used for terraced farming. They still use terraces for crops right there in the same valley to this day! You can easily see them from the giant steps by simply turning around, hahaha. The Nazca Lines could have easily been formed by first precisely drawing a much smaller image, then meticulously scaling it up. With ropes and stakes and one hell of an understanding of dimension, they were etched in the soil for whomever to see. They didn't need to be able to see it from above to know what it looked like. As to why? Who knows, but I'd bet a dollar they were intended for gods or maybe a calendar or something. Maybe even several different uses.

  • @harrywalker968

    @harrywalker968

    6 ай бұрын

    bs.. aliens built all megalithic structures.. the pyramids are over 100,000 yrs old,, they were factories for chemicals..ever played jenga.??.. they took granite blocks, direct out of mountains, . transported 500 miles over mountains, WITH AIR SHIPS, UFO,S ECT.. look up nan madol. the natives say the blocks were flown there, from the top of a volcano.. watch. viper tv sumerian tablets. unchartedx.. praveen mohan.. brian foerster.. the facts by how to hunt.. native u.s. indians, say, b/foot [ sabe], was ''made'', genetically, before man.. we, were ''made'', as workers, in mines.. the bible is bs, history is bs, the scientific world is bs.. as to farming, they taught us to farm, they made grains, brought things from there planet..which comes around every 3,600 yrs.. fact..

  • @MakinnaB24
    @MakinnaB246 ай бұрын

    The Greeks are the key to Western Civilization. The Romans just took everything and gave it new names, and took credit for them.

  • @DravenGal

    @DravenGal

    6 ай бұрын

    Hear hear!

  • @featherpayne

    @featherpayne

    6 ай бұрын

    Sounds like the dad in my big fat Greek wedding.

  • @daggermouth4695

    @daggermouth4695

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@featherpaynehaha settle down. Your Greek dad can barley spell 3 syllable words let alone know anything about ancient history.

  • @davidarundel6187

    @davidarundel6187

    6 ай бұрын

    And the Greeks , took from the Egyptians, who took from their predecessors

  • @TheOutlawGeneralBacon

    @TheOutlawGeneralBacon

    6 ай бұрын

    And butt sex 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @liitswqvsl9879
    @liitswqvsl98796 ай бұрын

    I don't wanna be nitpicking but the Nazca lines weren't made by the Incans, but a pre-Incan civilization called the Nazca. BTW good job on the vid, I really enjoyed it!

  • @user-pp7yg8js8n
    @user-pp7yg8js8n2 ай бұрын

    I like your videos because you never clickbait your viewers

  • @osanieslana960
    @osanieslana9606 ай бұрын

    11:07 The narrator conveniently forgets to mention the blocks are made of the hardest granite known but have no tool marks.

  • @David-gh6vp

    @David-gh6vp

    Ай бұрын

    And that many were transported 100's of kilometers. These structures are NOT the work of Inca or any other hominid race. Even the Spanish in 1500's knew this!

  • @amurtigress_mobile365
    @amurtigress_mobile3656 ай бұрын

    There is another example about swords: Around the year 0, Norikan swords were popular in ancient Rome. About 300BC, there was an explosion of a meteorite in mid-air above the Noriker's homeland in southern Bavaria, near the nowadays austrian border. That meteorite scattered a healthy amount of iridium across the landscape. For 300 years this displaced the population, but when they returned they unknowingly used PROTOSOLAR MATTER that hardened their sword blades. At that time it was normal that swords were bending during battles and needed to be straightened. With their harder to bend swords the romans had a clear edge! (Ha, pun...)

  • @TheRealTakoOrder
    @TheRealTakoOrder6 ай бұрын

    I feel like back then we were the kind of stupid that we were smart *proceeds to realise that I haven’t evolved at all*

  • @user-df1tu8xq4k

    @user-df1tu8xq4k

    6 ай бұрын

    🙌😂 true tho

  • @keiragalaise6435
    @keiragalaise64356 ай бұрын

    "It was believed that the Nazca lines were meant to be used as a symbol to ask the gods for help...help with drawing the Nazca lines. Bazinga! ...All jokes aside, I am obsessed with the famed historical drawings and I hope to see them for myself someday!

  • @duudsuufd

    @duudsuufd

    2 ай бұрын

    Drawing circles is easy, on any scale. You need a centre point and a rope with a certain length. Even spirals. Steady roll the rope on a piece of wood, so it becomes shorter while moving around in circles.

  • @IAW88
    @IAW886 ай бұрын

    Your video has so many good moments, I didn't waste any time relaxing with it

  • @bunyipdragon9499
    @bunyipdragon94996 ай бұрын

    My main query about the giant steps being terraced farming is the solid flat surface - not sure much would grow on or through that.

  • @DawnDavidson

    @DawnDavidson

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe there used to be soil, but it’s been eroded away?

  • @UNICORNSF3ProgameplayProRACER
    @UNICORNSF3ProgameplayProRACER6 ай бұрын

    Great video👍

  • @Gord1812
    @Gord18125 ай бұрын

    The batteries would have put out DC voltage. AC voltage is used for relaxing/messaging muscles.

  • @massiah1314
    @massiah13145 ай бұрын

    I wonder if the NASDAQ lines, the spiral in particular, if measured reveals that it matches the golden ratio 🤔

  • @lancerevell5979

    @lancerevell5979

    3 ай бұрын

    Electronic stock market? 🤔

  • @djshazaaaaaaam
    @djshazaaaaaaam6 ай бұрын

    awesome info again ty

  • @ThrillSeeker3524
    @ThrillSeeker35246 ай бұрын

    He's right about Wootz steel. Only Japanese swordsmiths ever truly use anything like the old ways anymore. The bands come from folding and twisting of the steel to drive out impurities and smoothen the carbon content throughout. Modern Damascus is more of a statement, because it simply layers different types of finished steel bars or rods, which does not improve upon the performance of a single piece of well-made, well-forged steel.

  • @OnTheRiver66

    @OnTheRiver66

    6 ай бұрын

    The wootz steel was never made by the Japanese. Roselli makes knife blades out of wootz steel. In wootz steel hard iron carbides are dispersed which make the blades very hard. It was made in the Middle East. I read a technical report on exactly how it was made over 40 years ago based on an examination of a wootz manufacturing site in the Middle East. It was not folded like pattern welded steel.

  • @mildfund
    @mildfund6 ай бұрын

    I enjoy your content more than anything

  • @Cleatus546

    @Cleatus546

    Ай бұрын

    "More than anything"? I don't believe it.

  • @Cleatus546

    @Cleatus546

    Ай бұрын

    More than this 👉🍔

  • @johnphillips5310
    @johnphillips53106 ай бұрын

    Our ancestors were more developed in math, engineering, and social development than us.

  • @unnamed7430

    @unnamed7430

    6 ай бұрын

    especially the last part

  • @olgagagarina4166

    @olgagagarina4166

    6 ай бұрын

    Social development. That triggers me. I dnt like strangers gwahhh!!!! Lmao

  • @Jakeg23

    @Jakeg23

    6 ай бұрын

    true and many more things

  • @rogueascendant6611

    @rogueascendant6611

    6 ай бұрын

    That's because people at that time weren't distracted by MODERN CONVENIENCE. They have others things to do like not dying from rampant diseases and usual conflicts.

  • @DownhillAllTheWay
    @DownhillAllTheWayАй бұрын

    The Chameleon cup is a wonder because its colours depend on nano-particles, and the speaker speculates (at 4:31) how they could have mastered the techniques without computers or microscopes. My understanding is (correct me if I'm wrong) that the micro-particles are too small to see with a microscope even if you had one - but in fact, stained glass windows use the same techniques, and they have been around for a long time too, in old churches. Perhaps this glass technique has been pased down from the Romans - that's a possibility - but a lot of what was known in those days was NOT passed down. For example, until the Anti-Kythera mechanism was found, examined and decoded, we believed that the earliest mechanisms using cogwheels in that way, were clocks, which were invented in the 13th century - yet the Antikythera mechanism was much more sophisticated than any early clock - and it comes from the time of Archimedes!

  • @ThrillSeeker3524
    @ThrillSeeker35246 ай бұрын

    Excellent video, Be Amazed! Your videos always brighten my day!

  • @bquade70
    @bquade706 ай бұрын

    Excellent!! Thank you ...

  • @chevtruck1000
    @chevtruck10006 ай бұрын

    The secrets for wootz steel are a very small percentage of vanadium and the forging process involving making crucible steel from the ore.

  • @richardgray5471
    @richardgray54716 ай бұрын

    There is another you tuber (click spring) who made an antikythera mechanism by hand. took him years, and he goes into great detail about it's many functions, not just the eclipses.

  • @theultimateyoutuber1
    @theultimateyoutuber16 ай бұрын

    Be amazed is one of the few channels that deserve to be a paid subscription 😊

  • @F32_PDX

    @F32_PDX

    6 ай бұрын

    You shut ur mouth 🤐

  • @onekerri1

    @onekerri1

    6 ай бұрын

    You first.

  • @harrywalker968

    @harrywalker968

    6 ай бұрын

    curious plus.. unchartedx.. the facts by how to hunt.. viper tv sumerian tablets.. praveen mohan. . be amazed is old news.. & doesnt give any explanation..the anti mech.. is far older than they say.. it could be 100,000 yrs old.. how did ''man'', know about precession, 23,000 yrs long.. sit around waiting.?. we were taught all things by our creators..aliens.. ie. viper tv.. watch it.. enki, made man, & saved us after his brother enlil, was told to destroy man with a flood, 13k ago.... religion is bs, scientists ect, are governed by religion & authorities, that need things to be atributed to them.. like,, egyptians, never built the pyramids.. same deal. history is bs.. we were created genetically, as workers, miners.. we still have part of there dna,, scientists know this, but ignore it.. if,,,, we came from apes. THERE WOULDNT BE ANY APES,,, WOULD THERE. darwin knew this. but couldnt say, or he,d lose credibility..'' missing link''..

  • @OnlyBanzho
    @OnlyBanzho6 ай бұрын

    The beat in the background is in my SoundCloud playlist. For years now. BE AMAZED😮

  • @Mr1nferno
    @Mr1nferno6 ай бұрын

    Black iron is the patina from heating it up to critical and slowly cool it off, the oxidation turns black instead of into rust and is weatherproof to an extent. Then heat it up slightly and coat with beeswax

  • @austinu7651
    @austinu76516 ай бұрын

    While I don't know much about that pole... could be something similar to bluing. Bluing is essentially intentionally causing a rust finish which is rust resistant with a black color. The finish looks quite similar.

  • @manueltapia1859
    @manueltapia18596 ай бұрын

    I'm not tired saying this love your voice!!!! 😊😊 Another mistery of incan people how could they cut with such precission the rocks for the buildings??? Also how Aztec could design drainage system back then?? 😮

  • @tomwesterbergh4887
    @tomwesterbergh48874 ай бұрын

    Some of these inventions look incredible and so mysterious and almost alien for how out of the world they look.

  • @oh.sparks
    @oh.sparks6 ай бұрын

    Damn youtube is really getting away with two unskippable ads in a row

  • @David-gh6vp

    @David-gh6vp

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, and censoring over the littlest of things. Freedom of speech my A-s.

  • @Skwish6952
    @Skwish69525 ай бұрын

    @Clickspring is recreating the greek mechanism. Using tools from that period. It is quite amazing all the little parts and the precision that the ancient greeks were capable of.

  • @Lmarimarre
    @Lmarimarre6 ай бұрын

    remember, back then it wasn’t a lot of distractions and only a few entertaining events. So they had nothing but time to focus on complex inventions especially if needing to conceal secrets and track everything in the world.

  • @franzkass5639
    @franzkass56396 ай бұрын

    9:05 The iron contains phosphorus which forms on contact with air iron phosphate which prevents rusting. BUT this iron-phosphorus-alloy is so brittle that it can't be used for machinery!

  • @Franceman.n
    @Franceman.n6 ай бұрын

    Nice one

  • @virgilius7036
    @virgilius70366 ай бұрын

    The Inca steps are built to be able to cultivate plants on the slopes of the mountains. We find the same at Machu Picchu.

  • @WhlteWolf9
    @WhlteWolf96 ай бұрын

    Those "giant stairs" arent actually stairs. Its a farm. Edit: as in terraces

  • @everx7

    @everx7

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes because they look like that, but are they really? or like were they really farms? Terrace farms? U just assuming as anyone else, even the scientist Saying that, i dont think they are stairs. But farms? really? do u have proof? or just seen the footage or some shots and u know those are farms, just because of them looking like what in nepal, india, thailand? come on now also look up terrace farms, these arent even close to resemble them, but whatever. I dont mind that we dont know, so we can guess and speculate and fantasize about what they couldve been lastly why would they build terrace farms out of rocks, so precise, there is and was an easier way to do them, u dont need big rocks to make terraces

  • @David-gh6vp

    @David-gh6vp

    Ай бұрын

    @@everx7 The Inca DID terrace slopes for various purposes, among them to farm, and control water run-off. The stones to support the edges [ @ 5:36] are not the mega-structure boulders that weigh many tons, and so were tenably built by the Inca. Those great walls @ 11:22 [Sacsayhuaman (sp ?)] were not built by any primitive native Americans, and any other hominid.

  • @dhm7815
    @dhm7815Ай бұрын

    I read a book summarizing Plato which was written before the discovery of the mechanism. The author took some stuff Plato said about progressing into the future and rewinding to the past and said he thought Plato had seen a geared mechanism which showed planetary positions. The author was trying to disprove an allegation often made that Plato hated practical matters in science in favor of his favorite emotional abstractions.

  • @daytonogier
    @daytonogier6 ай бұрын

    It would be so cool if time travel was possible i would love to see how the pyramids were created

  • @tveye363

    @tveye363

    5 ай бұрын

    We know how the pyramids were created. They literally just forced their slaves to work tirelessly til death and then replaced the dead with new slaves until their narcissistic monuments were complete.

  • @righty-o3585
    @righty-o35856 ай бұрын

    The Bagdad batteries have been tested, and they found that the max power one of them could put out was maybe strong enough to light a light bulb for like a minute.

  • @onidaaitsubasa4177

    @onidaaitsubasa4177

    6 ай бұрын

    Ahh, but that depends on the quality of the metal used and if it's new and the type of substance used for the battery acid, different mixtures would result in different voltage and what light bulb did they use for the test, cause it's not likely they would've had the same kind of bulbs, they might've used certain minerals or crystals that light up much like the LED lights we use today, and those take much less power.

  • @duudsuufd

    @duudsuufd

    2 ай бұрын

    @@onidaaitsubasa4177 There are no LED-like crystals in nature. Leds are a mix of crystals industrial treated for a very high purity. I think the Bagdad battery was used as a prank, to make fun of the guests at a festivity. It was made like a bottle of wine. They could hear the liquid in it and it smelled like wine. The upper electrode may have been covered with a clay sprout. Someone drinking from it would feel his tongue and lips prickling, dropping the bottle. No high-tech. Something they discovered by accident.

  • @1991keigan
    @1991keigan6 ай бұрын

    Another amazing video be amazed 😊

  • @AlrickFrancis-ur7sd
    @AlrickFrancis-ur7sd6 ай бұрын

    These days people all around are using phones and tablet but we did not have nothing like electricity

  • @mooredelira
    @mooredeliraАй бұрын

    at 9:51, the correct term is "oxidation". The term "OXIDIZATION" does not exist. Iron found at the sea bottom does not rust if there are lots of impurities in it such as silicon. This 1600 year old piece of iron likely had lots of silicon impurities in its' alloy of iron.

  • @Crazy-Clown-In-Town

    @Crazy-Clown-In-Town

    21 күн бұрын

    OXIDIZATION is a word. It means the process of oxidation.

  • @YammyBannana
    @YammyBannana6 ай бұрын

    Give him some credit he has done so much reserch to 3-5 hour prob

  • @protonjones54
    @protonjones542 ай бұрын

    this dude's definition of computers is comical

  • @TheArberter
    @TheArberter6 ай бұрын

    You can never underestimate the human spirit and Enginuity of our ancestors. I am still amazed at all the structures that was built without any of our modern technology that we have today.

  • @onekerri1
    @onekerri16 ай бұрын

    I suppose we'd know these things if not for the many "great resets" that took place throughout history; we're in the middle of one right now.

  • @leoplayswhittaker772
    @leoplayswhittaker7726 ай бұрын

    12 mil already? Its only been 1hour

  • @j.p.6932
    @j.p.69324 ай бұрын

    12:44 It is extremely peculiar how they were able to get all of the different sized and shaped stones to fit so perfectly. They knew exactly where each stone needed to go. People today couldn’t do it - certainly not without computers.

  • @corkbulb2895
    @corkbulb2895Ай бұрын

    The mysterious non-rusting iron pillar of India is definitely not magic or really that advanced at all. I've heard the pillar contains a high level of phosphorus, which will not allow the iron to rust. This can be done accidentally by not purifying the iron during smelting, or added accidentally from the fire used to make the metal. Also, I've also heard the pillar was regularly coated in butter (or ghee) for centuries, which will obviously stop the iron from rusting. Also, the pillar used to be much deeper in the ground, and contrary to its mythical status, isn't actually non rusting, as the first few feet (that used to be in the ground) has quite a lot of rust on the surface. Therefore, it would have been much easier for people to oil (butter?) the upper metal and stop it from rusting. The pillar was then dug up and moved at a later date, and not sunk into the ground as much, which is why the lower half (which was buried) is rusty. EDIT: About the sword of Goujian, if the edge of the blade was genuinely made of tin, or somehow tin plated, that would explain how it is still sharp and resistant to "rust" (actually, tin oxidizes but is the same process as rusting). Tin basically does not break down like iron or steel does due to oxidation, because the oxygen does not penetrate the thin layer of oxidized metal created at the surface. Iron and steel continues rusting beyond the surface due to molecular physics (that I will not go in to). Basically oxygen transfers from the surface atoms of iron to the next layer down, which is then replaced by more free oxygen in the air until the entire piece of metal is rusted all the way through. Tin and copper don't have this occur. Copper also has the same properties as tin, which is why copper water pipes don't "rust" through and stay intact for a LONG time. The surface layer of oxidation protects the copper (or tin) below.

  • @robertvecci262
    @robertvecci2625 ай бұрын

    There is always the "fall back" position to explain these things --- "ancient space alien visitations."😅

  • @lancerevell5979

    @lancerevell5979

    3 ай бұрын

    Only if you believe that larcenous old reprobate, Von Daniken. 😅

  • @GAMINGWORLD-go8uu
    @GAMINGWORLD-go8uu6 ай бұрын

    Generation to generation

  • @usmankarube8459
    @usmankarube84596 ай бұрын

    it is only Grice and Paru, there more out their

  • @GlobalGems66
    @GlobalGems666 ай бұрын

    In my account i talk about Antikythera mechanism to😮 nice video man

  • @narithaghazi524
    @narithaghazi5246 ай бұрын

    I am so amazed 😂🎉

  • @incognitotempo6922
    @incognitotempo69226 ай бұрын

    It could be like a wedge that prevents putting fingers in or a distance wedge to stop another piece getting cut to far down. There being more than one because you match it up with the other line so the real art piece that they were working on isnt there.

  • @gryffinity1134
    @gryffinity11346 ай бұрын

    Random but I don’t know how I feel about the new intro. It’s something about the little synthy melody from the original intro that just does it for me

  • @ernsailor9041
    @ernsailor9041Ай бұрын

    21:00 Stonehenge isn't in an empty field, the field has Stonehenge in it making it not empty.

  • @TnT_F0X
    @TnT_F0X22 күн бұрын

    5:45 those are farming steps... Because of the angle of the sun, flat farms wouldn't get light evenly, the steps help fix the problem by raising each level above the crops that would block the sun.

  • @GlobalGems66
    @GlobalGems666 ай бұрын

    I want to make a video about It toooo 😮😮😮

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe20206 ай бұрын

    I think the Bagdad Battery (although functional as one) was never intended to be a source of electricity. I think it was more important to the romans what the reactions did to the liquid inside the pot than the charges they produce.

  • @roderickmurdoch5264

    @roderickmurdoch5264

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure that the Mythbusters covered this battery in one of their episodes

  • @gl15col

    @gl15col

    6 ай бұрын

    @@roderickmurdoch5264 They made one of the Bagdad batteries, and were able to use it to electroplate a coin with gold. No way to know if that was the original use, but it worked.

  • @jamesrigg4389

    @jamesrigg4389

    6 ай бұрын

    What happens to the liquid inside? Why would the Romans be interested in that aspect?

  • @Lampe2020

    @Lampe2020

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jamesrigg4389 I am not a chemist, so I don't know exactly what happens - but I think it's maybe something with the taste, as they also sweetened their wine with lead.

  • @nicholasadams2374
    @nicholasadams23746 ай бұрын

    Peru is mentioned several times. That country was on another level!

  • @Eztoez
    @EztoezАй бұрын

    Amazing stuff

  • @dosendaring
    @dosendaring6 ай бұрын

    3:10 Julian calender is so complicated, even today we can't comprehend how many days in a month.... 28? 29? 30? 31? It's fascinating.....

  • @saeky7682
    @saeky76826 ай бұрын

    My opinion is that our ancestors, the one how succeed create some of the 'sciences' but much modernised peoples, the one who were able to make up a theory on how its actually works in details

  • @mospeada1152
    @mospeada11526 ай бұрын

    I think the most mysterious is the Mechanism, as it was way ahead of its time and a pity more didn't evolve from it. The second is the Jar and what that likely infers. Though a light source would be cool, it was likely electroplating!

  • @bunyipdragon9499

    @bunyipdragon9499

    6 ай бұрын

    Electroplating has been the theory for a few years now, esp since some artifacts look like they've plated rather than painted.

  • @warrenknox9688
    @warrenknox96886 ай бұрын

    Romans DID NOT invent indoor plumbing

  • @user-fy3kw4qp6z
    @user-fy3kw4qp6z3 ай бұрын

    WE CAN MAKE DAMASCUS KNIFES AGAIN!! WAHOOOOOO. Love your content, and keep up the great work!

  • @louisfivaz1367
    @louisfivaz13676 ай бұрын

    If our ancestors could meet us they'd say people got lazy, after being amazed by current tech.

  • @bunyipdragon9499

    @bunyipdragon9499

    6 ай бұрын

    They would be amazed at how much time we waste on useless crap given we have machines to do everything now.

  • @jamellehearn1389
    @jamellehearn13896 ай бұрын

    You should bring back amazing at the beginning of the Video

  • @OllieKayGaming
    @OllieKayGaming6 ай бұрын

    Yay new series

  • @AreUmygrandson
    @AreUmygrandson6 ай бұрын

    I don’t want to diminish the nazca lines, but a circle would be relatively easy to make compared to the other lines. You’d just need a string or rope pulled tight while the person on the other end just walks in a circle

  • @onidaaitsubasa4177

    @onidaaitsubasa4177

    6 ай бұрын

    You still need precise pivot points, but all you really need is a hot air balloon, if your society can make baskets, fire, and cloth then they can make a balloon, they probably had candle balloons toys for the children to play with and watch flying up in the sky.

  • @AreUmygrandson

    @AreUmygrandson

    6 ай бұрын

    @@onidaaitsubasa4177 right. But if you pull a string, rope, cordage with tension, you get a straight line. We use this today when laying brick walls, fences etc. It would be very simple for them to find out. If you can get a straight line, you can make a circle. They were modern humans, I think they could easily figure out a way to use a log as a rotation axle

  • @duanewolfe2321
    @duanewolfe23216 ай бұрын

    The incans lines would be cool to know

  • @juliettebouchery3550
    @juliettebouchery35502 ай бұрын

    Well, instead of saying "how on earth did these people with primitive means do these things?", the REAL scientific approach should be to say "maybe our view of these people's means is completely off". These building, computing and metal-making techniques (I didn't go to the end of the video, there may be more) were very efficient - why think they arrived at all these things "by accident", "without knowing what they were doing"? If these skills were lost, it's probably because of stupid domination or conquest sequences. For example, if the conquistadores had been less primitive (and stupid), they could probably have asked how the citadels in the Andes was built and got an answer. Same for the crusaders and Damascus steel.

  • @workingmothercatlover6699
    @workingmothercatlover66996 ай бұрын

    First 12 seconds: Probably think of ancestors being a dumber version of us. They didn't invent smart phones. My brain: that proves that they were more intelligent than us. 😊

  • @Aurora_Wang
    @Aurora_Wang6 ай бұрын

    I remember one kind of element makes a purple flame when added to water

  • @daenielamolat2871
    @daenielamolat28716 ай бұрын

    OLLANTAYTAMBO That part that you called giant steers are just rice terasis just connected to ladders

  • @ThrillSeeker3524
    @ThrillSeeker35246 ай бұрын

    It was aliens. Aliens built the pyramids, aliens built the Easter Island heads, aliens helped with the space race, aliens do our taxes. At least that's what the documentaries say.

  • @joeyRaven201

    @joeyRaven201

    6 ай бұрын

    The 120000000 slaves who build the pyramids 😢

  • @ThrillSeeker3524

    @ThrillSeeker3524

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@joeygrimminck Not true, either. They were skilled, well-paid and well-fed.

  • @FrankyRedEyes

    @FrankyRedEyes

    6 ай бұрын

    If "Aliens" isn't the answer, you're asking the wrong question.

  • @daveschiemerjr8453
    @daveschiemerjr84536 ай бұрын

    @beamazed can you make a history of religion video I wonder what spin you'd put on it

  • @robinwells5343
    @robinwells5343Ай бұрын

    Incan steps 100% for growing crops. No doubt. Not really a mystery whatsoever as the incans are literally known for forms like this

  • @lancerevell5979
    @lancerevell59793 ай бұрын

    Much of this lost ancient technology was probably explained in texts at the Library of Alexandria. What a monumental loss of knowledge! 😮

  • @mikemurphy7096
    @mikemurphy70966 ай бұрын

    We base our knowledge on what artifacts that are discovered the Alexandria library imo had secrets of advanced civilizations.

  • @speedracer1177
    @speedracer11776 ай бұрын

    I have watched every episode of Ancient Aliens. The answer has to be that. We don't know so it must be the aliens. Haha! Great episode. We need to give our ancestors more credit. They were incredibly smart and resourceful.

  • @onidaaitsubasa4177

    @onidaaitsubasa4177

    6 ай бұрын

    They could've just had hot air balloons, but there is written evidence of flying machines which their gods used, also in ancient Egypt there is written information in reference to some kind of stargate, so yeah, that sci-fy TV show actually depicts a concept based on actual factual written information on stones that are there.

  • @nicholasadams2374

    @nicholasadams2374

    6 ай бұрын

    If you don't know... It must be aliens. Words to live by. LOL

  • @ss_whole
    @ss_wholeАй бұрын

    Wait, there's toilet golf ! ?

  • @ninaholliway4085
    @ninaholliway40856 ай бұрын

    I wonder the actual value of these amazing things..😮

  • @_Zoroswife
    @_Zoroswife5 ай бұрын

    Could it be that some of the biggest structures made of rocks might have been just small rocks first but ovetime they fuse together, yes it's a thing called "cementation"

  • @LeonTMidnight
    @LeonTMidnight6 ай бұрын

    The fact his intro computer is still a banana brand laptop

  • @chefscorner7063
    @chefscorner70632 ай бұрын

    If you're not very knowledgeable about these things this is a great video to start with. If you have Average to Great knowledge on this, there's not much if anything new. Either way it's still fun to watch. ;)