Precision! - Evidence for Ancient High Technology, part 2

Ойын-сауық

Precision! Part 2 of my investigation into the evidence for ancient high technology, we dive into the precision aspects of the small stone jars, the giant statues, and the geometric, single piece boxes of Ancient Egypt.
Part 1 covered the context for this discussion, and the evidence for ancient machining and polishing - you can watch it here: • Evidence for Ancient H...
Part 3 is up, here: • Quarrying and Moving A...
Links:
Serapeum playlist: • Serapeum Series
Tube Drill documentary: • Ancient Tube Drills, P...
Chris Dunn's website: gizapower.com
Music:
Music (Creative Commons license CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... )
Scott Gratton - A Moment
Scott Gratton - the Hours
Scott Gratton - the Minutes
Scott Gratton - the Seconds
/ scott-gratton
Sinnersspeed - Miata is always the answer
/ miata-is-always-the-an...
(other tunes from KZread Free Music Library)
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#ancient #precision #technology

Пікірлер: 4 300

  • @UnchartedX
    @UnchartedX4 жыл бұрын

    @59:43 I got my zip code wrong for the mailing address! It should be 95604. Thanks for watching everyone, and please consider supporting the channel via the value-for-value model, you can find more at unchartedx.com/support

  • @robdeskrd

    @robdeskrd

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is a far more pervasive proof than even all the physical evidence, the kind of evidence that are modern world accepts in criminal court as proof of guilt and it is found in the archeology refuses evidence outside of pre-set acceptable dates & techniques generated by orthodox archeologists- If a mainstream archeologist finds real verifiable evidence generated by scientific methods the elites of archeology will immediately seek to destroy that person's credibility on every level they can but never address the evidence. There is no other scientific discipline that is allowed to so flagrantly disregard evidence, in fact all the real science are consistently moving toward complete convergence but archaeology stands alone and unassailable in it's right to proclaim whatever nonsense it wants to in contradiction to & in spite of case after case of hard evidence against those proclamations by hard scientic experts from multiple fields of study............ It's like Shakespeare had Hamlet say, "methinks the lady doth protest too much"

  • @joaquinvasta971

    @joaquinvasta971

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hello, I have recently come across your channel and its amazing what you show here, I also am very disappointed that there is no scientific group going toegipt now to conduct funded experiments. That is why I think you should start a go fund me or a pattern so yourself and other scientists go to Egypt and study drill cores, stones, the electromagnetic of the different stones used and the geometry and benefits of the pyramids. I would be delighted to pay for that. Good luck

  • @zaroastra

    @zaroastra

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hi, Have you taken a look at this theory : mariobuildreps.com ? It completely changes dates to something more compatible with what we see on the ground.

  • @SuperDave-vj9en

    @SuperDave-vj9en

    4 жыл бұрын

    A typical CNC bit would not last very long when working with granite. It would probably have to be impregnated with diamonds.

  • @Anyextee

    @Anyextee

    4 жыл бұрын

    95604? I had no idea. We are neighbors!

  • @randallburkhart8452
    @randallburkhart84524 жыл бұрын

    I'm a machinist by trade, and what these people did thousands of years ago makes me feel like a dummy lol. The type of engineering and programming that goes into making something like this is mind blowing. The mathematics involved is astonishing. Cooper chisels and bronze tools my ass.

  • @unitedspacepirates9075

    @unitedspacepirates9075

    4 жыл бұрын

    How many thousand years would your machine tools last without being maintained?

  • @paulnelson3096

    @paulnelson3096

    4 жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @paulnelson3096

    @paulnelson3096

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@itsmybike1078 noooooooo that is not the answer

  • @BetterBlue

    @BetterBlue

    4 жыл бұрын

    wrong. Make me a 12 ton granite block. you can't.

  • @siriusfun

    @siriusfun

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@itsmybike1078 What a ridiculous comment. Do you really have no idea?

  • @seanc8054
    @seanc80543 жыл бұрын

    i feel like i was robbed of my schooling as a child, all the dumb boring crap they forced onto me that i didnt need or care about, when there is SO much amazing information that i would have liked, been interested in and that would have actually helped me as an adult. i just found this channel, i really like it, thank you for all the hard work and effort that you put into it, it really shows, very awesome video.

  • @JM-co6rf

    @JM-co6rf

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree. Making me memorize the names of kings, when mysteries are the most educational. Having us memorize kings subconsciously gets us to agree to being ruled.

  • @scouter6926

    @scouter6926

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sean you said what many of us feel about the nonsense we were taught in school about previous hidtory. I have collard a few history teaches who still parrot the same nonsense force feeding it to the kids. When I ask them why they say they have no choice but comply with the State curriculum. When asked why don't they do something about the curriculum they say its too difficult, too expensive, so they continue to teach a False history. So much for the integrity of the teaching profession.

  • @collinvickers2345

    @collinvickers2345

    2 жыл бұрын

    Welcome to the club

  • @seancooney297

    @seancooney297

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same last name?

  • @imonoke7903

    @imonoke7903

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes you are so mistreated 😭

  • @The_Remnant86
    @The_Remnant86 Жыл бұрын

    Ever since finding your work I been rejuvenated with intrigue for Egypt. I've been down every rabbit hole, and Egypt never sparked my interest. Almost like subconsciously, what the mainstream documentaries portrayed wasn't to be paid attention to. Now, I'm fascinated. Now, I see there is something here. Well done, your work ( and that of your peers) is spectacular .

  • @MonsterTVchannel
    @MonsterTVchannel Жыл бұрын

    I'm deep down the rabbit hole with this now. Thank you for posting these awesome documentarys

  • @HillDogTV

    @HillDogTV

    Жыл бұрын

    haha same ere.... its really really interesting an these docos make it easy to get the vibe of what is infront . mind blown

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    What a surprise that you can't spell basic English and think this is a documentary as opposed to the load of complete bollocks it really is.

  • @paulwright4765

    @paulwright4765

    10 ай бұрын

    Doh! me to!! Can't unsee it 🙂

  • @bl8388

    @bl8388

    Ай бұрын

    It's funny because it was originally simple scientific pursuit. It only looks like a rabbit hole because of how much bias and sectarian Egyptologists ignored the evidence to fit the "flavor of the generation, model of history" The whole point of the scientific method is to keep humble and test against our own biases and pride. We don't know the details of the first of the earlier and more advanced, "Tale of 2 industries," but we see solid evidence they did not simply "rough it in," when doing their megalythic stone work.

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg10753 жыл бұрын

    Man these videos are so professional. You deserve a million subs

  • @SwitchbackCh
    @SwitchbackCh2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine someone walking up to the Mona Lisa in a museum and signing their name on it, and thousands of years later archaeologists say the Mona Lisa was painted by the person who wrote their name. This is that situation.

  • @Kenny-yl9pc

    @Kenny-yl9pc

    Жыл бұрын

    to make it even more clear and fitting, let´s imagine the signing was done by a child/toddler in some crayons or watercolour. And they still pretend like "yep that must be the person who painted the Mona Lisa" even though we can clearly see a major difference in skill and technique... Sadly that´s the situation we are in..

  • @any1alive

    @any1alive

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kenny-yl9pc exactly, but tis worse, as its like a child wentin with a knife and scratched throughhte paint to write thier name, and future historians, "he must have been rushed for time"

  • @Kenny-yl9pc

    @Kenny-yl9pc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@any1alive lol xD yea they always find some explanation as to why their view must be the only reasonable one. What astonishes me is their hubris and disrespectful behaviour towards other researchers that have good arguments why it could be different. They dont want to even talk about the matter. They just laugh it off and ignore it. Like the other researcher is stupid and doesnt deserve to be taken serious. I dont know but it makes me angry and sad. That is not what science is about or should be in my view.

  • @Chief467

    @Chief467

    Жыл бұрын

    Great analogy

  • @dicktracey3727

    @dicktracey3727

    Жыл бұрын

    You can’t say that when we don’t know if they had lost tech that created it. They still could have created this with tech we don’t know about or that was lost. So not accurate sorry

  • @DavidBeamson
    @DavidBeamson Жыл бұрын

    I am a newbie here and stumbled across your page purely by chance! These are by far some of the best videos I have seen regarding these concepts and VERY VERY interesting and well put together.. Knowledge is power! AWESOME videos! keep up the good work Ben 👌🤜🤛

  • @johnnajera9659
    @johnnajera9659 Жыл бұрын

    Time is a crucial factor here. If there were such a skilled sculptor who could make one of these objects using a pounding stone and a bronze chisel, it would take his entire lifetime. He would have been a savant. To imagine that there were that thousands of savants reaching inconceivable heights of achievement at the same is ludicrous.

  • @SuperDouginator

    @SuperDouginator

    Жыл бұрын

    A person couldn’t make one of those statues with primitive tools in 100 life times. It is not possible with the geometry’s and materials eledged

  • @samoksner

    @samoksner

    Жыл бұрын

    And so you have an entire culture of stone masons, carvers and sculptures right... thousands of people making statues, pyramids, obelisks, vases, bowls, boxes, tunels, ect... and then just like that, the knowledge is gone and not a single hyroglif can be found depicting any of those increbile processes. I don't see how we can claim to know 90% of ancient egyptian history from hyroglifs and then claim to know anything about objects not depicted in those hyroglifs. We acknowledge some plagiarism was done but then don't revise the date of the work plagiarized, the whole thing is disengenuous fundamentally.

  • @dunsdonjone1537

    @dunsdonjone1537

    Жыл бұрын

    reading that last sentence made me laugh

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    You're illiterate.

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SuperDouginator You're illiterate too. What a surprise! (Not.)

  • @motrebal
    @motrebal4 жыл бұрын

    I started watching this as a bit of entertainment by a loon, I was wrong, you have totally convinced me that we have lost an ancient civilization that had skills we cannot imagine. As soon as this Convid19 issue is over I am going to the museum, I have to see this for myself. Well done

  • @Zukalski

    @Zukalski

    3 жыл бұрын

    That is exactly what i am asking myself! How far does civilization actually go back for those things to completely disappear

  • @Ksoism

    @Ksoism

    3 жыл бұрын

    Not lost Ancient civilization, we do know quite a good deal of Egyptians of the ancient past. We know that almost 4000 years ago they were quite advanced in geometry, they got pi almost correct etc. They weren't dumb, but videos like these depict them as such. From the oldest surviving proof of geometry from the region, Serapeum is at least 500 years younger. Now think 500 years back from now. A lot can advanced in that period of time. If that is unfair, go yet again back 500 years, and world is vastly different. Guys in the ancient world made those things for thousands of years, they accumulated unbelievable amounts of knowledge, which was mostly teached by hand. Manual laborers weren't writers or readers. But they had generations of knowledge. Society changed, fashionable things changed, skills became useless and got lost. It happens today, too. Languages are lost, even very new skills like car body repair methods of old are being forgotten. We are a species of enormous capabilities, and very little recognizion for that. We have made the pyramids, conquered our planet and even a bit of space. Atomic energy, brain surgery, ancestry of birds, climate models. We don't accumulate knowledge like we used to anymore, but know it's open to everyone. And we haven't needed outsiders for that. If we would have, proof would really be there, instead of some pseudo-scientist saying that since I can't do it today, it must be done by something grander. Skill became obsolete, and died. It's sad, simple, and constant. There are gazillion little things that nobody/almost nobody can do anymore, that farmers did daily a hundred years ago.

  • @Zukalski

    @Zukalski

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ksoism I’m not agreeing with you. In order to make those vases., u need a Cnc guided tool. Where are the computers if these are 6000 years old?

  • @Ksoism

    @Ksoism

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Zukalski there just is technology or process we are not familiar. It's a boring explanation but most possible. And since this whole thing isn't widely known, academically pondered thing, either the solution is really simple and known or video depicts all of this... Creatively. But if there would be anything even remotely hinting at truly mysterious things, it would be known. Every student of technology and archeology, sociology and what-not-logies would be pissing honey for their final works, every scholar would make a living out of it. It would literally be biggest news ever, and since proof of it is public, you just couldn't hide it. People studying these things are schooled professionals, who understand these things just so much better. I'm not gonna tell racing driver or fighter pilot how to do their job. I do not understand an iota of global climate models, so I'm listening to those who do. I do have opinions, and I have desire to learn, but KZread, Wikipedia and random scientific articles are never going to make me competent to say that professionals are getting it all wrong. I work in somewhat rare and limited trade, and there isn't a whole many people in the world who can tell me how to do my job. Not many people tell their barber or mechanic, or guy designing their cell phones cpu how to do it. We are perfectly fine with the fact that people who work with their hands are experts in their field. But it is at least as much true in the field where most of your tool box is your knowledge and thinking. Archeologists, politicians, doctors, even cosmologists and astro-physicists get it wrong when it comes to dark matter, black holes or... Anything somebody has on opinion of. Uneducated guess, it is. And yes, so is mine, and great thing in this that it made us have a conversation - from which neither of us probably will learn anything of! 😂

  • @Ksoism

    @Ksoism

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Wild One okay, who did? Aliens? They came here, built a few vases, rooms, temples and went home? It's quite an humble act from a space race that masters interstellar travel. Not even metallurgy took big steps during that time, they just made a few things that are pretty useless as a show of strength. And people of day didn't really make a lot of it, either. A couple of paintings that supposedly depict astronauts (they don't) but even then they rather painted and carved humans and animals? We, the humans, made them. I don't know how, but then again I can't build a space shuttle nor submarine or skyscraper. Be proud, as you are the most advanced lifeform we know of. Yes, I believe there is life elsewhere. Less or more intelligent, in this galaxy or in galaxies far away? Dunno.

  • @markstevenson432
    @markstevenson4323 жыл бұрын

    Watching this video and seeing the beauty in these sculptures, thinking of the ratios they contain, how they were made and who possibly made them, put a tear in my eye. It’s absolutely amazing! This knowledge should be known by EVERYONE and taught in schools, not labeled as “pseudo-archeology” and “conspiracies”. GREAT VIDEO UnchartedX!!

  • @ShyDog827

    @ShyDog827

    Жыл бұрын

    I had the same emotion about this. It’s utterly stunning , scary , and beautiful . The gentleman at the end of the video referred to the civilization responsible for these great works of art being wiped out by the great cataclysm . I’m afraid to ask what they had done that God saw fit to destroy them off the earth. There are only magnificent artifacts pointing to their existence , but nothing else.

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    What? Don't you think enough bollocks are taught in school to add this crap to the lot?

  • @RostislavLapshin
    @RostislavLapshin Жыл бұрын

    39:20 The method allowing creation symmetrical statues like Ramses II is presented in the article: “Fabrication methods of the polygonal masonry of large tightly-fitted stone blocks with curved surface interfaces in megalithic structures of Peru” (DOI: 10.20944/preprints202108.0087.v10). KZread does not allow a direct link. Search by the article title.

  • @Michael-rg7mx

    @Michael-rg7mx

    Жыл бұрын

    It's easy. Just make a plywood template of the curves. Then stage them every inch. Pound a little, try the template, repeat. If you over excavate just glue it back on.

  • @walterwally983

    @walterwally983

    Жыл бұрын

    The interesting thing is that this polygonal masonry (cyclopean) is found around the world. There are ancient methods we know of that can get the joints of stone down to 1/1000 of an inch....the thickness of a human hair.

  • @dschoas
    @dschoas2 жыл бұрын

    I visited Baalbeck 15 years ago and was so impressed by the precission of the pillars at the temple of jupiter. These are rosequartz pillars, brought from Egypt. It looks like that these pillars were once in one piece, but had been cut to transport them.

  • @leestevenson80
    @leestevenson804 жыл бұрын

    This video should be ran in every school, fantastic work dude.

  • @gooddogtrainingservices5351

    @gooddogtrainingservices5351

    3 жыл бұрын

    KZread is the new school. Teachers are cursing joe rogan, ben shapiro and jordan peterson etc

  • @vinny6935

    @vinny6935

    3 жыл бұрын

    I can tell you that my kids will be watching this. I think a lot of teachers would love to share this with their kids, but it doesn't fit within the curriculum standards forced upon them by the inept people at the top making decisions.

  • @paranormal33

    @paranormal33

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@chillbill8591 If you think this video is what should be taught in schools and 'who decides what my kids learn is unfair' then its a good thing that you don't get to decide.

  • @gooddogtrainingservices5351

    @gooddogtrainingservices5351

    3 жыл бұрын

    Zo Kay Joe Rogan has a podcast who has interesting guests that yes I learn a lot from and give a different perspective Ben although I do not always agree with him has a lot of good points or at least get you thinking and Jordan is also a lot of great ideas and thoughts and perspective so yes at this point I like looking at things a bit differently and getting other peoples perspectives and point of you I don’t know if that was supposed to be a cheap shot or you do not agree that they are insightful or have any merit to what they are saying?

  • @michaeltaylor8835

    @michaeltaylor8835

    3 жыл бұрын

    They wont allow it

  • @allmetalmike8072
    @allmetalmike80724 жыл бұрын

    Ben, your point about precision is an excellent one, I have been a professional land surveyor for 40 years. Land surveyors are experts in measurement. The first thing you are taught is that you cannot get higher precision than the instruments you are using to measure. As an analogy to your ancient technology manufacturing, a surveyor cannot measure to 1-second angular precision using a 3-second EDM (electronic distance measuring instrument. In other words, your point (Dunn’s point) is valid, i.e. you can’t manufacture very precise objects with less precise tools, you need more precise tools.

  • @macioluko9484

    @macioluko9484

    4 жыл бұрын

    You're absolutely right about that.

  • @alfredclausen2593

    @alfredclausen2593

    4 жыл бұрын

    Then please explain the following: You need a precise tool to make a less precise tool. Who made then the first tool?

  • @notlessgrossman163

    @notlessgrossman163

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alfredclausen2593 you make a precise tool by making/using a precise datum, eg. A flat plane, edge .. you build that datum by checking against another datum eg edge or plane and checking and adjusting often until the precision level is achieved. Eg. A flat plate is made by removing high spots, then rubbing on another plane rinse and repeat. Metal scraping was a craftsman art in the 18-19th century when machine tooling was being developed.

  • @Matt-ur3dm

    @Matt-ur3dm

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@notlessgrossman163 well that told him 😁😅

  • @francis87589

    @francis87589

    3 жыл бұрын

    agreed from an high tech engineer myself, and work in MSA for production / measuring equips :)

  • @bulkzorage
    @bulkzorage Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate the effort you put into your show Ben. Very polished and easy to watch!

  • @ShyDog827
    @ShyDog827 Жыл бұрын

    I’m no engineer, I’m not a scientist, but I have eyes that Can Not deny the high sophistication of all the amazing artifacts that you have shown through this video. I can only imagine how amazing these objects appear in person . It angers me to know that any scientist would dismiss or ignore the overwhelming importance of these objects.

  • @simonthorneycroft1339

    @simonthorneycroft1339

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine if you will that someone comes across the authors opinion that an ancient civilisation built the pyramids and artefacts, and your interest in it, and is fascinated. She happens to be working for your local education authority and approaches you to teach an advanced course on Egyptology. She offers a good salary for you to teach a course spread over 8 sessions, and has taken the liberty of providing a proposed timetable. She has split the eight sessions in to block one (4 weeks) criticizing the classical model, and Block2 examining the details of the proposed ancient civilisation; Block one; Week 1 - Looking at the ancient artefacts and buildings. Weeks 2 - Looking at the classical explanation for the way the buildings and artefacts were made. Weeks 3 and 4 - Looking at the evidence suggesting that the classical explanation is flawed. Block two; Weeks 5 - An explanation of how the buildings and objects must really have been made. Weeks 6 - Describing the society that must have existed in order to have made these objects and buildings. Week 7 - Describing the evidence of artefacts, buildings and transport that support the claims made in 5 and 6 Week 8 - Describing the cataclysm that destroyed the ancient civilization and removed the evidence of their buildings, machinery, artefacts and detritus. Will you give some indication of what you would teach in weeks 6 to 8?

  • @methylene5

    @methylene5

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm an engineer, and I agree completely.

  • @FIZZYYAM

    @FIZZYYAM

    11 ай бұрын

    It is not ignoring or dismissing - it is hiding.

  • @richtomlinson7090

    @richtomlinson7090

    3 ай бұрын

    Nobody is dismissing the importance of artifacts. I dismiss the claims of Christopher Dunn. Just pause the video when they are talking about incredible accuracy of the sarcophagus. You can clearly see irregular reflections off the so called perfection. They purposely show grainy pictures from a distance, and talk about levels of accuracy that exceed precision granite inspection tables. Christopher Dunn is dishonest. I've developed an eye for ground and polished surfaces, as I have experience with grinding carbide and ceramic tooling, glass and plastic Optical lab work, and I'm a maintenance mechanic at a Granite shop, with almost 38 years of experience with machinery, grinding and polishing various materials. Granite countertops have less deviation of reflection, than these boxes, and countertop slabs aren't within 0.00005" This video is a joke.

  • @kevinsmith5448
    @kevinsmith54483 жыл бұрын

    "once you see it you can't un-see it" so true; mirror smooth surfaces, perfect right angles, then almost like chicken scratch heiroglyphs on top

  • @andrewcanady6644

    @andrewcanady6644

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said. I don’t know anyone who is obsessed with these things. Which is strange to me. How can everyone not be intensely interested in these structures?

  • @grose2272

    @grose2272

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@andrewcanady6644 because it's not easily explained away..

  • @JoonaHeikinheimo
    @JoonaHeikinheimo4 жыл бұрын

    Once again a video of such high quality - or should I say precision - that I need to instantly rewatch it! Thanks Ben!

  • @geirbalderson9697

    @geirbalderson9697

    4 жыл бұрын

    I tend to disagree. The video is very superficial. He discusses precision, yet his camera flies around an object and rarely lingers to actually examine the work. He goes down into the Serapeum and the lighting is so poor. A spot of light and dark shadows. Get some light man!! Focus and linger. Show us this precision.

  • @vincitomniaveritas3981

    @vincitomniaveritas3981

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@geirbalderson9697 What do you mean "show us this precision"? Its right in the video. Pause it if it seems too fast. I think the video footage is smooth and shows it quite clearly.

  • @2010stoof
    @2010stoof2 жыл бұрын

    The insides of the boxes is what has me completely stumped even with my education and training in machining in tool and die. If made of one solid piece inside corners seems like they'd be the hardest to do, especially where the walls meet and also meet the bottom.

  • @poolplexer

    @poolplexer

    11 ай бұрын

    There's been studies done by teams recently with laser levels and non of the boxes actually have a perfect 90 degree angle. They're all off by a few degrees.

  • @phil562

    @phil562

    10 ай бұрын

    @@poolplexer Did they post a video I can watch about their measurements?

  • @wyattsmith2143

    @wyattsmith2143

    5 ай бұрын

    Inside corners were imperfect but you are purposefully ignoring the perfect flatness of the walls of the inside, which are all truly parallel across the entire length of the interior of the box, being flat vertically and horizontally. Maybe you missed it or didn't understand the concept, so i'll state it clearly and easily here for you. To accomplish the above stated task of achieving relative perfect parallel flatness across a long and wide surface and on many sides, you CANNOT make one foul. If you so much as remove a pubic hair of material at any point on any wall, you've scrapped the entire project. It's like a high precision haircut, you can only take away the exact amount of hair to get the agreed upon style. If you take off too much at any side, you've ruined the style and disobeyed the agreement. Now consider that you CANNOT eyeball this level of precision across the inner dimensions of the box and stay true. If you have to use a surface roughness device to check that measurement, or use even a high quality modern straight edge or gauge, that right there should tell you what was needed to accomplish the task. If you suggest that you can eyeball it, i've got a high salary job for you in the construction industry where we could save a lot of time and money with you eyeballing every measurement to an exact value within fractions of inches, i'll get rid of all my measuring devices right now. Hell, you could really make it big in the aerospace industry with that kind of capability, should give Lockheed a call. @@poolplexer

  • @richtomlinson7090

    @richtomlinson7090

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@poolplexerYou are correct. Watch this video carefully as they talk about insane accuracy of the sarcophagus. There are obvious deviation of reflection off the top of the lid, as they just got done claiming precision to 0.00005". The video is a joke. Machinists use Granite inspection tables with less zeroes after the decimal point. These guys are making a lot of money with this crap. And that isn't criticism of the fine work of people long ago. I'm criticizing dishonest people today, showing bullshit videos.

  • @richtomlinson7090

    @richtomlinson7090

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@wyattsmith2143 Start watching the video at 11 minutes, and you'll clearly see reflections that deviate by quite a noticeable amount. If you worked in an Optical lab, or a Granite shop, or machine shop with lapping and grinding equipment, you would know what to look for. Christopher Dunn is dishonest.

  • @Paul-tw9ze
    @Paul-tw9ze Жыл бұрын

    Great video, it's almost painful not knowing who they were and how they did these things

  • @stephensomersify

    @stephensomersify

    Жыл бұрын

    One of us (and there's now 8 billion of us ) will work this out - it won't be me - It may not be in my lifetime = excruciatingly painful - - old git, UK

  • @Automedon2

    @Automedon2

    Жыл бұрын

    Documentaries like this always leave me feeling unsettled and frustrated.

  • @richardraby6266

    @richardraby6266

    Жыл бұрын

    It appears that its pretty obvious that a prior civilization , one that was much more advanced technologically, must have been involved. Someone has to come up with a plan on how to date these statues, carvings and structures, there has to be a way? We also need to start looking into what caused this civilization to fail, and then to leave all of it's artefact's behind. There must be some sort of evidence of this, or was it extremely localised, even so we seem to have a good start as to where to look. Fascinating stuff, mindboggling even!

  • @hereIam1965

    @hereIam1965

    3 ай бұрын

    I'd imagine sand blasting / or water too acheive the high precision . There's shafts dug into the rock in which a weighted shaped to fit rock can be suspended in and compressing the water or air. When pressure drops the stone can be lowered by pulleys. Once one small one is built larger & larger ones can be made more easily from the 1st. I cannot think of a high pressure hose ? Templates can be made and used by joiners / carpenters to achieve symmetry by the sand/ or water nozzle cutters.

  • @AFRICA4AFRICANS

    @AFRICA4AFRICANS

    Ай бұрын

    Those BLACK AFRICANS WERE SOMETHING ELSE BACK THEN…. AMAZING

  • @BFitz1976
    @BFitz19763 жыл бұрын

    The best content on this topic on KZread 👌

  • @patrickwinther

    @patrickwinther

    3 жыл бұрын

    True!

  • @DaDa-kf4vp

    @DaDa-kf4vp

    3 жыл бұрын

    Definitely. Nobody else compiles this information as well. The production quality is great and his voice is great for narration also.

  • @torsupersuccess2296

    @torsupersuccess2296

    3 жыл бұрын

    Best in english. But in russian there are tons of vids. They go very detailed about these things. Научно-исследовательский центр ЛАИ . They have started their expeditions around the world in 2008 or 2009. They have studied Egypt the most though. Im happy there is someone else on youtube in english .

  • @StoicChav

    @StoicChav

    3 жыл бұрын

    Narrating is spot on mate... Definitely not a dig at anyone else 🙄

  • @scifigeezer5271

    @scifigeezer5271

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DEVAmy69 most of these videos are inspired by work published by Christopher Dunn in 1998 which predates your Russian friends. Think before you speak. Even then a lot of these researchers are inspired (although they might not admit it!) by Eric Von Daniken's 1968 book Chariots of the Gods.

  • @badlandskid
    @badlandskid3 жыл бұрын

    It has bugged me for years that academia has treated ancient mankind as less learned and less sophisticated than modern man. Talk about the ultimate in narcissistic blindness.

  • @ClickClack_Bam

    @ClickClack_Bam

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol. They didn't have engines, modern medicines, airplanes, internet, computers, helicopters, microchips, & firearms etc etc etc. Their lives absolutely were less sophisticated than ours is right now in every way you can possible measure. We literally have a better life than EVERY fuckin King that ever lived did & then there's you here saying "they were smarter & more sophisticated than we are". Fuckin lol!

  • @Digital__rb

    @Digital__rb

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ClickClack_Bam well i mean they did make those huge sculptures, maybe they didnt even need metal to make the structures, maybe we took a wrong turn with metallurgy and the extraction of oils

  • @friedpickles342

    @friedpickles342

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ClickClack_Bam something happened back then. Whatever it was . we will probably never know. I'm sure it was fascinating. I have no doubt that what we've been taught is bullshit though.

  • @SimonHaestoe

    @SimonHaestoe

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ClickClack_Bam "literally". You go by the western mainstream narrative. Ask basically anyone in the east. You would probably laugh in the face of anyone who proposed the idea of a cyclical nature to our civlizations...? Well, everything else goes in cycles, including nature -- we have ice ages where the whole planet is covered in kilometers of ice and as high flooding. And mudfloods to no end which put a permanent layer ontop of earlier civilizations (maybe you've heard that archaeologists date findings based on how deeply they were found). How would any traces be left? And if they can't, how can you know.

  • @evanpenny348

    @evanpenny348

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Digital__rb Did we? How?

  • @evasanchez2094
    @evasanchez20947 ай бұрын

    This is the most perfect documentary I've seen in ages: extremely well argumented, carefully and "precisely" worded and all the images are absolutely relevant. No exageration, no manipulation, no computer generated imagery ... Ben, you are doing a great service to us all by producing these videos, thank you so much. I just came back from my first trip to Egypt and I came back with more questions than I had before. I am so glad to have found your channel.

  • @TheEarl777
    @TheEarl7772 жыл бұрын

    Thankyou once again Ben. I’ve used the precision evidence many times when debating with certain close minded individuals. I’m now fascinated with not only the civilisation that built the pyramids, great labyrinth etc but how differently they must have lived. They certainly had the “greenest” power plants as well as being the grandest

  • @pweddy1
    @pweddy13 жыл бұрын

    The same people who say “they didn’t have the wheel” also say they “rolled blocks on logs.” That’s a face palm, if they understood how to roll heavy objects on logs and understood the geometry required to build the pyramids then they knew how the wheel worked.

  • @daisyd9473

    @daisyd9473

    3 жыл бұрын

    If they had chariots, didn't they have to have wheels......

  • @gxulien

    @gxulien

    3 жыл бұрын

    Can't use a wagon to move big stones, axel won't hold.

  • @echoofdionysus4388

    @echoofdionysus4388

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@daisyd9473 they didn't have chariots

  • @Cronus66

    @Cronus66

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@echoofdionysus4388 they did at least in middle kingdom era

  • @FoxTheProducer

    @FoxTheProducer

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@echoofdionysus4388 yea they did. Check out King Tuts tomb. Check out some of the art thats all around Giza.

  • @youthised58
    @youthised583 жыл бұрын

    Nice job! People don't realize how difficult it is to put a video like this together. I appreciate your work and it is work. Thank you.

  • @auntiecarol

    @auntiecarol

    3 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. Bravo!

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    He must have used some sort of advanced technology.

  • @cheesecop9321
    @cheesecop9321 Жыл бұрын

    When I visited Egypt, I was shocked at the printing on the obelisks. A machine definitely did it, but no one talks about it.

  • @finnnpierce2297
    @finnnpierce2297 Жыл бұрын

    Loved this ! Have just started to watch all ur shows ! I am truly blown away with it all and love the work G Hancock and Randell is doing also ! Thanks

  • @donmitchell2367
    @donmitchell23673 жыл бұрын

    This is the best video ever made for the support of high technology in ancient Egypt. Thank you,well done!

  • @S.A.N.503
    @S.A.N.5033 жыл бұрын

    The idea that some of those incredibly precise and enormous stone carvings and granite boxes being made by primitive man who supposedly only had copper tools and hadn't discovered the wheel yet, is just laughable. It's very clear to me that a big chunk of our history is missing. The work of Graham Hancock and Randal Carlson is absolutely amazing, as is the work of smart people like the creators of this video and channel. It's beyond fascinating, and equally important to understand our history. I truly believe that a giant cataclysm took place and is absolutely responsible for the displacement of the technology in this video. It just seems impossible that the people of Egypt in our history books is responsible for the amazing structures in this video. There's clearly two different techniques for stone work in Egypt. Thank you for all of your hard work and dedication to unlocking the mystery of this matter! I look forward to following all of the new discoveries of the future!

  • @donovansweet9566

    @donovansweet9566

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lots of history is missing. That is the nature of the natural world. But your lack of knowledge of the available technology of the time periods in question makes it seem even more grandiose that it already is. And a lot of these are very grandiose in their own right. Lathes were known to exist in the 14th century bc and drills even earlier than that. Magnification via the use of lenses at least 424 BC. Investment casting, a method still used today goes back as far as 3700-4000 BC. All known via archeological evidence and investigation. All of these could easily pre-date the reference material. None of what is discussed here requires some unknown civilization with advanced technologies.

  • @S.A.N.503

    @S.A.N.503

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@donovansweet9566 Thats a great point, and very well could be the case. This topic is so interesting and fascinating. I wish those idiots didn't burn down that library in the past and destroy a huge portion of the know knowledge at the time. I always forget the name of that library lol. I could literally read information and watch documentary type videos on this subject all day, every day. It does seem like our understanding of our past is still far from complete. Thanks for your reply, and im going to go research some of the things you said. I genuinely love this stuff! 🤣🤣🤙

  • @salvalooez2249

    @salvalooez2249

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@S.A.N.503 don't forget the Mayan libraries were 100 times bigger . There is a reason why mayans used gold as mortar . And had 300,000 tons laying around the temples

  • @salvalooez2249

    @salvalooez2249

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@S.A.N.503 thank the Spanish for burning them up . 15,000 years of knowledge from one the most advanced empires to ever exist

  • @mobieus7
    @mobieus72 жыл бұрын

    Yousef, may the world forever celebrate the life and work of your father. Thank you for carrying on with his work.

  • @Blayzn18
    @Blayzn182 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for putting the links to each part in the description! You might be surprised that the "algorithm" doesn't automatically suggest the next part. Very interesting material built on the research of one of my favorite theorists Christopher Dunn.

  • @staszekgolab9319
    @staszekgolab93194 жыл бұрын

    Today we use granite surface plates for inspection of manufactured parts. These plates come in many sizes & cost from few hundreds to over $10K depending on size, shape, precision grade. Only top surface is precision surface. In case of granite box we do not have a technology today to make it. Not even close. Here is the link to factory tour showing production of granite surface plates. As you can see machines to produce these simple plates are huge, several stages of production. How could you fit one of these machines in narrow caves where Egyptians finished their boxes? Myself I am 71 old , retired mechanical engineer who worked on most of metal cutting machines & my conclusion is that technology of making Egyptian granite boxes is out of this world.Granite surface plate factory tour:kzread.info/dash/bejne/h55qmKNvl9SYfNo.html

  • @TheZacdes

    @TheZacdes

    4 жыл бұрын

    Let alone a granite, highly polished box with an inner limestone box that fits like it was poured in a liquid state like concrete!! Unbelievable!!

  • @T0mParker

    @T0mParker

    4 жыл бұрын

    The precision is amazing. I did hear a theory that the stones were finished first, and the tombs and structures built around them?

  • @fransmars1645

    @fransmars1645

    4 жыл бұрын

    And so the enigma continues. Isn't it wonderful?

  • @GuinessOriginal

    @GuinessOriginal

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thomas Parker that sounds pretty plausible

  • @imalexx

    @imalexx

    3 жыл бұрын

    Frans Mars , it’s fustrating, I just want the solution now! It’s annoying that this mystery isn’t mainstream interrogation, instead of it, it make us sound like complotist like we start to mention these stuff to other people with mainstream egyptian knowlegde.

  • @dustinbanneddotvideo2082
    @dustinbanneddotvideo20824 жыл бұрын

    This information is just amazing nobody talks about it like you do this is very puzzling how they produced these boxes Simply Amazing

  • @zenchristafarian4404
    @zenchristafarian4404 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for all of the effort that went into this!

  • @julierobertson2383
    @julierobertson2383 Жыл бұрын

    Most people forget what great craftsmanship and tenacity can produce. The pharaohs only employed the best of the best

  • @shrimpkins
    @shrimpkins3 жыл бұрын

    engineer: "does it seem odd to you that there are a lot of complex engineering problems here that nobody can explain?" archaeologist: "nah, just throw a bunch of slaves at anything, and it'll get sorted." engineer: "so we could have had tv and airplanes and phones a thousand years ago if we just put 50,000 slaves on the job?" archaeologist: "it's just some big boulders, get over it." engineer: "well, how come nobody's tried to replicate any of that stuff with hand tools?" archaeologist: "because we already know how they did it. i don't have time for this nonsense. i have papers to publish."

  • @keepmoving1185

    @keepmoving1185

    3 жыл бұрын

    Love this

  • @shaneculkin7124

    @shaneculkin7124

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@keepmoving1185: Agreed. Very clever. Enjoyed it !!

  • @briansutton2176

    @briansutton2176

    3 жыл бұрын

    You captured the sentiment quite well.

  • @jimijames7703

    @jimijames7703

    3 жыл бұрын

    Glen Wigmore so true my Friend. Information is being hidden purposefully.

  • @ankikeulemans8387

    @ankikeulemans8387

    3 жыл бұрын

    Glen Wigmore You’re so right ! When science meets spirituality!!......... if it doesn’t fit in the narrative, they abandon the question..... check the Gaia video’s........ it’s time for another approach ......maybe more (or other) ways to find the “truth”,

  • @ralphnickling7250
    @ralphnickling72504 жыл бұрын

    Everytime I look at these amazing artifacts in Egypt I always get the feeling as if I'm looking at the past and the future at the same time. Could human tech evolution go in cycles? Did we invent the wheel millions of times in the past? Is every invention a re-invention? This is all mind blowing! Great Video UnchartedX!

  • @captainbws

    @captainbws

    4 жыл бұрын

    Great insight. Yes I believe we are seeing the work of those more advanced along a Yuga cycle than we ourselves are.

  • @chiznowtch

    @chiznowtch

    Жыл бұрын

    No.

  • @Bdawg69420

    @Bdawg69420

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chiznowtch ​​⁠ anatomically modern humans have been around for atleast 200,000 years how is that so hard to believe?

  • @noneofur300
    @noneofur300 Жыл бұрын

    I hope to stillbe alive when we figure out what technology they used to make all these beautiful carvings,giant perfect statues, and pyramids. The hardest of rock was perfectly carved into a precise polished bowl. Amazing findings. Thanks for your videos

  • @timlarcombe9096
    @timlarcombe9096 Жыл бұрын

    Beautiful and well balanced view which I found quite emotional. If only we could have seen these items being produced what an incredible sight it would have been. It’s a shame the Egyptologists do not open their artifacts up to greater scrutiny. One day maybe.

  • @lxmacuahuitl1079
    @lxmacuahuitl10793 жыл бұрын

    Strange how so many of us that have been amazed at the fact of the sheer size and precision and number of these megaliths have been closed to the underlying reality of ancient cultures and technologies that far preceed our so called known history. Thanks for your work. Awesome. Cheers

  • @VinsPol247
    @VinsPol2474 жыл бұрын

    Christopher Dunn's Lost Technologies of Ancient Egypt is a book everyone should read. I read it three times. It really is awesome. And I wish someone like Mr Dunn would be granted full access to all the sites in Egypt, to conduct in depth studies of all the ancient artifacts and structures.

  • @frankgarcia5206
    @frankgarcia52069 ай бұрын

    I was a machinist when I was younger and there was investment castings hold a tolerance of .0005 be polished Easley but stone is a different entity would have to cool for a long time to get the crystals in the stone ( just out of the box thinking) love your podcasts keep it up

  • @robertnordeen4631
    @robertnordeen4631 Жыл бұрын

    We were robbed of information when growing as a child. They never talked about this in school growing up. They didn't know how to explain how it was done or they would be laughed out of a teaching job.

  • @nilsnyman6767
    @nilsnyman67673 жыл бұрын

    After having just watched part 3 of this series I'm back to watch this again. Your videos just get better and better. Camera work, lighting, sound, depth of topic, attention to detail. You deserve millions of subs.

  • @brienfoerster
    @brienfoerster4 жыл бұрын

    Great Job Ben

  • @ZiggyDan

    @ZiggyDan

    4 жыл бұрын

    ....Elongated skulls in the, Afrasayib Museum, Uzbekistan.

  • @guyxmas7519

    @guyxmas7519

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ur part of his motivation I'm sure Brian! :)

  • @appealinbanana
    @appealinbanana Жыл бұрын

    ‘Precision’ was a very poignant title for this episode because the level of precision in the vases and sculptures, to me, was not human. It was ‘more human than human’. Too perfect, too exact. Actually soulless. Makes me realise the beauty of imperfection. That’s what makes us human. “My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings; Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!” Is that bragging or a threat? Making me wonder if one day an ant will wake up and realise, it’s just an ant.

  • @UnchartedWorlds

    @UnchartedWorlds

    Жыл бұрын

    Is that bragging or a threat? Well it's part of 1819 poem by Percy Shelley: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch far away. - Percy Shelley, "Ozymandias", 1819 edition So

  • @TheBrugus
    @TheBrugus Жыл бұрын

    Superb ! I love it !

  • @motorsport32cw
    @motorsport32cw3 жыл бұрын

    This video has really made me realise that those bowls are not just any pottery. Wow who ever made those most definitly had some sort of advanced technology to produce that type of accuracy with such hard materials. Thank you for your research.

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    🤪

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    You couldn't make a pot if your life depended on it, so these Egyptian artists must have used "advanced technology", of course!... 🤦🤦‍♂🤦‍♀

  • @Mr02071961
    @Mr020719613 жыл бұрын

    After 35 years working in domain of precision machining combined with manipulation and assembling of heavy metallic construction pieces, I can confirm every word that is said in this video. Nowadays, on smaller scale, we could replicate the most of presented items, but on actual scale that we witness in Egyptian artifacts - simply NO WAY. Even replicating on small scale, it requires sophisticated computer programs based on advanced mathematics. Some of them we couldn't do even on small scale, for example the schist disc. There is no known technology for machining of such unfriendly, crispy, granulated material like schist (slate) at so small thickness, especially not in such mind boggling, 3D curved shape.

  • @grantbuxton

    @grantbuxton

    Жыл бұрын

    How do you feel about thermo dynamics, maybe lasers? Do you think they could have cast the pieces

  • @Mr02071961

    @Mr02071961

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grantbuxton It have been proven that blocks used for building are not casted. Lasers (as we know them) are great, but also have limitations. Nobody knows how they manipulated such heavy weights and especially how they have reached such level of precision.

  • @boyerindustries

    @boyerindustries

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, I ran a 5 axis cnc center for years and I could digitize it and write a program for it but it would probably take me several weeks to copy one, and likely dozens of blocks of solid material and countless types of tooling etc, with accompanying programming trial & error w combos of toolpaths, feed/speed etc for me to figure out how to copy that thing and I’m talking a half million dollar machine & dozens of thousands in tooling, starting with a Bluetooth digitizer that looks like it came from star wars ($30k piece about 1/4 the size of a red bull can that looks like the vital part of time traveling machine) with ceramic extensions and ruby ball tips that I’d have to calibrate with less runout than a 10th the width of a hair at 360 degrees etc etc That’s just hardware to digitize a 3D model of it, then add the $60k 5 axis surface editing & programming software to make a computer model that would translate to the 5 axis software for programming the countless sequences that would be necessary along with toolpaths, feeds speeds etc Yea, as someone who’s actually made pieces like that and I know what’s required to produce something that sophisticated, along with these fkn billet one piece boxes bigger than most CNC machines available today that would be required to ATTEMPT replicate one... I’m sorry but either we’re still in the Stone Age compared to whoever built all this shit or it’s fkn aliens bro. Go find anyone who runs a 5 axis cnc for a living and show him just the 2 aforementioned pieces, tell him those things were dated prior to the Stone Age. Then say mainstream narrative claims they were hand made. 11/10 cnc operators will laugh and say with conviction it’s more likely aliens are among us.

  • @DeezNutz-ce5se

    @DeezNutz-ce5se

    Жыл бұрын

    You should do some more research. The shit disk isn't even close to precise and level.

  • @Mr02071961

    @Mr02071961

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DeezNutz-ce5se Schist disc was found broken and now it's just crudely reassembled. 45 years of research should be enough I suppose.

  • @hwi62
    @hwi62 Жыл бұрын

    This is a great great video really digging into a lot of the details other videos on the same topic leave out. I especially enjoyed the chapter about the complexity of the crown/headdress - this part of the sculptures that looks to be easiest shows to be the most complex of all. Thank you for a superb lecture on this profound subject.

  • @LavaBladez
    @LavaBladezАй бұрын

    I believe much of the hard stone working was done with an abrasive. Circular vases and forms can be achieved by using a spinning technique with an abrasive like sand or flint chips.

  • @eddygun1o1
    @eddygun1o14 жыл бұрын

    One of my fave new chnnels

  • @S-Ltd1000
    @S-Ltd10004 жыл бұрын

    Brilliantly written and narrated Ben, can't wait for part 3.

  • @free_spirit1
    @free_spirit1 Жыл бұрын

    One of the things that stands out to me about the precision artefacts (statues, boxes and jars) is the absolute minimalism of the design language. Very simple lines, shapes and surfaces. It literally looks like it was designed with the modelling limitations of a modern cad program/nurbs modeller.

  • @rogersmith4834
    @rogersmith48347 ай бұрын

    This coverage of so intriguing a subject -- nobody does it better.

  • @sammysam2615
    @sammysam26152 жыл бұрын

    I've learned more from your videos than I ever did throughout my education. I'm 39 and am in utter awe. Thank you for your work.

  • @frontenac5083

    @frontenac5083

    10 ай бұрын

    Education? It must have been quite something if you think there's anything serious to "learn" from these videos! Lol!

  • @memyselfandyouz
    @memyselfandyouz4 жыл бұрын

    If I was to ever educate the young or old, your videos would be my first source to educate. Thank you Ben, for all your hard work.

  • @livechild212
    @livechild212 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing work, my friend. Just subscribed and I'm thoroughly enjoying the content. Thank you.

  • @glizzy2911
    @glizzy29119 ай бұрын

    Appreciate you Ben for your work and all that you do..

  • @salamanca1954
    @salamanca19543 жыл бұрын

    I had the privilege of performing the first edit of "Lost Technologies" for my dear friend Chris. If you read his work with full understanding of its consequences, you too will be staggered by its implications. Ben does a great job of summarizing Chris's work, while advocating, as Chris himself has done, a consistent and continuing investigation based on that work by the mainstream, which has the dollars to do it. To date, it hasn't.

  • @rickmcdonald1557

    @rickmcdonald1557

    Жыл бұрын

    >>>AGREED

  • @methylene5

    @methylene5

    Жыл бұрын

    Engineer here. I just finished reading Christopher Dunn's book on lost technology of ancient Egypt (2010), very well presented and definitely worth a read. I recommend it highly. Just started reading the Giza Powerplant, looks good so far.

  • @feelthepayne88
    @feelthepayne884 жыл бұрын

    I run a Faro Vantage laser tracker every day at work. About 20 minutes with one of those boxes and I could tell you exactly how square and flat the boxes in the Seripeum are to about .0001 of an inch or .0001 of a degree. Edit to add: I work in a machine shop and deal with tight tolerances daily. Our shop has some of the largest CNC milling machines in the country, and we manufacture some massive parts. I would be extremely curious to see those machine marks and bore holes for myself. I wish I could bring my laser tracker with me, if I ever get to go to Giza.

  • @feelthepayne88

    @feelthepayne88

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@marcmyers1465 not my company or video, but this it the tracker I use. kzread.info/dash/bejne/dZuisrajh8jcYso.html

  • @feelthepayne88

    @feelthepayne88

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@marcmyers1465 another video that's more in-depth. kzread.info/dash/bejne/qmh_t62moNXgpdo.html

  • @feelthepayne88

    @feelthepayne88

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@marcmyers1465 I'm not privy to the exact numbers, but I heard the last one my company purchased ran about $120k out the door. 😬 But man, it's a sweet piece of equipment.

  • @KyleHu

    @KyleHu

    4 жыл бұрын

    please go and measure!

  • @feelthepayne88

    @feelthepayne88

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@KyleHu I would love to.

  • @ForestBlue7
    @ForestBlue7 Жыл бұрын

    This shit is just so badass.. great vid man. Humility is a quality so rare in people, let alone “academics”.

  • @peterisaacs6882
    @peterisaacs6882 Жыл бұрын

    Utterly convincing and compelling. I'm completely hooked.

  • @snotabe
    @snotabe4 жыл бұрын

    I like yor quality of production. Top notch. Good job Ben! Thank you.

  • @PeterRabbit70
    @PeterRabbit704 жыл бұрын

    The hardest words for any human to say: "I don't know."

  • @jholan3

    @jholan3

    3 жыл бұрын

    I say," I don't know" all the time.

  • @flutube3688

    @flutube3688

    3 жыл бұрын

    Not true, i always say: "I don't know and leave me alone" 😂

  • @bartistclord1916

    @bartistclord1916

    3 жыл бұрын

    I have a serious lack of respect for anyone who refuses to say that they don't know when they don't know. I pity you, surrounded by lying idiot egotists. That's why "fixing computers" rules. Either it works, or not. and If they claim to know, then fail to fix... allows for a moment to give them a look of disappointment with a question such as "do you even know how to chew food ?", or "who did you blow to get this job ? Nevermind"

  • @badlandskid

    @badlandskid

    3 жыл бұрын

    peter rabbit right next to “Sorry, I was wrong.”

  • @mizofan

    @mizofan

    3 жыл бұрын

    more like "i was wrong"- that's the big problem for the closed and biased mainstream minds

  • @robertobarajas2329
    @robertobarajas2329 Жыл бұрын

    Great video!!! I use this video for reference daily to astonish and educate friends and family! Well done Ben

  • @SAELIOSMUSIC
    @SAELIOSMUSIC Жыл бұрын

    I watch like one or two of these a day now. I wanna travel to Egypt

  • @wearemilesfromnowhere4630
    @wearemilesfromnowhere46304 жыл бұрын

    My mother in law has the ability to identify every one of my tiniest faults, all thanks to precision. Great video BTW

  • @jpmcsweeney7156

    @jpmcsweeney7156

    4 жыл бұрын

    If she can measure your tiniest faults, then for cry eye, get her down to Egypt ASAP so we can get to the bottom of this! 😅

  • @JEKAZOL

    @JEKAZOL

    4 жыл бұрын

    Try an ex wife...

  • @kevincrady2831

    @kevincrady2831

    4 жыл бұрын

    Now I'm imagining her pressing a machinist's straightedge against you and shining a light against it. "See?! You're off by almost HALF A CENTIMETER! My [insert your spouse's name here] could have done SO much better!" :smile:

  • @wearemilesfromnowhere4630

    @wearemilesfromnowhere4630

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@kevincrady2831 LOL. Hey we may not figure this stuff out in our lifetimes so we may as well have some fun. I do wonder if Ramses mother in law had something to do with all that precision.

  • @kevincrady2831

    @kevincrady2831

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@wearemilesfromnowhere4630 That would be mothers-in-law, plural (shudder). The guy had a harem, and churned out (IIRC) ~100 sons and 50 daughters, and lived so damn long that his successor was an old man when he finally got to become Pharaoh.

  • @gembalaartoni
    @gembalaartoni4 жыл бұрын

    Breathtaking footage, again i didn't expect anything less 👍👍👍

  • @gbpferrao
    @gbpferrao2 жыл бұрын

    My fav channel for the month

  • @JustJoshinSC
    @JustJoshinSC7 күн бұрын

    This level of perfection is absolutely stunning. I do cabinets and consider myself pretty good at working with wood. But this is amazing. I would never be able to get the levels of square and plumb that whoever built these has accomplished. Absolutely advanced tech.

  • @seahawk930
    @seahawk9304 жыл бұрын

    Keep up the great work, Ben! We appreciate the effort!

  • @Marco-qc3gx
    @Marco-qc3gx3 жыл бұрын

    The fact that most, if not all Egyptologists and Archeologists are from an academic background with little or no experience in manufacturing is at the heart of why we a moving forward at such a slow pace in investigating these issues further. Anyone with any kind of rudimentary experience in manufacturing or engineering who looks at any of these objects will simply be awestruck, they are mind-boggling and there really are no words to describe how laughable it is to suggest that these objects were made with anything close to the current narrative put forward by academia.

  • @sewnonny2721
    @sewnonny27214 ай бұрын

    Ive watched these 2 videos a few times now, and have learned so much from them absolutely fascinating. Well done Ben, sent a little thank you tip.

  • @jaffasholva7738
    @jaffasholva7738 Жыл бұрын

    I found that many of the serapis temples all around the world are in alignment with each other. That is even a higher level of precision. These people were absolute masters.

  • @yurygaltykhin6271
    @yurygaltykhin62714 жыл бұрын

    One of the best videos on the subject, well written and narrated. I myself run a manufacturing of high-precision products (we generally require precision of IT Grade 9 or better) so as a professional I can vouch for every technical statement in this video. I also wanted to note that we have similar artefacts in Russia, although attributed to much modern times (e.g. Grand Kolyvan Vase, XIX century, on display at National Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg). Let me know if you are interested in learning more about them. Speaking about Egyptian high-precision artefacts, I cannot agree more that they required an advanced technology to be produced. They simply cannot be hand-crafted using the tech available at the time. That may not necessarily be the high-speed milling (or sort of CNC machining), but rather a technology yet unknown to us. As an example of similar novel technology not available a mere 50-60 years ago is an EDM which is used to carve extremely hard metals such as tungsten.

  • @2394Joseph

    @2394Joseph

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yury Galtykhin Hi Yuri, I would be very interested to hear your views on the "Grand Kolyvan Vase".

  • @yurygaltykhin6271

    @yurygaltykhin6271

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@2394Joseph Firstly, I am not an expert in stone cutting, so my opinion is basically an opinion of a layman. Anyways, here it is. The whole story of this artefact has few weak spots to me: 1) The official history tells about the original blueprints created by the architect Melnikov (earlier sources name another architect as its creator though). However, these blueprints were lost sometime around the alleged completion date. This is really strange that these blueprints were not preserved for further repairs and maintenance. 2) The vase has a shape of an ellipse, and made with very high precision. This is not a lathe which is relatively easy to manufacture. Even today with all available machinery and precision instruments it would require an enormous amount of efforts to maintain such precision. Not sure how it was made nearly 200 years ago. 3) I heard from a couple people that this particular artefact has absolutely minimal thickness to be structurally sound. Should they made the vase thinner by less than an inch, and it could not support its own weight. How could the creators of this vase 200 years ago make such calculations? Let alone, how did they make it with chisels and hammers without breaking it into pieces? 4) The vase was completed on site of manufacture. Then, extremely fragile vase with the weight of 19 metric tons was hauled all the way more than a thousand miles to its current location in St. Petersburg. How? The official accounts tell the story of hauling it, but they don't give any details except for the headcount of haulers. 5) It took 11 years to manufacture the vase, but when it arrived to St. Petersburg, it sat on the barge for 4 years waiting for special foundation to be built. Yes, they first manufactured it, then hauled it all the way down to the nation's capital, and only after it arrived they started to build a foundation for it. And building the foundation (relatively easy job) took more than 1/3 of the time needed to manufacture this masterpiece. Does it look like a well-planned operation? 6) and more. I could continue this list of strange facts about this vase, but I think this should be more than enough to at least make official history of it to be not completely trustworthy. I personally believe that this vase might be well an artefact which remains from prior technically advanced civilization.

  • @2394Joseph

    @2394Joseph

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@yurygaltykhin6271 Yuri, thank you for taking the time to detail your knowledge of the vase here. Very much appreciated. I was not aware of the Grand Kolyvan Vase. There is a saying that “history is a lie agreed upon” and the vase is a prime example of that. The Great Pyramid of Giza is also another one. According to the history books, Herodotus was told by the Egyptians that it took 20 years to build it and that is what is still taught today. There are 2.3m 2,5 ton (some even heavier) blocks of precision cut hard granite in the pyramid. The joints are so fine that you cannot force a cigarette paper between them, and there is no evidence of mortar. You do not have to be a mathematical genius to work out that they would have needed to cut, transport and lay 315 blocks blocks every day, (or close to 14 every hour) to achieve that, while just using hammers, chisels, tree trunks and wooden boats - impossible. If our teaching establishments can't work that out, and challenge it, there is not much hope for us.

  • @greendad57
    @greendad574 жыл бұрын

    Crushing the flimsy world of re inherited archaeology one site at a time. You my friend are the truth MACHINE!

  • @Soulseeologia
    @Soulseeologia Жыл бұрын

    I don’t think the new world produced those Locomotives I think they are old world tec what do you think, dear reader

  • @NBC_NCO
    @NBC_NCO Жыл бұрын

    This has got to be one of the best videos I've seen about our modern past. In my opinion it rivals big name media such as BBS PBS Nat Geo etc. Excellent work !!!

  • @pertinentparadigm1337
    @pertinentparadigm13374 жыл бұрын

    God... Seen and studied this topic countless times and I'm still fascinated with it, especially considering just how overlooked this subject is, relegated to the "settled science" category, we clearly don't know shit about our past. Well done as always my man! Respect!

  • @pertinentparadigm1337

    @pertinentparadigm1337

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Eddy Hep I didn't even mention Zog yet you had the clout and balls to realize that commonsense isn't Antisemitic, it's Antiseptic. Thanks for helping eliminate the spread of bullshit throughout the World. You made my day! That tribe has it's hands in everything wrong with the World today and it's always refreshing to hear someone point it out.

  • @pertinentparadigm1337

    @pertinentparadigm1337

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Eddy Hep Here's something not related to Egypt but certainly pertaining to the Historical Record, especially concerning the past century where Science, Archeology, History, Economics and Academia went awry. No surprise discovering the typical tribe of "culprits" behind every major calamity. Have a look at this FOIA release on the CIA's website, titled "National Cultural Development Under Communism", specifically on Page 9 where it mentions Tartaria. www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/document/cia-rdp78-02771r000200090002-6 I bet you probably know about Old Maps and the largest Empire no one's ever heard of but just in case you haven't, check it out. It goes without saying that Communism was a Jewish and Zionist movement that has yet to answer for the 100+ Million they murdered in their indiscriminate Genocide. Well past time they answer for their crimes. People need to openly discuss the blood on their hands without fear of their dubious labels.

  • @pertinentparadigm1337

    @pertinentparadigm1337

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Eddy Hep Thought I'd throw more sourced and annotated research your way proving how Zionists were responsible for escalating both World Wars. Hopefully you know the aforementioned document served as a receipt in 1917 after the YEARS of work Zionist's had accomplished by bringing the USA to the aid of the ALLIES entering WWI. This excerpt proves prior knowledge of well before 1917... ‘The Balfour Declaration, in the words of Prof. H. M. V. Temperley, was a “definite contract between the British Government and Jewry” (History of the Peace Conference in Paris, vol. 6, p. 173). The main consideration given by the Jewish people (represented at the time by the leaders of the Zionist Organization) was their help in bringing President Wilson to the aid of the Allies. Moreover, officially interpreted at the time by Lord Robert Cecil as ‘Judea for the Jews’ in the same sense as ‘Arabia for the Arabs,’ the Declaration sent a thrill throughout the world. The prior Sykes-Picot Treaty of 1916, according to which Northern Palestine was to be politically detached and included in Syria (French sphere), was subsequently, at the instance of the Zionist leaders, amended (by the Franco-British Convention of December 1920, Cmd. 1195) so that the Jewish National Home should comprise the whole of Palestine in accordance with the promise previously made to them for their services by the British, Allied and American Governments, and to give full effect to the Balfour Declaration, the terms of which had been settled and known to all Allied and associated belligerents, including Arabs, before they were made public.

  • @damion1757

    @damion1757

    4 жыл бұрын

    If people would stop believing silly religions, people would realize we have lived over 10,000 years ago. The oldest human skull found is about 400,000 years old. Our known history is only 5-6 thousand years. We could have accomplished our current level of technology over 60 times from the time of the skull. If we started even earlier, we could have had awesome, highly advanced, way more advanced then us, technology until the asteroid hit Earth's reset button.

  • @Bix12
    @Bix124 жыл бұрын

    Bravo, Ben....Bravo! Well done, young sir! You really hit this one right out of the ballpark!

  • @craigrmeyer
    @craigrmeyer11 ай бұрын

    Just fantastic work. Your best video of them all, I think.

  • @TheDane_BurnAllCopies
    @TheDane_BurnAllCopies6 ай бұрын

    Nice to see this series again. Great work, super good chanel.

  • @BLAZENYCBLACKOPS
    @BLAZENYCBLACKOPS3 жыл бұрын

    Yousef’s father was a brilliant man, may he Rest In Peace.

  • @oifiismith
    @oifiismith4 жыл бұрын

    As a bricklayer/mason. Carving two or more, individual statues/columns or pillars to the exact measurement without advance measuring tools would be very, very difficult. Keep up all you great work🤙🏽

  • @ItsOnlyNiall

    @ItsOnlyNiall

    4 жыл бұрын

    Would you agree it would be extremely difficult? Or is that a stretch? Just curious! Thanks 👍

  • @oifiismith

    @oifiismith

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ItsOnlyNiall I believe with enough time anything can be done. Yes, it would be extremely difficult. But one mess up and you would have to start all over on the project and I think the “ones” that wanted the things built would want to see most constructions completed in their lifetime. Just as in current times.

  • @Shad0wack

    @Shad0wack

    4 жыл бұрын

    Difficult or time consuming

  • @oifiismith

    @oifiismith

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Shad0wack Both

  • @Argrouk

    @Argrouk

    4 жыл бұрын

    But do you agree that once you have mastered the techniques, it should be reproducible? That calipers, levels and plumb lines are very simple devices with a wide range of uses.

  • @hawkeye1370
    @hawkeye1370 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting videos, it's staggering how they did this, and that only now could we come close to replicating these things. You make such strong points, I don't see how anyone could successfully argue against your points.

  • @paulhopper8156
    @paulhopper81566 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating. Well done 🙌🏻

  • @klivekussler4496
    @klivekussler44964 жыл бұрын

    Once again the Dynastic Egyptians claimed these Megalithic artifacts as their own because they did not have the Technology and know how to manufacture such advanced geometric structures . Ancient Squatters of a Megalithic Golden Era , that is what those Dynastic Egyptians were.

  • @dnagara

    @dnagara

    4 жыл бұрын

    Klive Kussler Interesting thought. where did the dynastic Egyptians originate from?

  • @klivekussler4496

    @klivekussler4496

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dnagara Well i believe for almost 30 centuries-from its unification around 3100 B.C. to its conquest by Alexander the Great in 332 B.C.-Dynastic ancient Egypt was the preeminent civilization in the Mediterranean world.......With the First Dynasty, the capital moved from Thinis to Memphis with a unified Egypt ruled by an Egyptian god-king .The 1st Dynasty, begun at Memphis by Menes, was marked by significant cultural achievements. He cemented his claims to the throne [by marriage] and by instituting, or reinforcing, the previous modes of governmental and religious traditions that would become unique aspects of Egypt's heritage of today . From the Global cataclysm 10.000 years ago and 7.000 years later this race of people claimed this ( Egypt ) their own of what was already left by those Megalithic Builders giving them a clean slate to work from and I believe the Egyptians adopted a Culture, Knowledge , Religion ,Prosperity and Dynasty ..... i also believe that 90% of the buildings that we see now were there already when those dynastic Egyptians happened upon those beautiful wonderment's of what we know today as EGYPT.

  • @FoxTheProducer

    @FoxTheProducer

    3 жыл бұрын

    Check it out. This video explains the jars pretty easily. kzread.info/dash/bejne/lndnvMF9ctGpoJs.html

  • @DEV3N87
    @DEV3N874 жыл бұрын

    My family and i freaking love your work Ben. You, Brien Foerster, Graham Hancock, John Anthony West, Christopher Dunn, and a few others are the beacons of light in this otherwise dark corridor of lies from Egyptology and others. Thank you so much for not only doing what you love, but also blessing us with your findings, theories, and opinions on these super ancient mysteries! Sacsayhuaman and Ollaytetombo(sry for spelling) will always be my personal favorites right behind Egypt and Baalbek. Have a great day my friend!

  • @calvinclark4471
    @calvinclark4471 Жыл бұрын

    I think that the vases were blown like glass. I'm a machinist by trade, and these captivated my attention mostly because of the materials they're made of. You can't even scratch the surface of many of these with steel, let alone copper. But blown glass can be shaped relatively easily despite its hardness. It would also explain the precision, as blown glass is often rotated similarly to parts on a lathe, spinning it while shaping it with a tool. Also, using a lathe wouldn't work on many of these, as the handles are protruding. But glass blowing is similar to welding, so the handles could have been added after the jars were turned. It also explains how the jars could have been made so thin.

  • @JimChap

    @JimChap

    6 ай бұрын

    But are you saying that the rock was melted and then shaped? I can't tell, but surely they were sculpted in some fashion from existing rock with some kind of advanced machine..

  • @eddieorfield

    @eddieorfield

    3 ай бұрын

    But HOW?

  • @peterrichardson4192
    @peterrichardson4192 Жыл бұрын

    EXCELLENT VIDEO. Worth watching

  • @phrtao
    @phrtao4 жыл бұрын

    Superb ! This is the documentary that I would have made (if I had your talent and eloquence). Just one comment, consider the trappings and technological capabilities that accompany the preponderance of precision in our time. Your introduction hints at it when you mention space flight and microelectronics but it is a logical conclusion to assume that these sophisticated technologies also existed in the distant past. In fact it would be more fantastic to assume that they only achieved sophistication in stone manufacture. Many of the artefacts you examine might once have been augmented with other technologies much less durable than stone and have long since disintegrated.

  • @jimparr01Utube

    @jimparr01Utube

    3 жыл бұрын

    A very good point methinks. Thank you for this perspective. I have long (intuitively) thought the same without knowledge of any kind about these artifacts. This documentary is providing supportive substance to my musings.

  • @sycadelic666
    @sycadelic6664 жыл бұрын

    Your edits just keep getting better and better, Ben. Entertaining, informative, well sequenced and thought out - one of the only YT channels that I come back to in order to watch the same vid multiple times. Respect. 👌 👍 🗿

  • @fidiak
    @fidiak Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for great video. Fantastic work.

  • @helenpetersen7174
    @helenpetersen7174 Жыл бұрын

    The schist disc reminds me of a turbine type of thing used to move water or air and yes, it is a complex piece for sure. Interesting video. Thank you.

  • @CamiloJamesGuitar
    @CamiloJamesGuitar4 жыл бұрын

    This has got to be my favourite one of yours yet Ben, gonna show this to everyone I know! Thank you!

  • @Robnoxious77
    @Robnoxious773 жыл бұрын

    I’m surprised at the apparent inability of egyptologists to ask the simple question: How?

  • @jamessalvatore7054

    @jamessalvatore7054

    3 жыл бұрын

    Because they are egyptologist. Educated to presume themselves experts and applying finds to their own theories as opposed to creating theories around what they find.

  • @freeenergynow

    @freeenergynow

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jamessalvatore7054 A brilliant analysis. Thank you!

  • @Kabodanki

    @Kabodanki

    3 жыл бұрын

    The whole history is about speculation. Even today history is written through the lens of the biggest party. History is lost everyday. Something happened in the world, a narrative is build around it, maybe the narrative is false, some know what really happened, if it doesn't fit the narrative and if the voice is too small to be taken into account, at some point history is lost. Only remains the bigger narrative. And even, in the future if someone start digging into the mainstream narrative and find dissonance, this person will build another narrative from alternative views that has maybe nothing to do with the mainsteam and alternate narrative.

  • @louissullivanartist

    @louissullivanartist

    3 жыл бұрын

    The word "how" wasn't invented yet silly

  • @f360speedhoodkinghotrods7

    @f360speedhoodkinghotrods7

    3 жыл бұрын

    Because they dont want to disturb their version of Egyptian disneyworld $$$$$...¡☆☆☆

  • @skibikerun60
    @skibikerun605 ай бұрын

    fascinating - thank you for producing this.

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