The Secret Of Tutankhamun's Tomb And Other Ancient Egyptian Mysteries | Egypt Detectives | Odyssey
Uncover some of ancient Egypt's greatest mysteries, from Tutankhamun's tomb to the pyramids of Giza. Archaeologist Miriam Cooke and Egyptologist Dominic Montserrat go on an eye-opening adventure, sifting through prehistoric paintings, millennia-old artefacts, unearthed tombs, and rarely-seen hieroglyphs as they reconstruct the Egyptian past.
Odyssey is your journey into the world of Ancient History; from the dawn of Mesopotamia to the fall of Rome. We'll be bringing you only the best documentaries that journey into the mysteries and ruins of worlds long lost.
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Пікірлер: 437
Tywin Lannister did an excellent job with the narration.
@kerpameidadkhar386
Жыл бұрын
you sure it's hime though?
@jcrip42
Жыл бұрын
"Because your a lannister that's why"
@L.A.Tex_Norway
11 ай бұрын
@@kerpameidadkhar386definitely sounds like him, he has a very recognicable voice
@oddie4391
9 ай бұрын
Charles Dance
@allan9603
7 ай бұрын
No
Love this channel. I went to the King Tut exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto in 2008. Egyptian art and artifacts are absolutely breathtaking to behold with your own eyes. A television screen or photo does them no justice. I highly recommend anyone go to their local museum or exhibition center to see them for themselves when such travelling displays are in their area. 🙏🍻
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
😊
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Its a great channel
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Thats awesome. I would love to hear more
@ilean9283
Жыл бұрын
My God, my God; thank you for the insight
@classicalaid1
Жыл бұрын
There is a new, astonishingly grand museum in Cairo housing the Tut treasures. It is comparable in size to the Louvre in Paris. Beg, borrow of steal to get your way to see the amazing new cultural palace housing the Egyptian cultural treasures.
When Tut died at such an early age, I can only suppose it was unexpected. There being a good reason why his burial posessions were more than likely inherited.
@mizzougrad001
9 ай бұрын
Inbreeding
@AWMulholland99
5 ай бұрын
@@mizzougrad001 Guy most prob found of the truth
@Twitch24
3 ай бұрын
As unexpected as murder can be. yes
@Lebeauski
3 ай бұрын
@@Twitch24 conspiring a different demise... Possible.
@ChristopherSitar
2 ай бұрын
It was expected, it was murder
I loved this series. Watched it a few years back
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Me too
Tywin lannister as Narator is amazing
@kerpameidadkhar386
Жыл бұрын
how do you know it is him?
@TwoBs
2 ай бұрын
@@kerpameidadkhar386 It’s not. It’s a different narrator for a documentary pushing two decades old even though all the totally original copy-pasted jokes about it being the guy from GoT claims otherwise.
@lynnedelacy2841
Ай бұрын
It is him - it’s Charles Dance the actor who played Tywin doing the narration - he’s 77 yrs old and so possible for him to record a 20yr old documentary
I read many many years ago that one sarcophagus of King Tut, was actually built for a woman, possibly Queen Tiye who I believe was King Tut's Grandmother.
Y’all are the best good job I love your videos I’m a huge fan
I recently visited Tut in his tomb. Is his mummy already in Giza or still in his tomb??? Greetings to all egyptomaniacs!❤
@mous3pad_music
Жыл бұрын
its in a museum
@rebeccafoster8765
Жыл бұрын
Wow! How thrilling for you!!
@harridan.
Жыл бұрын
I hope you get to enjoy the Amelia Peabody series written by Elizabeth Peters, extremely well written and done so with great humor. Every member of the family of egyptologists in the books existed but not as relatives. Peters also wrote as Barbara Michaels and has publicly threatened to sue herself for plagiarism. she did have a doctorate in egyptology from the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute. Dr. Salima Ikram was not merely a fan, she was a friend, and when the Elizabeth Peters room was christened at (i think the Cairo Museum, not certain, found it on KZread) she was there, with a bunch of ridiculously costumed scholars. Peters passed away in recent years, sadly. My Heathen cats and i miss her.
@ande100
Жыл бұрын
His actual mummy is back in his tomb KV62. The sarcophagus has been replacet and it is in an air conditioned glass display for view.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Cool
Great narrator and documentary
@mojojojo3796
Жыл бұрын
Tywin lannistor?
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
@@mojojojo3796 itz baker
wonderful
This is old! At some point early on Zahi took over the original findings of these archaeologicals - Zahi LOVED Akhenaten! He said: "I LOVE this man! He is my hero! He believes in one God!" Disregarding the evidence how Akhenaten terrorized his subjects. Part of the original documentary is missing - There is a bit about carvings in the blocks of Armarna show Akhenaten's guards hidden around corners listening to the people. They are holding their clubs high ready to beat them if the say anything negative about Akhenaten. This was carved into the walls for the subjects to read so they'd be kept terrified of making the Pharaoh angry. Also, depictions of - Never before seen in Ancient Egypt of anyone before Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and their family had to crouch on the ground putting their lips in the dirt before them. No one was allowed to pray or invoke Aten but Akhenaten and his family. Zahi and many Egyptologists, say he believed in one god - removing pantheism - He didn't! Akhenaten removed the family of gods which Aten or Atum, gave birth to. The hogs and goddesses of Ancient Egypt were all children of the Aten. Akhenaten removed them, throwing them away - AND replacing them with himself, Nefertiti, and his family. They were gods and goddesses on earth. It was horrible what he did.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Yup
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
He was the first monotheist we know of so shut it He was crap at war though
Ankanaton didn't left out of free will he got exiled. Nice to see this old footage and nice to see if anything changed about the narrative in these years.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Yes
I was blessed to see the King Tut and ancient Egyptian exhibit at the Met in NYC and also the Tut Emersion in NYC. I have great pics of the emersion of Tut and his family tree. I stood next to it and I actually looked like I belonged in the family tree.
@evag4535
5 ай бұрын
Hell yes…..
I thought everyone knew that Kiya was Tut´s mother, not Nefertiti.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Me too
@michaelwetzel1853
Жыл бұрын
Tut's mother was the Younger Lady mummy, who was also Akhenaton's sister. He was a product of inbreeding.
@Lela-plants
Жыл бұрын
I think this is an older show that was just re-released
@ekc_sc.722
Жыл бұрын
@@Lela-plants very old show. Roughly 20 years old at this point.
@wherestheaudio3209
Жыл бұрын
Who is kiya can you explain to me shortly please?
Charles dance, is a amazing talent, as a narrator he is in unparalleled
King tut was very very special, his energy and being was highly loved by all his presence could heal
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Ys
@shonii119
Жыл бұрын
errrr uhhh
@howlinwulf
Жыл бұрын
He could heal himself,must've died on a lazy day. Pft
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
Nope LOL
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
He died young
ty
Wow really
Interesting theories. More investigation is needed. Never assume, with ancient civilizations, that all the answers have been discovered.
I wonder if the thieves that robbed these tombs in previous times, regret what they've done while living in the after life, or if they just knew of their atrocities. So much has been lost, and it just plain sucks!
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
It does suck
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
They were raided
@harridan.
Жыл бұрын
if you love Egypt and a great mystery novel, check out Elizabeth Peters series of Amelia Peabody books. Extremely well written, hilarious at times....Peters had a doctorate in Egyptology
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
Carter and the other egyptologists weren’t much better imo. Tut got the royal treatment, but imagine finding out your 3-4000 year old body got literally eaten by rich Europeans to get magic powers
@madmesh978
Жыл бұрын
47....
I wonder if the problem of sand and the encroaching desert had anything to do with moving the sites and the layers of a mastaba. A mastaba could probably be hidden by the desert sands more easily while a larger structure had a better chance of remaining visible for centuries.
@ilean9283
Жыл бұрын
I wondered that myself
@sundayridetexas416
Жыл бұрын
I feel we still rob tombs in our modern way. IMO we should never remove items or bodies from their resting place. We should strive to only learn what we are able with what we have and protect the site. At no point did the pharoah want to be removed from their tomb, yet we still do to this day.
@dansonsaldanha4132
Жыл бұрын
@@sundayridetexas416 That's so true.
@rosiegirl2485
11 ай бұрын
I sort of agree with you..but if we didn't remove these remains, and content..we wouldn't know a fraction of what we do. Just imagine 3,500 years from now..we too, may be dug up and studied. Imagine the rediculous things that they may find from our culture. One thing that is absolute..we won't be adorned with all of the gold..and they won't find much more then bones left in our tombs.
Tutankhamun died very young, or murdered, and he didn't have time to accrue enough possessions for his tomb. either that, or he WAS murdered, and all his possessions were stolen, and perhaps many items were donated by the faithful that loved him.
@DrDoke
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, no.
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
Probably an accident or illness
the best part of the video is the one where the archaeologist explains how the Egyptians shaped the rock with a slightly harder stone and thus made a statue of the pharaoh, Miserable
Joanne Fletcher (red haired woman) isn't in it. Just so you know. You're welcome.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
☺️
@jeraldbaxter3532
Жыл бұрын
And it suffers by the omission.
Good evening everyone
Molto bello mi piace molto a fare la vacanza lì mi piacerebbero
They were building our solar system, crowning stars with gold and jewels.
I wish there were documentaries of other pharaohs who made the highest achievements during that time by erecting dazzling cities and comissioned megalithic monuments in devotion to a panacea of their gods (prior to other civilization) not just the pop culture of king Tut. Come on filmmakers, get to it!
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
I think you mean plethora
Both day & night, like the pharaohs themselves, building by the sun, by day, & in line with the stars, by night. Another video on the placement of Egypt’s pyramids ☮️🕊💚🍃 Ra, in life, & Osiris, after death 😔💛💟🌸
Need 4k
I wish Odyssey would focus on Egyptologists and archaeologists who are Egyptian, not folks from the same countries who robbed and looted the graves of the pharaohs.
pls add English subtitles :(((
@abbypengelly1432
Жыл бұрын
it's in English
KZread, every 5 minutes you give me a bleeping advertisement!?!?
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
It happens
Maybe the grave goods of the Pharaohs were never stolen. Maybe they just moved then around?
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Probably
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
I can imagine that not every pharaoh had time to build a tomb, or died young. I’m sure at least some pharaohs got grave goods from already ancient tombs because they just didn’t have the time
Sounds like Tywin Lannister to me.🏹⚔️🧟♀️🧙♂️
Also remember the Kings army were drown in the red sea and chariot wheels of that period were found where they crossed.There were also markers at the crossing, one standing, one fell and was raised up again .
@beanovofilgueira1584
Жыл бұрын
This is a fake news😂😂😂😂
@larapalma3744
Жыл бұрын
Wrong pharoah by few thousand years
From what I can remember, At the Cairo Museum ( talking of 10+ years ago) There were at least 5 such standardized sculptures, +/- damaged. The falcon one was the best preserved indeed, but I remember 2 more in decent condition. The Hanortositis Gneiss? Is this the name of the mineral composition of the stone? I've seen it before at the MET, used for a Sahure portrait together with his dwarf God, but I didn't see any glowing effect, even if it was in natural light. Not in NYC and not in Cairo.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
That’s awesome
Is that Tywin Lannister doing the voice over work?????
Are there anymore Pharoah toombs to be discovered?
Khufu ship was moved to grand Egyptian Museum in August 2021.
Way too many commercials I find tht hard to concentrate on program
@TwoBs
2 ай бұрын
You must be incredibly young, spoiled by skippable ads lol. This documentary was recorded a while back from live cable television with the commercial breaks. It has a rather nostalgic charm to it. Instead of complaining about advertisements and commercials, acting as if you can’t watch it because it’s not automatically skipped for you … how about you just appreciate the fact that this stuff is put up for you to watch for free? Skip through the commercials. It’s what a fast forward button is there for - make use of it for once.
Audio is not good, I hope you can get it remastered
When was this documentary made, please? It feels like an older piece -- and Mr Hawas has not been the Antiquities Chief since approx 2011.
@ekc_sc.722
Жыл бұрын
2004 originally.
@CuAnnuvin
Жыл бұрын
@@ekc_sc.722 Thank you
@saratonnan
Жыл бұрын
They mentioned 80 years had passed since the tomb was discovered, which was 1922.
@CuAnnuvin
Жыл бұрын
@@saratonnan Thank you very much that puts it at of after 2002.
Egypt. Broca's area, or the Broca area is a region in the frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere, usually the left, of the brain with functions linked to speech production.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
😊
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
That’s interesting
I sleep So well 😂
Wouldn’t a movie about Akhenaten be great?
@dr.banoub9233
Жыл бұрын
There is a movie, 1954’s “The Egyptian“ Look it up! Leading roles were played by Edmund Purdom, Bella Darvi, Jean Simmons, Victor Mature, Gene Tierney, Peter Ustinov, and Michael Wilding. Cinematographer Leon Shamroy was nominated for an Oscar in 1955.
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
Don’t let ancient aliens get the rights 😂
@dr.banoub9233
Жыл бұрын
@@Balrog-tf3bg Ancient astronaut theorists, say Whaaat?
Really interesting and enjoyable but WAY WAY too many ads :(
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Ya there are
I had never heard of a Pharaoh Cuckoo BEFORE!!!! 😂
Al Jah Jahra ,Sound power and word. Ai Ba Ra STA
3:40 Heyy bud, having trouble walking??
Volume is to low
Did they not have Oxen to pull the blocks…?
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Ys
Go and visit,please.
I have watched a few of these fascinating accounts of this young Pharaoh's post mortem ‘treasures'. I have absolutely no doubt about the validity of the claims. Considering his age though it makes sense he would have had in his ownership a number of his parent's possessions that he inherited. Also given his youth, he likely would not have acquired a great many of his own objects and articles. If however these items were specifically produced for the afterlife journey and subsequently placed in his tomb, that does beg an entirely different argument. Certainly it is clear the tomb he commissioned was not where he was interred, and nor were the funeral-specific items such as sarcophagi, canopic jars, and face transplanted gold death mask. Even the instructions to the underworld painted on the walls were oversized and heavily edited. Again, given his age and early death along with the prescribed 70 days to complete all tasks these does make a great deal of sense. Concerning all the other items though, are they not just the collection of articles he acquired and inherited during his short lifetime? Just a thought, not a challenge or criticism.
Most of all that was looted from Egypt must still be in somebody's possesion. Seems improbable that much of it would be discarded into the trash after being looted and sold.
Yoshu-aten 🤔
I.m from egebt
If they had chariots, isn’t it reasonable they might have had wheeled carts? I always wondered that, would be much easier than dragging stones by hand.
@showbread9366
Жыл бұрын
Are chariots wheeled carts?
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
@@showbread9366 half of a cart. Idk how effective it would be but I’d figure using thick enough and durable wood it’d be able to transport at least some large stones
I swear I saw this before. But another title, perhaps.
Tut will visit you in your dreams if you're born again.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Yup
Tut ankh amun is NOT the translation of "the living image of the Aten" it is the living image of Amun. Obviously no real research went into this production. Tutankamun originally was named Tutankhaten and the original name translates to the living image of the Aten.
I wonder how much money Zowie Howass has made selling antiquities on the black market?
Gabe Newell at 0:50 🤣
Don't we know already that Akhenaten and a full or half sister of his were Tutankhamun's parents? Tut had just one biological grandfather, Amenhotep III. Therefore, Tut's mother must be one of Amenhotep III's six (or so) daughters. Amenhotep III had taken two of his daughters as wives. Maybe those two are less likely to have been subsequently wives of Akhenaten, and so Tut's mother was likely one of the remaining four daughters. Nefertiti was Theban but was not of royal blood. She was never described as such. Therefore, although Tut is a biological son of Akhenaten, he is not a son of his primary queen, Nefertiti.
La tumba,la máscara y todo loq había en ése lugar,no le pertenecía... sí a la reina ..lo pusieron ahí de apuro, empezando que no fue bueno para nada,y antes de tirarlo a desierto 😅.....
The priesthood was robbing the kings tombs and the gold for themselves.
I believe the God akhanatan worshipped those days by abolishing all the other gods including aamon seems during the the time of Joseph who brought ppl back to one god abt its not seen in any of the walls of akhanat temple which is very strange how the history is be erased 😊 excited to see Joseph during the akhnatan period. 😊
Do I hear Tywin Lanaster?
amazing that a 90 minute episode could have been made from something that could have been explained in 2 sentences...
@chrisgullett4332
Жыл бұрын
There really is no explaining it, nobody really knows.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
@@chrisgullett4332 true
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
Eh true, but I found it interesting. Definitely went off on some tangents tho 😂
What if the rushed burial of Tut was due to religious purposes and not necessarily by choice. The burials were supposed to be the pathway from this world into their next. So what if they were so worried that if they took too long to prepare Tut he would miss his chance to move onto the next plane of existence. If you look at it from the perspective of them just trying to ensure the tomb was good enough to serve that cause, it all makes a little more sense. Taking relics and stuff from other Pharaohs tombs wouldn't be as bad in this perspective being that they would have already "made the journey to the next life" so essentially they didnt need the decor anymore other than for making the tomb look nice. (I'm no Egypt expert I just started learning about it, but it makes sense to me)
@detroitsin5250
Жыл бұрын
Tomb seemed rushed or repurposed, his embalming and mummification seemed rushed, maybe they were on a religious deadline and not necessarily trying to dishonor their unexpectedly dead Pharoah.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
@@detroitsin5250 ya
@JohnnyDogs1978
Жыл бұрын
Never thought of that, I hope Egyptologists have. Good theory, makes sense.
Who is the narrator?
Nice documentary, but constains some big errors. At 18:29, a pair are in the burial chamber of Tutankhamun talking about wife Ankehesaumun. The egyptologist shines the flashlight (why didn't they just turn on the lights installed in the tomb?) on one corner of the sarcophacus to "show" wife Ankesaumun. The indicated figure is Serket, the scorption godess - no relation with the wife. The scorpion on the head should be an obvious clue. How could anyone make such a mistake?
I want to see evidence from the great drought and hunger and traces that Joseph really built silos for storage of grains.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
So do i
@BenPat88
Жыл бұрын
@@bradgerberexcellent, you should make a video on this and link when you do!
KZread should demonetize these videos. I pay $17 a month for no ads and these people just put ads in their videos to what, bypass the hard earned money I pay to not listen to ads? Disgraceful
Interviewing someone in the middle of a noisy restaurant is entirely foolish.
There have been bigger and better discoveries, gold is just gold. Knowledge is more valuable and I discovered knowledge in Egypt so Carter can sit in the back seat.
Tombs, occupied or not can't be "robbed", pilfered or burglarized yes.
The music was incredibly obnoxious in this video
June jr
All my life I have been fascinated with Egypt. But...I have always felt that something is not quite right about its history.
@WorldWokeApeCult
Жыл бұрын
Fortunately, the professionals don’t rely on their feelings. If you think something is wrong, research it and give us a better interpretation.
@Balrog-tf3bg
Жыл бұрын
@@WorldWokeApeCult the ancient alien people don’t give humans any credit. Obviously most ancient civilizations had technology that “can’t” have existed back then, there’s just very little documentation of it
@BenPat88
Жыл бұрын
Agree, the dynastic Egyptians inherited all of the good stuff, like the schist disk and other crazy advanced pottery, the diorite statues and the Serapium boxes (and of course many of the pyramids, sphinx, etc). The pro-mainstream people in this comment section have no imagination, deny science and pretend they are more knowledgeable than they are. Rejecting evidence and overlooking serious problems with their accepted timeline proves they are willingly ignorant. I really wish one of them would carve me out a 10 ton block of rose granite from Aswan with a copper chisel but for some reason none of them will. I will fund the whole thing and pay them $100k
@WorldWokeApeCult
Жыл бұрын
@@BenPat88 yeah sure buddy, you go ahead and write up that contract and have it made all legal like. 😂😂😂
I miss you my king😢😢
If Tut was only 20 then maybe he wasn't that tall of a giant yet 🤔
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Ya
They probably found everything in the American desert 🏜 and shipped everything back to Egypt and dumped all the giants in the ocean on the way to Egypt
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
👍
King Tut would have inherited his fathers possessions, he was a King by age 8
Tuts treasure is behind the wall
who's the narrator?
@cherry-vz5kx
Жыл бұрын
I think it is Tom Baker,who may be best remembered as one of the best if not the best, Dr Who.
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
@@cherry-vz5kx yup
@Gorboduc
Жыл бұрын
It's definitely not.
Makes perfect sense that the priests buried the son of a heretic with his fathers (and mothers) retouched funerary goods. It explains why the tomb is small and hurriedly completed. It's location was intentionally forgotten, and the priests (who later looted them) could not destroy these artifacts. SO ironic the son of a despised monotheist (pre-dating Jesus and Mohammed) has become the most famous pharaoh of all.
@edoboleyn
11 ай бұрын
Not sure Akhenaten was a real monotheist. He merely focused the state cult on the Aten in order to disempower the priests of other gods, who threatened the authority of the Pharaohs. He did not deny the existence of other gods, and in political context his actions make sense. Also, Jesus was just a Jew, so he should hardly be considered an “early” monotheist.
is that charles dance
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Not sure
can't hear too quiet
@harridan.
Жыл бұрын
quiet as a tomb
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
@@harridan. ya
The women on this show are so beautiful! ❤ And why is it called sun disc? Couldn't it just be an illustration of the sun? 😂
1:08:27 the “scale” is completely wrong. How big are the goat skins ? In scale of course.
At counter 00:30 that was King Tut's wife .>>> Not Him .... That is Oonka cinnamun and if you look up her statues you you will see a common one aside of one of the very few of Tut at a throne and her 11with where "Eye" ((mi-spelt) her grand father had her statue face to be disfigured because she didn't conform to his rulings (regulations)' is still here for use to see..You can go find it. Last: At counter 00:44 about how they "Know that this was not stuff made for King Tut" Well of course, when I go to a thrift store and buy a old clock.......OK. Oh and my dad being a Great Pharaoh ,,ahhh OK. So the point here I guess that this odyssey channel is making is that this is fake and this this is not what it is , but rather something that is not for him when it was made and that they know, for they were born the other day and that maybe that King Tut wasnt real and that they put this here and made up the drawing and that these people of this time now will see it and believe it.
Man it really sucks that dam THIEVES robbed the world of seeing the very large and grandiose tombs as they where...could you IMAGINE what king Rameses the 2nd tomb would have looked like un touched??? Ah man... all that history and beauty.. gone..melted down. Chopped up and sold by some dam thieves
Jeru ( Jah Ra) sala (sailor) king of Manning. He Bruin
Amenhotep (1450 BC) was the Pharaoh of the Exodus.....his elder son was killed by the angel of death which resulted in the Israelites being released. Akenaton AKA Amenhotep Jr may have remembered the mystery and power of the people of the "One God, the Creator" that Moses (guessing here....Tut...Moses) and realized that they were probably right.....the tribe of Judah. יוי
@alexciarlo280
Жыл бұрын
Yup
it was robbed shortly after being sealed possible from the sculptors
Jah mon
😀😀
How does that statue still have a nose
For all there who are interested in ancient egypt, consider to take a look at grahams hancocks work , it is truly interesting theory
@j.l.emerson592
Жыл бұрын
Graham Hancock's 'work'? He has no work. He has no credentials. He's a hack 'journalist' who has a vested interest in having his so called theories heard by the widest possible audience because he makes money off book sales. He gathers no evidence, provides no proofs. He just writes whatever wild 'theory' he chooses & demands that the real professionals prove him wrong. News flash: it's not possible because Hancock provides nothing substantive for real scientists to examine using the scientific method. Hancock also said that ALL archaeologists disbelieve his 'theories' because they are protecting their jobs... So much for scientific method! 👎
@januk525
Жыл бұрын
@@j.l.emerson592 i did not say it’s true. I said it is interesting theory.