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ANCIENT TECH at ASWAN & ELEPHANTINE ISLAND 

Funny Olde World
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Hello Hunters,
Today i'm taking you with me to the unfinished obelisk at Aswan Quarry, and we put the dolerite ball theory to the test.
Then sailed down the river Nile to Elephantine Island the creepiest place in Egypt.
Our Tour Guide Yousef Awyan from ‪@Khemitology‬
I was touring with ‪@UnchartedX‬ & ‪@BrightInsight‬
If you haven't clicked the bell to be notified of video posts, I drop videos every Sunday.
#egypt #aswan #ancienttechnology #khemit #history
See you next time
JJ xx

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11 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 657   
@laurahaaima1436
@laurahaaima1436 3 года назад
Seeing Yousef his explanations for a long time on youtube.. He needs more appreciation for what he knows and does. What a lovely human being. He's a legend.
@WeallAreAdults
@WeallAreAdults 3 года назад
qft!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@jhosn-k1q
@jhosn-k1q 3 года назад
Seeing the crack , could be a good argument for dissing any cement or stone softener…. If I have this huge project I would do anything to repair.. and having stone softener I would be able to repair … unless the crack was part of the catastrophe wiping out everything.
@poppit5481
@poppit5481 2 года назад
yeah the last few months iv just started to hear his name over every podcast i watch..and they all trust what he says.he.must have some wisdom
@jonq8714
@jonq8714 Год назад
@@jhosn-k1q "It'll buff out."
@fhehufiusabdjspiufdh
@fhehufiusabdjspiufdh 3 года назад
I've been interested in ancient history and especially architecture for many years now. I've watched loads of different RU-vidrs talking about these topics over the last couple of years, and I think I finally found my favorite! I love the energy in your videos and I think you are one of the few RU-vidrs in the community that are good at talking to a camera, which makes the content more fun and interesting. Can't wait till this video premieres!
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
Thanks Henriq!!!!!
@The0007laika
@The0007laika 3 года назад
A very good candidate for sure 🙌🙌🙌
@Cmdr_Sam
@Cmdr_Sam 3 года назад
The reason I really like your presentation style is because you keep the video lighthearted and funny while explaining deep mysteries. I can easily send this video to a friend without them feeling that I am sending them some ancient cult video about lost civilizations.
@mrgreenbudz37
@mrgreenbudz37 Год назад
And she is drop-dead adorable at least in my eyes.
@paladinto77
@paladinto77 3 года назад
Oh yea, that box is one of my favorite. You CANNOT POSSIBLY see the angles on that and think it was done by hand. SMOKING GUN
@kronictube
@kronictube 3 года назад
Hahahahaha
@paladinto77
@paladinto77 3 года назад
@@davidleomorley889 you need courage? all the best
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
Continuing.... Luxor is hard to do inexpensively on a 7-8 day trip…without being rushed…but it can be done. Once in Egypt though, each day can cost you less than $40-60 per day more if you don’t go too overboard. An inexpensive but clean hotel room in Luxor and in Aswan further south costs me about $20.00 per day, and like I said, they often with a breakfast included. I stay at the Nefertiti hotel in Luxor. nefertitihotel.com It’s clean, friendly and it only costs about $22 for a single room…with a small breakfast included. The rooftop restaurant where I eat my breakfast overlooks Luxor temple….which is open in the evenings. It’s literally across the street. The people at the front desk can get you a taxi to the valley of the kings, a guide, or advice on other things….or you can just go outside and catch a ride yourself. I use the hotel…because my local friend works there and I get him to be my driver for the day…and we get to hang out and go to different temples. Hot air balloon rides are about $100 I am told…although I haven’t ever been on one. You can take a day trip to visit the Dendera Temple complex….and Abydos too if you choose. If you get a taxi to pick you up at 6:00 am, the driver can take the short-cut desert road to Dendera and have you there when it first opens at 7:00. The photos are the best in the early and there aren’t any tourists usually until around 8:00am. After spending about 3 hours or so there, you can have the driver take you to Abydos to see the Osirian and Seti I temple….which has the best bronze age temple art in all of Egypt. Abydos is actually my favorite place in Egypt. It’s a smallish town on the edge of the desert filled with friendly locals. Most people stay at the “House of Life” hotel and it’s because it’s the only one in most guide books. It’s not cheap…but I’ve heard it’s nice. I stay at my best Egyptian friend’s guesthouse called the Flower of Life Guesthouse. It’s right on the edge of the desert and walking distance to the Seti I temple and the Osirian. It’s about $22 night with a breakfast. Here is the website I created for him. I’m still working on it. www.floweroflifeguesthouse.com You can do a day trip to Dendera and Abydos from Luxor in one busy day. But if you want to slow down and see things rarely looked at, stay in Abydos for a night, or two, and visit mysterious places like the 4,700 year old Shunet el Zebib from the 2nd dynasty and Ramese II’s temple right on the edge of the desert where the first kings had ritual structures and are buried. There is also the new museum in Sohag you can be brought to and with a couple of more days, you could take a private trip with my friend to the Pharaoh Akhenaten and Queen Nerfertiti's city Amarna. Ameer, the owner of the guesthouse is a great and gentle man and will take care of you and make sure you are safely transported back to Luxor if you decide to stay. Sometimes the local police like to escort you around middle Egypt with a Toyota pick-up truck leading the way. That’s just how it is…but the experience will exceed your expectations. I like eating the local food which is easy to find anywhere, even on the street sidewalks. If I eat falafels, breads, Kofta, Ful (beans), dates, cheeses, Koshary, sandwiches etc, it will cost me about $10-13.00 per day for food no matter where I am. Meat dishes cost a bit more. I taped this the last time I was in Cairo: vimeo.com/210837790 Going to Aswan from Luxor is easy. You can take a train, a taxi or even cheap 2-3 day cruises upstream from Luxor. I’ve never taken one, but they do stop at the three temples along the way, Esna, Kom Ombo and Edfu. Aswan is like a whole other place. I stay at the same guesthouse the guy Karl Watson stayed at in the video above. Catching a Nile cruise on a felucca is easy. They are right there on the waterfront. If you walk along the sidewalk in Aswan that runs along the Nile,…you might be approached to the point of frustration. I walk on the other side of the street. I also stay at the Orchida St. George Hotel sometimes which is just up the alley from my friends store, the Patience and Faith Bazaar. You can take a 5 cent water taxi over to Elephantine Island, walk through the alleys and go to the temple at the south end. There are no cars. People are friendly. Most are Nubian people. You can take another 5 cent ferry back to the west side of the Nile and walk in about 10 minutes over to the Unfinished Obelisk. Most of the trips to Abu Simbel leave at about 3:45 AM. It takes more than three hours to get there…and then you stay for maybe three more, and then drive back. It’s most of a day…but if you go you Aswan you shouldn’t miss it. You can walk around safely in downtown Cairo, Luxor or Aswan during the day or even during the evening and you won’t feel unsafe. The best way to open your mind about ancient Egypt is to get the courage to leave your safety zone and go traveling to Egypt.
@paladinto77
@paladinto77 3 года назад
@@davidleomorley889 wow a personal travel agent on youtube! thanks man. I can form opinions with pictures as well, but wow
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
@@paladinto77 I don't like seeing the general public being misled about Egypt's amazing past accomplishments. I want the ancient work of Egyptians to be appreciated by the public and it frustrates me and pisses me off when people try to claim they didn't build these structures...and that they just discovered them. It's b.s....and a bit racist also. I have lots of Egyptian friends up and down the Nile and I plan to be living there full-time starting in late summer. I will be making videos that will be showing the work of scholars and debunking the lies being put out... as soon as arrive. I have more than 80 different Egyptology lectures available on my RU-vid page.
@cfapps7865
@cfapps7865 3 года назад
I enjoyed that. Good video Jahannah.
@maroje841
@maroje841 3 года назад
i like your videos Chuck.. and it's nice seeing all you ancient history/megalithic construction explorers interacting and supporting each other.
@cfapps7865
@cfapps7865 3 года назад
@@maroje841 Thank you. I have made some friends, Ben, Matt..others. They have offered help to me...which is appreciated because I'm a technical idiot. I will always leave a comment on a video i enjoy and take in something new that I have not seen before. And cracked some smiles watching this. Trying to get my brain on so I can finish a video.
@douggoble9695
@douggoble9695 3 года назад
C
@douggoble9695
@douggoble9695 3 года назад
Chuck, you know I enjoy your videos. And I enjoyed Miss James videos also. How about you and her do a video together?
@KalRandom
@KalRandom 3 года назад
@@cfapps7865 Keep looking in my feed for that video your teasing us about. Good to see you here Chuck.
@JohnC420.
@JohnC420. 3 года назад
Another great video Yusuf is the man whenever I can actually get to Egypt hes the only one I want to give me a tour he knows what hes talking
@Slavigrad
@Slavigrad 3 года назад
I wasn’t there, so I look forward for some video footage. There is this famous “unfinished obelisk” created with magical copper chisels, stones and pure strenght of human muscles.
@crhu319
@crhu319 3 года назад
Those cuts exactly one cubit deep were scooped out using some kind of leverage from above, maybe a huge pick on a seesaw lever
@yardsaleuw3075
@yardsaleuw3075 3 года назад
I think, The Obelisk didnt crack until after everyone had either died or abandoned the area, and it probably cracked due to massive earthquakes. If the egyptians made it, then they would have cut it up into smaller pieces, if it developed a crack. Thats why the egyptians didnt make it. They didnt have the ability. The civilization who made it was destroyed and all the technology was lost.
@Rabeea09
@Rabeea09 3 года назад
good point , if it indeed developed a crack during the work .. they propably would just cut it into smaller pieces and use them..
@herrmatthias4662
@herrmatthias4662 3 года назад
it looks like the civilization that tried extracting it was stopped by a huge cataclysm and thousands of years later newer civilizations tried to finish the work and failed, you can see multiple methods there but the first one was the supreme most precise.
@Jippa_33
@Jippa_33 3 года назад
Great to see Yousef get some screen time. I’ve been hearing about that guy from Graham for years & years. Another interesting video, thanks a lot 👍
@jeffborne1
@jeffborne1 3 года назад
You've been hearing about Yusef's late father.
@Gamerock82
@Gamerock82 3 года назад
Pounding stone theory is laughably stupid. That box / doorway / thingy lying on its side .... pause at 10:25 and look at the far right corner. After everything and after so long it is still perfectly square and crisp. Yet we are supposed to believe that free-hand swinging rocks achieved that edge. There's hundreds of very experienced stone workers in Egypt. Have any of them... even one - ever achieved that kind of corner or the crazy smooth finish like on the black granite, using this method? EDIT: Hubris and the "sunk cost fallacy" (hope I got the term right) .. Too proud to admit they have mislead everybody for years and they have invested so much in the lie it is too late to bail on it. We could dig up an intact, bronze disk, diamond tipped, camel powered circular saw tomorrow, complete with corundum dust, auto water cooled polishing machine covered in 100k year old human DNA and they would still say it was all done 3k years ago with rocky balls. Damn buffoons.
@The0007laika
@The0007laika 3 года назад
✌️
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
You're the only thing that is laughably stupid here.
@somethingelse4150
@somethingelse4150 3 года назад
They just can't tell the peasants that our Goldilocks climate is a fluke and at any moment everything they take for granted could be destroyed and the few survivors will exist in deep caves. People don't want to hear that.
@philipthomas3938
@philipthomas3938 3 года назад
Bit more high-tech than camel powered from beings who flew vimanas with devastating exotic energy weapons
@Gamerock82
@Gamerock82 3 года назад
@@philipthomas3938 The machines could have been people powered. I suppose if they figured out drive belt logic and / or gears, they could relatively easily have been camel or horse or donkey powered too. No harm in those ideas. Beasts of burden have existed as far back as we care to look. Not sure we need to invoke exotic weapons, much as I would enjoy the idea. They definitely had some way of planning that academia is ignoring. They definitely had skills that academia won't admit. Most importantly they had the means to carry out those plans with incredible skill and phenomenal attention to detail, precision and workmanship. The bit I firmly argue is that it could not have been done with the tools academia claims it was. You just don't polish a surface by pounding it. You just don't achieve three polished faces, of a brittle material, meeting in a flawless 90 by 90 by 90 degree corner / point with a round, heavy, hand-held rock.
@The0007laika
@The0007laika 3 года назад
Cool, never seen that “test holes” before. Thx for sharing ✌️
@Gamerock82
@Gamerock82 3 года назад
Me neither, first time I hear of these. Obviously horizontal striations in the sides means it was "drilled" as in rotating tool..... yet they don't seem to be perfectly cylindrical in shape. Mysterious indeed. Edit: spelling
@smakkdat
@smakkdat 3 года назад
Yes, while sometimes I think I’ve seen it all in brien foersters, always there is something new to see
@Diz_XS
@Diz_XS 3 года назад
Excellent... 👌🏻 there is no doubt .. it’s blindingly obvious ancient hi tech existed and it’s hard to believe in 2021 we are still told stories that make zero sense... love the vids, keep them coming..
@mileslong3904
@mileslong3904 3 года назад
I've cut a little stone myself, and I can't imagine building that booth without a CNC machine with a very versatile business end, let alone a dolomite pounder or copper chisel. Even with a steel chisel and steel hammer it seems extremely unlikely. Weird as hell.
@kronictube
@kronictube 3 года назад
Hahahahahaha
@douggoble9695
@douggoble9695 3 года назад
I heard John Anthony West call what your standing by, a smoking gun ! This is going to be another awesome video ! Reminder ON
@terrytartu
@terrytartu 3 года назад
Again pure excellence in presentation and camera work showing exactly the impossibility of the current academia. Those holes in the granite "some at least 8 metres deep" look like foundation support holes but surely on granite such would not be needed! Their use is baffling - even depth testing does not make complete sense! That box or doorway at the Elephantine Isle is so precise one's brain is stunned by its manufacture - before one can even consider its use!
@TheEarl777
@TheEarl777 3 года назад
First time I’ve seen the test drill holes at Aswan. Very cool. My mind goes mad thinking of what made the scoop marks, that I just found are almost exactly 1 cubit wide. Hmmm
@quos3683
@quos3683 3 года назад
6:30 "But again there are many possibilities if you drink beer" 🤣.
@ranceapostol1399
@ranceapostol1399 3 года назад
😂😂😂
@chucknorris3984
@chucknorris3984 3 года назад
You definitely make this subject 10.5 million times more interesting with all of the positive energy, enthusiasm, and motivation. Plus you show details not commonly seen which is awesome and sure helps bring things into a much clearer perspective. I'm absolutely looking forward to more and more of the great work you're doing. It is much appreciated by many of us and is very inspiring. I know I am going to try harder to make a vacation to the area in the near future. Well hopefully sooner than later lol. Who knows, you might just be the one to solve some of the biggest mysteries known to humanity.
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
Yessss chuck!!! make sure you get over there yourself!
@jorgedominguez529
@jorgedominguez529 3 года назад
love your approach and fun way you explain everything, keep it going ! I have been researching this topic for years. I send your videos to my 10 year old daughter so she can get get this perspective early on. We do not deserve to be lied to and our research resources wasted. Your work is very important.
@marcbee1234
@marcbee1234 3 года назад
I love her child-like descriptions hope she never gets jaded.
@01sidiropoulos
@01sidiropoulos 3 года назад
1:20 never saw a giant hole like that👀
@kawasakikev8905
@kawasakikev8905 3 года назад
i agree, that's the first time i've ever seen anyone mention them .
@hannibalbarca6308
@hannibalbarca6308 3 года назад
Lord knows i have.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 3 года назад
@@hannibalbarca6308 where..?
@marcbee1234
@marcbee1234 3 года назад
@@steve-o6413 He's joking
@EsotericallyObvious369
@EsotericallyObvious369 3 года назад
Another curious thing that nit picks my mind. The Obelisk still attached to the bed rock is mostly finished on the top and sides. They hadn't even finished quarrying the stone but it was almost in a finished state. Very smooth surfaces and very sharp angles. SO they must have had people or ' machinery ' simultaneously working on it as it was still being cut from the bed rock. Why? Would it be easier for them to flip it once it was freed from the bed rock? Its just odd it looks so refined and yet it was still being quarried.
@mikehunt8375
@mikehunt8375 3 года назад
I dont think that crack is what made them give up on it. The crack has to do with them being wiped out, imo. Also it really blows my mind the archeologists didn't blow up those boxes like the many other ones they admit to.
@nicholasbrassard3512
@nicholasbrassard3512 3 года назад
They blew up artifacts?! You know any videos that talk about this?
@alandeacon1988
@alandeacon1988 3 года назад
That "resonance chamber" box thing lying on its back at the end of this video is REALLY similar to the one that you looked at in Edfu: None of the carvings and the smooth rounded bits on the corners have been chipped off, but otherwise, pretty goddam similar! Interesting to note the drill hole that looks like it might have had a door hinge inserted into it... Did it have another one at the bottom? Thanks for vids, by the way, really enjoying getting a whole new angle on so much stuff!
@AlmostLakai94
@AlmostLakai94 3 года назад
Everytime I hear Yousef start talking I instantly get a smile on my face 😂 hope I get to get there and take a tour with him some day 🙏🏽 love the series btw
@mileslong3904
@mileslong3904 3 года назад
He should be in charge of Egyptian Antiquities but doing the logical thing is unwanted apparently.
@jeffborne1
@jeffborne1 3 года назад
Excellent presentation. Thank you.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 3 года назад
Great job covering those Sites, so many questions but so few answers and we know the manual labor ones were made up...
@domestique3954
@domestique3954 3 года назад
Always a pleasure to see Yusuf,the next „wisdom keeper „-his father told me long time ago that as a kid he swam through the tunnels under the Gizeh plateau,and that there’s a whole system......🤔
@mikhailasanovic
@mikhailasanovic 3 года назад
Those scoop marks are next level blow your mind wtf
@dystopiaahoy
@dystopiaahoy 3 года назад
As if the stone was ice cream.
@frankdaniels4364
@frankdaniels4364 2 года назад
@@dystopiaahoy Right...so now what do you do with it? Where did the spoils go?
@garrisong
@garrisong 3 года назад
This tour guide I think yousef he seems so knowledgeable and I could sit and listen to him talk about the ancient Egyptians for hours.
@AlexMartinez-dc4pe
@AlexMartinez-dc4pe 3 года назад
They really think we are dumb to believe those theories 😂 Thanks for bringing these beautiful videos to us. 😎👍
@londonviking3801
@londonviking3801 3 года назад
Love your videos - you have such energy and drama. Looking forward to Sunday. Takes my mind off the crap weather here in London.
@MOUNTAINLDC
@MOUNTAINLDC Год назад
I love how Yousef said considering the ball stone method upwards ..."it's impossible, like...no." ha! He's like DUH WTF 😂 Dude is literally a Treasure I hope he knows it. I've been following his teachings for many yrs now, PROTECT AT ALL COSTS. God Bless Yousef.
@dannyjackson5883
@dannyjackson5883 3 года назад
Aswads best tune was called "don't turn around"
@koolerking440
@koolerking440 3 года назад
I think what’s interesting is its the tools of the civilisation after the one that built these monoliths that have been found, not the tools that could’ve built these things. Not only has the knowledge gone but the equipment, which i find strange.
@johnweaver4564
@johnweaver4564 3 года назад
The hole or test dig gets me thinking the most! How? There must have been many, many years that passed by before the dynastic Egyptians arrived! More research and keep up the good work!
@legrosbastien
@legrosbastien 3 года назад
Hi, really refreshing content from Jahannah James on her channel with videos about ancient technology. Really nice edit, cuts and footage. Keeping everything clear, explanatory and fun under 20 mn ==> good format. Keep going! It's kinda rare to have a neat video going to the essentials of this touchy archeological subject ...with no silly's b-roll or voice-over. Who would have known this vlog/youtuber 's vibe will do good to the topic ,) Plus it's also rare to have a young person / + woman, for that matter anyway, treating the subject .. amongst the dominant male proportion of 'investigators', youtuber, scientists and archeologists. Good work!
@abutorab2914
@abutorab2914 3 года назад
Marvelous 👍
@jambykool
@jambykool 3 года назад
Now I understand why school texts show the Giza pyramids and other sites from a distance. Once I saw that box on its side it became clear that the texts from school couldn't explain in rational terms how these monoliths were built.
@jesusroks545
@jesusroks545 3 года назад
These are some of the best videos about Egypt
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
Thanks man
@jesusroks545
@jesusroks545 3 года назад
@@FunnyOldeWorld is this the last one? I hope not i look forward to these but i cant remember seeing 'to be continued'
@newman653
@newman653 3 года назад
The more we learn, the more we realise how much we don't know. Great footage & opinions . Cheers.
@stevefaure415
@stevefaure415 3 года назад
Great video, very high quality filming and editing. Elephantine Island is truly a bizarre place. At 10:00 you see these massive, precisely machined ruins sitting in the middle of this sort of ruined mudbrick courtyard. It doesn't make any sense no matter what kind of succession of builds you want to consider. And while the box is most impressive being intact if you look at the destroyed pieces they must have belonged to some even more impressive structure.
@raykudlak4713
@raykudlak4713 3 года назад
I'm interested in seeing a real Scientist employing LIDAR to allow a reconstruction of the broken bits back into whole structures. Want this to be used on Puma Punku for the same reason.
@robertfields4836
@robertfields4836 3 года назад
Watching from Ireland 😉, Loved it, Facinated with ancient Egypt, Can watch for ever, Longer next time 😁😁, Love the nails 😉😉😉😉.
@kellypg
@kellypg 3 года назад
All your videos have been blowing my mind. Thank you for posting this stuff for people who don't have the means to go there themselves.
@JohnBusakowski
@JohnBusakowski 3 года назад
Thanks for the info about about width of the scoop marks. I feel that the fact the scoops are exactly a cubit is significant, but idk how lol
@kateemma-
@kateemma- 3 года назад
Those pounding stones obviously need a lot more pounding! The pointy top box looks as if it had a door (hole at the top in the rim), so someone or something could be shut into it and granite is conductive so whatever or whoever was shut in could have caused some form of conductivity, just an idea?!? But once again Jahannah, thank you, you are a star and your videos should be shown in schools (when open again) because they would inspire more youngsters into looking at the past, only wish I had had something like this when I was younger, I would have become a scientist instead of bunking off all the time.
@zacharymilos392
@zacharymilos392 3 года назад
I love your videos and your open mind. I hope your channel grows huge so you can continue this journey!
@SimonHaestoe
@SimonHaestoe 3 года назад
Awesome! have been thinking about how the unfinished obelisk might have been moved... Think of how we move anything that seems impossible. Using the right technique makes it *way* easier. I agree that lifting it up initially -- standing it up -- would be really f'n difficult. but after that, perhaps the uneven terrain might have actually helped..? You could like *flip* it? Initially, I felt this had to be an impossible task but -- on ancient architects' channel -- I saw someone make really good arguments for why lifting really can become easier than we assume before we have to get really creative. You can also skid it. But yeah... still, it's 1000 tons, that would require a lot of people nonetheless. And the tech itself (of making it) is a whooooole other story and a bonafide mystery.
@eclypse1259
@eclypse1259 3 года назад
Can’t believe the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities is still pushing the “pounding rock” method, and going as far as forcing you guys to watch some bs vid. Thanks for sharing Jahannah, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
@AneudiD78
@AneudiD78 3 года назад
They think that if they repeat it over enough, people won't ask questions and believe that BS story. I'd respect them more if they were honest and admitted that they don't know how ancients did it.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
I can't believe you think you know more than 200 years of peer reviewed research ...because you watched a RU-vid video that got you excited. That's not how science and discoveries are made.
@beachmama9037
@beachmama9037 3 года назад
@@davidleomorley889 Question everything.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
@@beachmama9037 You: "Question everything." Me: Question everything. Today, there are two basic ways to come to "believe" in things. One is by being rational and the other is by acting simply on faith in someone. >Being rational means examining the available evidence about the subject and listening to the educated professionals in the specific field of study who have examined it in detail and who have conducted experiments on it. Theories are usually presented first by writing a paper explaining their theory and the specific experiments they used to make it. Once the paper has been presented, their peers examine it and replicate the experiments which were used. New experiments are also conducted and sometimes people disagree about issues for long periods of time. However, if a theory does survive everyone’s scrutiny, it eventually moves forward and is accepted by more and more of the rational people in that society. This process is called science. This is how Einstein's theory of relativity was presented…and how it survives yet today. >Acting on faith requires no real evidence, only the belief in one person’s idea or the beliefs and ideas of a small group of people, who are making a specific claim. Their claims can’t stand up to their peer's scrutiny or experiments, but it doesn't matter to those of faith who still believe and defend them.....because that IS the essence of what faith is. Like the opinions spoken by the ancient oracles, the words they are speaking are seen as being unquestionably true by the faithful. Again, that’s how faith works. >Believers in Santa Claus have faith in the words of their parents. >Those who follow the Abrahamic religions have faith in ancient texts. >Mormons have faith in the written words of an American scam artist, Joseph Smith. >Scientologists have faith in the written words of L. Ron Hubbard. >Charlie Manson’s cult had faith in Charlie Manson. >Those who believe what Graham Hancock tells them have faith in Graham Hancock. >Those who believe what Brien Foerster tells them have faith in Brien Foerster. >Those who believe what the guy on Uncharted X tells them have faith in what he tells them. >Those who believe in Edward Casey’s miracles have faith in the words of those who claim those miracles happened. >Those who believe in "advanced ancient technology" and a “worldwide pre-flood culture” have faith in the book authors they heard that information from…whether it was on RU-vid, Facebook, TV or in a book. >Ancient Astronaut theorists have faith in the words of people like Zecharia Sitchin and the words of TV personalities like Giorgio A. Tsoukalos. >Those who believe in an ancient race of giants have faith in the people claiming they once existed. >Those who believe in the things being said on the RU-vid channel known as "Mudfossil University" have faith in the words of Roger Spurr. “Religion is a culture of faith; science is a culture of doubt.” ― Richard Feynman Science actually claims very little. Science is simply a method of discovery that uses peer reviewed experiments and evidence to examine theories and determine truths. When new experiments produce new found truths, science moves to support those new truths. That’s all science really does. I rely on the method of science, because I am a rational human being.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 3 года назад
@@beachmama9037 In ancient times, people looked for the truth(s) in life in different ways than we do today. The questions they had and the truths they were seeking dealt with surviving in the dangerous, unpredictable natural world they found themselves in and finding solutions to the difficulties they had in figuring out how to do more than just survive. For ancient people, the wind, the seas, the rivers, the moon, the sun, stars, death, other animals, etc all represented aspects of the divine.The earliest forms of the Egyptian gods were depicted as the animals who represented those forces and phenomena but became more and more anthropomorphized overtime. Hathor was represented as a cow at first, but eventually came to be depicted as a beautiful woman. The jackals and wolves who hung around the cemeteries and like to eat and roll around on dead things represented the Khentyamentiu, or foremost of the westerners, westerners being the dead and were represented by the gods Anubis and Wepwawet. Eventually Osiris took over the role as the Khentyamentiu and Anubis became the embalmer while Wepwawet became the "opener of the way" in the myths. Thoth, depicted as the intelligent sacred Ibis bird whose bill seemed like a scribe's reed brush, and the Hamadryas baboon, an intelligent animal whose morning activities of facing the rising sun and chattering, thought to be the secret language of the sun god himself, represented the mental faculties of the human brain and the ability to write, speak and perform magic. By offering ritualized sacrifices to them at their temples, they hoped to gain influence over those natural forces. God was nature and nature was unpredictable. Ancient Egypt’s belief system for example, could be summed up as humans who were using heka, (magic) in hopes of producing maat, (stability & harmony) during their short lives and had hopes of becoming an Akh (having an afterlife) by being seen as justified and cleansed of any wrongdoing in the eyes of the divine. If you look at surviving examples of ancient Egyptian art, the vast majority of it has the same running theme, using images as a form of heka to create new life, renewal and therefore insure the continuation of the cosmos each day. Oracles were also sought after for the truth and as judges at trials. They were of course really just priestly people who were connected to the power behind the temple. They were seen by the public as divine representatives of the gods. After the bronze age collapsed between around 1200 to 1150 BC, the eastern Mediterranean societies were mostly destroyed. From Greece, all along the eastern Mediterranean all the way to the border of Egypt, societies were suddenly smashed to pieces as “sea peoples” as they are known to us, came south in hoards of desperate people for reasons that are still being debated. Eventually societies rebuilt after new hierarchies and government systems were established and stability arrived once again. However, things were a bit different than back in the bronze age past and as more and more people began to escape the limits placed on people in the past, new questions about life begin to appear in the archeological record. What in life was true, what in life was false and what in life was worth actually pursuing, or to say what is the “good life” as Plato put it, became a new theme. Literacy increased, coinage started coming into existence for the first time around 600-500 BC, and with it, newly traded material goods from afar and a growing number of people in the merchant class. The pursuit of truth itself was becoming a different topic all together. The narrow period of time sometimes called the “axial age,” roughly between 650 BC and 400 BC, produced a great number of new thinkers who introduced new ways of seeing the world, which are still with us today. Taoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, Zoastrianism, Judaism and the Greek philosophers ALL came out of the same, narrow timeline. Here is a lecture on the subject: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5QOzB_vlkZ8.html The personal experience of worshipping and experiencing the divine also began rapidly changing. The ancient way religion was conducted was through ritual continuity. The new emerging world had a larger literate class. When the Greeks took over Egypt, in places like the Alexandrian library, a reexamination of the ancient world started being conducted. Old texts were being commented on, analyzed and finalized into a single final, canonized, unchanging form. Texts replaced ritual to become the new way to sustain a religion. Here is a conversation with a scholar who speaks about the subject starting at the 46 minute mark: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KTG1hUENhgM.html After the western Roman empire fell and western European world fell into the dark ages at the end of the 5th century of the common era, the Catholic Church grew out of the ashes of Roman authority and basically controlled western Europe for the next 1000 years. After hundreds of years of illiteracy and ignorance, and following the blood letting episodes of the crusades starting around 1096, the western world rediscovered the works of Plato and other earlier writers they had forgotten about for many centuries. Because of their contact with Islam during the crusades and wisdom about the ancient past they learned from them, new education systems in western Europe were created for the elite within the control of the Catholic Church. This is when the beautiful Gothic churches in western Europe were built. This period, following the plague, led to what is called the European Renaissance, which saw major advancements in European curiosity about the ancient past and led to new works of amazing artistry, expanding wealth, knowledge and growing commercial trade. Then, around 1517, Martin Luther officially questioned the truth about the bible being handed out by the Catholic church after learning how to read the new kingdom bible in latin and in its original Greek. After he translated the bible into German and exposed that the Catholic Church was lying to everyone about what the bible actually said, the population in what is today Germany, began to rebel. Following the fallout from Martin Luther’s Reformation movement, the Thirty Years War and other types of violent turmoil that took place during this period, several new humanist philosophical developments took place trying to fill the gap of authority and determine how mankind should proceed with finding the truth(s) of the world around them now, since the Catholic church’s authority in society had been tarnished and/or destroyed. This is usually referred to as the Enlightenment period. The Catholic church was now tarnished in the eyes of much of the public. Several new Christian factions developed who also fought with one another in their pursuit of their biblical based truth(s). There was also a deist belief emerging in public at this time in which people believed that god made the world we see before our eyes, but then had left us all here on our own and that god does not actively intervene in our world. Empiricism, the notion that our own bodily senses are the source of our value and our knowledge when looking for truths, and rationalism, the notion that it is our ability to reason that is it’s source, became two of the leading theories that developed during the 1600s and 1700s. When empiricism and rationalism eventually came into contact with the emerging Industrial Revolution of the mid to late 1700s, it was the birth of what we now call the Scientific Revolution. To be honest though, Ibn al-Haytham, a muslim Arab had actually pioneered the scientific method around 1010 AD more than 700 years earlier, but he is rarely given any credit in the western world. The increasingly industrialization of western society allowed for large, repeatable experiments to be conducted to determine the accuracy of various theories people had about what worked and what didn’t work, or what was true and what wasn’t true. This is the environment that led to research laboratories such as what Thomas Edison was doing. This advancement in the method of pursuing of the truth allowed for rapid societal progress. Repeatable, peer reviewed experiments remains one of the crucial elements of the scientific method of discovery today. In many ways, the industrialization of the world we see before us today, is a direct result of the scientific revolution.
@del69raptorking
@del69raptorking 3 года назад
We! crafted them so why the hell don't we know, it really winds me up grrrrr. Thanx JJ.
@iang1
@iang1 3 года назад
Fabulous footage. Never knew about the test holes plus those obelisk scoop marks are mind boggling. Love the atmospheric music in these vids too.
@binneyhamilton6941
@binneyhamilton6941 3 года назад
I’m super excited about your channel! Love seeing a woman, a cool chick (and cute!) doing this work. Makes my heart so happy! Thank you!! And I hope there are more adventures to come that you get to share w us. ✨
@stuartpatterson1617
@stuartpatterson1617 3 года назад
I think the giant obelisk was being made by a later civilization that was trying to recreate the grandeur of the earlier dynasties. That last box like chunk looks as if you sit in it, possibly to get the resonance effect. Check out Tesla's device that Mark Twain liked so much. Nice vid, love the nails.
@darellnewsome4459
@darellnewsome4459 2 года назад
Excellent video! You have the best sense of humor in your videos! I will forever be fascinated by Egyptian history!
@hannibalbarca6308
@hannibalbarca6308 3 года назад
The idea of just pounding the stone with another stone by hand is the dumbest thing ive ever heard..even on another level than 'copper chisels'🤣
@ranceapostol1399
@ranceapostol1399 3 года назад
lol yes 😂
@saralicht
@saralicht 3 года назад
Dolores Cannon's work addresses these mysteries (How would you move an obelisk of this size...?) in her book "The Three Waves of Volunteers And The New Earth." So glad I found your channel, it's awesome!!
@colarb5276
@colarb5276 3 года назад
Please tell me you have plenty of footage still to show, because I look forward to this every week. Love it. You might also like to visit the Sigiriya Lion fortress in Siri Lanka, where I believe there are the same scoop marks, as well as great carvings.
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
I have lots of footage and photos that didn't fit in the vlogs. So i'm making some sit down vids exploring those with you guys :)
@colarb5276
@colarb5276 3 года назад
@@FunnyOldeWorld I hope you were also able to bring back some personal souvenirs. I have a six inch high stone carved Pharaoh sitting on my bookshelf and several scarab's.
@howieb3344
@howieb3344 3 года назад
I enjoy your enthusiasm and reactions of awe. Ben does a great job too, but he is so "matter of factly". Great videos, keep them coming. Never saw about the test holes before, wonder if they are found elsewhere in the world. I like that you spent a lot of time with Yousef and were asking questions. Thank you for the vlogs.
@0toeknee0
@0toeknee0 3 года назад
It’s like waiting for Christmas!
@marcbee1234
@marcbee1234 3 года назад
...even more painful, she's tops for me!
@tc9992
@tc9992 3 года назад
Yousef is the man, When I go out there again in September I hope He can lead me around! Peace, TC
@alanderson9711
@alanderson9711 3 года назад
We live in the Golden Age of Enlightenment where anyone with a computer can access University data bases and study anything they want. Yet some people think that knowledge is being hidden via various conspiracy myths. Thanks for an entertaining vid and all the brainfood that is so hard to do digest in One sitting. Stay Safe!
@JR-xo5jp
@JR-xo5jp Год назад
It's great to see some one do something because they love doing it ..your energy is amazing keep educating us please
@valdivia1234567
@valdivia1234567 3 года назад
This was really interesting. Nothing over the top, just showing what's there. I really liked this.
@briankeller2739
@briankeller2739 3 года назад
I am loving your videos of your Egypt visit. I like how you have done them and your humor is great. Thanks for sharing!
@bradleejones9959
@bradleejones9959 3 года назад
Sound. They perfected Sound. Look up "Cutting Stone with Sound". Soft brass drills a hole through a rock. I believe they had huge metal spoons propped up and put sound frequencies that vibrated and carved them out. Now how they pulled them out of the hole,...?
@trodriguez6024
@trodriguez6024 3 года назад
Interesting!
@Hermit_
@Hermit_ 3 года назад
the structure at 10.00 seems to be some kind of throne to me. when placed in a big room your voice will be projected very loudly, that certainly helps in asserting dominance over your followers.
@dsmith9456
@dsmith9456 3 года назад
Excellent. Love the work you do, its fresh, qwerky and your energy revitalises well-trodden topics/ground with intelligent curiosity that captivates the viewer. I look forward to more. Thank you.
@tumppigo
@tumppigo 3 года назад
Huge test drill holes, that was news to me. Woah!
@marcbee1234
@marcbee1234 3 года назад
She needs to put her camera down the hole so we can see the cutting tool markings.
@dougmcpheters1546
@dougmcpheters1546 3 года назад
Hello Jahannah. Beautiful name btw!...I have to say I greatly admire your curiosity and allow me a thank you for producing these videos! So entertaining! Mighty fine work you're pumping out!
@Diz_XS
@Diz_XS 3 года назад
Excellent .. looking forward to it ..
@chunk252
@chunk252 3 года назад
One thing I never hear anyone talking about when it comes to mining is "fire-setting" fire setting was a method of mining by setting fires against rock faces to heat the stone then doused in water (most liquids) which then fractures the rock by thermal shock. This would help aid and speed up the process.
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
Yes yousef talked about the possibility of fire. When that method is used it does do some surface alterations to the rock. Which are not apparent at this site. The stone is unmarked from that method.
@yvettekosta7994
@yvettekosta7994 2 года назад
Love your vids. What a great life you have created for yourself. I am in awe and envy of the Queen of RU-vid !!!! Love you, your presentations and insights are down to earth and intelligent, and love to argue with your conclusions, in a civil way.
@hunterkc8794
@hunterkc8794 3 года назад
The wait is over 👍🏼☺️....
@kevindoyle5856
@kevindoyle5856 3 года назад
Really really enjoyed this video with my kids thank you
@luckyme7611
@luckyme7611 3 года назад
Been really enjoying your video’s. Love your insight on it all
@emilyrooks
@emilyrooks 11 месяцев назад
Resonance chambers makes a lot of sense. Looking at many of these super ancient “futuristic” looking stonework from around the world you often find resonating stone all over the place that archeologists find curious. The more I learn about ancient cultures and how aware they were that ever in the universe is just vibrating molecules and tapped into this for spiritual and practical purposes it starts to look much less curious and become obvious. The complete chamber here at elephantine island looks exactly like a meditating chamber you can find in many Hindu temples (often hidden in main courtyards and small crevices for someone to squirrel away in and meditate). But recall that many meditations come with a chant right? So sit on that little elevated step, close your eyes, and repeat that chant in a resonant chamber and some magical things can happen ;)
@yassineu.z4067
@yassineu.z4067 3 года назад
Happy valentines! Your beauty also blows my mind !^^
@vtwinflyer4215
@vtwinflyer4215 3 года назад
Really liking your content and you take great footage 👍🏼 I really really wish we could go back in time and see what the hell was really going on back then and how it was really done!
@freelifetas1252
@freelifetas1252 3 года назад
Another great video 👍👍
@chronicbob
@chronicbob 3 года назад
Its amazing to see sombody asking the real questions. not just alens this and magic that. a fresh face a good vibe. and wait to see more. Subed.
@Nethasis
@Nethasis 3 года назад
I just found you this day 7-30-2021 and not even looking at you I subscribed. That dorky nature of yours got me hooked.
@billieworley9459
@billieworley9459 3 года назад
Had not seen the test holes before. Wow, thanks for info. Incredible
@coconutfleetsleeper5717
@coconutfleetsleeper5717 3 года назад
Wow, did not know of those deep holes.
@kenburns2639
@kenburns2639 3 года назад
Even though the ruins had been moved since the dam was built, it's still a very impressive site. I especially enjoyed the night-time show.
@Robinhood1966
@Robinhood1966 3 года назад
There are tube drill holes, cores still in situ unliberated bedrock, partial column remnants that have the helical striations revealing the machine cutting process, same as Flinders Petrie's infamous Tube Drill Core 7, but on a much larger magnitude of scale. There are megalithic ruins still in the area with same size columns as those I'm referancing. A little telling in my estimation. There are legions who consider all these empirical physical megalithic, monolithic, artifact findings. Viewing the evidence from a scientific perspective, the evidence is self explanatory. It exists, therefore it's possible, even if we have no idea of who, why, when and how. The evidentiary how can't reveal the exact machinery or hand tools, but it does reveal what type of processing tools, whether machine or hand processed. The degree of precision accuracy exhibited with scores of examples around the globe exclude hand held and/or hand tools. As impossible as this seems to most, they exist as testiment that in antiquity, there was a caste who had the ability to create such works at an industrial scale simply not able to be replicated by modern man. It is possible, no matter how improbable at face value. We have to accept this as fact. Engineers need to go on record with certified engineering PE stamps that can outline specific findings including the degree of precision, minimum tooling requirements to reproduce with known modern tools, those which by default exclude hand held power or manually powered tools. Such precision requires having set anchor points to prevent the product and machine both to be immovable. Cannot attain optically flat accuracy down to 2 thousands of an inch, evidenced on the interior of the 24 100ton boxes in the man made tunnels of the Serapeum at Saqqara. These boxes, Ramses II statues along with Drill Core 7 would be the best examples for certification by an engineering PE Stamp, to once and for all openly achnowledge these required precision machine processing, elevating the ongoing debate from "if machined" to "how machined". Christopher Dunn's engineering findings may be sufficient for independent certification. Is not an engineer's burden to also explain how such was possible in the early known history of humanity. That's an ongoing debate for others to seek out. One step at a time, but humanity deserves to know the collective truth, that so many are trying to keep suppressed for a myriad of different reasons, none of which are for the greater good.
@kenburns2639
@kenburns2639 3 года назад
@@Robinhood1966 Well said :)
@Robinhood1966
@Robinhood1966 3 года назад
@@kenburns2639 Thanks for the encouraging comment. Those of us conducting legitimate research into the traces of lost ancient advanced civilizations and the traces of their tech left behind are treated like herotics by mainstream academia. Many of us have no concern for the opinions of biased critics. Would you believe I've already read comments on a "Debunking" RU-vid channel, calling for the owner to produce a "debunking" video on this lovely woman, for daring to have an opinion that does not coincide with theirs. Pathetic. I get it that people fear and reject what they don't understand, but to immediately call for her persecution because of her controversial (to them) videos? Pathetic insecurities by men of little stature.
@stage1greg
@stage1greg 3 года назад
I like your videos because you take the time to let your camera focus on what you are trying to show us. You don't bother with the things we've seen 100 times, thank you again. Glad to have found you through the Ben's channel.
@tc9992
@tc9992 3 года назад
yep yep yep my goodness the thoughts we have on this.........really diggin your vids/stuff...........TC
@lipepl
@lipepl 3 года назад
Your face expressions are a great a part perfomance! It make the videos very soft and nice to watch, really... keep this nice work! Great personality! :-)
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
Thank you so much!!
@lipepl
@lipepl 3 года назад
@@FunnyOldeWorld you allways remind me Jemma Simmons LOL
@stuartjackson4416
@stuartjackson4416 2 года назад
This is all so interesting!! Keep them coming please!!
@AllysonA8281
@AllysonA8281 3 года назад
I love the unfiltered imagery you share, Jahannah. Going to Egypt has been a lifelong dream of mine that I hope to fulfill soon. Your experience has further illustrated my opinion that I would begin the trip in awe and amazement but end it just frustrated that so much obvious contradiction exists between the accepted theories and the actual evidence. Thank you for another fantastic peek into this mysterious segment of our history. Cheers!
@loloolollll
@loloolollll 3 года назад
It was well worth the wait! Thanks for the work and continue to provide great content bc I do learn so much from you thanks and take care
@Smoothviewproductions
@Smoothviewproductions 2 года назад
Honestly, your channel is fascinating! Thank you for your thoughtful, fun, sometimes hilarious commentary. You deserve millions of followers. Keep it up! I absolutely love the challenge to the Academic narrative 🙏🏽🙌🏽💯
@funkysoulsistar
@funkysoulsistar 3 года назад
Brilliant video
@KrYpTiCxFaTaLiTy
@KrYpTiCxFaTaLiTy 2 года назад
Love your content Jahanna, great personality and voice for it, keep up the solid work
@sirds1548
@sirds1548 3 года назад
Great vid on how to make history about yourself!!!
@kawasakikev8905
@kawasakikev8905 3 года назад
awesome , cup of coffee ,feet up and watching . let it roll .
@kawasakikev8905
@kawasakikev8905 3 года назад
pounding stones are just awesome , i only need to make a small garden wall so it should only take me about 85 yrs to get it just how i want ....great content Jahannah but way too short , i could watch your videos for hours ..thanks
@angelohernandez6406
@angelohernandez6406 3 года назад
Kitchen counter tops today of marble or granite will be a couple of pieces and made with heavy machinery 😆
@davidpowell6098
@davidpowell6098 3 года назад
Brilliant Jahannah, as always, I would love to know how they moved the darn things, we, today, would need some amazing set up of machines to just start, the Egyptians had nothing more than beasts of burden, or man power. I wonder how they did it? Lifting one of those obelisks would need as much precision as cutting them, due to the length. Maybe we will never know?
@sgtrock68
@sgtrock68 3 года назад
That black granite looks like it is just extremely dense. Out of all the types of stone it "feels" hardest. I wonder if the bits and pieces of black granite here share a parentage with the black granite boxes of the Serapeum.
@FunnyOldeWorld
@FunnyOldeWorld 3 года назад
It felt so similar.
@violetpalmer1775
@violetpalmer1775 3 года назад
I wish your videos were longer, they make me so happy❤️
@luckyme7611
@luckyme7611 3 года назад
It’s a never ending mystery! Great video once again 🙌🙌👏👏
@aronbijl4109
@aronbijl4109 3 года назад
(especially the last stone "box") Definitely machine working. You never ever get that straight by hand. I do wood working, and I use all kinds of tools to get something straight even then I get a precision of like 0,2 mm max.
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