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The Osirion Anomalies | Egypt 

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7 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 2,2 тыс.   
@phillipmoore6295
@phillipmoore6295 Год назад
Okay, just about the water. As an Operating Engineer (IUOE Local 15 ret). I worked on a building in Manhatten where water from the East River was flooding the construction site. They bought in 4 giant water pumps. Each one was the size of a large truck. The hoses were 24 inches in diameter. They were able to pump the millions of gallons of water needed to keep the site dry. Until they had hammered in "sheeting" 250 feet deep around the entire perimeter of the site. If they wanted, they could bring in much larger water pumps. They also have pumps that can pump "slurry" or any other viscous liquid. IMHO, the archeologists are "slow rolling" the exploration of these ancient sites. Because if the truth is actually known. It would reveal that we had technologically advanced ancestors. Exposing their cave man to astronaut story of history to be a lie. It's their lie, and they're sticking to it.
@jeremyturley1276
@jeremyturley1276 Год назад
Great comment. Absolutely agree.
@1TheWhiteKnight1
@1TheWhiteKnight1 Год назад
It’s called Egyptian bureaucracy
@nicholassmith787
@nicholassmith787 Год назад
Exactly what you are saying is true. I do drainage design and draining this would not be hard at all. The other way to drain this would be to dig a drainage system diverting the ground water to the closest point that's lower than the bottom of the chamber
@danm8747
@danm8747 Год назад
The desert covered so much of that space. They know if was once a lush forest. Why don’t they use lidar to look for other structures. Probably because they will see the same things we see now in the amazon. Full of structures and civilizations. Looking at google images of upper Africa it easily shows that the upper part of the continent was washed out.
@casualviewing1096
@casualviewing1096 Год назад
And why exactly would they cover that up? How does it benefit anyone?
@brianmihlfeith7135
@brianmihlfeith7135 Год назад
I’m a Hydrologist in Arizona. A typical irrigation “production” well can easily hit 1800GPM in a 24” cased well. So 500 GPM isn’t that much recharge given the immense surrounding surface area this “well” has to replenish and recharge. This is basically how a well works. Surrounding groundwater percolates into the column via perforations in the casing (in this case the Osiron) as the pump pumps out the water. Here, we have an very large water column. This is not surprising to me at all in regards to the water. This is still a giant mystery, and I love the exploration. Just pointing out some facts.
@canadarm999gbernier
@canadarm999gbernier 4 месяца назад
Bon commentaire M. Brian. Yeah, this is still a giant mystère. Hello from Québec, Canada
@Enlightenedskeptics
@Enlightenedskeptics 3 месяца назад
Do you. Think the temple has sunk as soooo heavy on top of water sodden sand. Maybe 4 stories were once above ground?
@briangodfrey7424
@briangodfrey7424 3 месяца назад
@@Enlightenedskeptics No, the temple is too well preserved. Things don't settle so uniformly. It would be all busted up if it had settled even a foot.
@daisyd2392
@daisyd2392 3 месяца назад
Not on a water basin that covers 1/10 of the African continent...
@MrBrianms
@MrBrianms Год назад
Not just another burial hole. It really chimes with the idea that there is an underworld of labyrinthine rooms. This is brilliant to find out new stuff. Thanks.
@kensmith5694
@kensmith5694 Год назад
Not really. Remember that they did seismic.
@v4skunk739
@v4skunk739 Год назад
@@kensmith5694Yeah they 100% did do scans at Giza and 100% found a complex underground with locals saying it has over 20 levels. A underground city.
@viciousyeen6644
@viciousyeen6644 Год назад
@@v4skunk739nothing special to be true. There are lots of such places around the world, like the Necropolis of Rome, or the Paris Catacombs, or the underground of Istanbul. People built stuff over other stuff and dug cellars and Tunnels and sometimes caverns. Sometimes it was used to bury the dead, sometimes just to store food or water.
@TruthWiz
@TruthWiz 2 месяца назад
@@v4skunk739 When you say 20 levels at Giza, are you talking about the network that connects to the Osiris shaft and the causeway? Or where exactly is this "underground city"?
@KayInMaine
@KayInMaine 2 месяца назад
​@v4skunk739 it makes sense to me that they would have built into the ground because the desert is so hot. Very cool!
@faafafineartist
@faafafineartist 5 месяцев назад
Great footage! It's a breath of fresh air to see content where the narrator isn't the main focus and has more in-depth relevant visual comparisons to grasp the brilliance of the EGYPTIAN genius.
@cosmicporch6537
@cosmicporch6537 3 месяца назад
Agreed!!!!
@markd3250
@markd3250 3 месяца назад
Agree about it not being about the narrator, but the whole point of these types of videos is to show that it _wasn't_ the Egyptians; these works are by a much older and much more advanced people. They had a completely different mindset and personality characteristic, whoever they were.
@rolandeauten8798
@rolandeauten8798 3 месяца назад
@@markd3250What Egyptians do you mean? Obviously it wasn’t modern Egyptians; The structures are millennia old. Surely it was ancient Egyptians? Or do you know why another people built in a land where they didn’t live?
@markd3250
@markd3250 3 месяца назад
@@rolandeauten8798 The people we call Egyptians, are literally the descendants of Egypt, one of the sons of Ham who was Noah's youngest son. Genesis 10:6 "The sons of Ham: Cush, Egypt, Put and Canaan." I think he and his descendants found whatever was left in that area after the flood, which they claimed as their own. We have no idea who lived there before the flood.
@rolandeauten8798
@rolandeauten8798 2 месяца назад
@@markd3250 They lived in Egypt. Therefore they were by definition Egyptians. Whatever some allegedly millennia-old book claims, whoever they were/weren’t descended from; Egyptians.
@alexmccormick9800
@alexmccormick9800 7 месяцев назад
I absolutely love how you don't just blindly follow the mainstream historical narrative. No body knows for sure. But alot of things don't make sense with the mainstream narrative. Keep asking the questions. You are a true truth seeker. Keep up your brilliant work.
@JoshuaAuerbach
@JoshuaAuerbach Год назад
Thanks for covering this, I am always surprised how little is discussed about the depth of the Osirion
@ocpurifiers
@ocpurifiers Год назад
When we were there last year with Anyextee, I felt we saw everything. The Osirion was the most mysterious to me. This video by you is amazing. The mysterious just got jolted with much more mystery. Thanks for the excellent history of this very special site in your unique style. Egypt leaves you affected forever. You understand this. Thanks again from a fellow Copper Chiseler.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 Год назад
Anyextee? The guy that does misreading of heiroglyphs? Yeah he's not so great, he says heiroglyphs say stargate and they don't it's laughable these ancient tech sites
@johnwalker1553
@johnwalker1553 Год назад
@@drummerdad80 Anyextee yes we know. But at the Osirion (26.1841° N, 31.9185° E) is no Bedrock right? The island in the middle wight approx. 12,000 To porphyry Dolomite not Granite. So in this Logic it must be transportet from a quarry at this location. Please Explain it.
@rebekahhudson2502
@rebekahhudson2502 2 месяца назад
So cool
@davidponseigo8811
@davidponseigo8811 Год назад
I look forward to your videos, they allow me to feel intelligent for a short while. I have a Masters in Military History but instead of using it to do something worth while instead I'm a military antiques and firearms dealer. I feel dirty every time I see it hanging framed on the wall in my office. I guess I'll just keep watching your channel and live history vicariously through you.
@MrRugbylane
@MrRugbylane Год назад
Hey Dave. You are being very unfair to yourself. Take your academic qualification and start from there. Its a target rich environment. The current Russo-Ukrainian War is a Revolution in Military Affairs on Steroids... massive money to be made
@athelwulfgalland
@athelwulfgalland Год назад
Just be glad you stopped at a Masters degree in Military History. I've been hooked on Military History, from one aspect or the other, since I was four all the way back in '82. I wanted to understand it inside & out. I thought to join the AF but was "strongly discouraged" (i.e. threatened with being disowned from my entire family) from joining any service by my military brat parents. I thought to pursue your line of education as well but again was discouraged by everyone from family & friends to my high school teachers & career guidance councilors for the lack of positions that would require a degree in that field. Then when I reached adulthood & started on the journey to join anyway I learned a sprained ankle I'd had really was a break which healed incorrectly; Thereby disqualifying me from service. In the end I settled on something I thought would be stable & at least semi-interesting; Drafting with the intent to move into architecture. The only trouble is that when I finished my initial courses in drafting the entire course line was gutted & replaced with computers, computer programming, CAD, etc. In essence I'd have had to start over from the top & I couldn't afford that. I plunged headlong into the workforce & started my own family. Times had changed since my grandparents or parents day though too. Employers have no loyalties to their employees anymore. We're just components that can be swapped out. Stick with a company for too many years, earn too many raises & you'll find yourself with a "glad to have had you" card & a pitiful severance payment if you're lucky. My lifelong struggles aside that extremely expensive bit of paper you have hanging on your wall? I can only look back & wish I'd at least have pursued something I was terribly passionate about whether I found a use for it over the years or not. I'd at least be proud that I stuck it out & got it I guess but we all have our own perspective of things. Like you though I have to live vicariously through the lives of a variety of RU-vid content creators, including this wonderful young lady. I don't think it's military related but the architecture is fascinating & difficult to explain. At least it's difficult with our existing knowledge of the available tools or knowledge we currently possess about the people of the time. We're definitely missing something & I think academia is reluctant to open that can of worms. I'm absolutely of the belief that the entire complex was built up by two or three successive civilizations over a period of several thousand years which likely goes back to before the Younger Dryas. I don't have a firm basis for this belief save for the lack of technical sophistication of tooling & architecture of the latter periods of occupation. Though I do have to wonder what on Earth caused such massive granite blocks, used as pillars, to break up like this? Sand erosion obviously didn't do it. It didn't look like anyone had intentionally broken apart the structure like sites we've seen over the past 50 years in Afghanistan, Iraq & Syria. I didn't see any clear signs of demolitions like dynamite from the early 20th century excavations of the site. (I suspect this could be what some bore holes might be, seen elsewhere, in Egypt.) I wouldn't wager on something like an Earthquake either given their discovery that the entire site is built on water saturated sand as opposed to bedrock. I'd imagine that a significant Earthquake would lead to severe liquefaction thereby causing the site to sink.
@chiznowtch
@chiznowtch Год назад
These aren't making you more intelligent they're dumbing you down with stupidity. Don't fawn over these hacks. If you have a mind for history, study these things via legit sources, not youtube scammers.
@gofastgang7284
@gofastgang7284 5 месяцев назад
Your only place you went wrong was listening to your parents abt them threatening you for doing something you think you should do, that's not there life to live
@johnnyxmusic
@johnnyxmusic 3 месяца назад
Have you thought about starting a RU-vid channel? Where are you? Discuss the various artifacts that you are collecting and selling… And providing some historical insights into their origin and use?
@JJ33438
@JJ33438 Год назад
The Osirion appears to be a water processing plant. Yes legacy building. Osirion looks very industrial like the great pyramid.great video.
@nunyabezwackz
@nunyabezwackz 10 месяцев назад
I was thinking something like that. Or maybe a water trap to hide something.
@bob_btw6751
@bob_btw6751 10 месяцев назад
Yes, a water processing facility. The whole thing looks more like an industrial design and lacking in aesthetic appeal. I suspect it was originally a CAD/CAM design, produced and manufactured by a prior lost/unknown civilization.
@Blackboxinquisitive
@Blackboxinquisitive 6 месяцев назад
There is a solid theory that the pyramids were used as a huge chemical manufacturing facility- water processing and distribution center for that huge aquifer sounds very plausible.
@BigTrees4ever
@BigTrees4ever 6 месяцев назад
The design from above makes it look like it’s electrical in nature, perhaps it’s a dual purpose water plant that uses the natural energy of the water for electricity.
@donnamariefarrell533
@donnamariefarrell533 5 месяцев назад
Definitely what I was thinking 🐦‍🔥🐦‍🔥🐦‍🔥
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 3 месяца назад
One of the better videos about this relatively new site. The more I see that's uncovered of the ancient world, the more I doubt we know our true historical lineage. Worth a couple of Watchs IMHO...
@erikcourtney1834
@erikcourtney1834 Год назад
If I could have 3 wishes, one of them would be to know exactly what ancient Egypt was all about. It’s mind blowing with the amount of huge structures that are pretty much impossible to build today. Something amazing was happening back then and we may never know what it was.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
None of what they built is impossible at allm even by pre industrial revolution technology, let alone modern technology. Hugely expensive yes - impossible no. The rise of capitalism means if something has no commercial viability it doesn't get done. If you had a few $billion you could get a brand new Great Pyramid done prontissimo - just ship in a dozen cranes one the scale used in the largest shipping ports and have a constant supply of new limestone brought in from an adjacent quarry as the Egyptians did at Giza. Those who say it is impossible do so either out of ignorance of modern technology or a desire to obscure its capabilities for personal financial reasons - a la Graham Hancock who profits from people buying his books.
@erikcourtney1834
@erikcourtney1834 Год назад
I wasn’t referring to just the pyramids. But it would be a unfathomable undertaking to Build today. The engineering, Cutting and shaping all the stones, transporting in the stones the setting them all. Some of them would take multiples of the largest cranes we have today to set. But they did all that with simple hand tools, ropes, and man power….. and for what? Tombs and church’s? I don’t think so
@AB-nb7mi
@AB-nb7mi Год назад
​@@mnomadvfxprove it
@granthurlburt4062
@granthurlburt4062 Год назад
Well maybe you could read the immense amount of research produced by Egyptologists. Just a thought
@AB-nb7mi
@AB-nb7mi Год назад
@granthurlburt4062 egyptologists have produced massive amounts of fascinating research, but still no one has proven how these megaliths were built
@jeffnelson57
@jeffnelson57 Год назад
Your style of witty insight, comedy & factual data is addictive! Love the serious yet light hearted approach. It sets you apart yet keeps you at the top of your field.
@markiepooharling1043
@markiepooharling1043 Год назад
Looooove that cute little voice whilst she's making a witty retort as well.
@rosifervincent9481
@rosifervincent9481 Год назад
@@Baneful_Regal_BenShe’s top of the pseudo-scientific field perhaps?
@tobystewart4403
@tobystewart4403 Год назад
@@rosifervincent9481 "pseudo science" is when someone purports to be a scientist, but is not using the scientific method in their analyses. All this young lady is doing is reporting on a structure, and what is known about it. Getting snarky about "the science" is an unfortunate trend in the modern world. It reeks of an emotional attachment to a cult of knowledge that is only known to worthy initiates. If you have a theory to explain the various anomalies of the Osirion, you should present it, and edify your peers.
@rosifervincent9481
@rosifervincent9481 Год назад
@@tobystewart4403 Just one example of many; She claims that ‘the water here….is fixing eyeballs”. That is a scientific claim, with no actual science to back it up. It would be trivially simple for her to test this claim. Why do you think she hasn’t? We both know the answer to that question, don’t we?
@wag0NE
@wag0NE Год назад
Haha I'm glad someone said it. The reason those are anecdotes and not case studies is because they are clearly and hilariously untrue, as sweet as those stories are. Does get me someone getting all charged up over 'factual data' when this was pretty much entirely speculative XD @@rosifervincent9481
@dgetzin
@dgetzin Год назад
3:20 - thank you Jahana for mentioning that it was the ladies who discovered the entrance to the Osirion - had not noted anyone else mention that. Makes sense metaphysically in a beautiful way because ritually - the place has become important to Egyptian women and there is a pregnancy thing about it.
@peterparahuz7094
@peterparahuz7094 Год назад
there was that woman Dorothy Eady, who believed she was a reincarnated egyptian priestess. she moved to egypt and made discoveries of ancient buildings.
@paulastearns3074
@paulastearns3074 Месяц назад
I always learn something watching her that I had not heard before. Always.
@ianthomas739
@ianthomas739 3 месяца назад
Gobekli Tepi is another example example of the modern world being denied knowledge of the advanced technology our ancestors had at their disposal. That in itself is a bigger mystery.
@artmosley3337
@artmosley3337 Месяц назад
I just found out there are tunnels that run under the Black Sea… no one knows how old or who made them.. they were used by sheep 🐑 hurdlers to move them from the north to the south for grazing in the winter… there are thousands of these tunnels all over Europe.. thousands of miles long
@beautyallaroundme724
@beautyallaroundme724 2 месяца назад
Very interesting, and great presentation. The man whose eyesight improved from drinking the water was probably the most interesting part to me.
@CaspCic
@CaspCic Месяц назад
That's what's made me stop watching this video.
@jasonbose3507
@jasonbose3507 Год назад
I LOVE HOW THE ORIGINAL ANCIENTS were genius at diverting and obtaining water 💧 💦 through irrigation and canal workings! Even after millennials of time and sand ⌛, once it was unearthed, the canals started flowing with water again.....WOW 😲, ABSOLUTELY AMAZING FEAT OF ENGINEERING BY THE ANCIENTS!!! It almost seems impossible how well the irrigation works, especially after being neglected for anywhere's of up to nine thousand years ago! An amazing feat of engineering indeed!!! Thanks 👍.
@jimbailey490
@jimbailey490 Год назад
Thank you Ma’am for all of the great work that you do! You do it with such passion and energy that I could watch your videos all day. I look forward to more!
@JosephDiveley
@JosephDiveley Год назад
Reminds me of the negative space temples of India where instead of building the temple to the sky they built it into the ground to create a water well. You should ask Praveen to go with you sometime. I bet he would have some unique insights to it. To me the structure is a water well. You have a solid wall outer shell surrounded by watered sand. Then you have an open bottom. Water travels through the sand easily and seeps up through the bottom due to the water pressure from outside the walls. Therefore, so long as, the water level in the sand outside of the walls is higher than what is inside the walls the water from outside will push up into the bottom of the structure till it stabilizes water pressure. There are probably places at the bottom where plates can cover up the water entrances to stop it from filling up but over time have log jammed. If all they do is pump the water back out into the sand it will never stop filling up. They would have to pump the water AWAY or INTO containers to another site. Otherwise it's like using a bucket to take water from the bathtub but then just dumping it right back into the tub. The temple was probably built to worship the place that creates water endlessly or at least seems to. It must have been seen as miraculous in the middle of a desert.
@kelseywarren-bryant2682
@kelseywarren-bryant2682 Год назад
That was my thought as well. It definitely seems like well to me
@dogtown1013
@dogtown1013 Год назад
That wouldn't help because the water is coming from the water table, no matter how much you pump the water table would never be depleted
@JosephDiveley
@JosephDiveley Год назад
@@dogtown1013 That depends on how saturated that water table is because after all it's in the middle of a desert so there can only be so much water nearby or else it would be quicksand. As it is removed or put in containers the available water table will lower which will also lower the pressure and flow of water so that the pumps can gradually lower the water in the structure. Of course, I have no idea what that number value might be. I am not saying it's practical but just that it's possible and that it would work far better than what they have previously done by just dumping the water right back outside the structure. After all, they don't have to get rid of the water table but just lower it enough to slow down the speed it enters the structure so they can shovel out the muck and what not.
@JosephDiveley
@JosephDiveley Год назад
@@kelseywarren-bryant2682 I would just love to see her do a sit down with Praveen since I love that guy =)
@dogtown1013
@dogtown1013 Год назад
@@JosephDiveley actually that's not true, wet sand is far more stable of Fermin wait supporting than dry sand is, quicksand is an entirely different Dynamic and can only be created in very specific circumstances. Like when you're at the beach and you walk on the wet sand by the water it's extremely firm and hard
@BeefyFish
@BeefyFish 10 месяцев назад
I was in Egypt last month (Nov,2023). I visited Abydos and the temple of Seti 1 and it was amazing. The site is hardly visited by mainstream tourists due to it's distance from Luxor. Unfortunately, I was not able to go into the Osirion, as it was 'closed' until further notice. You can stand outside at the top and peer into the exposed courtyard. Our guide told us, to gain entry - a ticket hefty ticket price of 1000 USD would be required. Jahanah is right about this temple's unique design - away from the norm. One look at the massive and smoothly cut granite blocks and you can attribute it to pre-dynastic Egypt, way before the Temple of Seti....
@methylene5
@methylene5 5 месяцев назад
Agreed. People forget that is isn't just moving and cutting the rocks, it's the economics. Today it would cost us a fortune, but in predynastic times they were able to do it with impunity. Hence why we often see granite temples situation right next to a limestone quarry, and yet the granite was quarried hundreds of miles away.
@kahnfu-zhin8627
@kahnfu-zhin8627 Год назад
That “hook” Osiris is depicted with is actually a “crook” used for managing livestock such as sheep, goats, or geese. The other item is a “flail”, used for separating grain from stalks.
@RebootingHistoryz
@RebootingHistoryz Год назад
The Greek historian Herodotus wrote that the grave of Osiris was located in the city of Sais in Egypt on the lake which surrounded the city. Much like what you're describing in the Osirion. The city of Sais is also the location of the records of Atlantis according to the Greek dialogues and the city was once the capital of Egypt and dates back into the Neolithic period and is the home of Neith Egypt's first Queen from dynasty 1, who is the same as the Greeks call Athena.
@johnwalker1553
@johnwalker1553 Год назад
It must be older as one million years. This is the Period of time in there a glass bottle disappears. And all other artificial materials. Iron and alloys disappear much sooner, but in favorable zones without an acidic environment, a piece of stainless steel can lie there for as long. But after 100K years is all disappeared.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
"The Greek historian Herodotus wrote that the grave of Osiris was located in the city of Sais in Egypt on the lake which surrounded the city" #1. Sais was in the Nile delta in the lower kingdom, which is hundreds of miles to the north of Abydos in the upper kingdom where the Osirion is. #2. All pharaohs were essentially viewed as descendants of Osiris and his son Horus. Therefore Herodotus being less culturally acclimatised to ancient Egypt may have simply mistaken commentary about the pharaohs of the Saite dynasties being buried there for the actual deity himself. Religion and myth is hard enough to reason out from a first hand source without seeing it through the lens of a second hand source too. "Neith Egypt's first Queen from dynasty 1, who is the same as the Greeks call Athena" #1. No - if Athena is based on any pre Hellenic god it is far more likely to be Minoan/Aegean - now whether the Minoans were influenced by the Egyptians through trade is another question beyond that. #2. The wife of 1st pharaoh Narmer was POSSIBLY called Neithhotep, but possibly only. This is not 100% verified by multiple sources. "The city of Sais is also the location of the records of Atlantis according to the Greek dialogues" #1. It's just Plato's dialogues, no other Greek sources talk about Atlantis except to reference Plato after the fact. #2. All of Plato's dialogues cover philosophical debate and not true history a la Herodotus. The Critias and Timaeus are no exception despite the vain glorious efforts of grifters to proclaim otherwise for profit sake.
@romanzelgatas
@romanzelgatas Год назад
I subscribed @After
@RebootingHistoryz
@RebootingHistoryz Год назад
@@romanzelgatas Thanks alot!!
@romanzelgatas
@romanzelgatas Год назад
@@RebootingHistoryz no problem I enjoyed your insight in this thread
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
@AncientEgyptArchitecture Год назад
The water source is not 'unknown'...it is the top of the Qena aquifer, a well documented underground reservoir that is vast in size and contains 'fossil' fresh water. This is the reason it cannot be pumped out, the reservoir is many sq miles in area and hundreds of feet deep. Also there are recently discovered stone lined water channels under and around The Seti Temple foundations, some leading directly into the Osireon, as well as the remains of a substantial canal linking the site with the Nile, which served as a conduit for construction materials to build the temple. ( no need to fret about dragging large blocks across 7 miles of desert )
@isutrikanda
@isutrikanda Год назад
Great additional info. Thanks.
@tomkeegan3782
@tomkeegan3782 Год назад
can that water really improve your eyesight?
@CristianSoare-nu2bf
@CristianSoare-nu2bf Год назад
No need to fret about 80 tones granite blocks I know .. easy on paper :)
@Azzaleas777
@Azzaleas777 Год назад
Well thats solve the question about transporting the 70 ton pillar support blocks in the chambers .... they what floated them on boats .... how big would these boats need to be ... how many blocks per boats would gauge the timeline for the construction? Is there any boat specs & designs published that show one that can transport these blocks😅
@virginiai.3632
@virginiai.3632 Год назад
While watching i figured the camels around there have some watering spots from an aquifer.
@jeremiahw1369
@jeremiahw1369 Год назад
Fascinating. I had never heard any of that sub surface stuff or the healing water that can't be pumped out. The granite stones alone are crazy but floating the entire structure on quicksand basically is wild. Like a giant boat designed to take on water to a certain level indefinitely.
@tristanobrien4096
@tristanobrien4096 Год назад
Indeed mind boggling. Or maybe the huge ‘boat’ acts like a big pressure vessel to force the water out of the saturated sand. And then… for what? A ‘well’? More questions than answers 😂
@cozg4922
@cozg4922 Год назад
Hello! Thankfully I found you today because this video has blown my mind in the most wonderful way! I've always been interested in anything and everything to do with Egypt.. The info and footage I've just seen has really inspired me to do even more research so, thank you dear! Fingers crossed I will be able to see these amazing things first hand but if I don't, I'm happy to live vicariously through you haha! To all that read this, have a happy, safe and interesting journey through life xx
@nicksothep8472
@nicksothep8472 Год назад
This was really intresting, I find it amazing how I never heard of the "hidden chamber" in the 30 years I've been studying the topic, I knew about the water issue, the fact it can't be pumped out fast enough before it refills, so thanks Johanna for the beutiful footage and great info. And yes btw, this is no doubt a legacy structure, like many others in Egypt.
@Kelticfury
@Kelticfury Год назад
Sweet! It is always a good day when there is new Johanna stuff!
@tednolte2656
@tednolte2656 Год назад
I wonder if the wet pack sand and the shear weight of the structure makes the sand act like a Newtonian fluid and hold the structure firmly in place. They need 2- 18” diesel pumps to get the water to drop lower than the point of natural recharging from its source. I’ve seen 8 of them drain a several acre lake in Florida. Probably have to pump some water back into the muck to make it wet enough to pump out the structure fully. Hope they get explore deeper into the center of the structure. Good video, thanks l!
@johnwalker1553
@johnwalker1553 Год назад
So where did the prophorty come from? there is no bedrock. The island in the middle wight approx. 12,000 To. It is one single piece of block
@drunvert
@drunvert Год назад
Thought similar. As they built, it sank. So they but on top, and it sunk, etc etc etc..eventually the displaced water in the sand had enough pressure to flow into the structure and was clean filtered water. The pressure could raise temperature also
@landlinesandpercolators8822
Really appreciate your videos - thorough but digestible and fun. Usually show me a new angle and I've watched a lot of these things! Well done. Interesting how so many of these structures had a connection to water as well as the astrological and probably energetic alignments.
@pchabanowich
@pchabanowich Год назад
Osiris is remarkable in every way, so his vibe would find no problem inhabiting the site for thousands of years. Thank you for guiding us with your lively charm.
@piercefreqs
@piercefreqs 3 дня назад
I was there today. It is closed and roped off. I bee-lined for the steps and had two security guards running towards me telling me to stop. They even constructed what seems to be a shack that a local man lives in guarding it 24/7. From what I hear it is 30,000 Egyptian pounds (~$620USD) for a special permit from Cairo to be able to walk down the stairs. There is definitely something going on here. Exciting times! Great vid : )
@garyguymon9857
@garyguymon9857 Год назад
The Osirion is indeed one of the most enigmatic structures in Egypt.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
I'd argue more that it looks that way simply because the water table is much higher today than it was in ancient times when you would have been able to see much further down into the structure. The building of the Aswan dam has altered Egyptian archaeology irrrecoverably unfortunately. Some sites have become inaccessible from flooding while others are likely damaged and/or caved in due to the effects of constant bedrock saturation. While the Ethiopians building their hydro dam will be bad for the Egyptian nation, it will be a boon to its archaeology that has so far not been compromised.
@v4skunk739
@v4skunk739 Год назад
@@mnomadvfx But the reality is the Nile is drying up lowering water levels. Thousands of years ago the Nile was at the Giza complex.
@nicl8749
@nicl8749 Год назад
Has no one thought, these structures were on land, then there was a global flood, which covered these structures in sand and debris, a lot of the Egyptian buildings were painted with figures and hieroglyphs the ones buried like the osyrian had no painted figures or hieroglyphs. Believe me like the pyramids the ancient Egyptians did NOT build these structures. I believe the antediluvians built these structures.
@1Aanibal1
@1Aanibal1 6 месяцев назад
The Osirion is a Jail, for slaves. That is why doesn´t have any ornamentation, it wasn´t sacred at all, that´s why is plane whith no relief, so that the slaves cannot escape by climbing. The worst part is that you can kill the slaves by flooding the thing. the gratness of the elemets fit the purpose of -can´t be destroyed by the slaves-, our jails are always more secure than regular construction.
@Bad_Chariot
@Bad_Chariot Год назад
Looks like we need to get the boys from Oak Island out there to show them how to drain a hole!
@oneom8158
@oneom8158 Год назад
I hope I'm not the only to bring this up... but doesn't anybody thought about sending a scuba diver to explore the bottom of this magical pool ? Or a miniature sub with camera and light ? Is it feasible ? Happy so see you back.... it's been a wile hasn't it. Much love from Quebec 💙
@tobystewart4403
@tobystewart4403 Год назад
I should think that with the preponderance of fine silt, it would all get very murky, very quickly.
@oldomurchu4462
@oldomurchu4462 Год назад
Always found it odd no one has gone for a dive there or even send down a robotic sub.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
It looks far too murky to get anything worth looking at given you can barely see beneath the surface. It needs a good dredging first to eliminate what is likely a lot of crap left over from the excavation efforts still down there.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
@infiniteshoeblack RADAR is of limited use in water for the same reason that radio does not work well underwater. High resolution 3D SONAR reconstruction would be of more use
@Yves95128
@Yves95128 Год назад
It's filled-up with silt, like dirt or clay you can't dive into it, it would be like trying to dive into compacted mud.
@MaxSMoke777
@MaxSMoke777 Год назад
Oh, it's a gravity pump. You put really heavy weight on top of ground containing water and use the weight of the object to push the water out. It fills up with water because it's SUPPOSE to fill up with water. The more water you remove, the more it pumps out of the ground for you. It's not suppose to empty.
@danpetitpas
@danpetitpas Год назад
Wow! What a structure. And needless to say, you covered things about the Osirion I hadn't heard anywhere else.
@michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304
@michaelcalmeyerhentschel8304 11 месяцев назад
Excellent program. The watery sand is a perfectly stable volume-foundation if pressurized by weight and boundaries, which also explains the reaction of the whole to removing water from one corner, creating negative pressure to re-fill from wherever the source comes, much I imagine like a toilet bowl, so there must be a simple but ingenious weight somewhere that moves and releases the pressure in a bulk refill (as described in the video) after some designed depletion allowance, rather than a constant trickle refill that we might have expected. The ancients, and I personally believe the Osirion to be one of the most ancient structures we have EVER found, really knew their water and stone management, potentially their chemistry and energy management in ways we have yet to learn ourselves.
@shardovl586
@shardovl586 11 месяцев назад
Isn't it a man made aquifer and the temple there is to honor its waters, Occam's razor would have it that way and if this is the case then draining it is a wasteful excise
@KayInMaine
@KayInMaine 2 месяца назад
So interesting. There are stairs that lead down into the water so it doesn't appear as if they wanted the water to rise that high to where it is now. It's too bad that nobody hasn't scuba dived down there to see what is going on!
@Lizziekarendreams
@Lizziekarendreams Год назад
Fabulous video, thank you. In my opinion (based on my strange dreams) it had a much taller building on top of it. Maybe Seti 1 used some of the old ruins for his building project but the lowest part was too difficult.
@conniebenny
@conniebenny Год назад
An excellent video on a truly fascinating subject. Thanks for giving us such a great overview of the site. It really makes me want to visit it and find out more. Please keep making these wonderful videos; you're a very engaging and personable host and your clear love of the subject matter comes shining through! 🙂
@triberium_
@triberium_ Год назад
Absolutely beautiful works of architecture, makes the mind go crazy wanting to know what lies beneath everything
@IntuitiveSpirituality
@IntuitiveSpirituality 8 месяцев назад
Love listening to you - love Egyptian old history, always have always will ✨✨
@awillis2676
@awillis2676 Год назад
Your videos are always such a pleasure to watch. You never fail to find something new and exciting to all of your watchers. Thanks so much.
@JoseGuerrero-xx5oy
@JoseGuerrero-xx5oy Год назад
Saludos Ms Johanna. Particularmente, el Osirion siempre es uno de mis temas favoritos y he tenido mucho interés por saber más de estas estructuras megalíticas imponentes que recuerdan mucho a las edificaciones pre incas en Perú. Yo coincido con las apreciaciones de especialistas en que estos restos son mucho más antiguas que el templo de Abydos. Se dice oficialmente que el Osirion es un templo subterráneo que fue construido en honor a Osiris, lo cual no tendría asidero debido a que este “templo” no tiene inscripciones de ningún tipo, no tiene jeroglíficos, no tiene estatuas, no existen frisos, nada. Este reporte suyo es muy valioso, hay detalles que definitivamente son nuevos, el tema de la temperatura del agua es de por si muy misterioso. Parece además muy claro que quien construyó esta colosal edificación tenía dominio de técnicas y de herramientas, además de conocimientos de ingeniería que dejan en ridículo cualquier explicación oficialista. Partimos de un hecho incuestionable: “esto no se hizo solo”. Todo lo que se menciona en este contenido suyo, así como las comparativas, son muy razonables en verdad. Se tejen muchas historias sobre este lugar, pero los detalles que usted señala se ajustan a la razón y permiten inferir que el oficialismo es muy pobre en sus apreciaciones. Para mi esto NO es un templo, esto es algo que es necesario determinar con ayuda de la ciencia y tecnologías de punta.
@vicqchristine4402
@vicqchristine4402 Год назад
Ceci est le temple ďosiris personne dans les commentaires ne se posent la question ! Comment ce temple avec des pierres aussi massives a pu être endommagé noté le cisaillement concave des piliers de cette section il faut donc une force du Haut vers le bas sans compter qu’il y avait au dessus un toit fait de dalles de pierre encore plus massive il a donc fallu une force colossale pour ľ endommager c’ est sûrement pas avec des misérables outils de cuivre les constructeurs des temples méghalitiques donc les plus anciens ont une origine bien plus lointaine que ce que l’on imagine , de grandes choses quant les mentalités auront évolués avec une nouvelle génération de chercheurs pourront être découvertes et comprises mais il faudra en être digne
@TruthWiz
@TruthWiz 2 месяца назад
I love your comment. It seems like we are indeed looking at something that was primarily functional in nature. I am deeply curious if there is a way we could get more advanced diagnostic and sensing equipment into the deeper spaces. I also wonder if there's open passage into the central island from beneath the water line, perhaps closer to the bottom of the overall fifteen meter depth. So many intriguing questions...
@TruthWiz
@TruthWiz 2 месяца назад
​@@vicqchristine4402 I really appreciate you bringing up this question about the concave shearing of the large granite cross beams. This points back at the possibility of ancient disaster. The design and execution of this site is one of our most profound examples of a possible civilization that likely occupied the same land as the Egyptians but was here before the dynastic era. Someone who had skill and technology that was on another order of mastery and capability entirely...
@stevehunt9715
@stevehunt9715 Год назад
Great video. I was there last year with Yousef and he said the waters in certain part of the temple was used by local women who had miscarried and apparently they were able to carry the child to fill term by bathing in the water. Certainly healing properties in this special place we don’t understand yet. 🙏❤️
@milkboxshow1416
@milkboxshow1416 Год назад
I’d love to read a peer reviewed scientific paper on this. Surely there must exist one.
@seanegreene
@seanegreene 3 месяца назад
Hahah the water "Hits different and is healing eye balls". lol. love it
@anielyantra1
@anielyantra1 Год назад
Wow the first new Osirion video that actually taught me something new!
@richardzrogers
@richardzrogers Год назад
Super informative, love the video and your style overall! The original structure, depending on age, might not have been submerged in water. This could have actually been at or above ground level depending on how old it is and the amount of soil accumulation typical of the area (desert, very dusty, probably considerable). It's also very possible that the water table has changed since that time, some of which is caused by human activity, as it has elsewhere on the plateau as it has for other structures that are now flooded. But still, love it, now on my list of places to go.
@rachelcox5290
@rachelcox5290 Год назад
Could this structure have been a huge ancient public well? Love your content! ❤️
@ward142
@ward142 Год назад
I would say Yes! I think that it started as a natural mineral spring, whan the locals found out that the mineral water had healing properties, the word got out and people from all over to take the waters. in those days, people figured that it must be a God doing the Healing, then some priests came, a shrine was build, then a temple.
@Alberthoward3right9up
@Alberthoward3right9up Год назад
And built walls under water
@maszkalman3676
@maszkalman3676 Год назад
@@Alberthoward3right9up It wasn't uber water when they built it you mongrel? What do you thing how hand made/dug wells are made peoples don't dive 10-30 meter in water they dig down and slowly from the underground water veins the water fills up the hole you dug...
@dogtown1013
@dogtown1013 Год назад
That's what I believe it was, I can see no other use for that and it's sure appears to be something like that
@dogtown1013
@dogtown1013 Год назад
​@@Alberthoward3right9upwe have no way of knowing what the water table was his a time, it could very well have been much lower and they didn't build it underwater they built it to access the water where it actually was and in the intervening Millenia the water table Rose significantly
@buckackerman9256
@buckackerman9256 Год назад
I often think about the Mediterranean sea as a great valley. can you imagine what is actually down there from the last ice age when the water was 200 feet lower? There is a lot of missing history.
@U.S.Citizen...
@U.S.Citizen... Год назад
I think it's more like the water was 400 feet lower... I could be wrong, but I'd swear I heard it that way. Peace people
@DominikParry-Waller-pp4fi
@DominikParry-Waller-pp4fi Год назад
​@JohnONeill. Good point! In uk they make a big deal how the land is still rebounding (although geologically speaking slow motion) in the North, in Scotland dur to the weight of ice being removed
@ronhall5395
@ronhall5395 11 месяцев назад
Ev Red n with the water levels 100 feet lower, the water table at this site could have been at least 50 feet lower than today. Thus making the building much easier than the modern excavation. I am sort of wondering if this was some sort of cistern in ancient times with healing waters.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
@AncientEgyptArchitecture 10 месяцев назад
400 feet lower, not 200.
@FullMetalNobody
@FullMetalNobody Год назад
I do appreciate discussions that don't go thru all the melodrama rambling, Thank you. Water is no surprise. That entire region, across Africa past the Middle East was not always as dry a desert. Oh man, that is built deep😮
@danieltrejo9264
@danieltrejo9264 Год назад
Great video but I was just scrolling facebook and came across your teleport "for me id do my bedroom to a five guys" video 😂😂 hilarious. That unison of "ohhhhh" was the best 👌
@luvindemaclean3782
@luvindemaclean3782 Год назад
Thanks for the video! My humble guess is that the Osirion wasn't that underground when built thousands of years before the temple of Seti I. It doesn't belong to the pharaonic period, but to the Atlantean (around 17000-12000 bc, if i remember correctly), when Egypt was called Khem and was an Atlantean colony, the main one left after Atlantis sunk. The complex should belong to the same period as some buildings in saqqara, the sphinx, the entrance buildings to the sphinnx complex, and the piramids, at least the main big ones. Probably the method for building it cannot be explained by newtonian physics; it is a technology long forgotten, i read about man made stones on site or moving stones like floating, by a principle of magnetism with a device called the djed, but there are other theories that have to do with dimensions and the fabric of our reality. Also, the flowers of life that appear in two of the blocks are the most ancient ones ever found, and they are not painted but as if engraved with laser technology. As regards its purpose, apart from burial site of Osiris (probably with a self filling water mecchanism to protect the main underground chamber), in khem it was used as part of the initiatic way (33 temples along the Nile, going all the way up from Sudan) and it was the place where mums of special kids would go to give birth... Special, meaning the geniuses that would drive their civilization forward. This is what i recall from different channelled sources i heard. Check on Matias De Stefano's take on this.
@yanyanz3011
@yanyanz3011 Год назад
Your comment deserves more thumbs up.
@chrismillar4474
@chrismillar4474 Год назад
Why does it always have to be lasers lol. I don't understand therefore lasers
@luvindemaclean3782
@luvindemaclean3782 Год назад
@chrismillar4474 no idea if it was laser technology or what, but it is the closest I can think of to describe how the several flowers of life are depicted on site, since they are not painted. They seem to be engraved with a heat source that penetrates the stone. Laser is the only tech we know of that would do that.
@standin-dc4pf
@standin-dc4pf Год назад
@@chrismillar4474energy/vibrational based mebbe
@englandw
@englandw Год назад
Your perspective seems closer on point than most others. I added a bit of my own interpretations/understandings to this thread, rooted from my Gurdjieff readings/research and a good many years connecting the dots starting from John Anthony West's work back in 1994, researching the husband and wife team of Schwaller de Lubicz -- and from this cummulative knowledge, a common sense understanding that began to back up instictive perspectives. It is remarkable when seeing such (actually obvious evidence) of highly advanced ancient civilizations such as the Great Pyaramid, or Balbeck's foundational stones and so-many-other-places, it is as if "we" are in a trance like state of auto-denial, almost unable to registar and come to terms with the fact that engineering such structures without massive machinery (or other unknown technologies) is an impossibility. Gurdjieff (in the 1930's) spoke to / defined so much of what is now gradually being uncovered by the wonderful work of the likes of Hancock, Christopher Dunn, Ben of Uncharted X engineering-based work, which is to say: that a global civilization - the Atlantians, existed long before the Egypt we know of - and (almost overwhelmingly magnificent information): this civilization cohabitated with "the gods from the sky" for thousands of years. Gurdjieff called the great flood that wiped out this great civilization (now referred to as the Younger Drias great flood) the "transapalnian perterbation" -- . He referred to specific societies that existed in Atlantis and provided actual names of individuals who led those societies. There is good rationale for how and why he knew of this knowledge.
@dann409
@dann409 Год назад
This is a great video. You have lifted the veil on the osirion for me. My thoughts are the osirion is from before the Egyptian dynasty. It is definitely built to keep something important safe. The muck filled moat around the island is where a watertight barrier would go, then you pump water from stairs until you reach the next obstacle. It is also very likely the water table has changed and the system won't work as designed.
@wqmanawqke3375
@wqmanawqke3375 Год назад
So I wonder if the water from the Osirian was sent to a Japanese researcher (I forget his name at the moment) what he would find in the water. He studies the 'memory' of water and has discovered that the molecules will create divine geometry shapes when imbued with specific intention.
@stevehunt9715
@stevehunt9715 Год назад
Good idea 👍 I have Nile water I bought back from Egypt. The man is Dr Masaru Emoto was a Japanese researcher whose photographs of water crystals are responsible for us not perceiving water merely as H2O molecules any more. He was born in 1943 in Yokohama.
@SeventhSamurai72
@SeventhSamurai72 Год назад
Very intriguing. The heat anomaly makes me think it could possibly be a cooling component for a power generator of some type.
@Jonyringo
@Jonyringo 3 месяца назад
I follow you on Facebook and I’m very glad that I found you on RU-vid. This is one of the most compelling ancient sites that I’ve seen in a video. You’re doing a great job please do not stop being a bad ass! Thank you so much for sharing. I look forward to watching more!
@Flastew
@Flastew Год назад
You (and Kayleigh) always find the most interesting facts about history and make them fun. You also inspire us to research these places.
@mistermousterian
@mistermousterian Год назад
Throw in Megalith Hunter to that group of talented female history buffs, each with her own style of presentation.
@Flastew
@Flastew Год назад
Totally agree@@mistermousterian
@chiznowtch
@chiznowtch Год назад
What facts? She's speculating. She's not even doing that she's just regurgitating the same tired talking points from all the other ancient tech hacks.
@v4skunk739
@v4skunk739 Год назад
@@chiznowtchEither way the Dynastic Egyptians didn't build any of the great megalithic structures. They simply found it, repurposed and repaired with inferior techniques and technology. Something big happened in the time of the Pre-Dynastic Egyptians, i'm talking cataclysmic. There is a reason why all megalithic sites around the world are completely smashed and blown to pieces.
@chiznowtch
@chiznowtch Год назад
@@v4skunk739 Speculation. Zero evidence. Fantasy.
@andrewgordon9588
@andrewgordon9588 Год назад
Love your show Johanna, great presenter, very authentic and charming. Keep powering on with these videos they are great. So many of us are into the hidden history guarded by the fragile gatekeepers, more young blood needed to break the paradigm we have been force fed.
@pantidropper
@pantidropper Год назад
Creep
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
Lol - the people like Jahanna are literally piggybacking their grift off those so called "gatekeepers" who excavated and documented all of these sites in the first place. If gatekeeping was their desire they would have been left buried in sand once more and they would never have published any details about it. Try drinking less conspriracy koolaid and opening a book once in a while
@nickidaisydandelion4044
@nickidaisydandelion4044 4 месяца назад
Osirion is my absolute favorite place in Egypt it is a true miracle. I strongly believe that all of those megalithic structures were built according to ET architecture and engineering. The truth of ancient historic events is coming into the public's attention now which will bring down the corporate stringholders as all dynasties have come down in time. Your channel is super.
@1993ka24det
@1993ka24det Год назад
I just now been watching your videos and been a fan of Uncharted X. I love your energy and spunkyness, it really brings out the enthusiasm of the topic. It's the ancient engineering in to precise shapes or purpose. For me it could be from middle ages to 12,800 years ago and behond. If I could afford to trave there I would love to do it one day.
@davidsparks6146
@davidsparks6146 Год назад
15 meters! That's crazy... and you mentioned it might be hollow? Can't they send down a probe or a scuba dude? See if there is an entrance to another room? When are you going back, and will you offering tours?
@robetprice4759
@robetprice4759 Год назад
"Full of silt"
@DylanTheMattressMan
@DylanTheMattressMan Год назад
A question - this may seem a little one compared to the rest of the questions raised but how does a straight measuring stick with no sticky out bits pick up a metal hook?
@mwa5704
@mwa5704 11 месяцев назад
Aliens bruh
@sashapontual1678
@sashapontual1678 Год назад
Great video and summary of this work Jahana! Thanks for bringing this to the attention of a broader community - i always thought the green water of the osireion was some putrid stagnant pools 😂 but fascinating to hear that its good water and mysterious where it might be coming from. It seems that the more that this guy works in the Osireion the more questions he uncovers and the less is understood!! Probably because it’s not a temple or related to Seti I temple, so it needs to be looked at from a different angle to really understand it.
@cosmicporch6537
@cosmicporch6537 3 месяца назад
THE best video on the Osirian, and your vibe and content are refreshing.
@joshgraham396
@joshgraham396 Год назад
Soo, she's probably the closest to perfect woman I've ever came across. Beautiful, soothing to listen to and interested and knowledgeable on such amazing stuff.
@Mortismors
@Mortismors Год назад
They experimented floating blocks. They were able to float a 2 ton stone on the old Egyptian style boats, but when they tried a 3 ton stone it sank the boat. Doubtful they were transporting 50 ton or heavier stones that way.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
The ancient Egyptian boats found were of ceremonial use only, buried with their owners to take into the afterlife along with their grave goods. You can't measure a boat made for ceremonial purposes as if it were a work boat any more than you would measure a ceremonial sword as if it was made for battle.
@aquariandawn4750
@aquariandawn4750 Год назад
​@@mnomadvfxwell the archaeologists have yet to prove how the stones were transported. And the thing about the boats it's not about how they were built it's about the wood that they were built out of. Actual engineers of today will tell you that boats built out of that wood that grows in Egypt would not be carrying 50 ton Stone. You need to start listening to what the architects and engineers are saying about these ancient sites because the archaeologists well they can't prove anything. The architects and engineers aren't coming up with answers but they can easily prove and have easily proved that the explanations given to us by archeology is bull.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 Год назад
Temple of hatshepsut shows heiroglyphs of huge barges hauling oblisks, they definitely knew how to do it, also the unfinished oblisk had a man made canal right next to it they had the knowledge the skill and the man power they were amazing
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 Год назад
​@@aquariandawn4750read☝️ it's known just channels that support ancient tech will not talk about it because of profit off the unknowing fools
@alexlupei1228
@alexlupei1228 Год назад
@@aquariandawn4750 They imported wood. Easy
@markwilliams5654
@markwilliams5654 Год назад
Looks like a giant pit for massive circular saws with water as lubricant 😊 for cutting blocks
@oldoldvisdom
@oldoldvisdom Год назад
Have you ever looked into El Dorado? I did some research on it, hoping for some pre Younger Dryas connection, and I think the connection could be there. Legend has it, El Dorado is next to a lake, and through satellite surveys, they found evidence for a fossil lake. The area also has lake bottom organisms. I spoke to one of the writers of the paper, "Searching for Lake Parime From Space", and he told me that their main theory is that heavy rain 7000+ years ago could have wrecked the exit of the lake, unleashing all the water, and turning what was once the lake into a measly river. Regardless of when the lake dried out, the point is, it was a hell of a long time ago, so why do the natives still speak of an abandoned city. Could it be where they lived in the past, maybe even before younger dryas?
@StephenGillie
@StephenGillie Год назад
The full name would be El Dorado Ciudad [The Golden City].
@FullBeardSk8
@FullBeardSk8 Месяц назад
First coming across this lady's content and it's quite lovely, could listen to many hours
@paulastearns3074
@paulastearns3074 Месяц назад
She has many others.
@FullBeardSk8
@FullBeardSk8 Месяц назад
@@paulastearns3074 yeah been watching, good stuff
@DipBlu
@DipBlu Год назад
Lived in UK for five years and I never heard anybody as entertaining as you. Keep it up! You dah gal... You dah gal!!!
@rbu13
@rbu13 Год назад
In my opinion, this is a relic of a civilization from before the Younger Dryas. It looks like the whole building has a technical character, which is confirmed by the exact repeating dimensions of the individual parts of the building (for a religious object, accuracy does not matter, only the correct orientation is sufficient, according to the given dogma). The construction pit is massive, few people realize that, to organize an excavation of such dimensions, adequate formwork, drainage, embedment of piles in the bottom of the structure, stone extraction, processing, transport and finally construction on site, according to the current interpretation (archaeological convention) in time, at least 7 thousand years in the past and using tools that we know nothing about (and which have surely already rusted) - do you really think it is the work of the "Ancient Egyptians"? Where are the signs - they were obsessed with the sign - they are on all the buildings - except this one. Yes, in the entrance hall they are quite damaged - one would say - the oldest building - why are the inscriptions not reconstructed? I recommend the interesting channel "UnchartedX" - well-founded interviews and reports on the issue.
@awilk07
@awilk07 Год назад
The golden gate bridge was possible because there was millions of dollars funding it. The archeologists couldn't do it because I doubt they had millions of dollars to do this excavation. The ancients created this around the water source from the ground up so they could have easily diverted it while they built and then redirected when they were done. We can't do that now because we're working backwards against their process and lack of archeological funding Edited spelling error
@jc4388
@jc4388 Год назад
Lol, spoken like a mainstream archaeologist.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Год назад
@@jc4388 "Lol, spoken like a mainstream archaeologist" You mean with logic and critical reasoning instead of fantasy and wishful thinking? Nice self own there jimbo 😂🤣😆
@brianw3415
@brianw3415 Год назад
Easily, yes too easy for them way way back when with hand tools?
@mikehunt8375
@mikehunt8375 Год назад
Lol you think archeology could EVER do that!? Idc how much money you throw to Egyptology they'll just put it in their pockets, draw some child like hieroglyphs on the walls, and tell you some more fairy tales....
@John_Falcon
@John_Falcon Год назад
Also, something you should know about Osiris is that he was a sort of embodiment of Thoth, which is sort of the God who created all mathematical, and literal, and technical know how of pretty much any thing you can imagine; even plumbing and physics. So you may want to keep in mind just how important the involvement of Osiris, and Thoth/ TOT are within this structure.
@doctorstarcrumbs
@doctorstarcrumbs Год назад
Thoth and Moses and Hermes are said to be the same person….
@lahaina4791
@lahaina4791 Год назад
They represent the same person. No, Moses is not included.
@dashinvaine
@dashinvaine Год назад
Very fascinating. As far as I know, the only other building in Egypt in a similar style to the Osireion, is the Valley Temple near the Sphinx in Giza, attributed to Chephren/Khafre of the 4th Dynasty, more than a thousand years before the time of Seti I. It has similar square granite pillars and no carvings. I tend to think that the Osireion is at least that old, though the prevailing view has been that it was built by Seti, at the same time as the rest of the temple, but in a deliberately old-fashioned style, and deeper down.
@v4skunk739
@v4skunk739 Год назад
The Dynastic Egyptians didn't build shit in Egypt except the lowest quality constructions like the bent Pyramid and other mud brick structures.
@ericvandermey3231
@ericvandermey3231 Год назад
Fantastic work. Plenty of potentials as to what happened there ten thousand years ago.
@XRobinson
@XRobinson Год назад
I would guess that the original very first building on the site was a drinking water well site. You see the same thing in India and South American ancient sites. A clean water supply is very important for civilization to happen.
@brynjones8636
@brynjones8636 Год назад
Great video! I had coincidentally spent the past three days researching this exact subject trying to find info about the lower submerged levels. Have you read what Strabo said about the Osireon? He thought it was constructed similarly to the Labyrinth and said that stairs went down through vaulted galleries to a fountain at the bottom! That would explain some aspects of the water encroachment…. (Also…fountain of youth!?!)
@rbu13
@rbu13 Год назад
Poor Alexander the Great, he was looking for her in the wrong places!
@betooo331
@betooo331 11 месяцев назад
Fountain of youth is a time machine. "Youth" going back in time.
@betooo331
@betooo331 10 месяцев назад
@@sparklesparklesparkle6318 are you really that sad and lonely that you had to ask that downy question?
@betooo331
@betooo331 10 месяцев назад
​@@sparklesparklesparkle6318 ​ I just googled you and saw that you believe in more than two genders. You deserve to be exactly where you are at.
@ArgentinoMuertoDeHambre
@ArgentinoMuertoDeHambre 10 месяцев назад
@@betooo331 kids a democrat loser probably pitches and catches if you catch my drift. God has a special place for em soon.
@1e2werks15
@1e2werks15 Год назад
Great video as usual. From previous videos, I thought that the ancient sea levels were about 100 feet or lower than today? Perhaps this would have made it much easier for the ancient people to build the temple on dry ground?
@daphnewilson7966
@daphnewilson7966 Год назад
Yup.
@SandyCheeks63564
@SandyCheeks63564 Год назад
finally someone considering the possibility that there was not this endless source of water back when they built it. Geography changes over time.
@jasonbarn88
@jasonbarn88 11 месяцев назад
400 feet
@shankspony9369
@shankspony9369 Год назад
At 3.41 of the video (top of the screen) one can see a natural sandstone wall/ledge that is similar to what surrounds the great sphinx. It also has water erosion like seen at the sphinx enclosure. As the place in this video was buried, and the area not having seen rain of the amount needed to erode that ledge like that, one could make the case to date it the same as the age of the sphinx is being back dated to when it rained in Egypt that heavy.... 11,500 years ago.
@robertomagnani8091
@robertomagnani8091 6 месяцев назад
Very good point!!!
@DADela-ht6ux
@DADela-ht6ux Год назад
Holy friggin wow! I'm so jealous. And the depth and water... I'd bet that there has been some kind of well in that location for over 10,000 years.
@Taliesin-xd7ke
@Taliesin-xd7ke Год назад
Another great video from you, thank you. Curiously the water issue at the Osirian, the struggle to pump it out, made me think of the similiar issue encountered by the excavation team at Oak Island in Canada. I wonder if this, possible, water barrier was intentional to prevent the lower layers from being exposed, as this seems to be the prevailing thought at Oak Island. Just thought it was odd.
@sshreddderr9409
@sshreddderr9409 11 месяцев назад
I dont think so. Either the water was not there when they build it, or it was constructed to work with the water in mind. the amount of water around there is way too much to pump it out.
@markcopas3368
@markcopas3368 Год назад
Is it possible it was built BEFORE the water level rose to its current level?
@ramesses8887
@ramesses8887 Год назад
I think it's more than possible.
@BreakOutOfTheAlgorithm
@BreakOutOfTheAlgorithm Год назад
We get to watch the most beautiful and Awkward Silly Willy creator on RU-vid. 👁️💓👁️
@EnforcementDronEd209
@EnforcementDronEd209 Год назад
👁👃👁 my pet pig and 👁❤ 👁🐽👁 watching her show.
@DA-gq6kt
@DA-gq6kt 10 месяцев назад
Thank you for the wonderful video. For me as an Egyptian, I find that this site is most amazing. The first time I heard about it was from an Egyptian amateur archaeologist who hypothesises that this location in addition to many others were actually built about 12-20,000 years BC, and that this high-tech civilisation ended abruptly after a huge global flood. Centuries later, a more primitive civilisation started building its own monuments and leaving some graffiti on the older civilisation. Classic Egyptologists do not believe in such theories.
@udoheinz7845
@udoheinz7845 Год назад
Very interesting! A lot of the old egyptian building seem to have no hieroglyphs I also saw a video about the connection of the osirion and the babylonians, where there is a similar water temple. The temple in babylon was build for a "god" with similar to osiris
@justmeEnglandUK
@justmeEnglandUK Год назад
Public water supply. If it was covered it wouldn't have green algae and would be sand filtered and perfectly drinkable . It could have been built on the surface and liquid sand removed from below allowing it to sink if all the block are locked into position no reason why it wouldn't work . I've seen it done with Wells on water logged subsoil .they pump and liquify the ground below . The structure will then sink further down until the pressure on the side eventually stops it from sinking further . How they would have achieved this without metal pumps machinery and power supply fuel total mystery . I think it was build by a previous civilization much more advanced then we are today evolving with nature and a better understanding of natural energy and resources we are only now starting to look at . A great worldwide flood wiped the majority out previous cities now under the Oceans and only a few remaining site on higher ground survive today Egyptians pyramids being the pinnacle of a previous civilization . The turned vases and plates found in with grave goods and burried under temple's hidden away by those who knew they couldn't never reproduce this work hiding the previous technology of their ancestors . If found it would have destabilise the ruling elite who took over the surviving structures . Much like the Vatican do today hiding the past and holding all the power .
@imcheesecakeLLC
@imcheesecakeLLC Год назад
The powers that be do not want us to know how/what these structures are. The governments of the world have the technology to figure this out. Why don’t they?
@bretthess6376
@bretthess6376 5 месяцев назад
"They" don't.
@aanchaallllllll
@aanchaallllllll Год назад
0:24: 🔍 The Osirian in Abydos, Egypt is a unique and unusual temple-like structure. 4:30: 🏛 The Assyrian site is massive and deep, with huge granite block pillars weighing 70-80 tons. 8:53: 🏛 The chamber in the Temple is an architectural feat, measuring 15 meters deep, 12.5 meters wide, and 21.8 meters long. 12:17: 🤔 The water table at the Assyrian site is complex and built on water-saturated sand, posing challenges for its construction and preservation. 15:51: 🏛 The speaker discusses the Assyrian structure and its relationship to other civilizations. Recap by Tammy AI
@applesaucemannomadicgarden529
@applesaucemannomadicgarden529 11 месяцев назад
It's not Assyrian.
@giteducalme
@giteducalme 5 месяцев назад
This is an extraordinary video, thank you so much for making another vlog that is researched and filmed and documented so well. 👌
@belavarplaniie8933
@belavarplaniie8933 Год назад
Super, thanks! Fascinating presentation going beyond 'the usual' stuff. Can't wait to hear more.
@AdieJ62
@AdieJ62 Год назад
Utterly fascinating! Raises more questions than we have answers for!
@pickettywitchoriginal
@pickettywitchoriginal Год назад
Your subscriber numbers are busting the attic! Well done lass you’re doing so so well. Not my daughter OBVIOUSLY but .. very proud of our clever inquisitive talented English Rose Johanna 💗
@cmpe43
@cmpe43 Год назад
Great presentation and thank you for your interest!
@chrismalcomson7640
@chrismalcomson7640 Год назад
Whenever you look for acheaology you always dig down. The earlier the site, the deeper you dig, which is a good indicator of its age. Its interesting to think that much of ancient Egypt was a mystery to the ancient Egyptians themselves due to the huge time spans involved. I wonder if they even knew what this site was about when they built the temple complex above? Great vid!!
@DevilsAvocado69
@DevilsAvocado69 5 месяцев назад
As someone with a little knowledge, they are using friction to keep the structure level and floating. In the grade behind west wall diagram you can see it clearly. Its held in like a keystone in masonry arch.
@kamel3d
@kamel3d 4 месяца назад
11:27 I don’t know what you talking about but of course the water will only fill the area where it is removed from
@impressiveprogressive7343
@impressiveprogressive7343 22 часа назад
These types of mysteries has always intrigued me, with this one (Osirian) however I can't escape the coincidence of the water filling the Osirian faster than it can be pumped out, it reminds me of another mysterious place with a similar alleged "hydraulic security system", Oak Island Nova Scotia and the "Money Pit. I find it odd that this structure seems to be intentionally built lower in the ground than surrounding Egyptian constructions and it may be possible that the Osirian was built before the sands arrived. It also reminds me of the structures in Ethiopia at Lalibela.
@alexispark3678
@alexispark3678 Год назад
Damn dude, WHAT?!?! I am completely enchanted. Those blueprints?? it’s a machine, look at it, it’s a battery, it’s not a palace of worship, it’s a megachip
@giovanniguarino9152
@giovanniguarino9152 5 месяцев назад
Amazing video! Thank you very much. Many unknown (so far, for me) information you gave with it. So good. Thanks again.
@MuktiArno
@MuktiArno 6 месяцев назад
Regarding the water issue ad Osirion, the ground level has increased over time burying everything. There is likely a nearby watersource that originally didnt touch the structure but after being buried, the water found its way into the structure. There was probably gardens or farms nearby probably near a spring or old river. Excavating the land around the structure, both deep and wide would find the source. Then you can plug it up or redirect it. Expensive job
@OGSanSimeon
@OGSanSimeon Год назад
Your skills for narration are so good! You can hear the passion! Great video!
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