Ancient Egypt Architecture
Ancient Egypt Architecture
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Manipulation is easy, thinking is hard
Treasure and exercise your natural ability to think for yourself.
Просмотров: 2 227

Видео

Did the Ancient Egyptians use geopolymers? Part 1Did the Ancient Egyptians use geopolymers? Part 1
Did the Ancient Egyptians use geopolymers? Part 1
Просмотров 6 тыс.Год назад
We attempt to provide a rational critique of the geopolymer theory propounded by Davidovitz, ET AL.
Egypt in- country travel scenesEgypt in- country travel scenes
Egypt in- country travel scenes
Просмотров 471Год назад
A sampling of views from a variety of conveyances, from Cairo to Abu Simbel 0:00 Introduction 0:37 LUGGAGE BEDLAM 0:45 ONE HOUR DRIVE TO HOTEL 1:01 STREET SHOPS 1:27 CAIRO, POP. 21 MILLION 1:49 GIZA GOVERNATE 2:17 ROADSIDE TRASH EVERYWHERE 2:34 PRIVATE CAR TO SAKKARA 3:09 SLEEPER TRAIN CAIRO TO ASWAN 3:51 EGYPTAIR CAIRO TO LUXOR 4:23 BALOONS AT DAWN 4:38 WATER TAXIS 4:55 COLOSUSS OF MEMNON 5:09...
Ancient Architecture part 13;  Medinet HabuAncient Architecture part 13;  Medinet Habu
Ancient Architecture part 13; Medinet Habu
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.Год назад
We travel to Luxor to tour the Mortuary temple of Rameses III and examine the many hollows once filled with precious gemstone. Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
Ancient stone jar Measurement proves advanced machining!Ancient stone jar Measurement proves advanced machining!
Ancient stone jar Measurement proves advanced machining!
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
Researchers conduct metrology analysis of ancient granite jar and findings prove that it was machined, not carved! ruclips.net/video/WAyQQRNoQaE/видео.html
My paranormal experience at PhilaeMy paranormal experience at Philae
My paranormal experience at Philae
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Год назад
An account of the 'mystical' or 'paranormal' event I experienced at Philae temple in 2008. Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
Ancient Architecture part 12.... KarnakAncient Architecture part 12.... Karnak
Ancient Architecture part 12.... Karnak
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Год назад
We return to the temple complex of Karnak, which was the most important center of worship in ancient Egypt for over 2000 years Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
Ancient Architecture channel trailerAncient Architecture channel trailer
Ancient Architecture channel trailer
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.Год назад
Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
Ancient Iron?Ancient Iron?
Ancient Iron?
Просмотров 4,2 тыс.Год назад
did the ancient Egyptians have iron working knowledge?
Aswan CityAswan City
Aswan City
Просмотров 974Год назад
We spend some time exploring delightful Aswan city, the jewel of the Nile
Philae; the last gasp of ancient EgyptPhilae; the last gasp of ancient Egypt
Philae; the last gasp of ancient Egypt
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.Год назад
we visit beautiful Philae, the last temple complex of the Dynastic Egyptian empire Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
Mohamed's Cafe in LuxorMohamed's Cafe in Luxor
Mohamed's Cafe in Luxor
Просмотров 686Год назад
The most amazing country style food in Luxor, on the west bank next to Medinet Habu
Ancient Architecture part 11Ancient Architecture part 11
Ancient Architecture part 11
Просмотров 13 тыс.Год назад
we inspect the basalt flooring of Khufu's mortuary temple for traces left behind from the tools that cut the blocks. Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin
On the Giza plateau with Christopher Dunn part 2On the Giza plateau with Christopher Dunn part 2
On the Giza plateau with Christopher Dunn part 2
Просмотров 5 тыс.Год назад
Mr. Dunn explains his theory on a possible connection from outside the pyramid to the northern queens chamber shaft and loses his hat in the process....fun times on the Plateau.
The Pyramid Texts!The Pyramid Texts!
The Pyramid Texts!
Просмотров 9 тыс.Год назад
We return to Sakkara to view the famous pyramid of Unas and the Pyramid texts inside it. TEXT TRANSLATION; www.africa.upenn.edu/Books/Papyrus_Ani.html Join this channel to get access to perks: ruclips.net/channel/UC1i7lKvFQ6zeLpfzllbgs5Ajoin

Комментарии

  • @barrywilliams991
    @barrywilliams991 9 дней назад

    Bags could have easily been made from animal hide.

  • @barrywilliams991
    @barrywilliams991 9 дней назад

    There is a major flaw to your theory ... Not all geopolymers require cement. Geopolymer concrete (GPC) is a construction material that can replace conventional concrete and doesn't use Portland cement. Instead, GPC is made by mixing sand and aggregate with fly ash or slag, and then activating it with an alkali like sodium hydroxide.

  • @barrywilliams991
    @barrywilliams991 9 дней назад

    The Egyptians didn't build the pyramids. So no, the Egyptians didn't use geopolymers.

  • @nautika1
    @nautika1 14 дней назад

    This is the best staue on the world ever

  • @StanJan
    @StanJan 19 дней назад

    What does the outside of the wall look like ? If you removed the sand ? Do we know for a fact if it was "built-into" the earth or was it built and the outside of the walls were filled up against ?

  • @sebastianbucur5135
    @sebastianbucur5135 23 дня назад

    you forgot to mention that we cannot produce such items today . We don''t have the technology. And even if we make one, it would be too expensive.

  • @rycka88
    @rycka88 24 дня назад

    As a retired alien I can confirm this to be true.

  • @RyanSpringer1984
    @RyanSpringer1984 24 дня назад

    What material is the disc made of?

  • @ProudTexan81
    @ProudTexan81 29 дней назад

    Mayans were they real masters as humans on this earth

  • @emanuellagos5736
    @emanuellagos5736 Месяц назад

    By one hand the smooth polish, by the other THE PERFECT SYMMETRY.

  • @dunnobagels
    @dunnobagels Месяц назад

    How do we know the statue was one piece? Is it clearly one piece broken or could it have been multiple pieces and some of the seperations are interpreted as breaks?

  • @Marrow614
    @Marrow614 Месяц назад

    Its al a lie 😂

  • @ratsuttraust6916
    @ratsuttraust6916 Месяц назад

    What if the Schist Disk originated from a pre-dynastic Egyptian period and was preserved by later dynasties as a relic, a treasure of lost technology? What if the question of how pre-dynastic stone was so incredibly cut was linked to the schist disk? Assuming advanced metallurgical skills existed in this earlier era, could the disk have been created to mould tools to spin and carve hard stone? If the disk was indeed a mould, possibly for a one-time use due to the fragility of schist, how might this connect to the development of stone-working techniques or early metalworking processes? Could the Schist Disk represent a prototype or a pre-mould for clay in the evolution of ancient Egyptian craftsmanship? Would a remnant such as a 'master cast' from the lost "stone technology" not be a prize worthy of a pharaoh's tomb? Let's ask AI.. Your hypothesis presents an intriguing perspective on the Schist Disk, linking it to potential pre-dynastic Egyptian technology. Let's explore this idea further: Pre-dynastic Origin: Assuming the disk originates from a pre-dynastic period could explain its unique design and the lack of similar artifacts from the First Dynasty. This theory aligns with the idea that early dynastic Egyptians preserved and valued relics from an earlier, possibly more technologically advanced era . Stone-Working Technology: The idea of advanced stone-working techniques in pre-dynastic Egypt is compelling. If such technology existed, it could explain the disk's intricate design and precise craftsmanship, which seem out of place for the First Dynasty period . Metallurgical Skills: Your suggestion of reasonable metallurgical skills in this hypothetical pre-dynastic period is interesting. It could explain how such a complex object was created, possibly using metal tools for carving or even a primitive form of stone lathe work . One-Time Use Mould: The idea of the disk being a one-time use mould is plausible. Given the brittle nature of schist, it's unlikely the disk could withstand multiple casting processes without significant damage. This could explain why only one such disk has been found . Prototype or Pre-mould: Considering the disk as a prototype or a pre-mould for clay is an interesting angle. It could have been used to create a clay negative, which in turn could be used for metal casting. This multi-step process might explain the disk's elaborate design and its presence in a tomb as a valuable technological artifact . Link to Missing Stone Tools: Your suggestion of linking this to missing stone tools is thought-provoking. If the disk represents a transition between stone and metal technologies, it could indeed be a crucial piece in understanding the development of early Egyptian craftsmanship . Experimental Replication: Recent experiments with 3D-printed replicas have shown that the disk creates efficient vortices when rotated in water . This could suggest a practical purpose related to fluid dynamics, possibly in brewing or other industrial processes. (I kept this in for transparency. but I dont think we are looking for the ancient beer technology missing link) While this hypothesis is speculative, it offers an interesting framework for understanding the Schist Disk's origins and purpose. It challenges conventional timelines of technological development in ancient Egypt and suggests a more complex technological history than previously thought. **************** Granted it is thin.. but the disks location in the tomb next to the body, broken, as 'worth' is significant. An Egyptian royal would not be bringing 'beer' to the afterlife. He'd bring gifts and apologies, technology and power. But considering the rise in belief of a previous Egyptian society coupled with evidence of the earlier existence of incredible stone masonry skills we are almost looking for some piece of evidence that might link the two points.. what tools could they have used and how would they have made them? How could those ancients cut and carve solid granite with only copper? Cut massive blocks for pyramids in short time with no tools?! And is that strange schist disk really for holding daffodils or could it be a link to ancient technology? A treasure worthy of a prince of Egypt.. Or an Egyptian princes death worthy for a broken treasure

    • @ratsuttraust6916
      @ratsuttraust6916 Месяц назад

      I mean for the love of god it even looks like a mould. If you filled it's shape with molten steel it looks like (after a bit of sharpening treatment) you'd get a pretty good 3 blade spinning disk to go on an axle to me. Have a few blades of varying sizes... The fact its schist is a question mark - it could be a symbolic piece or simply a prized remnant handed down. But if it was a remnant of lost pre-dynastic tools it would be a valuable piece in a collection. Should it be considered evidence towards higher level of stone and metallurgy skills in pre-dynastic Egypt

    • @ratsuttraust6916
      @ratsuttraust6916 Месяц назад

      Or another way to try to make the point... this disk is so finely made and out of a material that screams craftsmanship for its age. It's existence implies a positive dominance of this shape which implies a comfort with its negative shape.. which if you take out of a cast would look like a three bladed disk on an axle. Which implies that in this time period they were comfortably 'forming' shapes we would consider advanced by our own standards. Whether its a whisk for beer or a chaff separator for wheat or a spinning lathe that cuts stone quick it still shows they were using far more advanced tools than told.

  • @VenturaIT
    @VenturaIT Месяц назад

    you have most of your info wrong

  • @foodlifeofaprofessional9124
    @foodlifeofaprofessional9124 Месяц назад

    With all due respect to you, there is no device that detects the age of a stone. Who said it is 3000 thousand years old? These are used to separate grains from ears

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture Месяц назад

      No one says it is 3000 years old. The disc dates, as stated in the video, from 3000 BC, which means it is a bit more than 5000 years old. The most common method of dating non organic artifacts is context. The Schist disc was recovered from the tomb of Prince Sabu. The tomb has demonstrable provenance from 3000 BC, therefore its contents have to be at least 5000 years old according to context. As for dating stone, both cosmogenic nuclide measurement and thermoluminescence are validated techniques for determining when stone artifacts were quarried or worked, allowing their outer surfaces to begin interacting with environmental effects such as radionuclides in the atmosphere, solar radiation, or cosmic rays. These techniques have been used to date the construction of Stonehenge, for instance. Many commentors have suggested a mechanical use for the disc, such as rope winding, threshing, water pumping, etc., but anyone familiar with how extremely brittle metamorphic schist is, and taking into account the thinness of the webs on this artifact, would immediately recognize that subjecting it to centrifugal forces from rapid rotation, high surface loads from media processing or water pumping would instantly shatter it. Therefore any mechanical use is [was] highly unlikely.

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWynd Месяц назад

    Molded geopolymer? Or many many people with LOTS of time on their hands and not much to do except chip rocks?

  • @scottfoster3445
    @scottfoster3445 Месяц назад

    The pyramids made concrete !

  • @stanleymunro1500
    @stanleymunro1500 Месяц назад

    Hate to tell ya your all wrong. Bro if ya want i can give a link to a video that basically shows them making it....by hand....no machines....only 3 toold a wicker hand basket, squigies on a long pole amd a flat pounder. You dont need any equipt. Its really so simple a smart cave man can do it.

  • @matthiasstrunz1343
    @matthiasstrunz1343 Месяц назад

    The aliens again 🙈

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne Месяц назад

      can you please provide a time stamp where aliens are mentioned?

  • @izzybella432
    @izzybella432 2 месяца назад

    Yummy!

  • @deanmadley4786
    @deanmadley4786 2 месяца назад

    The pyramid reminds me to think outside of the box to have a bird’s eye view to have a cosmic view and as make this observation this calculation and break it down using geometry it looks like a cat, why you may ask , because it’s all about the power of the lion

  • @briang6119
    @briang6119 2 месяца назад

    It’s both, quarried, and poured stone. There’s proof, they still make marble (scagolia)* there’s tons of proof they used geo p. Casting world wide. G. Pyramid structural stones where quarried, casing stones where (poured). Teotihuacan Mexico, all the mortar in the ancient pyramids? That sand is special, it was transported from Brazil…..3000km away? I’m sure if any ancient people’s wanted resources bad enough they could acquire them. Timber, beer, cocaine and tobacco, was world wide cargo. Roman pots have been found in a bay in Brazil. We don’t know Jack about those before us.

  • @copycatth3gr3at
    @copycatth3gr3at 2 месяца назад

    This is great. Where exactly can this recording be found. I heard that this may have healing properties.

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 2 месяца назад

      it is embedded in the video starting at 1:54

    • @copycatth3gr3at
      @copycatth3gr3at 2 месяца назад

      Do you have a mp3 or anything of this sound?

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 2 месяца назад

      Yes.

    • @copycatth3gr3at
      @copycatth3gr3at 2 месяца назад

      @@AncientEgyptArchitecture Where would some be able to get a copy

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 2 месяца назад

      Cue up the clip and Press Windows+Crtl+R on your keyboard to start a video screencap. There are many free apps available that will allow you to isolate and save just the portion of the audio track you want as an MP3 file.

  • @user-iq2dv6ot8c
    @user-iq2dv6ot8c 2 месяца назад

    BEMBE TRIBE

  • @gillsimo5610
    @gillsimo5610 2 месяца назад

    Here is something amazing that this disc actually does as opposed to the somewhat stupid theories that abound. Please copy/paste the following into the YT search bar for a short 4min explanation. The astounding truth of the Sabu Tri-Lobed Disc?

  • @Floridantea
    @Floridantea 2 месяца назад

    One of the very best documentaries thank you for preparing and sharing. Objective unbiased, non-presumptive commentary. And logical in the reasoning. Today when people are making their own videos and sharing thoughts with collaboration, the old theories from old books are looking so much less plausible. Tombs, Bronze Age tools, bulls in sarcophagus, etc. Our history is far richer and complex than a mere 6,000 years.

  • @bengtlilja6621
    @bengtlilja6621 2 месяца назад

    This lobed disk is with absolute sure, a blender for paint in a big barrel. It is pushed and pulled upp and down in a barrel to get homogen paint. I´ve seen (used) it in reality. It mixed paint really effektive. Ive used it myself when i painted barns with the swedish "Falu rödfärg" or in english Falu redpaint. (Falu red paint, also known as Falun red or Falu rödfärg in Swedish, is traditionally made from a pigment called Falu red pigment or Falu red paint. This pigment is derived from copper-rich iron ochres mined from quarries near the town of Falun in Sweden. The pigment consists mainly of iron oxide (hematite) with varying amounts of silica and zinc. The process of making Falu red paint involves grinding the iron-rich ochre into a fine powder and mixing it with water, flour or starch, and sometimes linseed oil. This mixture creates a thick paste that can be applied to wood, giving it a distinctive red color. Falu red paint is widely used in Sweden for painting wooden houses, barns, and other structures due to its durability and traditional aesthetic appeal.)

    • @SomeoneLikeAnotherone
      @SomeoneLikeAnotherone Месяц назад

      Do you know the name or the manufacturer of the blade ? Would be interresting to see.

  • @transformtransmitt
    @transformtransmitt 2 месяца назад

    Really loved this series thank you- great work!

  • @transformtransmitt
    @transformtransmitt 2 месяца назад

    Awesome series!!

  • @TeeCee66
    @TeeCee66 2 месяца назад

    His theory of a tunnel might be better if there was actually any evidence of a tunnel!?? Seriously!? What else could it be,, I'll tell you. It was an enormous tower buried in the ground that was being used as an anchor to move the stones up the pyramid, with ropes or leverage. Thats why it's dead center. Once it was completed, it was dismantled. I'm sure the two large pits to the left and right we're also part of the construction process. Once it was completed they were filled in and covered with stone

  • @user-zl9cs4ou7p
    @user-zl9cs4ou7p 2 месяца назад

    First apply glue then a fine layer of ground rock. Repeat till u get the necessary thickness. The final coat will have al the other features being added on.

  • @geoms6263
    @geoms6263 3 месяца назад

    i believe to be a smart watch

  • @MisterHowzat
    @MisterHowzat 3 месяца назад

    One big assumption made here is that it was the ancient Egyptians who built those monuments. And it is kinda ironic that you say it's so labor and energy intensive to make geopolymers but you downplay the amount of energy and resources and time required in transporting and cutting the stone blocks, and you attribute that to their ingenuity. And oh, please also consider that the builders could have used a technology other than geopolymers?

  • @michelg.rabbat2267
    @michelg.rabbat2267 3 месяца назад

    This is Michel Gamil RABBAT Egyptian AMERICAN in Florida..it was never carved using copper or brass since they had better. biotite..final shine used gomma lacca( acacia rezi. solution)

    • @eoinosullivan2636
      @eoinosullivan2636 2 месяца назад

      Biotite is a 2.5-3 on the Mohs scale of hardness. Diorite is 7. You need a material harder than a 7 to carve Diorite.

    • @Leeside999
      @Leeside999 2 месяца назад

      @@eoinosullivan2636 _" You need a material harder than a 7 to carve Diorite."_ If that was true then we wouldn't be able to cut diamonds as there is nothing higher than 10 on the mohs scale. Like also cuts like. So Diorite can be used to carve diorite. Someone has carved a diorite vase using nothing but bone, wood and flint and various abrasives.

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne Месяц назад

      @@Leeside999nobody has come close to the precision of those vases in the last 3500 years. We haven’t seen anything like them at any other point in human history. You are greatly downplaying the tremendous anomaly these objects present

    • @_TheGoob
      @_TheGoob 27 дней назад

      ​@steviechampagne I agree with your overall point, but in Ben's own videos he compares a modern stone vase turned on a modern lathe to the ancient vases, and the tolerances were almost identical. Granted, the modern vase was marble, we absolutely can and absolutely do achieve the levels of precision seen in these ancient vases. However, it is not commonplace for us to do so even with our supposed MASSIVE technological advantage.

  • @Kevin_Janessa_JoJo
    @Kevin_Janessa_JoJo 3 месяца назад

    Good scratch patterns both sides.

  • @costag7241
    @costag7241 3 месяца назад

    Prince was riding on 24” spinners way back in the days.

  • @jamespaw742
    @jamespaw742 3 месяца назад

    The problem with this documentary is the lack of scientific testing on the artefact. Too much documentation and talk and hardly no scientific examination from any relevant and reliable scientific institutions. If this artefact is an acoustic antigravity disc, why is there no scientific publication about it. SE should be conducted by an institution not by any individual in order to be credible.

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 2 месяца назад

      Apparently you are unaware that this artifact, along with thousands of other, similarly puzzling artifacts in possession of the Egyptian antiquities authorities, is not available for scientific examination, by anyone. This is why there is so much 'talk' and so little 'fact'.

  • @tonywybrow2767
    @tonywybrow2767 3 месяца назад

    There is no rock in the world that cant be cut, hammered and polished by hand using the tools available to the masons attributed to making them, in the time they are said to be made. This is very fine work done by the best stone workers of the day, give them some credit.

    • @Jonadab7
      @Jonadab7 3 месяца назад

      @tonywybrow2767 what part of Copper and Brass are 3 & 4 respectively on the hardness scale and Diorite is 6.5 did you not understand?

    • @tonywybrow2767
      @tonywybrow2767 3 месяца назад

      @@Jonadab7 I think I understand what the hardness scale actually has to do with shaping rock better than you do. It’s not the copper that cuts, it’s the abrasive you use with it. Maybe look into some real facts before you be so dismissive. Check out how rock is shaped and polished even now, then you might understand the hardness scale all the snake oil salesman keep talking about has nothing to do with the viability of shaping or polishing stone.

    • @ryann6067
      @ryann6067 2 месяца назад

      @@Jonadab7also note stone of equal or greater hardness will scratch and abrade stone. Stone tools were used, in addition to and along with metal ones.

    • @TylerChamb
      @TylerChamb 2 месяца назад

      ​@@tonywybrow2767 Maybe go outside, pick up a piece of granite, and make a scale model of a serapeum box. It doesn't have to be that size, just make one that looks like it, with the same tolerances and polish, etc. It can be the size of an apple, whatever. But make it. You or literally anyone in this world, it's not an experiment that would cost millions of dollars. It would cost nothing, nothing except a rock. That and what we claim they used to do these things: a handful of sand, a big rock to smash into a little rock, and a copper chisel. Go ahead. All the discussion and argument and theorizing is pointless, a meaningless exercise. Just do it and everyone here will admit, alright I guess it is possible, these guys were exactly what modern knowledge assumes them to have been, relatively primitive. But you're not gonna do it, nobody's gonna do it, just as nobody ever had done it, because it's not possible to do. So we're just going to stand around arguing about it for another 200 years when, if what you say is true, this entire debate could be finished forever with a rock, a handful of sand, and a piece of copper. Pointless. Just go outside, get a rock and a copper chisel and actually do it, or pay somebody else to do it, and come back and tell us all about it, because you will never be able to produce anything even in the vicinity of a serapeum box, a stone vase, or one of these completely symmetrical statues, even when you only have to produce a 1/100th real size one- not with the primitive tools it is assumed they used. Nobody's going to ask you to make the real full size serapeum box because that actually is impossible- just a baby one. Stop talking about it and do it, it's an experiment that would cost absolutely nothing in terms of money or equipment. Contract a whole team to help you, it wouldn't make any difference. You cannot make a Serapeum box with a copper chisel, some sand, and smashing rocks- not even one 1/100th the size of the real thing. You want the scientific method? That's the scientific method: do it. You can't do it? Maybe your idea of how it was done is a bunch of BS then. Whatever excuse you can try to come up with to rationalize not trying, just remember: a rock, a handful of sand, and a copper chisel. Doesn't require NASA's budget and a large hadron collider to test this. I'm sick of listening to people having this debate, there's 8 billion of you MFs on the planet and not one of you can figure out how to put those three things together and make some of these artifacts we're arguing over? Then maybe those three things aren't what they used.

    • @thegettokidZz
      @thegettokidZz 27 дней назад

      ​@@TylerChambTony's been real quiet 😂

  • @UUAUAUUUU
    @UUAUAUUUU 3 месяца назад

    KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK

  • @matthewdaramola5412
    @matthewdaramola5412 3 месяца назад

    Nice

  • @truthfilter
    @truthfilter 3 месяца назад

    seems like it was used to make rope...imagine a length of rope going through the middle then a length of rope passing through each opening and attached to the centre rope so as it turned it would twist the three pieces of rope around the centre piece of rope like platting hair

  • @kalebbillig3472
    @kalebbillig3472 3 месяца назад

    The aggregate would also contain all the same minerals as quarried stone

  • @kalebbillig3472
    @kalebbillig3472 3 месяца назад

    This is all about calcium silicate… but what about sodium silicate?

  • @alephmale3171
    @alephmale3171 3 месяца назад

    Maybe it was an automated fan spun by a stream?

  • @njackson3148
    @njackson3148 3 месяца назад

    This wasn't made when the pyramid of Amenemhat was. It was probably built around the same period as Giza, by the same builders. Modern humans didn't build the pyramids. They were built by a different version of humans or by the Anunnaki

  • @Wayne--O
    @Wayne--O 4 месяца назад

    seems like it could develop negative pressure when spun?

  • @marissamate
    @marissamate 4 месяца назад

    Please! Please! Somebody help me! What does "lost in antiquity" mean? 😭

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 4 месяца назад

      The phrase "whose beginnings are lost in antiquity" is used to describe something whose origins date back so far in history that they cannot be precisely traced or documented.

  • @JCarAlvi
    @JCarAlvi 5 месяцев назад

    It looks like a three-phase rotor

  • @Samuel42069
    @Samuel42069 5 месяцев назад

    ancient egyptians copied hieroglyphs of older cultures and made their own variation of the language, same and similiar hieroglypths but different meaning than it once had.

    • @Samuel42069
      @Samuel42069 5 месяцев назад

      so thats why you cant really translate it.

  • @patrickdennis7041
    @patrickdennis7041 5 месяцев назад

    The Egyptians had diamonds. They knew how to polish diamonds. They knew how to set diamonds into other metals. A diamond could scratch diorite. Diamond dust could polish it.

    • @anthonyfoden9382
      @anthonyfoden9382 3 месяца назад

      You are talking nonsense. No diamond has ever been discovered in any ancient Egyptian jewellery.

    • @wanparaph
      @wanparaph 3 месяца назад

      Totally agree

    • @wanparaph
      @wanparaph 3 месяца назад

      I agree with that the concept of certain minerals scratching or cutting other minerals was clearly known to these sculptors. Probably not diamond but idk. 6.5 on the mohs scale isn't intensely hard. They probably had to have used tools that accepted the charging or embedding of harder minerals dusts, and copper qualifies as a substrate that is capable of this.

    • @Jonadab7
      @Jonadab7 3 месяца назад

      @@wanparaph no offense but can you hear how ridiculous that sounds? It was made from one single slab. How did they quarry it? How did they rough cut it? Copper saws? Since copper and brass chisels won't do anything except flatten with each strike of a mallet or pounding stone how exactly did they shape it? Lastly, the statue is exquisite right down to the toe nails which look like they were cut with a laser they're so precise, and then you have the hieroglyphs identifying the statue as Khafre that look like they were chiseled in by a 12 year old in comparison to how superior the work on the statue is.

    • @ryann6067
      @ryann6067 2 месяца назад

      @patrickdennis7041 Note: stone of equal or greater hardness can be used for this purpose. Sand which contains quartzite, will also work, and we also know that the Ancient Egyptians mined and used corundum too for this purpose.