The Megalithic Osirion of Egypt: Live Walkthrough and New Observations!

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  • Опубликовано: 10 мар 2024
  • Join me for a live walkthrough of the incredible megalithic Osirion - located behind the temple of Seti I in Abydos, Upper Egypt. I get into some of the history of discovery and features of this mysterious site, and share some new observations and details that I've only just learned of recently.
    Filmed, produced and edited while in Egypt, this is a little different to my regular content!
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Комментарии • 728

  • @joanberkwitz2662
    @joanberkwitz2662 3 месяца назад +81

    Watching these walk-throughs, it’s some of the best way to see these amazing ancient sites. Not only do you get to see around corners and things that you wouldn’t ordinarily see, but then you see the people walking around and you get a sense of scale. When you point out different aspects, it’s really fascinating. Thank you for this wonderful video today

  • @johnnyreno5255
    @johnnyreno5255 3 месяца назад +155

    It's Monday and I've been at work a few hours already. Seeing a new UnchartedX video was the first time I've felt any happiness today. :)

    • @CraftySasquatch
      @CraftySasquatch 3 месяца назад +12

      sad for you

    • @johnnyreno5255
      @johnnyreno5255 3 месяца назад +24

      @@CraftySasquatch Don't be sad. I've got no problem putting on my big boy pants and going to work. Just because I don't enjoy it, doesn't mean I'm not getting a sense of pride, accomplishment or a real nice paycheck. The glass is half full my friend.

    • @CraftySasquatch
      @CraftySasquatch 3 месяца назад +6

      @@johnnyreno5255Glad to hear that but you should have added that in your original post.
      I know what it's like to have a job you no longer enjoy and after a period of time no amount of money will keep you there. You haven't made it to that point but you will with continued comments like the one you posted above.
      Been there done that got all the damn hats and shirts one would ever need.

    • @stiphbreis5513
      @stiphbreis5513 3 месяца назад +5

      Hang tough bro, the future is bright for the common man. Terrible time to be a billionaire:)))

    • @k.scheer5to1
      @k.scheer5to1 3 месяца назад

      Lighten-Up Crafty..... We all have our own burdens to bear and tales to tell !.....@@CraftySasquatch

  • @Hoobz01
    @Hoobz01 3 месяца назад +53

    Huge thanks Ben.
    Dropped everything to watch it.
    Your commentary was brilliant.
    21m deep!!!
    21m high island of stone!!!
    It's exciting to wonder what's in that trench.

  • @HalfWarrior
    @HalfWarrior 3 месяца назад +86

    It’s really awesome that you share all of this Ben; because I would never be able to get to see this myself (hemiplegic and in a wheelchair). Thank you👍🏻😁

    • @PK-mx7nf
      @PK-mx7nf 3 месяца назад +3

      ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @bluemountain1411
      @bluemountain1411 Месяц назад

      Just play 432 hz and shine lights in your eyes for 6 weeks

  • @DarthChrisB
    @DarthChrisB 3 месяца назад +6

    Writing the name of a pharaoh on a keystone block is like if Picasso had signed the hook on which his paintings were hung on.

  • @VonDunn-op7hj
    @VonDunn-op7hj 3 месяца назад +65

    Going with Ben on his tour with Yousef was the best damn vacation I ever had!!!! It's worth every penny. Keep on doing great work, Ben!!!

    • @gregoire203333
      @gregoire203333 3 месяца назад +6

      An estimation on the cost?

    • @birushinobi
      @birushinobi 2 месяца назад

      @@gregoire203333 It costs about a vase understanding the stonework.

  • @brianstevensii938
    @brianstevensii938 3 месяца назад +8

    The Giza plateau itself, the Osirion the sphinx and all three of the pyramids were all made before 36,450 bc. All of these structures were made well before the great flood. They were made during the "Zep-Tepi" This was mentioned by the ancient kemet priest. Robert Bauval stated that the pyramids themselves were built 11,500 years ago, because at that time shafts within the great pyramid align with certain star constellations. However, he only was partially right. What he didn't do was reverse precession until all of the structures lined up with their respective star constellations. The year is 36,450 bc, the golden ages. And it stands to hypothesize that if ALL the structures in and around the Giza plateau lined up with their respective star constellations at their zenith via viewing the stars on the horizontal plain, based on the precessional cycle, these structures were made in anticipation of 36,450 bc, to celebrate the mother civilization prior to the flood reaching its zenith! It was stated that when the pyramids were built initially, the sphinx and the Osirion were exceedingly old then! This means we are talking about extremely ancient structures. None of these structures were built by dynastic Egyptians, after the flood that wiped out much of the previous civilization and left a very watered down version, that the greeks and Romans inherited. The dynastic Egyptians copied what they saw from their predecessors to the best of their ability but never came close to reaching the levels as is evident by the bent pyramid for example. The math in the construction of that pyramid is incorrect. Which caused it to collapse on itself. There is salt, sea shells and such at the base and some 40 yards up the great pyramid, which means that there was a salt water ocean which submerged the entire area!!

  • @lxdead5585
    @lxdead5585 3 месяца назад +31

    Another great material, thanks Ben! I must say You and Your work deserve more attention and respect. Best of luck!

  • @sancocho1718
    @sancocho1718 3 месяца назад +4

    Very interesting how the Osirion, and the shaft that is supposed to be the tomb of Osiris both have similar themes. Large, megalithic, bare blocks. Water, incorporated into the design of the structure.

  • @brett328
    @brett328 2 месяца назад +3

    A couple of those keystones near the end were definitely repair work. They clearly were aligned with a significant crack running through the giant stone wall. These "keystones" are identical to "butterflies" used in woodworking to keep the cracks in wood from expanding.

  • @danqldaus
    @danqldaus 3 месяца назад +50

    Great walkthrough mate. The extra info was bloody brilliant!

  • @jeffreyyoung4104
    @jeffreyyoung4104 3 месяца назад +14

    Thank you for this video! It isn't often we see much of the Osirion.
    It is wonderful that the authorities are draining the water finally.
    I am always amazed when we are introduced to new digs, and the most ancient work is made from the largest blocks of stone, yet the newer the work, the smaller the blocks, till we get to where each block is the size one man can carry one block.
    I doubt we can use it for official dating of digs, but it is a start!
    But getting hands on in the Osirion, just WOW! Good for you!
    My time has come and gone, and I will never get to visit, but thanks to you and others making videos, I can still watch and enjoy!
    Thanks again!

  • @reyalPRON
    @reyalPRON 3 месяца назад +20

    dear sir Van Kerkwyk.
    Thank you for your efforts sir, your channel has made this topic interesting again.

  • @TheRotnflesh
    @TheRotnflesh 3 месяца назад +11

    I had a lengthy discussion with an associate a while back about the Osirieon, and one of the points we talked about were the sockets and the bore holes. We were both of a mind that the entire complex was a HARMONIC structure, and that the pink granite was periodically excited via reverse piezoelectric effects when the water levels rose, applies pressurized water to the bases of the pink granite (which saturates the stone, altering the ultra-acoustic properties and electrical capacity of the quartz), and that the entire complex was used for 'ascendance' purposes: The body would feel the resonance in the central altar area, as the harmonics of the structure balance the standing wave in the middle. The side alcoves played a key role in the harmonics.
    We were ALSO of a mind that the 'flattening' that was being done to the stone was NOT done by the original builders; that was most likely done by the pre-Dynastic Egyptians before the China Excursion (6000 years ago), whereas the entire complex was built over 12,700 years ago (Gothenburg Excursion). The harmonics of the stone would have been ruined if the crystal structures of the original stone were damaged.
    Cutting stone damages the crystals. These people did NOT cut the stone!
    Edit: The connected facings were cut, not the visual facings; the connected facings HAD to be seamless to share the vibrations. I had to clarify that.

    • @stanleymoore8798
      @stanleymoore8798 3 месяца назад +8

      That’s a lot of assumptions to make..

    • @neilw5198
      @neilw5198 3 месяца назад +3

      I'm in construction, to me I would say those were drain holes. Lowest point just keep it dry inside. Water would run into the recess fill up then drain out the hole. It may not had water pressure in at the time of construction.

    • @richtomlinson7090
      @richtomlinson7090 3 месяца назад +2

      People have been using abrasive for cutting stone, for millenia.
      Cutting is done by grinding, and doesn't change the crystalline structure, that wasn't touched.
      All methods of working stone changes crystalline structure, of what surfaces were worked, but not the underlying material.

    • @TheRotnflesh
      @TheRotnflesh 3 месяца назад +3

      @richtomlinson7090 All KNOWN methods, be specific. We are learning new things every day we don't think are possible.
      I am all for the simple answers, I just cannot fall in line with conventional archaeological thinking...not when we know how quickly civilization can erode and how often cataclysms likely happen. Not when we find finely drilled jade jewelry from 70,000 years ago from a completely different hominid, in Denisovan Cave. Not when the timelines of mass extinctions coincide with geomagnetic excursions and our myths talk about events that would have happened during geomagnetic excursions (such as rainbow skies, intense solar ion precipitation events that cause fires and melt glaciers, etc...there are many recorded excursions now, and they seem to follow a 6,000 year cycle known as Heinrich Cycles).
      We are here now, saying they (then) did not exist, and have no relevance. I disagree: since our studies of black holes have gained traction, the idea of 'time' is contextual ONLY: time passes differently depending on what elevation you're at due to gravitational drag and time dilation. The measure is minute, but is still there, showing that time is not a real thing.
      With that in mind, remember that our history only stretches back about 6000 years and is incredibly spotty. Their history is potentially tens of thousands of years due to the periodicity and predictability of Heinrich cycles. But 12,750 years ago the Heinrich Cycle was so extreme that the Ice Age was rebooted in a sequence of events that raised the sea level by 400+ feet and inundated 29 million square KM of coastal land (today, over 4 billion people live on that equivalent measure of coastline, to give you perspective).
      There was no way to maintain continuity; we barely survived the 900-1400 year geomagnetic Excursion. We now call this Era the Younger Dryas.
      By the way: during the Younger Dryas, people were cutting megalithic stone in Turkiye. Gobekli Tepe, Karahan Tepe, and Boncuklu Tarla are over 12,000 years old.

    • @N8Dulcimer
      @N8Dulcimer 3 месяца назад +2

      1 The piezo electric effect is not 'resonance' it is literal bolts of electricity.
      2 By definition, the piezoelectric effect deforms the crystals.

  • @tylerouimette2934
    @tylerouimette2934 3 месяца назад +23

    I love this. For some of us who dont get the chance to get there and experience this in person, this is nearly as good. Great great great

    • @wendywestra
      @wendywestra 3 месяца назад

      I love it as well. It's soothing some 🤔

  • @briandavis812
    @briandavis812 3 месяца назад +9

    The vaulted ceiling at 41:00 is very impressive.

  • @polygonalmasonary
    @polygonalmasonary 3 месяца назад +9

    6:50 Makes sense that the biggest and best construction would come at the beginning of a civilisation 🤔🙄 Great video Ben, nice to have a new Uncharted X video to watch. 👍🇬🇧

  • @Eye_Exist
    @Eye_Exist 3 месяца назад +21

    Great to hear from you Ben! Hoping to see the next video!
    A good rule of thumb is that there's no need to evidentially disprove or propose an alternative hypothesis to something which has never been evidentially proven, so it's the official story to these sites that requires the proof first before they should even be taken seriously.

    • @steveo5295
      @steveo5295 3 месяца назад +8

      While what is true, there are certain tools and methods we can rule out. So either the dates are wrong, or the tools and methods are wrong, or both are wrong 🤔...

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 3 месяца назад

      pyeamids could be +- 200,000 yrs old. same as all the world wide structures. not man made. in sumerian tablets. our creators, aliens, left earth 13k ago. so, that is minimum age for any construction. they mined minerals, gold, mica, mercury, for there planet. we, were cloned from homonids, as there workers. @@steveo5295

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 3 месяца назад

      its all proven, they just refuse to acknowledge the truth. the church, bible, is a book of bs, lies. as are all scientists, archeologists, or they dont get grants, to lie.. viper tv sumerian tablets. the observation lounge. the facts by how to hunt. everything inside me.

  • @psystealth
    @psystealth 2 месяца назад +4

    24:55 unbelievable, thanks for taking us with !!

  • @muckaboi2351
    @muckaboi2351 3 месяца назад +13

    this is all so facinating to me. Really gets your brain working. Lots of unexplainable stuff. Would love to see you cover some the ancient sites in india. alora caves. kaliasi temple etc.

  • @TheMookie1590
    @TheMookie1590 3 месяца назад +3

    @39:00 those "doors" he walks by on his right. you can see they used tube drills on the corners, and can see holes going up. Almost like tube drilling if a way for them to set reference points to work from.

  • @grayrainbows912
    @grayrainbows912 3 месяца назад +8

    Absolutely stunning work and wow were we once advanced or what !?

  • @PhilipCockram
    @PhilipCockram 3 месяца назад +8

    Fascinating . Thanks Ben . The close quarters and precision fitting of those massive blocks is amazing to say the least .

  • @XxSxTxYxLxExSxX
    @XxSxTxYxLxExSxX 3 месяца назад +5

    My man! You keep doing what you are doing. You are Highly respected, especially for your utilization of Citations from books, other studies, and peer reviewed work. You are well followed. Just don't lose any footage or SD cards and we will be HAPPY! Looking forward you one of your long cut edits, whenever you get home and have a chance! God Bless! Safe Travels!

  • @ung427
    @ung427 3 месяца назад +3

    Wow, once you get inside, to the unfinished part, it starts looking exactly like the ruins in South America. As if these super old ruins with the nubs, and 3-D puzzle-fitted blocks were from another type of beings long ago.

    • @AustinKoleCarlisle
      @AustinKoleCarlisle 3 месяца назад

      and the walls were never shaved down in those areas--like the machine for smoothing walls was in Egypt when all work was stopped, probably due to the cataclysm, and the walls in South America and elsewhere were left unfinished.

  • @annewitkowski7586
    @annewitkowski7586 3 месяца назад +7

    From about 4 minutes in, a real good look at the sort of mortise slots at the top of two of the columns. Had the sun hitting them just right.

  • @burt3498
    @burt3498 3 месяца назад +4

    pause at 2:52 outer wall looks like the same "water erosion" on the Sphinx enclosure = WAY Older site than we are being told!

  • @ScrewdriverTUNING
    @ScrewdriverTUNING 3 месяца назад +8

    Thank you for all your efforts Ben. 🧬⚡️❤️‍🔥🦾

  • @lilbones486
    @lilbones486 3 месяца назад +4

    they were building this and never finished, that's the craziest part to me! later people added but they could never finish the original construction because they didn't have the means!

  • @Biohazz
    @Biohazz 3 месяца назад +3

    The whole megalithic structure was very old when they've put those key stones in it. So this was built waaay back! It's clearly that they've inherited the whole plateau.

  • @REKLESSWOLVES1
    @REKLESSWOLVES1 3 месяца назад +4

    Did you guys know that the Flower Of Life design found in paintings and inscriptions could be duplicated if you can find the specific resonance frequency. Using sand and a Chladni Plate, called Cymatics. It`s the technique of sprinkling Sand on a rectangular metal plate and when exposed to sound it shows the resonance patterns at specific frequencies of oscillation. I believe this place and others like it were sealed acoustic buildings, potentially a healing place. We already know that if you expose Cancer cells to certain resonance frequencies the cells disintegrate and the Cancer is no more, perhaps the `First Lost Ancients`, not The Dynastic Egyptians, used this technique instead of chemicals to treat ailments. It`s well worth someone out there experimenting with this Flower Of Life symbol, see if they can recreate it and what effect it would have on the human body.

  • @setken
    @setken 3 месяца назад +6

    Thank you for sharing your videos. This building was not open to the public when I visited about 10 years ago.
    One of the colossal blocks you pointed out appeared to be cut as a 3d throne hieroglyph. This may have been the camera angle, but coincidently that glyph forms part of the name for both Osiris and Isis.
    Nut is the sky goddess, and Nun is the primordial ocean.
    Again, thanks for sharing.

    • @UnchartedX
      @UnchartedX  3 месяца назад +1

      Cheers. And it's still not open to the public, you can visit by special permissions access only, $$$

  • @kaidwyer
    @kaidwyer 3 месяца назад +4

    Thanks for sharing these close-ups with the world!
    I struggle to fathom what required this infrastructure. It’s so massive and we can’t be sure of what excesses its framers enjoyed…
    Was this “typical Tuesday” for them, or were there legions of indentured laborers like what is commonly described for such creations?
    Was it a mere bath-house? A centralized septic system? A hydroponics facility? All three - at various times or all at once!?
    I constantly wonder what blend of culture and technology was responsible for such impressive feats. I just can’t see anyone whipping the backs of those who took such pride in their craft.

  • @megret1808
    @megret1808 3 месяца назад +3

    The shear brake on the lintel implies a very powerful blow from above

  • @mrbluepencil_
    @mrbluepencil_ 3 месяца назад +8

    Thank you Ben for another fantastic walk through this incredible place. How mainstream archaeology can still believe that these huge structures were built by simple copper chisels and pounding stones is truely laughable. I just hope that in my lifetime some new discovery is made that will finally shed some light as to who, how and why these structures were made. Keep up the great work. 👍

  • @Thex-W.I.T.C.H.-xMaster
    @Thex-W.I.T.C.H.-xMaster 3 месяца назад +74

    One of the less talked about sites in Egypt. This place seems like it was buried by the sands even during some of the Ancient Egyptians times. The blocks weight is like 67 tons. There obviously no way that the Bronze Age people of the Old Kingdom had the ability to build it... super hard stone like fucking Granite and perfectly fining interlocking into eachother.... crazy crazy stuff...

    • @robertmortimer8288
      @robertmortimer8288 3 месяца назад +2

      Maybe it's pre-dynastic or we have missjudged and underestimated the capabilities of the Old kingdom!

    • @tlk14725
      @tlk14725 3 месяца назад +9

      It reminds me of the megalithic structures in Peru.

    • @Grottgreta
      @Grottgreta 3 месяца назад +3

      The temple that is close by, which the Osirion is supposedly a part of, is a bent temple. One of a kind from ancient Egypt as far as I know, so what that suggests to me is that as they were building the temple of Seti I they stumbled upon the Osirion and rather than destroying it or the temple they were building the built it in an L shape

    • @ArcheologyScience
      @ArcheologyScience 3 месяца назад +1

      Plenty of evidence out there of how they did all of the things you mention. But due to misunderstanding and confirmation bias, we are now here :-(

    • @Grottgreta
      @Grottgreta 3 месяца назад

      @@ArcheologyScience Cutting, moving and lifting up 67 ton granite blocks with incredible precision? Show me please, I'm genuinely curious

  • @shawnwillis7561
    @shawnwillis7561 3 месяца назад +5

    Bout...damn.....time. miss your videos man. No one aside from maybe Randall compares to the amount of info and depth in every minute of video you bring to us. Thank you

  • @harchihiarchi
    @harchihiarchi 3 месяца назад +3

    Firstly, i would like to thankyou for your presentation. When you said " It's a mess:".., you are correct. I had in my mind 1 minute prior, "Ït's a disgrace". I was there for 6 months in Nov 1997.., just a week following the Luxor massacre. The whole area was near empty, so i had a rare modern times opportunity to go where many can not go anymore. It showed me then how modern day Egyptians have absolutely no idea and sows how backward modern man has devolved..;, where they can not even work a way to pump debris away to allow water to flow in and reveal, what may be revealed..., by simply a pump 😞

  • @bananabanjo
    @bananabanjo 3 месяца назад +5

    So good to revisit this amaaazing site with you, and all the little details (came on the Feb2024 trip)! Can't WAIT for the archaeologists's updates...
    - Lesley

  • @ChristopherZoechling
    @ChristopherZoechling 3 месяца назад +3

    When looking at this it really shows and feels that this is way older then 4500 years. The great pyramids, this site and many more seem to be from at least 12,000 years ago and have been buried in sand for all this time.
    And how come there isnt anyone with the interest and budget out there that would fund the excavation and pumping out from all the water. There is so much more hidden in ancient Egypt.
    Like the tubular drills shown in this videk, im sure ee could send a small remote controlled robot in there or do scannings

  • @spartacus8661
    @spartacus8661 3 месяца назад +11

    this has to be some of the finest stone work ever seen, perhaps ever made

  • @BCTGuitarPlayer
    @BCTGuitarPlayer 3 месяца назад +2

    1:18 ! Freeze/pause in this spot and look closely at the scooping on the back wall! What a revelation! We've all seen this scooping technique in dozens of videos re: pre-diluvian civilizations, stonework. Here we see the rounded faced stones which had been placed together firstly, followed by the scooping and finally the flattening and polishing of the stone blocks. I find this absolutely amazing. The only question is: what type of heat sourcing were they using to do this; if heat was used at all! I've seen these structures and videos many times but this is the first time I spotted that scooping in the background of the Osirion.

  • @foxdenham
    @foxdenham 3 месяца назад +8

    That was terrific. please do more walkthroughs of other places - They need less editing for you and the spontaneous feel gives us a 'what are we going to discover?' vibe. Thanks bud.

  • @mwagner_87
    @mwagner_87 3 месяца назад +3

    This is super interesting. The depth of the structure is almost unbelievable. Really adds to the mystery of what its original function was. My first guess on the tube is is it simply functions as a vent, maybe to improve the flow of water. Great video as always. Can't wait to see more.

  • @nicksothep8472
    @nicksothep8472 3 месяца назад +5

    Love the new footage, always a treat being able to witness The Greatness!
    On a different note, you sound tired as hell, It seems you're having a hard time articulating, I was insomniac for years and I clearly remember how hard it was to talk after three days of close to no sleep. Take care of yourself, and thanks for what you do brother 👍🏻🖤🏴‍☠️

    • @UnchartedX
      @UnchartedX  3 месяца назад

      Thanks. My energy is fine, but my voice goes out in Egypt. Part air quality, part talking all the damn time. I'm normally sitting in my studio not talking much!

  • @giovannipotenza123
    @giovannipotenza123 3 месяца назад +12

    Great job Ben as always. Seems we still dont know anything about this building at all. 5 stories deep? Seriously? WHats down there? Egypt is a mystery! Brings back memories from last year. Nice to see Maddy on her third trip (odd not seeing your dad with you:). See you in Italy next week Maddy!

    • @steveo5295
      @steveo5295 3 месяца назад

      Thirty meters about ninety feet deep, seems like there is always something new to discover in Egypt...

    • @andreysavenkov905
      @andreysavenkov905 3 месяца назад

      A hydroenergy system linked to the pre early driassic Nile ? Taking those curveball tubedrill holes into account.

  • @ArtStorey1
    @ArtStorey1 3 месяца назад +2

    Your uploads are always so informative. Thank you brother. These ancient engineers are far more brilliant than we thought.

  • @user-ho5gh4wh7x
    @user-ho5gh4wh7x 3 месяца назад +7

    I've loved everything about ancient Egypt since a little boy. I hope to make it out there before I'm gone.

  • @seth1184
    @seth1184 3 месяца назад +2

    This just proves that we are getting smaller in life forms progress in the future.

  • @finley.h
    @finley.h 3 месяца назад +2

    Some people may have noticed traces on the surface of the rock that are similar to the polygonal stone walls found in many parts of the world. Of course everyone know the legend of Hiram Bingham and the story of Percy Fawcett‘s "unknown bird." I‘m now convinced that the stone has softened in whatever way it has. And the machine that stacks it up also. This is very strange for those of people who think inside the box, but.. 🤔 Thanks for this video! 🙂🙏🏻

  • @jeanhorseman9364
    @jeanhorseman9364 3 месяца назад +3

    This building is completely mind blowing. Unexplainable. What on earth do regular archaeologists tell themselves? Scary weird.

  • @WLMPRO
    @WLMPRO 3 месяца назад +2

    10:46 that is insane, they made a nudge to fit the other stone and in the background you can see it aswell, that is some advanced thinking, they didnt want the stones to move at all, as if their weight wasnt already enough.
    i never knew about this place, dare to say it but it even looks older than the pyramids.

  • @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126
    @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126 3 месяца назад +6

    Ben, at 22:45 into the video did you notice that the top granite blocks that make up the back wall have been smoothed out but that smoothing, for lack of a better term, stops halfway down the wall and you can literally see the tool marks left behind by whatever device they used to scoop off the stone 😱 Is it possible that this structure was actually not completely finished and the worked stopped due to a catastrophic event like we see at other locations, or do you think they just decided it wasn’t necessary or they didn’t feel like finishing out the rest of the wall? I have never seen this back wall with its unfinished stones before! I always assumed all the stones were completely smoothed out and finished like most of the stones we see in the rest of the structure. Thank you so much for taking us on this tour and for all the work you do!! 🙏

    • @annewitkowski7586
      @annewitkowski7586 3 месяца назад +3

      Check out "Unfinished" by Brothers of the Serpent Russ, who was there with Ben.

    • @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126
      @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126 3 месяца назад +1

      @@annewitkowski7586
      Thank you very much for that recommendation, I will certainly check it out 🙏😁

  • @scottprather5645
    @scottprather5645 3 месяца назад +4

    Indicates a very sophisticated level of construction and the fact that it goes down 21 meters is astounding. I've heard that They have tried to pump that water out in the past and we're unable to do it because it instantly replenished by the aquifer. A very mysterious structure indeed I would love to know what's below that water line down to the 21 m.

    • @milky_joh6281
      @milky_joh6281 3 месяца назад +3

      Having worked in the construction and mining industry as a dewatering tech it would take a couple big vacuum trucks and a water jet and pump 3-4 months to excavate the sediment out. would probably be some massive blocks from the roof down there as well so a tower crane would need to be erected. $5-10 million needed for equipment

    • @scottprather5645
      @scottprather5645 3 месяца назад +2

      @@milky_joh6281 thanks for the comment. it would sure be fascinating to see what's down there if it does in fact go down 21 m. It would prove an extremely advanced state of construction technology.
      Remnants of Atlantis??

    • @milky_joh6281
      @milky_joh6281 3 месяца назад +1

      @@scottprather5645 I just can't get over how they shifted those massive blocks let alone excavate the hole. We aren't even close to the tech they had

    • @scottprather5645
      @scottprather5645 3 месяца назад

      @@milky_joh6281 yeah its totally possible that they knew how to levitate objects. There's proof that this is possible look at the guy that built Coral Castle he said he had discovered the secret of how the pyramids were built
      The largest stone being 35 tons and he moved it single-handedly.

    • @johng4093
      @johng4093 3 месяца назад

      They built a skyscraper of stone but didn't realize it was built on quicksand. 😂

  • @crozza79
    @crozza79 3 месяца назад +6

    Dude you got some sun ☀️

  • @matcleary42
    @matcleary42 3 месяца назад +2

    That angle on the tube drill hole at 13.54 is insane. To do it at that angle feels like drilling through granite was so insanely easy for them that they said " Yeah f@ck it, let's drill it at 37.5 degrees because doing at 90 degree right angles will take all f@cking day"

  • @nanceeM1313
    @nanceeM1313 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you Ben. When I first saw a little of it ~ it hadn't been opened yet.
    This is very exciting especially since I know I can't make the trip. Tfsharing💜🕊loved walk thru & history.

  • @paganisto
    @paganisto 3 месяца назад +11

    Excellent! Many, Many Thanks!

  • @ivannasha5556
    @ivannasha5556 2 месяца назад +1

    Just gotta say I love your sober takes while still speculating about the rabbit hole. To many people just try to fit the puzzle pieces into their set in stone world view.

  • @Nellis202
    @Nellis202 3 месяца назад +2

    You begin to look like an ancient Egyptian , you know , the ones you see in old Hollywood movies.
    A good thing !

    • @UnchartedX
      @UnchartedX  3 месяца назад +1

      I look like a raccoon and or panda bear with my stupid sunglasses tan

  • @jock-of-ages73
    @jock-of-ages73 3 месяца назад +5

    This is great footage, i'd never heard of this amazing place, it's just awesome. Love your channel. 🙏

  • @MattC-eo6ep
    @MattC-eo6ep 3 месяца назад +3

    Hard to believe this megalithic work was dynastic! Thanks Ben, love your videos.

  • @paulkay8986
    @paulkay8986 2 месяца назад +1

    Everything about your videos, from the opening music which I love through to the final credits is sensational. You bring the subject material to life and infuse that feeling of wonder. Great work Ben!!!

  • @effoffutube
    @effoffutube 3 месяца назад +1

    What an incredible civilization this was.

  • @earthtwits
    @earthtwits 3 месяца назад +5

    Thanks for the tour. Looks like the typical pre flood architecture

  • @thephantomarcana
    @thephantomarcana 3 месяца назад +10

    I always wonder how many other marvels are buried beneath the sands of Egypt. Just astonishing the magnitude and precision of

  • @JohnCoughlan1
    @JohnCoughlan1 3 месяца назад +3

    Such an enigmatic site.

  • @mikelee9886
    @mikelee9886 3 месяца назад +2

    I think we'll learn a lot more once it's all FINALLY pumped out and the mud is cleared out. I'm actually curious if there's not potentially more of these type of sites still completely buried that are untouched. This site appears to only have been found by accident by the builders of the Temple of Seti I, so there is probably more of them to be found, that not even the dynastic Egyptians knew about.

    • @davidyendoll5903
      @davidyendoll5903 3 месяца назад

      I agree Mike . The whole success of Egypt is based on water in an area of arid land , maybe not completely arid , but certainly land that needs extra water supplies for humans to expand their farms away from the Nile . Surely academics have studied water sources and landscapes to help locate maybe more obvious possible water management types of archaeology in the area ? Water is so important to improving an area for living in . As a kid I was was lucky enough to see an example of water management over two thousand years old in an area even more surprising to find ancient water works than Egypt ; Al Ain (UAE) or Buraimi ( Oman ) and several other 'villages' are to be found about a hundred miles east of Abu Dhabi ; that is straight into desert away from the Gulf across dry plains and big sand dunes with no surface water at all . But at the oasis type of place that Al Ain , or Buraimi , same place really , is there is a man made underground water carrying tunnel system dating back to 500 AD . Maybe this system does not have fine blocks of decorated rock to wonder about , but the system has allowed more people to survive and prosper than a simple pond oasis might have done in the back of nowhere . Now think of Egypt and how water engineering schemes probably await discovery . In big style probably too !

    • @davidyendoll5903
      @davidyendoll5903 3 месяца назад

      I should have said ..... the water tunnel system at Buraimi or Al Ain is called a Falaj .

  • @dubselectorr345
    @dubselectorr345 3 месяца назад +4

    Unparalleled documentation as always!

  • @sean_b_drummer
    @sean_b_drummer 3 месяца назад +8

    Man! That 48-minutes flew by!
    Thanx for the tour, Ben. 🙏🏽😎

  • @adee957
    @adee957 3 месяца назад +1

    The small ”rooms” with two holes in the roof, are also find in ancient megalithic Indian temple.👏 The painting/flower could be a map of used sound frequency.

  • @Valkyrie_71
    @Valkyrie_71 3 месяца назад +2

    Great Video Ben! Thanks for sharing this and your perspective. The Osirion is my favorite enigma and in my personal opinion a work of next level human intelligence. Whoever did it was far beyond anyone else in the ancient past in terms of engineering brilliance. I have to agree that Seti likely did some repair work to the structure out of respect and reverence for what it was. If he had built it as well why the L turn during the construction of his temple to avoid it? And why change up the stonework style and size. Seems a little strange. Look forward to what you have on it next!

  • @markgiles8527
    @markgiles8527 3 месяца назад +1

    In that final back chamber those images, carving are amazing. The detail and how it’s made looks flawless. Unlike the other scratching that can’t even produce a perfectly straight line. It’s almost like on race of people was copying those who came before them. Very interesting stuff.

  • @Noel-jk3jy
    @Noel-jk3jy 3 месяца назад +1

    i watch these on 1.5x and always appreciate how upbeat the intro song sounds

  • @gregbrown5473
    @gregbrown5473 3 месяца назад +6

    Bloody hell Ben with this water receding how much more you can see like nubs ( AUS knobs ) scoop makes and to think it go's down 21m, farout very cool new bridges too would love to see what is under there thanks man 🙂🤙

  • @toddmetzger
    @toddmetzger 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks Ben! I really enjoy that you try to show so much of these places, and the odds and ends that are often missed. I was going to make a joke about you giving us a deep dive into the place, but it seems like that might be coming soon. I hope they are able to get it drained and mucked out. Finding out what is down below, probably will just make for more questions. I enjoy trying to figure it all out nonetheless.

  • @ogapadoga2
    @ogapadoga2 3 месяца назад +8

    I am from Singapore and our underground floodwater management facilities look similiar to this. It's called the Stamford Detention Tank. I personally think these are infrastructure projects and not temples.

    • @ronnierush9379
      @ronnierush9379 3 месяца назад +1

      Agree , Don't think you need that construction for a "look at me" bathing complex, the rooms around the top made from metres thick granite, and weren't there for bathing costumes. Whatever was intended to be in those rooms they/it was very well protected perhaps for our equivalent of cutting edge engineering equipment to be used on the site. Such a shame we will probably never know?

    • @nat7x7
      @nat7x7 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for the comment, interesting to hear. These absolutely look like something functional (as are the pyramids imo as well as the area around them - remnants of an industrial processing plant and mine tailings, not temples or tombs). Any thoughts on Longyou caves in China, could they be some type of waterworks?

    • @ogapadoga2
      @ogapadoga2 3 месяца назад +3

      @@nat7x7 Longyou's construction resembles Kasukabe Underground Flood Caverns in Japan. But Longyou doesn't have a discharge channel.

    • @nat7x7
      @nat7x7 3 месяца назад

      Thanks@@ogapadoga2 It is highly likely that the caves are somehow connected to the nearby river. There is an excellent video on this by Tina on youtube if you haven't seen it (search for 'Longyou Caves: Mystery Solved on the Purpose of These Caves?- the Curious Being channel).

  • @classica1fungus
    @classica1fungus 3 месяца назад +2

    These are exciting times for excavations... So into it cant get enough

  • @6nferno
    @6nferno 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanx man. I will never get to see Egypt in this life. This was cool.

  • @Carolevw
    @Carolevw 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks Ben, Ive always been interested in this as it feels to me it is much older and so little is known of it. The "island" and aqueduct was a new thing to me so thank you for giving the extra info. You never fail!

  • @aripalefski2676
    @aripalefski2676 3 месяца назад +4

    Nice work and keep up work
    Very cool

  • @jimmyzbike
    @jimmyzbike 3 месяца назад +2

    This building is so fascinating. Thanks for sharing

  • @DarkSiv
    @DarkSiv 3 месяца назад +2

    Felt like I was there experiencing this with you. You are a great narrator and guide. Thank you for this experience!

  • @conniebenny
    @conniebenny 3 месяца назад +3

    Fantastic walkthrough video! The next best thing to actually being there. Thanks so much for making it.

  • @scocassovegetus
    @scocassovegetus 3 месяца назад +1

    23:54 very interesting, haven't seen something like that before.

  • @simonbeechey8350
    @simonbeechey8350 3 месяца назад +2

    Good morning Ben, i have recently discoverd your channel and have to say im loving it! Thoroughly enjoying binge watching all your videos. Great respect for you and your knowledge. Keep up the fantastic work!

  • @Octaviousrex1080
    @Octaviousrex1080 3 месяца назад +1

    One thing I've noticed is all the modern stairs and bridges recently built here, and in the pyramids. They're being explored today by people very much how they definitely wouldn't have been, or at all, otherwise these structures would be more "user friendly"

    • @AustinKoleCarlisle
      @AustinKoleCarlisle 3 месяца назад

      i've yet to see any true megalithic "steps" at any of these sites, the steps always seem to be a later (cruder) addition. makes you wonder...

  • @HoLeeFuk317
    @HoLeeFuk317 3 месяца назад +3

    I always wonder what kind of condition everything would be in if there had never been any human interference like quarrying. How much more granite would be in place on the pyramids

    • @Reginaldesq
      @Reginaldesq 3 месяца назад

      Yeah me to. Now that you mentioned that. I wonder if any blocks in the pyramids etc were actually taken from other sites. Maybe from former rulers who were hated by the current ruler.

  • @AustinKoleCarlisle
    @AustinKoleCarlisle 3 месяца назад +3

    Are there any hieroglyphs found in the areas that had to be excavated?

  • @rawr4444
    @rawr4444 3 месяца назад +1

    Gosh, this will be amazing to see if they clean it all up. 21 meters, oh my

  • @crypticscripts
    @crypticscripts 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you Ben, for this really engrossing and important look into the minutiae and detail of the Osirion. The more I see from your content (and the content of Russ and Kyle, as well,) the more questions I have. I travelled to Egypt back in 2002 and had the chance to go into the Pyramid of Menkaure. The Giza Plateau looked a whole lot different back then........

  • @1WillowMoon
    @1WillowMoon 2 месяца назад +1

    Literally one complaint....wanted the video much much longer, it went by so quick. I was engrossed. Thankyou ben for sharing this amazing site. 😊

  • @benhirodaro
    @benhirodaro 3 месяца назад +3

    I see some big stones. I see where this is going. Nice

  • @aurelf3158
    @aurelf3158 3 месяца назад +10

    I like very much your (neutrality) of information -you don t impose the data in one way .Thank you for sharing us the beautiful old Egypt!Keep it on !

  • @that9blife465
    @that9blife465 3 месяца назад +1

    That square with the tube drill idea...... perhaps it was used to wash their feet before entering the pool

  • @andynichols9476
    @andynichols9476 3 месяца назад +4

    Thank you ben 😊

  • @Whenthoughtsmaycome
    @Whenthoughtsmaycome 3 месяца назад +3

    Great footage! I’m so thankful for you guys documenting these enigmas for the world!

  • @zbraal
    @zbraal 3 месяца назад +5

    Estimated 21 meter depth is unreal. Hope to see the pools cleared out in the near future. Need to know what’s down there! 👍 Another excellent video. Cheers!

  • @Major_Jester
    @Major_Jester 3 месяца назад +2

    awesome once again. your great, thank you.

  • @seanleo3464
    @seanleo3464 3 месяца назад +1

    Wonder what other hidden treasures are buried or under water. The most fascinating thing is human history, truly amazing!