Analyzing the North Face Corridor of the Great Pyramid

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • The ScanPyramids Mission revealed to the world on March 2, 2023 the first images taken from inside a hidden corridor within the Great Pyramid of Giza.
    The hidden North Face Corridor of the pyramid was found to contain a gabled ceiling, known as a saddle vault. This design redirects the weight of the pyramid from above, and thus it was widely assumed to be a so-called ‘weight-relieving chamber’ protecting the descending corridor below.
    But many details about the North Face Corridor suggest that protecting structures below may not have been its primary purpose. This video compares the design to other saddle-vaults and puts the corridor in context to the other features within the Great Pyramid.
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    Join this channel to get access to livestreams:
    / @historyforgranite
    ------------------
    Thanks to Keith Hamilton for the tip about Julien Bruchet’s 1965 book. Keith Hamilton’s North Face Corridor Guide:
    www.academia.edu/98053499/The...
    Thanks to Yukinori Kawae for taking us into Campbell’s Chamber in this video:
    • 【完全保存版】三大ピラミッド内部を一挙公開!...
    Thanks to Ancient Architects for the shout-out:
    • The Great Pyramid Nort...
    SanPyramids SP-NFC 2023 Report:
    vimeo.com/803685954
    Scientific Papers on the North Face Corridor:
    www.nature.com/articles/s4146...
    doi.org/10.1016/j.ndteint.202...
    Franck Monnier’s Facebook posts:
    permalink.ph...
    permalink.ph...
    0:00 Intro
    1:27 Congratulations ScanPyramids Team
    2:16 Ground penetrating radar and ultrasonic tests
    3:41 Entrance Vault connection
    4:48 Chevron ceiling design
    5:58 North Face Corridor analysis
    8:22 Holes in the ceiling
    10:37 Weight-relieving weaknesses
    12:08 Inaccurate models
    14:15 North Face Corridor access
    16:50 Jean-Pierre Houdin's model
    17:44 Next steps for investigation
    20:08 Damaging a pyramid
    21:20 Good publicity for Egypt

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @mikedickinson9730
    @mikedickinson9730 Год назад +1133

    I like how Hawass was totally against the scan pyramid project, and he’s in a photo with the team taking credit. That guy is the gatekeeper of knowledge in that country and really should be challenged in every aspect.

    • @GM-qq1wi
      @GM-qq1wi Год назад +271

      His legacy of being a total con artist and archaeological gatekeeper will outlast any former credibility he had in the past. Nobody will remember him for his actual contributions, his massive and grotesque ego that stood in the way of archaeological research shall define his career.

    • @chickenfist1554
      @chickenfist1554 Год назад +1

      He loudly announced that he didn't believe in radar. Doesn't have any objection to it though when he can claim credit for what it discovered. The man is a cancerous polyp on the anus of humanity.

    • @mikedickinson9730
      @mikedickinson9730 Год назад +61

      @@GM-qq1wi For sure. I mean really though. He now says that Khufu’s burial chamber is below the Chevron Corridor? The same team that told him about the corridor says nothing is below it. What a fool.

    • @tinkeringinthailand8147
      @tinkeringinthailand8147 Год назад +1

      The man's a nob.

    • @salactro
      @salactro Год назад +84

      He’s just a shill for tourism

  • @centennialpeaksadventures
    @centennialpeaksadventures Год назад +894

    My first thought was, “how long until this episode’s dig at Zahi Hawass?” Under a minute. Not disappointed in the slightest. It’s a certified staple of HfG. Brings me joy every single time 😄

    • @HistoryforGRANITE
      @HistoryforGRANITE  Год назад +285

      If he's going to say ridiculous things, it's only fair to put them in context.

    • @centennialpeaksadventures
      @centennialpeaksadventures Год назад +53

      @@HistoryforGRANITEPrecisely. Somehow I find reasoned explanations more convincing than ego. But what do we know? We’re just lowly commoners, after all.

    • @hailthemightytriff
      @hailthemightytriff Год назад

      @@centennialpeaksadventures We simply cannot handle the extra details and information. Hawass' intellect is just too immense for us to comprehend

    • @mylesjacobs2298
      @mylesjacobs2298 Год назад +16

      FZH

    • @jackmountain8503
      @jackmountain8503 Год назад +18

      By two mins thanks and shout out to the actual scientists🥰

  • @joeblow8982
    @joeblow8982 Год назад +275

    It's a breath of fresh air to find a channel that isn't sensationalising these type of discoveries.
    You keep an open mind while leaning toward the evidence. Kudos to you my friend.

    • @moray2
      @moray2 Год назад +4

      Great comment @joeblow

    • @joeblow8982
      @joeblow8982 Год назад

      @@dd61125..... like?

    • @Degenevesting
      @Degenevesting Год назад

      Ah I love passive aggressive digs at proponents of opposing theories.

    • @joeblow8982
      @joeblow8982 Год назад +8

      @Colonel-ng7hf wait... what?
      How did you *possibly* interpret my comment as passive aggressive? 😆
      Proponents of WHAT theories? You must think really highly of whatever theory you think I'm passively aggressively attacking...I just wish I knew what it was. 🤔

    • @dnjdsolarus
      @dnjdsolarus Год назад

      ​@@Degenevesting more like a reasonable criticism of dogshit clickbait conspiratard shit that plagues every inch of this website relevant to egyptology

  • @giantenemybird2687
    @giantenemybird2687 6 месяцев назад +13

    This channel is a great example of why having logical outsiders challenging status quo can be so valuable. I believe there is something to be said for looking at things with fresh eyes. Great video.

  • @jamZowdermilk
    @jamZowdermilk Год назад +179

    A basic tool of hard rock mining is a "tattle-tale". This is a wooden beam placed between two notches that hold it in place. A miner can wiggle the wood so he knows its feel. If the the beam starts to feel looser or tighter the miner can know if the rock is shifting. Clear "tattle-tale" notches appear across from one another high in the ceiling of the Northern chamber in the Bent Pyramid across from the dug passage connecting to the western corridor. The ancient Egyptians were testing if their designs worked. They wanted to know if there was any subsistence or shifting in their structures. The shallow holes dug into the gabled ceiling of the new passage could have held "tattle-tales". Same for Campbell's chamber.

    • @ronmurphy9819
      @ronmurphy9819 Год назад +13

      I’m a 64 yr dude and still love to be educated. In this channel I always get a good education. Thanks

    • @pepeshadilay
      @pepeshadilay Год назад +3

      No it was just a tomb ....either that or a temple....nothing else

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Год назад +31

      ​@@pepeshadilay how is that pertinent here? Did you reply to the wrong comment?

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Год назад +7

      This makes perfect sense. Also has anyone noticed the dark stains on the ceiling and on the back wall that bats typically leave behind? If that's what it is, how are they getting in there.

    • @dr.decker3623
      @dr.decker3623 Год назад +4

      to understand the structure, they should first uncover the foundation,.. which they will never do.

  • @BrunoAlexandreCubiaco
    @BrunoAlexandreCubiaco Год назад +84

    Ah, the most expected notification of the week. Love your videos specially the detailed diagrams, Mr. Granite

  • @garros
    @garros Год назад +110

    Channels like this one are why I love RUclips. Gems like this channel, made by someone passionate about the content and subject matter they create, who build upon the work done in the field up to that point and truly add value in terms of analysis, hypothesis formulation, debate and nuanced commentary, are such a gift. Justice should demand that someone such as yourself should have a documentary crew and a production budget behind them with which to make cinematic and high-value production style content for mass broadcast to as wide an audience as possible, and yet it is here, for free, affording the creator minimal financial reward despite all of the effort put in, and is available to those of us interested and lucky enough to find it on a platform such as this. Thanks for your passion and knowledge, mate. Cheers, Matt

  • @KlausJepps
    @KlausJepps Год назад +38

    I want to express my appreciation for History for Granite's fresh take on the pyramids and his enthusiasm for exploring them further. History is a never-ending journey of discovery, and there's always more to learn and explore. Thank you, and I hope to see you again soon for another exciting adventure.

    • @jerry-xi4gi
      @jerry-xi4gi 4 месяца назад

      "fresh take" .....he thinks the pyramids are tombs...that's the lamest "theory" .

  • @methylmike
    @methylmike Год назад +18

    history for granite notifications are producing huge amounts of dopamine.
    you are a hot second away from "drop everything im doing" status
    awesome!

    • @Ryne918
      @Ryne918 Год назад +1

      I was thirty minutes into a podcast and paused immediately.

  • @lightdot459
    @lightdot459 Год назад +16

    I've been waiting on this to drop since the morning they announced the discovery lol

  • @InfamousTog
    @InfamousTog Год назад +2

    I can't stop recommending this channel to everyone I know when videos with this quality keep coming out.

  • @gotMylky
    @gotMylky Год назад +100

    I feel like watching your videos is as close to - being a pioneering explorer to find new land - that I will ever get. Such fantastic analysis I love your work so much

    • @nerokcubreva
      @nerokcubreva Год назад

      you can just go to egypt and hang man.

  • @skelta1990
    @skelta1990 Год назад +122

    A big Thankyou to you and Ancient Architects for the work and research your channels put out to help understand these significant finds.

    • @honeysucklecat
      @honeysucklecat Год назад +5

      Something from Ancient Architects popped up in my feed. I feared it was yet another woo woo woo channel until they mentioned this channel, and then I knew they were okay, Norman!

    • @ender4555
      @ender4555 Год назад +3

      I like how informative Ancient Architects videos are, but I find his speech so distracting that it is hard to focus on the content at times. Not his fault at all, and I'd assume English might not even be his native tongue, but it is what it is. I've been trying to watch more of his stuff to "get used" to it.

    • @davidyendoll5903
      @davidyendoll5903 Год назад +3

      @@ender4555 I find no problem with his speech , it has improved admittedly . More importantly his explanations are completely sensible , credible and scientific . He exposes other 'experts' downfalls , people who have made statements which have been proved to be wrong , but they hang on to their stories and try to convince us they are still correct . These folk are getting in the way of discovering the truth ; truth for granite just wants to discover the truth , nothing personal , just the truth . Well done that man !

    • @Sgt.chickens
      @Sgt.chickens Год назад +2

      ​@@ender4555 hes english. So yeah.
      He just speaks weirdly when presenting. Puting the emphaSIS ON RANDOM WORDS AND TRYING TO SPUND EPIIIIIIIC

    • @tiborbogi7457
      @tiborbogi7457 Год назад

      @@ender4555 I am not English speaker, after watching few episodes of Ancient Architects channel I feel I understand enough. I prefer content over form, so I am big fan of Ancient Architects.

  • @xtopherxy
    @xtopherxy Год назад +4

    Wow. I've binged every single one of your videos this weekend! I'm now more interested than ever!

  • @ThePr8head
    @ThePr8head Год назад +1

    I think it was a breakroom. Awesome info and very interesting. Thank you!!!

  • @rustyrobinson8027
    @rustyrobinson8027 Год назад +3

    Thanks again to everyone involved ❤️

  • @douginorlando6260
    @douginorlando6260 Год назад +88

    Here’s a new perspective … consider when the pyramid was half built. The new corridor’s raised floor is the same level of blocks as the floor of the queen’s chamber. The architect would have walked around on that layer and surveyed the floor plan (kinda like walking around a partly built house with the floor but no walls installed yet). I bet that was a major milestone … and extra effort was made at that point to level the floor and correct/adjust for any deviations outside established tolerances.
    And the next 3 layers were special, with walls for chambers and corridors, then chevrons for ceilings. There may be other special things planned for that layer of the pyramid

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 Год назад

      ?..the builders,,aliens,,knew exactly what they were doing. building a power generator.. which tesla re discovered,.you cant have world wide free power,,you cant ,,charge,, for it.. this is why all attemps at finding the truth of there purpose & making it public, has been stiffled for decades.. watch viper tv sumerian tablets..then, revalation of the pyramids..

    • @dr.decker3623
      @dr.decker3623 Год назад +22

      None of the pyramids have been fully uncovered, they don't rest upon the sand, they are much bigger, and wider at the base than people think,.. those things go down to bedrock, and the tunnels are a labyrinth that extends in a network to other underground structures. I visited the site before, there is a small stone structure about a hundreds yards or so away from the Great Pyramid, it houses a pump room (ventilation shafts) and a small power sub station, all the cables, pipes, and vents go down under ground towards the pyramids. I wandered over to see what this was away from the main group, was quickly shouted at by guards, and they went through my camera to make sure i had no pictures.. this was 10 years ago. to understand the structure, they should first uncover the foundation,.. which they will never do.

    • @heatshield
      @heatshield Год назад +2

      In which direction is this small structure? I’d like to have a look myself.

    • @polbecca
      @polbecca Год назад +4

      @@dr.decker3623 I can believe that. The Egyptians would also have made much use of water channels to determine levelness of the prepared ground.

    • @GarrisonFall
      @GarrisonFall Год назад +14

      Imagine if the queen was with the architect... "Hmm, on second thoughts, I think I want my chamber further over there, away from the front door."

  • @bigman8642
    @bigman8642 Год назад +1

    Excellent, thank's for sharing ! BIG UP !

  • @GMar-qe7ge
    @GMar-qe7ge Год назад +3

    Ha! We've been excitingly awaiting this video from you , analyzing this latest discovery in the Great Pyramid. Another stellar job. It is such a joy to watch all your videos on this subject. You are my "go to " source for the Egyptian Pyramids. Thank you once again.

  • @pw383426
    @pw383426 Год назад +4

    Yaaaasss I have been waiting for this video! Finally a credible explanation of the corridor

  • @guzzi4947
    @guzzi4947 Год назад +11

    Looking forward to this, new subscriber who recently binge watched all your videos, great job, well done!!

  • @passeunebonnejournee
    @passeunebonnejournee Год назад

    Wow! Thank you for so much detail and effort in your presentation! 👍👍

  • @wishgodgirl1903
    @wishgodgirl1903 Год назад +2

    Ran out of new episodes to watch, starting to watch them a second time! This is fast becoming my favorite channel. Your simply going to have to make them faster! Lol. Keep up the wonderful work!

  • @guitarsword1
    @guitarsword1 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. Well explained .

  • @jamesrobb5370
    @jamesrobb5370 Год назад +28

    Thank you for all the meticulous research and amazing presentations you provide

  • @Codemaster99
    @Codemaster99 Год назад +4

    ABSOLUTELY PRECIOUS AND WONDERFUL VIDEO!! Love all the SUPPORTING evidence provided. Bravo for calling out model inconsistency and when morons can't swallow their pride and admit they are wrong.

    • @karlbjorkquist7489
      @karlbjorkquist7489 Год назад +1

      As a humble modest engineer (by training; not practicing) it is so mindknumbingly maddening to see pride get in the way of being a decent person and team player. Strong egos just show how insecure they truly are.

  • @themilkmen973
    @themilkmen973 Год назад

    Keep up the great work, research, and content man!!! I stumbled upon your videos and I am enthralled

  • @hugovanpayns9557
    @hugovanpayns9557 Год назад

    Was waiting for this video, intersting thoughts and insights!

  • @mototrainer1
    @mototrainer1 Год назад +6

    Was waiting eagerly for this since the image was released. Didn’t disappoint. Re-watching the “entrance vault” video from a year ago now.

  • @reidjordan6246
    @reidjordan6246 Год назад +6

    I've been waiting for this one! Great stuff as usual!

  • @mattking1332
    @mattking1332 Год назад +21

    Jean Pierre Houdin has the best explanation of the construction that has ever been put forward. Great to hear him mentioned 👏

    • @kirknelson235
      @kirknelson235 Год назад

      This

    • @scottbreseke716
      @scottbreseke716 6 месяцев назад

      The same building technique would be seen in the other two pyramids, but we don't see that.

    • @RipOffProductionsLLC
      @RipOffProductionsLLC 12 дней назад

      ​@scottbreseke716 the great pyramid having a unique construction method makes sense considering it has other unique features such as internal rooms within the masonry, rather then below the ground under the pyramid.

  • @Mohamed-lc5wj
    @Mohamed-lc5wj Год назад

    Great video with alot of information.
    It's good to know different points of view

  • @brunster64
    @brunster64 Год назад +3

    How I wish you had full unfettered access to all the information the ministry of antiquities has - your insightful interpretation of the information would be fascinating and informative. Here’s to hoping.

  • @ScienceEtConscience
    @ScienceEtConscience Год назад +6

    I think you're right when you say that this corridor has not been built for relieving pressure because it is too close to the pyramid edge. I think it must lead somewhere, probably to the big void with a narrower passage since it has not been detected by the muon technique. Or it was abandoned for an unknown reason. Very interesting to find out that people 5000 years ago were as smart as today. Keep on the good work.

  • @TheBlueMeanie
    @TheBlueMeanie Год назад

    Amazing work and amazing times we live in. Thank you for the video. Subbed.

  • @Gin-toki
    @Gin-toki Год назад +6

    Interresting video.
    Zahi and his gatekeeping aswell as the general withholding of information about the pyramids is what made me loose my overall interrest in the pyramids and egyptology as a whole. I was really into it as a child and teen but the frustration became too much.
    I'm glad there are people who genuinely try to share knowledge and information about this topic, it is afterall a heritage of the world and should be shared with us all equally.

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne Год назад +2

      Once you realize they were made by the Atlanteans before the Younger Dryas impact event, it becomes alive once more.
      They are at MINIMUM 12,000 years old.

    • @sgcdialler
      @sgcdialler Год назад

      Well that's clearly incorrect. The pyramids were landing pads for alien spaceships.

  • @amisheskimoninja
    @amisheskimoninja Год назад +7

    By the time the images of the passage hit mainstream news, I had already been aware of the possibility of a space there from your videos. It made me feel like I was part of the discovery. So of course, I've been waiting patiently for your analysis video. Was not disappointed in the slightest!

  • @reinatycoon3644
    @reinatycoon3644 Год назад +4

    This was an excellent video. Your passion and knowledge of Pyramids is amazing. I'm new to all this stuff but I find it soo interesting.

  • @Kevin-Ward
    @Kevin-Ward Год назад +1

    Awesome video. I have been fascinated by the pyramids then got a little bummed out not finding anything new. I love research like this. Much respect. Your on the right track

  • @artemcultura6191
    @artemcultura6191 Год назад

    Thank you for all your efforts

  • @Primatron
    @Primatron Год назад +4

    Great video as always. I like the idea of this lining up with the Queen's chamber passage, and possibly going on further.

  • @lemagreengreen
    @lemagreengreen Год назад +5

    I keep coming back to the 1986 drilling of holes in the Queen's Chamber corridor and finding that quartz sand filled void... It feels like all of this may be connected with some of the connecting chambers and corridors backfilled, some remaining open like the NFC and the Big Void.
    So frustrating to know that this discovery was made in the 80s and then... nothing. Hawass was apparently involved in that inaction.

  • @Gains24-7
    @Gains24-7 Год назад

    Another amazing video. I learn so much every time I watch a new video. Thank you sir!

  • @DC-cg2sx
    @DC-cg2sx Год назад +1

    Very well done.

  • @svetovidarkonsky1670
    @svetovidarkonsky1670 Год назад +26

    So pleased to see this vid released. It certainly brightened up my Saturday morning here in Oz. Excellent synopsis and analysis, and of course you noticed much more than I did (though I did notice the symmetry of the saddle vault, and thought they are not weight relieving 😏 ). Thanks again for your research and logical, well thought out ideas. Cheers

  • @briancooney9952
    @briancooney9952 Год назад +7

    it seems like most of the smooth finished faces (inner and outer) of the pyramids, were finished in situ not before.
    That being said, i think based on the size and alignment, this could have been originally designed as an entrance when the pyramid underwent the expansion that some have theorized might have occurred. It was left unfinished, unused, and blocked off.
    The "Gantenbrink door" seems to support this, as it could've been simply a plug for the queens chamber ventilation shafts, because there was no need for them once the kings chamber and it's shafts were built.
    It's also possible that this is a blocked off entrance to a burial chamber, and all the other chambers were merely diversions

  • @monsterinhead214
    @monsterinhead214 Год назад

    More fine high quality pyramid talk. Thanks! Please do more, it is so good and fun.

  • @Dr.Yalex.
    @Dr.Yalex. Год назад

    Thank you. you have an amazing eye to see what you see... and I also see it !
    I agree with you!

  • @Punchcado
    @Punchcado Год назад +14

    I've seen a couple of other early treatments of this subject and yours is of course the most informative. Thanks for this. I always look forward to your thoughtful, scientifically-supported videos and am glad to see the channel growing.

  • @conniebenny
    @conniebenny Год назад +12

    Another outstandingly good fact and logic-based analysis. This is by far the best channel of its kind on RUclips and I eagerly await each new video. The North Face Corridor absolutely demands further investigation, and your suggestion for how to go about it is extremely sensible and reasonable, and for those exact same reasons, I sadly doubt we'll see such a thing for a long time. Conventional Egyptology moves more slowly than continental drift and hates being challenged by awkward facts that contradicts its dogma.

  • @gabrielofficial7859
    @gabrielofficial7859 Год назад

    Interesting video thank you for talking about this wonderful discovery 🌟

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Год назад +1

    I was waiting for this upload patiently. Can't wait to watch! 📺 🍿 👀

  • @AncientArchitects
    @AncientArchitects Год назад +6

    Superb analysis as always! 👏

  • @Jonnygurudesigns
    @Jonnygurudesigns Год назад +3

    I have been waiting for this since the announcement! I woke up at 5am to watch this bad boy.. HfG delivered as usual! His respect for the pyramid builders and the modern scientists involved is admirable

  • @gregorydahl
    @gregorydahl 11 месяцев назад

    Thanksfor doing this

  • @mattressfour20
    @mattressfour20 Год назад

    Great content as always. I really dig your analysis

  • @TheBeltanin
    @TheBeltanin Год назад +21

    I love your work so much. Between you and AA, I've been thrilled to learn and listen to everything you produce. Thank you!

  • @severedize
    @severedize Год назад +7

    Thanks! I've been waiting for your video since the news came out. I've been thinking that the corridor has already been entered in the past and re sealed.

    • @damo87araimo
      @damo87araimo Год назад +1

      This seems the most probable scenario. That area has been exposed for years with only a single chevron layer denying robbers access to the riches hidden behind.

  • @georgejaparidze
    @georgejaparidze Год назад

    This was a good video, content and analysis. Thank you brother.

  • @CCovers1
    @CCovers1 Год назад +1

    Phenomenal video. You are a key figure in fuelling a resurgence of interest in Egyptology.

  • @TheHighDreamsYouTube
    @TheHighDreamsYouTube Год назад +6

    Most educational video I've ever seen in my life! I love how you dedicated your time and effort into all of this! Thanks

  • @lyarrastark6254
    @lyarrastark6254 Год назад

    Great video, thank you.

  • @kevinlucko2902
    @kevinlucko2902 Год назад +1

    Amazing video!...again!

  • @General_Confusion
    @General_Confusion Год назад +3

    They would only need to push in about another 6 or 7 meters of plastic conduit to be able to feed in the camera and see what is behind the raised floor block. If they push and twist a plastic conduit it would climb over that bloc. I use the same technique to run cables under floors in old buildings that i can't lift the floorboards in and am confident i could do it in ten mins.

  • @mcjok88
    @mcjok88 Год назад +7

    Really excellent analysis. Thank you for making your hard work and research so readily available to all who are interested. The past ways of information distribution did not have the reach the way you tube does.
    How excellent, available and concise this format is.
    Thank you again, and I'm quite shure that many others interested in this information feel the same gratitude that I do.
    Thanks

  • @JeffAM1986
    @JeffAM1986 Год назад

    Great video. Thanks.

  • @redtomcat1725
    @redtomcat1725 Год назад

    Well done !!

  • @victorcast2467
    @victorcast2467 Год назад +6

    I've been doing a marathon of all the videos on this channel since yesterday, from the oldest to the newest, and what an amazing job you've been doing! Thanks for the effort and knowledge!

  • @timm8123
    @timm8123 Год назад +4

    They need to spend more time and effort on the notch much further up. Put an endoscope in there as there are huge gaps and get ScanPyramids there too. I think there's more to the notch than we know.

  • @StanJan
    @StanJan Год назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @ericgregor2086
    @ericgregor2086 Год назад

    Thank you for your video

  • @andrewvoros4037
    @andrewvoros4037 Год назад +5

    Excellent presentation and definitely one of the most soberly analytical channels of this type. It's also great to see Jean-Pierre Houdin get some much deserved credit for his theories, and much needed support for his persistence in the face of Egyptian antiquities politics.

  • @Montana_horseman
    @Montana_horseman Год назад +12

    This was really great to see and get your take on. While I commented on and noticed the chevrons not being staggered you picked up on a whole lot more fascinating things about the space. I was wondering if you had any thoughts about the black spot or shadow on the right side wall. 11:45 It seems so different color/shade wise than anything else in the space. Great to see your video and I hope you (we all) get more endoscopic video in the future to ponder. Always a thumbs up!

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Год назад +3

      Mark's shadow?

    • @RichieAdriano
      @RichieAdriano Год назад +1

      @@therealb888 I think he means 11:48

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Год назад

      @@RichieAdriano yup that's very clearly black.

  • @apollion888
    @apollion888 Год назад +1

    Informative and entertaining, I see why Ancient Architects recommended you. Subscribed 🙂

  • @GriffLandia
    @GriffLandia Год назад

    Awesome work! Looking forward to more, thank you.

    • @HistoryforGRANITE
      @HistoryforGRANITE  Год назад

      Thank you for your kind words and generous gift. I promise the best is yet to come!

    • @GriffLandia
      @GriffLandia Год назад

      As a lay person who is neither an Egyptologist, Architect or Structural/Materials Engineer, I’ve already come to the conclusion that so many “experts” are desperate to protect their narratives and turf at the exclusion of truth. I had no idea so many Egyptologists are also expert Construction Engineers 😂
      Your channel is a breath of fresh air and no BS - thanks!

  • @mwozniak8677
    @mwozniak8677 Год назад +3

    I really appreciate your attention to detail and logical explanations. It’s quite refreshing to watch a video about the Giza pyramids and not hear the word “aliens “.

  • @TheMabDeno
    @TheMabDeno Год назад +24

    When I see the hole the endoscopic camera went through I am positive it looks drilled. It seems far to uniform to be a natural access point, so I'm guessing they drilled a small hole in between the blocks. I would love to see the rest of the footage so we can examine the blocks at the end better. I'd like to see if they are below the chevrons or blank the end of the chevrons off which could indicate whether the corridor continues in its current configuration.

    • @marcin7928
      @marcin7928 Год назад +38

      It is a tube that they put inside first so the camera has a smooth way in.

    • @Montana_horseman
      @Montana_horseman Год назад +10

      Agreed @Marcin For just a moment at about 7:43 you can clearly see the end of the tube right before the endoscope goes in. I imagine what kind of looks like drill marks are actually guide ribs to create less resistance as it slides through.

    • @1TheWhiteKnight1
      @1TheWhiteKnight1 Год назад +4

      It’s a gap between the stones. They could’ve put a camera thru there years ago.

    • @UnitSe7en
      @UnitSe7en Год назад +5

      It's a plastic tube. How are you not able to identify it as a plastic tube and not drilled stone?

    • @JesseP.Watson
      @JesseP.Watson Год назад

      Dirty mind.

  • @migram4190
    @migram4190 Год назад

    Excellent coverage! Subbed! 💪

  • @ThisHandleIsntTook
    @ThisHandleIsntTook Год назад

    Excellent as always 👌

  • @mbank4261
    @mbank4261 Год назад +2

    Rock on, History For Granite!! Love your passion, intellect, and your stellar videos. Please keep them coming!

  • @lewispaine4589
    @lewispaine4589 9 месяцев назад +6

    It's fascinating that these Pyramids still haven't given up all their secrets thousands of years after they were built

  • @brockmckraken
    @brockmckraken 9 месяцев назад

    Fantastic observations within the discovered small chamber. You pointed out details I totally missed until your analysis.

  • @garyjust.johnson1436
    @garyjust.johnson1436 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @polyscroll
    @polyscroll Год назад +4

    Excellent analysis! You, and the producer of "Ancient Architects", are the only two channels on RUclips about ancient Egyptian architecture that I truly respect!
    I am so sick of the "so called" Egyptologists (you know who I am referring to. ZH, ML, et al.) trying to pawn off their opinions as fact.
    I love, however, how you present things based on scientific observation.
    You have no agenda to skew your analyses.
    Keep up the fantastic work!

    • @notsoroyalacademy7001
      @notsoroyalacademy7001 9 месяцев назад

      except Ancient Architects pushes sometimes forward some completely false ideas like the bs of water pumps and other nonesense. He does otherwise some excellent job too from time to time, but youtubers and other "independent researchers" are by no means a substitute for true academic research, if your work is not peer reviewed and subject to serious academic and scientific debate then it might better be labeled as "unverified guess work" rather than "independent" (independant from true enlightened criticism?) research. I might as well call myself an "independant researcher" and "publish" my nonesense in blogs, social media and even arxiv, it doesn't make it scientific or a research by any means. I love this channel's work. In fact it's an excellent channel on egyptology, but we should always remember that it's just for fun and educational purposes.

  • @aTewfik
    @aTewfik Год назад +2

    I just want to say I love your channel. I literally cannot find another a good source of content on the pyramids that doesn't bring in aliens or ancient high tech civilizations, or make grand claims about all kinds of mystical things. I really appreciate that you are down to earth and give the whole picture.
    We as a civilizations have spent thousands of years plundering them, hundreds of years pontificating on them, decades protecting them, and it seems only a short time actually studying them.

    • @XoddamCXVII
      @XoddamCXVII Год назад +1

      I agree with all of your remarks. The last line of your comment is brilliantly succinct.

  • @tsparc2
    @tsparc2 Год назад

    Your videos are brilliant sir - very interesting indeed

  • @timestampterrysassistant7638
    @timestampterrysassistant7638 Год назад

    Love this channel

  • @HughONeill
    @HughONeill Год назад +11

    Thanks for another great analysis, would it be helpful if I built the chevron section as you describe as a 3D model?

    • @emotionice7967
      @emotionice7967 Год назад +2

      Getting accurate models instead of the wrong ones that are being used at the moment is for sure a good thing

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Год назад +1

      I think the imagery he has shown implies that he already did this in 3D.

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Год назад

      ​​@@mnomadvfx Hi, I see you're in VFX. I want a vfx pov of my passion.
      For now we have architecturally accurate 3D models but not photo realistic ones. I'm thinking of putting together a team architects, independent egyptologists, photogrammetry, muon scans, VFX & game devs to build a structurally / architecturally & scientifically accurate model of the great pyramid that's also photo realistic & real time playable.
      Games / vfx take artistic liberty. The goal is to make the closest to reality virtual reconstruction in UE5.1/Blender/revit that can be used by scientists, gamers & explorers alike. If they could do it in stone in ancient times, we can do it vfx in modern times!
      I know this is a massive undertaking & very ambitious but the great pyramid was one too!

    • @HistoryforGRANITE
      @HistoryforGRANITE  Год назад

      Sadly 3D VFX are not in my skillset. But they also have huge problems because details get glossed over or changed during the recreation process. The ones seen on cable TV docs are often ridiculously inaccurate. My approach is to give a 2d overlay on top of real photographs so everyone gets the opportunity to make their own analysis of the real thing.

    • @HughONeill
      @HughONeill Год назад

      @@HistoryforGRANITE Hi, I was offering to create the 3d model of this section and produce some renders, I have found that there are some detailed 3D scans out there of the interior, but not for this section, so if you can point me in the right directon for accurate mesurements I can build it.

  • @Marcosneopoli
    @Marcosneopoli Год назад +4

    First time leaving a comment but I wanted to let you know, keep up the amazing job. I hope your channel does great in the future, as I got recommended as an outsider of egiptology this precise video a week ago and have watched dozens of your videos already.

  • @lucioussmoothy
    @lucioussmoothy Год назад

    nicely done

  • @mr.inspector3935
    @mr.inspector3935 Год назад

    I'm so excited to see what we will keep discovering. Have a good day

  • @DimitarDobrinov
    @DimitarDobrinov Год назад +6

    The following just came to my mind in regard to Zahi Hawass's suggestion that Kufu's burial chamber is still intact inside. The conventional understanding is that the pharaohs built their pyramids during their lifetime and upon death they were solemnly placed in a chamber which was then sealed and blocked to prevent grave-robbing. But what if the pyramid was just partly built at the time of dead of the pharaoh. So let's say the pyramid is 1/3 of it's height, the pharaoh dies, his mummy is placed in a chamber in the middle of the pyramid and then the rest of the pyramid is built around that chamber. So no real entrance or a path to the burial chamber - the pharaoh is (relatively) safe forever - hundreds of feet of stone all around him. If I wanted to be left alone after dead, this is what I would have done. Does this make any sense?

    • @johns1625
      @johns1625 7 месяцев назад +2

      This makes sense and you would think they would want to maximize space since they only get to build it once. There is a lot of room in there for other things and it would be really dumb for us to assume we've found everything. It's taken how many decades just to get to drive a camera up the queens chamber vent thing and there is so much evidence in there of other chambers possibly. We could figure all this out in like 5 years if the antiquities dept wasn't like trying to reason with a toddler.

    • @hocaslocas
      @hocaslocas 6 месяцев назад +1

      The reasoning about constructing a huge monument and use it as burial place and then don't want anyone to disturb you does not make sense. If you don't want to be disturbed hide your tomb and don't advertise it by having the largest and most complex building in history.

    • @scottbreseke716
      @scottbreseke716 6 месяцев назад

      Do we spend as much effort on building tombs today? Nope. It would hard and downright mean to force a large number of people to think about death all day long for years.

    • @pencilme1n
      @pencilme1n 5 месяцев назад

      What mummies are you talking about?
      No mummy has ever been found in any Egyptian pyramid.

  • @masaharumorimoto4761
    @masaharumorimoto4761 Год назад +3

    When the news hit I almost ran down the street screaming "Houdin was right!!!" hahahaha, then I saw 2 feet of snow and turtled back into my hole :)

  • @180mph9
    @180mph9 Год назад

    Really cool!

  • @susanlodges48
    @susanlodges48 Год назад

    I concur with you completely. I thought that I was the only one with the eyes to see. Thank you.

  • @Asterra2
    @Asterra2 Год назад +34

    I can't help but find myself considering this small corridor in these terms: Had it not existed, the giant void further up in the pyramid would likely remain unexplored for all time, because of the old guard's reticence to place credence in anything not specifically researched by themselves. And while that still may remain the case, the fact that the muon tech led first to discovery and then, happily, an easy, *non-destructive* verification at least opens the door to a possible future exploration of the more important, probable second Grand Gallery. I can say with some confidence that there would be 0% chance of that ever happening without the smaller corridor providing an almost perfectly convenient "test case".

    • @Chris-eh8mi
      @Chris-eh8mi Год назад +5

      That sounds about right to me as well, which is just so disappointing. The old guard is too scientifically illiterate to hold power. They don't understand the physics involved or the 5.8σ confidence given to the findings.

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Год назад

      5:51 Is that staining on the ceiling and back wall that bats typically leave behind? I so, then how are the getting in.

    • @Asterra2
      @Asterra2 Год назад

      @@MJIZZEL Gonna say extremely doubtful. If bats could have ever gotten in and out of that space, they had thousands of years to do more damage than anything we might today find ourselves questioning yea/nay.

    • @douginorlando6260
      @douginorlando6260 Год назад

      @@MJIZZEL maybe the corridor was left open for several years before final sealing..
      I.e. the time between completion of the pyramid and death of the pharaoh.

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Год назад

      @@douginorlando6260 exactly what I was thinking. If it is organic, and it's still datable, it could point to the time the corridor had been finally sealed.
      However if it is from the bats and has recently started to accumulate, that would point to there being another access point that either isn't visible from the scope or it is and it hasn't been shared but by those few in charge.
      I'm would bet on it that the footage from the scope that we all first saw isn't the first time hawass had seen inside!

  • @Anfimus
    @Anfimus Год назад +6

    Props for giving the team recognition right off the bat. Not a lot of content creators would do that. Love your videos.

  • @jerrywatt6813
    @jerrywatt6813 Год назад +1

    Great news thanks ! Harass never fails to disappoint ! Thay need to access that back wall and core drill so they can scope the space that's behind ! That it's connected to the great void is a good bet again thank you good job !

  • @thoughtsuponatime847
    @thoughtsuponatime847 27 дней назад +2

    I still don't understand your hypothesis about this chamber. I have so many questions:
    - 15:55 How do these Entrance Vault chevrons test the weight tolerance of stones above and beside them? Am I misunderstanding what you mean by saddle vault?
    - 16:18 That does not look like an undiscovered passage. that looks like solid stone. When and how could they add this stone if this was a completed access tunnel.
    - 17:25 How exactly would this access point work? How would this stone be moved and how would it be placed there?
    - 8:32 If this was a test of weight relieving chevrons, perhaps they learned from this test that they should move the holes from the ceiling to the floor. That is why they are on the granite floor above the king's chamber later in construction. Also, maybe they learned to stagger the chevrons after building this passage.

  • @lmonk9517
    @lmonk9517 Год назад +3

    very great video and best breakdown of this new discovery.
    just wondering if any of the other pyramids have been muon scanned. would be interesting to see if the red pyramid did contain a similar space.