Curious Ancient Stone Objects In The Cairo Museum In Egypt

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 526

  • @brienfoerster
    @brienfoerster  Год назад +116

    Greetings from Cairo

    • @brrrayday
      @brrrayday Год назад +7

      You are spoiled rotten, but I love all your adventures and your findings

    • @ivepeters
      @ivepeters Год назад +6

      Hi from Oz 🇦🇺

    • @michaeleire6951
      @michaeleire6951 Год назад +6

      Greetings from eire aka ireland

    • @burrvisiontv
      @burrvisiontv Год назад +3

      New videos please

    • @danielcruz8347
      @danielcruz8347 Год назад +7

      Hello from Palm springs California., Enjoy!

  • @billstream1974
    @billstream1974 Год назад +10

    These boxes made of granite are just magnificent.

  • @StopListenThink
    @StopListenThink Год назад +43

    They make it look so effortlessly perfect it’s like working with model clay that turned into rock…wild

    • @8Epitaph8
      @8Epitaph8 Год назад +5

      Yeah it's insane, I feel it has to have been the use vibration & resonance affecting the subatomic structure to form and shape.

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Год назад +3

      I still can't get my head around what they must have used. Must have been a big wheel with diamond cutting bit, I mean holy crap how come we have never found any of these tools!

    • @whenever-199iq
      @whenever-199iq Год назад +3

      @@tbrowniscool Well hidden from us long ago. I believe they are somewhere hidden among the deletes.Or the vat i can.

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Год назад

      @@whenever-199iq Yep the Vatican holds all the secrets

    • @Movetheproduct
      @Movetheproduct Год назад +4

      @@8Epitaph8 no

  • @JAYBODDY
    @JAYBODDY Год назад +18

    Pyramid Depot was closed and they couldn’t get another saw blade. Happens to me all the time.

  • @janelletames9160
    @janelletames9160 Месяц назад +1

    I can tell u with confidence that large table-size 'monument' with the 20 scooped out spaces is just a game. I bought a small wooden game identical to this when visiting Nigeria back in 1995. There were marble-like balls u moved from space to space. No doubt this extra large one in the Cairo museum was a convenient size for many people to move around & play at the same time.

  • @skepticalgenious
    @skepticalgenious Год назад +13

    Very intriguing artifacts. The hieroglyphs did look crude compared. They didn't even look fully straight. My opinion is those are from different talent.
    Great vid Brien...

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад

      "opinion is those are from different talent."
      The pre-talent era where human faces in paintings, drawings etc looked like they were run over and flattened by a truck

  • @nancyvolker3342
    @nancyvolker3342 Год назад +4

    The stone bowls are some of my favorite things there

  • @1964_AMU
    @1964_AMU Год назад +2

    Thansk a lot for this work. The pictures are amazing. Wire cuting saw marks are clearly visible. In addition diamond powder is needed to cut some of the materials you have shown.

  • @greeneyeddevil1
    @greeneyeddevil1 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video Brian

  • @terrycureton2042
    @terrycureton2042 Год назад +5

    At about 5:05 in the video, the rectangular stone with an array of cup-shaped protrusions on top might actually be a stone working tool face for grinding down a flat and/or polished surface on another softer and possibly much larger stone. The cup shapes are designed to retain an abrasive/polishing material which can only escape where the rims of the cups are in close contact with the work piece stone and where the actual grinding/polishing occurs. If the cup-shaped protrusions were filled with an abrasive or polishing substance when in contact with a work piece stone below it and moved around in some methodically overlapping circular pattern, this should grind down and/or polish the surface of the softer stone. And, if the rims of all the protrusions are precisely in the same plane, the resulting surface should be mirror flat.
    (I vaguely remembered seeing somewhere a modern tooling fixture using the exact same principles for grinding surfaces. It might have been used in making optical glass surfaces precisely flat and also for precisely curved surfaces,)

    • @tcf70tyrannosapiensbonsai
      @tcf70tyrannosapiensbonsai Год назад +1

      Thank you so much!

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Год назад

      @@tcf70tyrannosapiensbonsai It's a good theory. Perhaps the outer rim was used to keep a rotating polisher from wandering while the entire array above it could simply rely on gravity to maintain pressure.

  • @robmac5086
    @robmac5086 Год назад +4

    Thank you, Brien, I've been saying for years that what they're telling us can't be true, I love your work, keep it up.

  • @CheefSmokealot64
    @CheefSmokealot64 Год назад +19

    The shift disk reminds me of what I saw in southern France. They still made hemp ropes the old fashioned way. The shift disc looks like the wheel they used to spin rope and spin small ropes into big ropes. As to what the big stone object is on the pic, here’s my guess. I worked at IL state fair one summer. There was an omelette flat top grill in one booth. They sold egg omelettes. The stone slab reminds me of this flat top grill with molds for the omelettes. That’s my 2 guesses. 😂

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад +1

      Spin rope cook omelets I will grab the beer let's party lol

    • @smsheard
      @smsheard Год назад

      @@drummerdad80 I think you might need drugs for this one.

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад

      @@smsheard I don't do drugs or support garham Hancock and his drug use, he is not a role model, not sure if brien forester supports that view so I have no opinion on his view on that

    • @smsheard
      @smsheard Год назад

      @@drummerdad80 I did not mean to say you do, just the concepts being talked about with a lack of understanding in this field is so wild it would help to be on drugs to understand why people are so silly.

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад

      @@smsheard it should be proof to why hancock can not be trusted

  • @TheZombieSaints
    @TheZombieSaints Год назад +1

    The saw marks are so obvious and the fact that it was thicker towards the centre is curious too. Amazing stuff

    • @mariebaxter473
      @mariebaxter473 4 месяца назад

      Not curious to me , when a round blade gets to the end of its life they tend to get over heated and suffer a kind of wow and flutter effect like old records . Ive only seen it 3 or 4 times in 48 years of cutting and its pretty ugly thing to watch on a big blade. Turn off and run away time .

  • @spinnymathingy3149
    @spinnymathingy3149 Год назад +27

    I think Ben is on the money with his investigations into the stone vases, the one he managed to get his hands on for scanning produced incredible results, let’s hope that the museums offer up some more for scanning.

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Год назад +1

      They won't because they're suppressing the obvious conclusion.

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад

      Watch scientist against myths Olga made a recreation of a vase that is very good for her first try with primitive methods, Egyptians trained kids at young age by 15 they were masters of stone working, by adult age they were extraordinary!

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад

      @burt panzer they are not... lol, if you watch and do research you will see the ancient tech people are suppressing debates, Ben won't talk to ancient presence channel anymore after the podcast they had evidence on the serapeum against him, David miano asked to do a pod cast ben blocked him, a geologist asked randal carlson to debate on the geology of scablands randal won't reply..( I can't remember his name) I wrote jahana James about her stargate anomaly video, to talk about her guide lied about what the heiroglyphs say, I can read them they lied, she never wrote me back...they don't say stargate....so look at all sides like I do, the rabbit hole has snakes in it becarful....

    • @spinnymathingy3149
      @spinnymathingy3149 Год назад +1

      @@drummerdad80 thanks, I just watched it. But it only convinced me that certainly a beautiful could be made, but certainly not to the accuracy shown by Ben’s investigation.
      As a machinist I understand the tolerance being shown here and how difficult it’s to be achieved even now days with fully automated lathes etc

  • @reggiefoelife
    @reggiefoelife Год назад +2

    I work at an electric motor repair shop. The shist disk looks like a fan for a motor to keep it cool.

  • @weedwarrior6961
    @weedwarrior6961 Год назад +3

    the shisk disc is a wick holder for a giant oil lamp that sat on top of the pyramid ! Twas a light house on top!

  • @h5mind373
    @h5mind373 Год назад +23

    I used to own a stone fabrication company. We cut and polished the edges of granite slabs for countertops. It would take 8-10 diamond grit-impregnated disks on a water grinder and half a day to polish those edges to a high gloss. It would be impossible by hand, even assuming you had varying grits of diamond dust to work with. We also used hollow cylindrical bits to drill holes as shown in the video. Identical except for their size.

    • @SharpMagnets
      @SharpMagnets Год назад +2

      Sand

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад +2

      Watch sacred geometry polished granite, you can polish granite with granite and he hits a high gloss surface with a smoothness of less than 1.5 microns

  • @oBseSsIoNPC
    @oBseSsIoNPC Год назад

    Haha, very cute ending. This is some great footage! Thank you for taking time to record and publish your material.

  • @omo195205
    @omo195205 Год назад +7

    Million dollar question = ... where have the cutting tools gone. ?

    • @blackychan2070
      @blackychan2070 Год назад +1

      Probably metal so most likely eroded away.. and/or hidden from public to fit current narratives. Why does it matter anyway?? If the rock is a harder material than the presented tools it doesn't take a genius to understand they are not the tools that were used. The main issue is with the level of precision in the artifacts we do have so what's your point?
      Do I claim to know the answers not at all.. however doesnt change the fact that egyptologists are not engineers and the math doesnt add up in their storytales

    • @willbohland3698
      @willbohland3698 Год назад

      @@miquellluch1928 It does.

  • @elbamartinez3023
    @elbamartinez3023 Год назад +2

    Thank You so much! I could never be there and see those wonders !

  • @SSgt_Steve_USMC3-6
    @SSgt_Steve_USMC3-6 Год назад +2

    Greetings and thank you sir. Oorah Brien!! 💪🏽🙏🏽

  • @alryan8609
    @alryan8609 Год назад +10

    Always find this subject totally AMAZING , but I often wonder if they had a power source of some kind why were they still working with stone , Brian keep up the great work 👍

    • @chancemathews7057
      @chancemathews7057 Год назад +5

      When we think of technology we think of phones iPads computers power tools, I think there are other forms of tech we could discover, if we didn’t base everything off of modern electricity, maybe they lived in a technological way we havnt thought of yet, because we only think of powered tech

    • @zaneshark
      @zaneshark Год назад +5

      Stone endures for great lengths of time and is environmentally friendly.

    • @BRIZVIZ
      @BRIZVIZ Год назад +1

      Why do we work with materials that don't last, The term carved into stone has meaning

    • @faragraf9380
      @faragraf9380 Год назад +1

      stoneage people were stone masters.

  • @simonthorneycroft1339
    @simonthorneycroft1339 Год назад +8

    Brien, will you explain your theory as to why a people who had power tools made with materials capable of cutting stone to great precision would proceed to make an impeller or any other such thing out of a difficult to work brittle material ??

    • @abrahamsorby8193
      @abrahamsorby8193 Год назад +1

      As part of a mechanism with a specific function. Its the only thing that would make it worth the effort. If it were a 'just cause i can' thing, then it would have been something with more ego behind it. See my above comment to see how the pieces might fit together

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад

      the mass and size is the key, if they could make a large flat thin saw blade that's a lot different than trying to melt and cast or machine a massive block of solid metal to make that object, it could be an impeller of some kind to move water as a pump's impellor

    • @simonthorneycroft1339
      @simonthorneycroft1339 Год назад

      @@HobbyOrganist How do you envisage the large flat saw blade was powered?

    • @simonthorneycroft1339
      @simonthorneycroft1339 Год назад +1

      @@abrahamsorby8193 When you look at the object does if look as if it could be an impeller?
      The blades on an impeller are pitched at an angle or run outwards at right angles to the shaft.
      This object does neither thing, so how would it project water in any direction?

    • @tomcollins5112
      @tomcollins5112 Год назад +1

      Yeah, bizarre. Why make a stone tool when you're already using metal?

  • @jeremiahlyleseditor437
    @jeremiahlyleseditor437 Год назад +1

    Great Video Brien.

  • @dorothymccarthy6933
    @dorothymccarthy6933 Год назад

    Wonderful
    Thanks Brian

  • @jess-zx6oj
    @jess-zx6oj Год назад +1

    Egyptians were aware that everything was based on 3, 6, and 9; 3, 6 and 9 being correlated as energy, frequency and vibration (amplitude). I believe the schist disc (schist being metamorphic rock) was utilized to alter all three properties (energy, frequency and vibration) into individual currents of three. It was a flux generator! (OR something similar!) It may have spun circularly within a larger version which could either have re-woven the splits into a new "woven current", or split the energy further. This could be used with plasma or sound for fascinating effect! The stone box at 5:03 may have been cups filled with water at various levels so that sound played across it may have been altered. It's fun to guess what these unique pieces may have been used for when we clearly cannot even imagine the level of technology and science that was at play here!

  • @craftchest
    @craftchest Год назад

    @6:58 It's obviously a representation of a subwoofer box. Even back then BASS was awesome. Twenty 10" subs. The Egyptians knew what was up.

  • @sharonjb.y111
    @sharonjb.y111 Год назад +5

    That strange artifact with the "cups" could be a "musical" imstrument. Has anyone tried it for sound effects? Maybe it's not, but worth trying.

    • @skepticalgenious
      @skepticalgenious Год назад +2

      I am being silly but I am not sure it would be ok to walk up and play drums with this ancient artifacts. Can you imagine however doing such.😅

    • @sharonjb.y111
      @sharonjb.y111 Год назад +2

      @@skepticalgenious you are not silly; you are right, although Brien is one of those people who might be able to get permission to gently drum on it. One has gotta try.. :-)

  • @Allannah_Of_Rome
    @Allannah_Of_Rome Год назад +1

    Um, not only tools were used buuuut they also worked out how to use fire to help crack the stone in a somewhat perfect line along with water. Egyptains were master alchemists and there is still so much we don't know and need to learn!!

  • @dunningkruger3774
    @dunningkruger3774 Год назад +1

    The argument by Archeologists like Ken Feder were that it all HAD TO BE made by the Egyptians because no other civilization came before them and they were simple hunter gatherers. Then along came Gobekli Tepe - as far removed in time from the dynastic Egyptians....as we are from them now. More actually-

  • @tekannon7803
    @tekannon7803 Год назад +46

    Thank you for your stupendous contribution to the study of ancient history. Brien, I know I speak for many people when I say you and your colleagues have opened my mind to seeing as clear as day, that power tools were used to carve the granite, and quartzite, diorite, and other hard stone material. Critics say to me, "well, where are the tools then?" Until now, I didn't have an answer, but it is most probable that the tools were made of metal and therefore recycled or simply rusted away. It is impossible to deny that high technology was once omnipresent on our planet. The great dilemma of course is that if they disappeared without a trace, when our number is up, we just may surprise ourselves and only leave some of the stone buildings as a trace of who we were. Imagine, if they had tools to carve diorite etc., they must have had everything else that goes with a high-tech society. All of the paintings, drawings, books, films are gone. John Anthony West said one thing that has stuck in my mind. He said the dynastic Egyptians started society with everything in place, schools, hospitals, law, construction techniques, cities, librairies etc., and that it all went down from there. In other words, everything we have in society today was how the Egyptian society started, which means it was all intact when they came on the scene.

    • @zeph6439
      @zeph6439 Год назад +3

      If you take a close look at the tool belts, armbands and staffs or scepters that the Mesopotamians and Kemetians carried around it seems to me that a type of focused energy beam technology was employed by the Atlanteans and those who inherited that technology. Perhaps they did not need large tools such as saws to cut through quartz and granite with? There are many applications of the rays within of the electromagnetic spectrum.

    • @ambertracks
      @ambertracks Год назад +2

      i believe frequencies were used to make the stones more plyable

    • @tekannon7803
      @tekannon7803 Год назад

      @@zeph6439 GGGGGGGGGGGreat to hear from you.I hope one day your hypothesis gets proven! All I know is that there are so many things that point to the world as we know it to have been imagined and taught in schools from events in recent history. As humans, we are corruptible and academics have a time-plate they have to follow, so all evidence-based experience that does not line up with what is considered historical fact gets put in the attic. The sad awful truth of the matter is it looks like that in spite of recent discoveries, we are probably going to go to our graves with the fairy story of history we have been told still holding water. It is my belief that the earth was terra-formed to allow life to flourish. But how in the world would they ever let a thought like that even get discussed on TV?

    • @zeph6439
      @zeph6439 Год назад +1

      @@ambertracks We know very little for sure due to lack of definitive evidence so it may be that sound waves and EM waves were both used. They could have also actually used saws - a mystery worthy of a Sherlock Holmes.

    • @al2207
      @al2207 Год назад +3

      one more option alien civilization at work in Egypt some 18,000 years ago after an interstellar war they had lost they were forced to leave earth with all theirs tools and transportation means

  • @williamwelch7
    @williamwelch7 Год назад +2

    Thanks Brien

  • @karimedinburgh
    @karimedinburgh Год назад +2

    فيديو جميل تحياتى و رمضان كريم

  • @edwindijkstra6901
    @edwindijkstra6901 Год назад +1

    Much love Brien!!

  • @tmillchr
    @tmillchr Год назад +1

    Some of these items almost hint at pieces of an electrical or nuclear facility, the thick stone boxes and niches would have housed some form of nuclear fuel rod, or energized crystals. I suggest that electricity, magnetism, plasma, acoustic and atomic energies were well understood back then. And I strongly believe the quantum leap in modern science, especially in electricity, quantum physics, atomic energy and genetics owes its thanks to archaeological discoveries from Egypt.

  • @Bambi_Sapphic
    @Bambi_Sapphic Год назад +2

    3:33 The boomerangs are definitely from Australia, too many indigenous elders around here have stories of the people who came from the sea thousands of years ago seeking to exchange wisdoms and teachings

    • @smsheard
      @smsheard Год назад

      The aboriginals of Australia were not the the first people to make boomerangs and they have been made by lots of separate cultures all over the world, as its just a stick that you throw at stuff. No mystery, No people form the sea needed to solve this puzzle, just a goolge search .

  • @MrSixxshooter
    @MrSixxshooter Год назад +1

    Hope all is well with you Brien . Thank you sir . Hope to join you on your tours I’m the near future .

  • @conanmcclanahan1069
    @conanmcclanahan1069 Год назад +1

    Forgive me for admitting that some of the theories and postulations around the megalithic sites are often too much for me to take in, and I become hesitant to view some of the content surrounding it... but this video is astounding. Clear, concise, and to the point. It's so extremely obvious after this ~7 minute video that they had technology we haven't found... so extremely obvious!

    • @mariebaxter473
      @mariebaxter473 4 месяца назад

      Well put and in a nice calm way , others try to shout there views across as if that helps it sink in .LOL

  • @scottkrier106
    @scottkrier106 Год назад +1

    Brian buddy you must see the wall in Montana... Has the nubs and huge rocks stacked in the middle of woods

  • @nephilimslayer73
    @nephilimslayer73 Год назад +32

    There is no way that stone masonry of that skill level was done solely with chisels. Impossible.

    • @ExploringCabinsandMines
      @ExploringCabinsandMines Год назад +3

      LOL yet there it is in your face, silica sand, water and a smooth metal blade will cut the hardest stone.

    • @dco1019
      @dco1019 Год назад +1

      @@ExploringCabinsandMines the problem is that you dont know when any of that stuff was done... and where foerstner always says its done earlier by " the lost ancient civilization" , what about if some things are actually done much much later.. like the abandoned cut in the granite for example...what if it was some arab in the year 1300 tried to cut a slab of the granite with a blade made out of much tougher metal? how would you know? what if it was done in 1600... how would you know? perhaps even in 1876 and you still wouldnt know..

    • @ExploringCabinsandMines
      @ExploringCabinsandMines Год назад +4

      @@dco1019 The date doesn't matter , I'm telling you HOW it was done , and if it was an exotic alloy we'd find the tool, this guy is making $$$ off telling you it's a mystery and that's a fact.

    • @tannji5971
      @tannji5971 Год назад

      it is impressive. Far, far older than neolithic, however.

    • @dco1019
      @dco1019 Год назад

      @@ExploringCabinsandMines ofc it matters ... Cause if you have a later date then you also have the likely tools... Like, say it happened during the Industrial revolution someone tried to cut that slab of granite then what's the big mystery really? It's only spectacular if you say it happened way before we know they were capable.

  • @Jason.1734
    @Jason.1734 Год назад +1

    Awesome video

  • @dorianmclean6755
    @dorianmclean6755 Год назад +1

    Loved the last pic lolol thx

  • @wojciechwilczynski5309
    @wojciechwilczynski5309 Год назад

    And these are the tools that made these amazing pieces of work.

  • @bushranger7646
    @bushranger7646 Год назад +1

    It would be good if those boomerangs could be forensically checked to see if they are actually Australian. We have an anomaly in New South Wales called the Gosford Glyphs that are contentious

  • @dreamingmusic3299
    @dreamingmusic3299 Год назад +1

    YT channel 'UnchartedX' has a new video showing an ancient vase being measured with aircraft tools and shows that the vase (made of granite) is perfectly symmetrical and could only have been made on a machine.
    I would include the link but YT will automatically delete posts that contain links.

  • @disklamer
    @disklamer Год назад +2

    I bet they hid the tools in the basement. We tend to not make things more precise than necessary, because the cost of precision rises exponentially. In other words, precisely made things are expensive, and these are not luxury goods but clearly were made for a purpose.

  • @henrythoreau3681
    @henrythoreau3681 Год назад +2

    Good stuff. If this is what they show, imagine what's underneath.

  • @henkverhaeren3759
    @henkverhaeren3759 Год назад +3

    Amazing!

  • @Oddworld2024
    @Oddworld2024 Год назад +3

    That large flat slightly rectangular object at the 5 min mark, that is also the thumbnail. Always looks to me like spheres may have sat in those indented circles. And perhaps we’re use like a roller to move large things on. Like a track almost. I’d be curious to know how many spheres they found of a size that would have them fit into these indents. And how many other boxes like this are found with the same Indentations. It’s be a real easy way to move big stones no.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад +1

      The problem with say balls resting in those holes is the balls have to turn, if they dont they just scrape and wear, even with grease in there any heavy weight on top wouldnt necessarily be able to rote them like modern ball bearings

  • @fifthavenue8505
    @fifthavenue8505 Год назад +1

    At 5:17 the stone box if it would have been machined, to make a curved dome, by something that machined by a progressively deeper therefore a machine designed for that purpose must have been made. If so, why for only one box? If a whole machine is devoted for just one lid? No. It would have been for others, And if so, what would have been the purpose of not just one but multiple lidded stone boxes?

  • @d.t.4523
    @d.t.4523 Год назад

    Thank you. Keep working. Good luck!

  • @StephenS-2024
    @StephenS-2024 Год назад

    Great work!

  • @tansey123
    @tansey123 Год назад +1

    All these vessels start to make sense in the context of chemical production , separation , storage

    • @tansey123
      @tansey123 Год назад

      Mettalurgy , agriculture , seed storage or whatnot. Either way there is clear sign of advanced understanding of physics to create tools for industrial processes .

  • @bretthenke9613
    @bretthenke9613 Год назад

    At 6:58 the box with circles on top. Is there anyway you could make it ring? Like if it's hit on the side does it ring kind of bell like? The stone looks like it has heavy metal content from the coloring.

  • @CoachStephenDredd
    @CoachStephenDredd Год назад +1

    i wonder if those disks create a sound frequency when spun at high speeds

  • @jonathaniszorro
    @jonathaniszorro Год назад +4

    The tapering of the tools is one of the most fascinating and mysterious aspects of this for me, especially the tapered tube drill holes. If these tools worked the way our current ones do, where the cutting action happened only at the edge, then the taper would cause the tool to get stuck and these cuts would be impossible. How can a tube drill taper in this way while moving down through the rock? The only way this would work is if all faces of the tool, like the outside face of the tube drill or sides of the circular saw blade, are also cutting the rock. But that is a level of technology we don't have even today. However, if the cutting tool was instead focused sound energy, that could explain these tool marks.

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Год назад +1

      You've seen a step-drill bit, well something like that would drill a tapered hole.

    • @jonathaniszorro
      @jonathaniszorro Год назад

      @@burtpanzer A step drill bit pushed into the rock would not create a tapered hole, it would be a consistent diameter matching the diameter of the largest step on the bit. It also would not create a flat part at the apex, it would leave rock that mirrors the shape of the stepped bit.

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Год назад

      @@jonathaniszorro Well, I did say something like a step-drill, without the steps I guess. It would mirror the shape of the bit, so imagine a long tapered drill tip with a recessed channel just before the cutting edge.

    • @drummerdad80
      @drummerdad80 Год назад +2

      Watch scientist against myths they make a tapered drill core with a primative rotation of a copper tube, it wobbles as it spins so it wears the top down more than the bottom, they did an amazing recreation of core 7, it not to crazy to think it's just a wobble of the drill to cause that feature, and the thin edge is the copper wears down and actually self sharpens when drilling and cutting stone

    • @jonathaniszorro
      @jonathaniszorro Год назад

      @@drummerdad80 I did see one of their videos with a copper tube drill, and I recall that the core they extracted didn't have a single perfectly spiral striation like core #7, unless I didn't see the right one? I also saw one where they tried recreating one of the vases, and it looked similar but was nowhere near the quality or thinness of those from Ancient Egypt. They also broke it multiple times and had to glue it together, and took six months to make a single one, which doesn't seem to match the perfection and quantity we see in Egypt. If I am wrong I would very much like to see the correct video you refer to. While I very much buy into the theory of lost technology from a lost civilization, it's only because the apparent evidence makes that seem so obvious. If evidence to the contrary directly refutes it I will gladly integrate into my thinking.

  • @mireadur
    @mireadur Год назад +1

    Amazing stoneworks

  • @moonshinefuel
    @moonshinefuel Год назад +4

    This has in large part I believe more or less figured out what was going on here on the plateau. Still mysteries but this is not really high tech, but very good knowledge of what they were doing at the time. "The Land Of Chem" we need to give props to. He's piecing it all together and is making the most sense with data right now that I can see. Many have been living a fairly tale basically because of omitting, obfuscation, no technical data, and some very egregious lies.

  • @chrisdymyd2669
    @chrisdymyd2669 Год назад +1

    Greeting from the East of the Mississippi

  • @godsowndrunk1118
    @godsowndrunk1118 Год назад +1

    The quartzite box with the holes is obviously an ancient "Wack a Lemur" game....

  • @pjhue6607
    @pjhue6607 Год назад +1

    interesting video thanks

  • @aidshusten240
    @aidshusten240 Год назад

    The shist disc is a water propeller, you throw water on and it will rotate once the rotation is given direction.

  • @Bob123Max
    @Bob123Max Год назад

    It seem logical that tube drilling was used for excavating box-like cavities - as seen on the lid of the box at 4:23. I cannot imagine how else such work could be achieved

  • @mrbunyip
    @mrbunyip Год назад +1

    The tubular holes at 4:27 are ridiculous.
    Almost all the other evidence may be able to be explained away with arguments of the stone being worked by hand tools over long periods of time but these holes would have to be from a power tool in my opinion. I just wonder whether the holes were drilled back when the stone was being carved or has it been drilled in more recent times for some reason.

  • @michaelj2536
    @michaelj2536 Год назад +1

    Utterly amazing.....and today's media could give a shit less....

  • @MKCamo520
    @MKCamo520 Год назад

    @ 3:00 that's my lost windmil device for my DeLorean to Hover sorry guys I have to go back and get that crap!!! 🎉🎉😂😂Nice video Brien I love it!!!

  • @1800imawake
    @1800imawake Год назад +3

    Maybe the destroyed civilization before ancient Egypt was more advanced than even our own, and yet almost all evidence of them was destroyed except for the hardiest of structure. What parts of our civilization would survive if and when we are faced with the same? We have the best evidence to solve the greatest mysteries, and that's us as living examples of who they were. Why than is there such an organized effort to stop us from solving those mysteries?

  • @joetotale6354
    @joetotale6354 Год назад +1

    Is there any artefact made of granite to a high degree of precision that ALSO contains high-quality engraved hieroglyphics or are the two not seen together?

  • @BarbaraGodin
    @BarbaraGodin Год назад

    Looks like an array of batteries that could be linked together to make a welding rig. You can chain a series of car batteries together and make an ad hoc welding rig. It seems relatively trivial to do this with Baghdad batteries and although this is a stone carving, that's what such a rig would look like

  • @TheTerraFighter
    @TheTerraFighter Год назад

    at 5:00 isnt it that this tpye of form also gets used in heatresitend rooms?
    looks like a plattform to place glowling metal objekts on?

  • @BotchedGod
    @BotchedGod Год назад

    2:30 is clearly a toroidal propeller of some sort. 5:10 appears to be a vessel for transmutation of multiple things are once which is why it has all of the collapse toroid's and is made of electrically conductive quartzite

  • @abrahamsorby8193
    @abrahamsorby8193 Год назад

    1:50 WOW!!! You can even see the score mark they made as a guide for the blade

  • @Anamnesis-Apotheosis89
    @Anamnesis-Apotheosis89 Год назад

    The Schist Disk was a simple (yet VERY ADVANCED in design) room fan. My theory and I'm sticking to it.

  • @808pathfinder
    @808pathfinder Год назад

    At 5:05 sec. The box with the circles was the original game called "Twister" and that misterius round disk was the speener for this game, case closed lol

  • @drummerdad80
    @drummerdad80 Год назад +1

    Great high definition video! Just turn down the volume to miss the silly misinformation...

  • @Kronikalrag3
    @Kronikalrag3 Год назад +1

    Maybe that block with the bowls on top is some kind of food preparation bench , like laying dough and creating a pocket for filling...

    • @sanfranciscobay
      @sanfranciscobay Год назад +1

      Used for making a mold for Cupcakes, Pot Pies and shaping the flour and water mix, then you put the food in an oven?

    • @ashleylydbrook5047
      @ashleylydbrook5047 Год назад

      A bit overkill in terms of effort and skill to produce for a function this easy to reproduce in clay and wood no?

    • @Kronikalrag3
      @Kronikalrag3 Год назад

      @@ashleylydbrook5047 Yes and no , the wealthy always like to be different... Only wanting the best that can be made?

    • @ashleylydbrook5047
      @ashleylydbrook5047 Год назад

      This is true

  • @michaelbitar8489
    @michaelbitar8489 Год назад

    The rectangular stone with the circle donut structures on top, looks like some kind of a circuit

  • @aranciameccanica71
    @aranciameccanica71 Год назад +6

    And these are the tools that, the archeologists, suggest are responsible...😂 Nothing explains things better than this. Thank you, Brien Foerster.

  • @ibiufos
    @ibiufos Год назад +1

    The shist disc always reminds me of a seed spreader it would have spun to throw out the seeds

  • @JJ-me4yu
    @JJ-me4yu Год назад

    5:06 reminds me of the speaker box I have in my trunk🤣 Does it have resonance properties?

  • @denzoil
    @denzoil Год назад

    Some say that block of stone was a game or seed-separator. I speculate that molten glass poured into those bowl shapes would produce lenses or even magnifying lenses powerful enough to start fires and/or melt stone.

  • @sunnindawg
    @sunnindawg Год назад +1

    Interesting

  • @telletran2558
    @telletran2558 Год назад

    2:35 I think the disc is a piece of gold processing equipment for getting fine gold out of sand.

  • @johnnydrac
    @johnnydrac Год назад +1

    i cant help but wonder if some of them are for some kind of casting

  • @abrahamsorby8193
    @abrahamsorby8193 Год назад +1

    5:12 almost looks like some sort resonator

  • @leonthewise5807
    @leonthewise5807 Год назад +5

    NEVER TOO LATE FOR EGYPT!!😁

  • @zGJungle
    @zGJungle Год назад +2

    I must visit Egypt at some point in my life.

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Год назад

      It's a shitty country I wouldn't bother

  • @larryjackson8675
    @larryjackson8675 Год назад

    Thanks brien, never knew some of these items existed before!

  • @dp.2766
    @dp.2766 Год назад

    As a machinist by trade, I can tell you that the drift in the cut that you see in the box near the beginning of this video is quite common when using a circular saw to cut material when either trying to feed the tool at two higher rate or win the blade dulls, and you’re not watching it close enough. The result of the cut drifting is an evitable catastrophic failure of the cutting tool, causing it to shatter. If the failure in the cut was not noticed in time it is very possible that someone was injured or even killed due to this failure considering the size of the cutter as you estimated. As far as tooling is concerned Carla I have no experience cutting stone, but if a high strength steel, or even steel blade with carbide inserts/brased on teeth, or even a diamond tooth, after so long there would be nothing left of the tooling, even in a desert environment After several thousand years.

  • @timgstar3585
    @timgstar3585 Год назад +1

    5:06 looks like it was for baking bread

  • @sanfranciscobay
    @sanfranciscobay Год назад +2

    What was the purpose of "no photos?" Was that to increase tourism?

    • @IraTate
      @IraTate Год назад

      Flashbulbs destroyed paint.

  • @AlexaLake1
    @AlexaLake1 Год назад +1

    Some of the objects have hieroglyphs inscribed on them. If Brien had them translated, it may give a clue as to the purpose of the objects.

    • @JxKITCH
      @JxKITCH Год назад

      Really? People who had nothing to do with the construction doing graffiti on the objects might have some clues. Interesting. Like when a wall has a gang tag. Surely the street thugs built the wall.

  • @funkymonoloko
    @funkymonoloko Год назад

    Hi all
    Me opinion is that the Lego Stone was some tipe of frequency modulator we can call it today frequency generator plug in 😊 sort of remote control on site

  • @bavariancarenthusiast2722
    @bavariancarenthusiast2722 Год назад

    Amazing to look for this kind of evidence - great! Egyptians were as smart as we are or smarter. They had hundreds of years to develop technology how to treat or machine stone, granite. Rotating machines are so obvious that they must been in service for thousands of years.

  • @bluey-uo9li
    @bluey-uo9li Год назад

    Very interesting thankyou Energy containment, Quartz and it's miraculous capabilities from PC,s to piezo ignition etc etc power energy 👁️🙏

  • @willbohland3698
    @willbohland3698 Год назад +3

    That table with the bowls is going to haunt my dreams. WTF is that thing?! If it's a game, it's basically a golden basketball hoop, which is a perfectly reasonable possibility. If it was for seeds, it would've been for storing them, like a seed vault. Farmers don't need huge granite tables for their seeds, and they have a lot more seeds than that table can hold. So... congratulations. You did it. I'm going to wake up in a cold sweat thinking about that table. Probably why they didn't allow photos for so long. Now I'm irreparably traumatized. I'm FUBAR.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад +1

      Seems like a hell of a lot of work just for some "board game" though

    • @willbohland3698
      @willbohland3698 Год назад

      @@HobbyOrganist It does! That was my initial reaction as well. "No way that's a game." Then it dawned on me that wealthy people might be able afford the novelty of a worked granite version of their favorite game. It could be something like an ultimate special edition. So that has to be a possibility.

    • @faragraf9380
      @faragraf9380 Год назад

      @@willbohland3698 they could do chemical labor samples of the table.
      Scientists did it with samples of caves from austria. Very disturbing result.

    • @smsheard
      @smsheard Год назад

      @@HobbyOrganist Well thy didnt do the work they got their minions to do it. So any experiment they wanted to see could happen. Maybe doesnt mean anything at all. Its interesting but thats all really. We will probably never know and Im good with that really.

    • @rebeccamartin2399
      @rebeccamartin2399 23 дня назад +1

      Buffet table.

  • @nicholasdavidson5683
    @nicholasdavidson5683 Год назад

    The quartzite box at 4.40 seems to have massive tube drill holes in order to remove the majority of material*? Unless the bottom indicates otherwise

  • @darraghspooner9824
    @darraghspooner9824 Год назад

    Amazing, great research guys, deffo high tech

  • @abrahamsorby8193
    @abrahamsorby8193 Год назад

    3:25 this piece and the next piece look like they go together as some part of a mechanism, there's assuredly pieces missing...but those two are a pair. 4:42 This looks very much like another piece to the mechanism. I wonder if it all sizes up to fit together....maybe used to create some sort of liquid vortex generator. Most likely mercury. The electro magnetic field is provided by the pyramids themselves, so the only thing missing is the shafts, and the shaft driving mechanism (which could easily be done in many ways)

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад

      That would a LOT Of mercury to fill all that, I doubt they could have found and produced a quantity like that, it may have been to move WATER which would have been a vital thing to have plenty of

  • @shmuelarom5773
    @shmuelarom5773 Год назад

    I have a solution for one of the mysteries. In the video at 5:00 min, Brien shows a slab of stone with many circular sunken circles. I have a theory for what this thing is. It's a wavelength instruction for a device. You can see what I mean here : ruclips.net/video/KPwsvClaSEc/видео.html. In this video you can see that if you put a chocolate bar in a microwave you will get circular sunken circles, which correspond to a certain wavelength (that the microwave emits). This slab of stone is like the chocolate, but instead of a wave that will produce the holes, the holes are already there to produce a certain wavelength.

    • @shmuelarom5773
      @shmuelarom5773 Год назад

      I want to add that this slab of stone that will make a certain wavelength : If we can figure out this wavelength, maybe we can find out what it does. It could for example cause a stone to be softer, which can be used for the polygonal masonry. Maybe there is a clue for that in the material from which this slab of stone is made of.