Updating the Great Pyramid Internal Ramp Theory

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @HistoryforGRANITE
    @HistoryforGRANITE  2 года назад +292

    Thanks everyone for your support. Through the end of November, there is a promotion for channel merchandise close to wholesale: history-for-granite.creator-spring.com Hope this video brightens your holiday season!

    • @leckmich8169
      @leckmich8169 2 года назад +6

      THX from Austria👍

    • @dravidakumar1697
      @dravidakumar1697 2 года назад +8

      Herodotos reporting is accurate.. first they would build stepped structure using inset ramps and then fill in the same as well as arrange outer casing stones around this by dismantling the inset ramps stage by stage starting from top down. the geometry problem could be resolved by using ropes to measure the accuracy during each stage of the consturction ........ it makes the best sense as compared all the other complicated theories.

    • @JonnoPlays
      @JonnoPlays 2 года назад +4

      I bought a shirt and I love wearing it! 👌 💯

    • @beru58
      @beru58 2 года назад +7

      About your critique of the counter weight theory that they were not needed cause they had all the man power they would need: Ok. They had enough man power. But not the space to do the pulling.

    • @syjwg
      @syjwg 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for another great video! I've seen some spiral ramp images that showed the spiral pattern from above. Don't know if it was from the neutrino study/experiment?

  • @johns1625
    @johns1625 Год назад +193

    1 year later they had put a camera into the void behind the chevrons proving the ScanPyramids project correct, and Zahi Hawass immediately started bragging about it and making stuff up about Khufus burial chamber still being in there. It's so frustrating being forced to deal with such a capricious personality in order to study this.

    • @irtnyc
      @irtnyc 3 месяца назад

      Capricious is too kind a word. Insecure egomaniacal jackass, morelike?

    • @rtqii
      @rtqii 29 дней назад +3

      {Censored) has talked about this for years before the ScanPyramids project. He was talking about hidden cavities, Khufu's burial, when he published his "definitive" book, but it's not in the book. He talks about stuff that there is no evidence for, and makes up stuff to dismiss evidence that exists. Incredibly frustrating man... Owned by David Koch and Harlan Crow.

    • @seltonk5136
      @seltonk5136 23 дня назад +6

      He's a figurehead he's what the Egyptian government wants in his position. I would stop personalizing this about this hawas character.
      The problem is the nation of Egypt

    • @JIMMY-THE-JEW-FROM-PHILLY
      @JIMMY-THE-JEW-FROM-PHILLY 20 дней назад

      ​@@seltonk5136Just remember, Muslim archaeologists still push the lie the Jewish Temple never existed in Jerusalem and in their culture lying and duplicitousness is accepted behavior and expected. I'm literally stating what liberals won't say about Hawass and the fake arrogance his culture tries to exude on Western Archaeologists and those from the West who work with Hawass are the type of leftist who will lie to themselves to ingratiate themselves with Muslims. It's a sick cycle of Islamocommunist misinformation that currently prevails in Egypt and the Bureaucracy in the dept of antique reeks of Muslim approval and also discrediting any outside state seas as a matter of fake honor. Hawass would destroy evidence just to avoid losing credit!

    • @surfaceten510n
      @surfaceten510n 20 дней назад

      It would be an historic disaster for the Egyptian government to reveal that the Pyramids have nothing to do with the Egyptians but a race of people of African decent and not of middle eastern . Hawass insisting on the pyramid is the tomb of Kufu based on a single piece of graffiti of dubious origin and date is the only time a pyramid is claimed to be a tomb as no burials have ever been discovered in any pyramid ever.

  • @shubus
    @shubus Год назад +619

    Hawass has been an obstacle in Egyptology for more than 30 years. He has been the ultimate gatekeeper and done everything possible to stifle any ideas put forth other than his own.

    • @loxoloveXo
      @loxoloveXo 10 месяцев назад +24

      Yeahh he needs to go somewhere far away from Egypt. And let people that can solve the mysterious pyramids...

    • @sirdetmist3204
      @sirdetmist3204 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@loxoloveXo One day hell be dead but the secrets will remain to be discovered.

    • @robertmortimer8288
      @robertmortimer8288 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@sirdetmist3204 I really hope that, if there are evidence that undermines some ideas of egyptology, that it have not been destroyed just because of it!

    • @thelegion3682
      @thelegion3682 10 месяцев назад +16

      Helwass must be in his mid to late sixties by now and his personal life has not been lived the healthiest so that being said... He's an obstacle now... But he's not going to be for much longer. That's the beauty of these people. They are mere mortals and don't last forever

    • @you2be839
      @you2be839 9 месяцев назад +15

      Hawass really does seem to be the kind of person that, if he could, he would have someone build a pyramid for him, and then take all credit for himself in building it in some hieroglyphs... he truly embodies a pharaoh without a pschent (crown) like nobody else I know of!! 👌😆

  • @nabiliskandar6598
    @nabiliskandar6598 2 года назад +2076

    I am Egyptian. I am so proud of your detailed knowledge. I am so grateful to you and John Pierre Houdein. On the other hand, I am also so ashamed of Zahi Hawas.

    • @stevea2909
      @stevea2909 2 года назад +157

      You should not feel shame. He's greedy in so many ways, he became a joke.

    • @patriciaoudart1508
      @patriciaoudart1508 2 года назад +13

      And if Zahi was from a gardians of the pyramid dynasty. This will be accurate to do his best to recover the antiquities robbed from your country and stop speculations, letting Pharaohs living their death in peace! So you could also be proud he dont let clowns trying now to unmount the pyramid to see the inside, what is dangerous.

    • @jayc2469
      @jayc2469 2 года назад +82

      I agree do not feel shame because you share the same common country of ancestry to Hawass but I understand that Hawass is a Very Bad advertisement for Egypt

    • @Kidraver555
      @Kidraver555 2 года назад +3

      Hawass has promoted the idea that there were no slaves in egypt, shows how corrupt he is.

    • @MrBottlecapBill
      @MrBottlecapBill 2 года назад +28

      @@Kidraver555 Incorrect. His assertion is that there were no slaves used in the construction of the pyramids............not the same thing. Directly on site he is probably correct.......however in the quarries and places where items were outsourced there were absolutely slaves used.

  • @ShawnieP512
    @ShawnieP512 Год назад +47

    Fantastic video. You showed complete non biased work here. You provided sources and gave feedback both for and against each expert involved. Personally, I admire JPH's work and dedication. He put his heart and soul into it. He seems genuine and sincere and wants to progress science, not his personal agenda like some others. I'm sure he would like to receive credit for all his work, like we all would, but him refraining just shows us his class. People have such shallow egos that they can't admit they could be wrong. That's what science is all about. Testing, evidence, trial and error. I wish him long health and hopefully he can remain around to see some profound discoveries.

  • @rossroderickwhitney
    @rossroderickwhitney Год назад +635

    In 1958, when I was 13 years old, my brother and I (he was 17) followed a guide to the top of the Great Pyramid of Giza. There were Egyptian men at the base who for a few small coins would conduct tourists to the top, up one of the corners. The view from the top was stunning, of course. In those days, it wasn’t hazy. The chiseled inscriptions on the topmost stones were spellbinding, and appeared in various languages. Some were dated hundreds of years before. Graffiti has always been with us.
    Everyone followed the same path to the top: it went up one of the corners. And you hoisted yourself up, block by block. (The internet reveals that the tallest stones are nearly five feet tall.) If you fell, you were dead. It’s remarkable that my parents permitted us to do that. As I recall, it took about a half hour to reach the top. In the summer, such an adventure would have been unbearably hot. But Egyptian winters are marvelously pleasant.
    After we’d returned to the ground, another Egyptian, a teenager, told us that for a small sum he would climb to the top and return in five minutes flat. We hired him to do so. He spent four minutes climbing at great speed to the top: he was in great physical condition. And then he descended, leaping down from block to block to block, in the remaining minute. You had to see it to believe it. He got the price he’d quoted, plus a good tip.
    I don’t know when tourists were finally forbidden from making the dangerous trip. But I’m glad it was after I’d left Egypt. I’m now 78 years old.

    • @michaelnoronha2801
      @michaelnoronha2801 Год назад +35

      That sounds like a beautiful experience, one that not many have had or can ever have, thanks for sharing

    • @rossroderickwhitney
      @rossroderickwhitney Год назад +4

      @@michaelnoronha2801

    • @rossroderickwhitney
      @rossroderickwhitney Год назад +19

      @@michaelnoronha2801 It was a beautiful experience, and one that is forbidden now. Thanks for your kind response.

    • @joshjwebster9
      @joshjwebster9 Год назад +9

      What a fantastic story. I visited the Great Pyramid of Giza in 2016 and obviously knew I wasn’t allowed to climb it, so it’s great to read of someone’s experience who did! All the best to you!

    • @_HMCB_
      @_HMCB_ Год назад +4

      Amazing. Thanks for vividly describing your experience. You helped me relive it as if I was there. ❤

  • @RickshawMunky
    @RickshawMunky 2 года назад +2667

    History will remember Hawass very differently to what he thinks he deserves

    • @naradaian
      @naradaian 2 года назад +401

      You are being generous- he is an enemy of humanity and wont be remembered at all

    • @6thmichcav262
      @6thmichcav262 2 года назад +261

      I remember watching late 90’s and early 2000’s documentaries with Zahi, and I had no idea who he was. But it was clear he knew who HE was. He thought he owned Egypt. All of it. No, no-ALL OF IT. ZAHI OWNS EGYPT!

    • @daos3300
      @daos3300 2 года назад +165

      @@6thmichcav262 i bet he also talks about himself in the third person

    • @barryminbiole6199
      @barryminbiole6199 2 года назад +144

      Harass is a legend in his own mind!

    • @kalrandom7387
      @kalrandom7387 2 года назад +145

      It also never seems to never come up about him selling off Antiquities.

  • @libertyauto
    @libertyauto 2 года назад +236

    I like how you present Houdin's ideas with both respect and skepticism. You acknowledge how his work, even if you disagree with some parts of it, was critical in furthering what we know about the Great Pyramid.
    Thank you for your videos.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 2 года назад +13

      Sometimes being wrong in a way that causes the right answer to be revealed is as good as guessing right in the first place.

    • @libertyauto
      @libertyauto 2 года назад

      @@mal2ksc Nice. grin

    • @chrish4439
      @chrish4439 Год назад

      @@МаркелСосипаторыч lol dude. Do you seriously think your long winded rant, that was essentially just one long run on sentence that didn't even make sense. Is some how a well thought out critique of a theory a man worked on for years?
      Lol fucking step away from the arm chair there tough 🤡🤣

  • @Bill-xx2yh
    @Bill-xx2yh Год назад +18

    This is my THIRD OR FOURTH TIME "THROUGH" this episode. Still captures me and still learning…the same as all your works here.
    Ole man in Nebraska says, THANK YOU…Bill

  • @guardrailbiter
    @guardrailbiter Год назад +250

    As far as I am concerned, the Great Void refers to the interior of Zahi Hawass' skull.

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 6 месяцев назад +2

      Hawas is a brilliant and patriotic Egyptian.

    • @guardrailbiter
      @guardrailbiter 6 месяцев назад +15

      @@busterbiloxi3833 Did I touch a nerve, buddy?

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 6 месяцев назад

      @@guardrailbiter I'm not Egyptian, if that's what you you're getting at. I'm a European who admires the brilliance of the non-Albion world. Engerland is a land of traitors and toffs and Yobs.

    • @andrewandres148
      @andrewandres148 5 месяцев назад +11

      @@guardrailbiter I think you may have, or buster is on robot mode..... And Hawass has a very self descriptive suffix in his name..... He has always been a most annoying self absorbed road block to true Pyramidology... And he does not even look at the great step as important....

    • @stripeytawney822
      @stripeytawney822 3 месяца назад

      ​@@guardrailbiter you might consider things from a local point of view.
      What has been the Egyptian experience with oh, start with napoleon? Nappy took obelisks and handed them out to countries as party favors.
      Next, those British?
      How much art was hauled off to English museums?
      I have read that the British burned mummies as fuel in steam locomotives.
      Hawass is an Egyptian. His first loyalty is to HIS country. Controlling the tourism industry- what runs their economy and yeah being the boss and letting all know it is his job.
      Add in both third world hunger for respect (you will wait in line because I can make you) and disqust for every millennial twerp with a blistery channel degree pimping alantean alienz from planet dumbass theory....
      Maybe he is being the gatekeeper his nation needs.
      Think about it.

  • @wendymartin6479
    @wendymartin6479 2 года назад +504

    Zahi Hawas is the embodiment of Max Planck's quote: A scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.

    • @TheCuriousOrbs
      @TheCuriousOrbs Год назад +39

      Boomers really dont like having their personal beliefs challenged. They never have.

    • @Nightdreaux22647
      @Nightdreaux22647 Год назад +8

      Thanks to the internet the old knowledge will not be forgotten by the new generation.

    • @Dave-ty2qp
      @Dave-ty2qp Год назад +22

      @@TheCuriousOrbs Millennials don't seem to have any beliefs that have merit steeled by experience. But they do have immature ideas that might grow into fruition. I wish you good luck on your quest..

    • @aolinger680
      @aolinger680 Год назад +17

      @@TheCuriousOrbs Middle schooler input is always welcomed here.

    • @sadavir429
      @sadavir429 Год назад

      @@Dave-ty2qp Right! Like these guys never take historical context in their analysis, and are blinded by their own baises- Like the reason Hawas is so protective of Egypts archaeological sites is bc they have been looted by European powers for the last 300 years. Europeans even used to eat mummies back in the 1800s that's why there are so few of them left.

  • @walley2637
    @walley2637 Год назад +106

    Zahi Hawass was a villain. i don't know his true motives but he did a lot to hold back Egyptology.

  • @jsbaker2795
    @jsbaker2795 Год назад +10

    Thousands of years later we're still scratching our heads. That's just mind blowing to think about.

  • @thomasstreich6564
    @thomasstreich6564 2 года назад +193

    Zahi Hawass is the biggest obstacle to pyramid exploration. He cannot bear that his expertise might be refuted. He also likes his position and the reputation he has as a result. If he were genuinely interested in real origins, he would pursue any theory, no matter who it came from, and explore every opportunity. Instead of opposing them.

    • @zackworrell
      @zackworrell Год назад

      He is an expert of nothing but lies, deceit, and manipulation

    • @molitararbutus8438
      @molitararbutus8438 Год назад +11

      Zahi proves that he not a true Archaeologist at all as he does not want to investigate possible truths.. he is a fake!

    • @tomballenger1809
      @tomballenger1809 Год назад

      Zahi Hawass is nothing but a self serving fraudulent bureaucrat. Always has been. Probably always will be. It is a shame that the new evidence about the pyramids is cloaked by this charlatan's shadow!

    • @d.i.l.l.i.g.a.f
      @d.i.l.l.i.g.a.f Год назад +9

      I thought Zawi Halfass was booted out of the ministry of antiquities years ago, somehow weasled his way back on to the employee list, the sooner the guy retires/emigrates/passes away the better, and someone who has even the slightest of open mind and curiosity about them takes his place, the better, then some of these mysteries may well be solved/debunked. The egyptians are happy to recieve all the foreigners money through tourism etc, But when some company/person invents a machine or something that could look into these mysteries, that would cause no or very minimal damage, the barriers all come up so fast with so many pitfalls and clauses put in their way, especially with Zawi Halfass having any kind of say, that might disprove his expertise and hypothesis. Moving the goal posts even further.

    • @gkess7106
      @gkess7106 Год назад +10

      He doesn’t want to take a chance on someone showing that the pyramids were built before the Egyptian’s

  • @mostafaayyad690
    @mostafaayyad690 Год назад +315

    ironically, zahi hawass has officially announced the presence of the void behind the Chevron blocks entrance thanks to the great work of the scan pyramid project, which he himself was criticising his results, thank you again and again for your brilliant work

    • @abcdedfg8340
      @abcdedfg8340 Год назад +21

      At least archeology seems to slowly be opening up to realization that specialists in climate scientists, economics, religion, architecture, and engineering, among others can offer valuable insights into more practical problems that archeologists, are not exactly expected to be experts in. There may be some holdouts unfortunately.

    • @JimAirborne25
      @JimAirborne25 Год назад +22

      He seems to have quite a few portraits of himself.

    • @jameshemphill-lt5fq
      @jameshemphill-lt5fq Год назад

      OSSILATOR using moon and core...

    • @chippysteve4524
      @chippysteve4524 Год назад +16

      Standard backpeddling tactics of any conman being exposed.
      The world can see that he is an obstacle to knowledge and discovery.
      Far too late to start pretending to care about the truth now!

    • @sitkimintas1451
      @sitkimintas1451 Год назад

      Zahi hawass is corrupted as you all know he is the head of ministry of antiquity

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays 2 года назад +171

    Possibly one of the best available theories to explain construction. Great work as always!

    • @ottavva
      @ottavva 2 года назад +3

      keep up the good work 😀

    • @Ron4885
      @Ron4885 2 года назад +6

      Agree. The grand gallery being used as room for counterweights makes a lot of sense to me.

    • @ottavva
      @ottavva 2 года назад

      @@Ron4885
      they'll never stop puzzling us with how they did it

    • @untouchedsports8296
      @untouchedsports8296 2 года назад

      There was never a ramp. The bricks were formed in place. There is more proof of the bricks being formed than there being a ramp people just choose to believe what they have heard first. If you do some true research you will see this video has no good info at all.

    • @ottavva
      @ottavva 2 года назад +1

      @@untouchedsports8296
      GEOPOLYMERES i.e. liquid mass which solidified into sometime we later believe to be compact rock/stones, maybe combined with actual rock/stones where needed and/or wanted
      the pyramids were most probably NOT assembled like LEGO cubes, but rather poured and molded, the process just like e.g. a drive way in front of your house

  • @markbrown5253
    @markbrown5253 Год назад +4

    I just wanted to drop a comment that I really appreciate your critical yet open-minded attitude toward this subject. So many people view it either simplistically or go straight to "ancient aliens," of which neither really advance the scholastic investigation of determining the how of building the pyramids. I studied history, not engineering, but I appreciate having an open mind, but not so open as to suggest human couldn't possibly have built them.

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays 2 года назад +38

    Why am I not surprised that Hawass has inserted himself into a scientific process that has nothing to do with him, and erased all trace of the person who initiated the entire thing. That's how I understood it anyway...

    • @starkistuna
      @starkistuna 2 года назад +9

      He has been doing that for decades, there was one guy that found a subterranean system that had been ignored since Pietrie's days that can possibly connect with the Giza complex , and when he announced it , hawass had it dismissed and locked under heavy security even tho it was a "worthlless" discovery then a couple of years later he takes credit for rediscovering it and is conducting work in that area.

    • @JonnoPlays
      @JonnoPlays 2 года назад +2

      @@starkistuna so true and shows his consistency at least.

    • @Vandal_Savage
      @Vandal_Savage 2 года назад +7

      Hawass is a grandiose narcissist who seems to have total control over all of Egyptian archeology...
      I almost switched off when I saw him onscreen, I cannot bear to watch him talking about himself and how he discovered everything singlehandedly (as he has done in every other of his appearances that I've seen).
      I watch history shows to learn about history and every time Hawass comes on all he ever does is talk about himself and I learn nothing...

    • @starkistuna
      @starkistuna 2 года назад +2

      @@Vandal_Savage Lol same he demanded to be in every single documentary shot in his time as reigning the supreme council. I hate everytime he says "perameds"

    • @GigaNetBoy
      @GigaNetBoy 2 года назад +1

      Also...
      But rest assured his time will come, and the "perameds" (as the sucker says it) will remain there for centuries to come.
      He is just another rock on science path to understanding a lot more this ancient culture.

  • @gt4654
    @gt4654 Год назад +144

    I am fortunate to follow Jean Pierre Houdin from around 2008 if I remember correctly, and I lived almost in real time the problems that Hawas introduced. I remember talking with Jean Pierre in facebook, asking him why he is not in this new "committee", and he explained me briefly the problems and that he was just being patient. At that time, he lost all of his fortune, and his father had just died, and from what I understood, he was being unofficially "employed" by the dassault guy, just to help him, but also to keep him silent on the side, because Hawas was not happy that some "foreigner" was steeling his thunder and the situation was very delicate at that time. It was after Hawas brought down from his "throne" and a new minister was appointed that didn't like Hawas that the whole project started, but the new minister also wanted to keep a balance and didn't bring Jean Pierre....
    This is a great but tragic story, but I know that he will be written in history as the guy who started this new wave of explorations that brought all these new discoveries.

    • @armiltupil1810
      @armiltupil1810 Год назад +7

      You have an intelligent Opinion

    • @gt4654
      @gt4654 Год назад

      @@frontenac5083 It hapens for me to wuork on the restorant that yu had eatn on yesteday. I hoppe you've enjoid the sekret ingreedient on the whitte sause.

    • @nwchrista
      @nwchrista 9 месяцев назад

      Houdin got it right on the spiral internal ramp but badly mangled the rest of it... UNLESS, he intentionally mangled it in an attempt to get through the eternal CRIMINAL, Hawass. This means, he sold his soul... And neither position is where I'd want to be.

    • @carlosipec2270
      @carlosipec2270 Месяц назад +1

      Compared to many I haven't followed Jean Pierre Houdin for so long but truth be told. The first time I saw/heard about the excellent work he did. I was almost mesmerized! After all some of the assertions Houdin presented were kind of "obvious". Almost in a "Colombo's egg" fashion, making it sound simple and easy. which was neither as we learned. Kudos to the Man (notice the capital letter) who wrote is name in the modern Egyptology.

  • @DarkSlayer010
    @DarkSlayer010 2 года назад +122

    Thanks for this awesome video, Mr. Granite. I love Houdin’s theory. It really fired one’s imagination.
    As for Hawass, unfortunately people like him, in positions of authority, will always be a stumbling block to true science and research. With people like him in place we’ll never see another Flinders Petrie come along and uncover the last mysteries of the pyramids.

    • @johnlong384
      @johnlong384 Год назад

      You're absolutely right and "Mr. Haw Ass" would sell his grandma before accepting
      the truth about the pyramids being built long time before Egypt's have been around!

  • @jakemoeller7850
    @jakemoeller7850 Год назад +9

    I was very happy to see John Romer in your video. His presentations are by far some of the most eloquent and informative.

    • @HistoryforGRANITE
      @HistoryforGRANITE  Год назад +7

      I like Romer - although he made a colossal error in his Great Pyramid book about the 'air channels' which needs to be addressed. But that book also has one of the best observations I've ever read in Egyptology, which I will share in a video about the same subject.

    • @EbonyPope
      @EbonyPope Месяц назад

      @@HistoryforGRANITE Hey history for Granite. I love your content. But since you showed Hancock and mentioned bias do you see any merit in his theories? Dan from Dedunking channel often defends some of them. What is your opinion?

    • @driveboy317
      @driveboy317 Месяц назад

      Gotta love the Romer

  • @histoiretraduite
    @histoiretraduite Год назад +74

    Since I knew of Houdin's work, I taught it was the most interesting discovery about the great pyramid since a long time. Further Moree, I like Jean Pierre Houdin as a person. The man is full of class, never rude. Things that neither Hawas or the female archeologist "discoverer" of pyramids can stated of themselves. Very well done summary and video. Thks.

    • @nuntana2
      @nuntana2 Год назад +3

      She was very annoying, likely a feminist and likely wrong. Dunno man, as with their construction, should women be involved in the pyramids today? lol

    • @olsim1730
      @olsim1730 9 месяцев назад +1

      *thought

    • @pedro_mab
      @pedro_mab 3 месяца назад

      @@nuntana2 a woman was involved in your birth, but maybe that shouldn't have happened either. waste of oxygen.

  • @turdmite
    @turdmite Год назад +76

    Good grief what masterful presentation. Only the third video of yours that I've watched and once again concise, accurate and desperately needed. Your channel is an absolute gem. Thank you.

    • @altaif5134
      @altaif5134 8 месяцев назад

      اريد ان اخبرك انه لا يوجد خشب يستطيع حمل هذه الأوزان ولا يوجد حبل تستطيع حمل هذه الأوزان من نظري

    • @altaif5134
      @altaif5134 8 месяцев назад

      انا اعمل في شركه لي مقاولات انا مشكلتي دائما في رفع البلاطات الخرسانيه الكبيره وزنها ٣٠ طن كتله واحده ولدي رافعات ولكن احيانا نفشل ونحن في العصر الحديث

  • @GermanGreetings
    @GermanGreetings Год назад +28

    A brillant summary, helping so many people to understand the wole discussion about Jean Pierre Houdin. The Egyptologists can`t bypass this man without discussion. Thank you for this channel, Sir !

  • @collectiontime7341
    @collectiontime7341 5 месяцев назад +1

    Honestly Houdin should be proud. He's the only person who's ever offered a comprehensive and sensible explanation giving precise engineering principles and in doing so he gives great respect to the Ancient Egyptian builders' sophistication and abilities. It is the mainstream who should be ashamed and lambasted, THEY are the ones who, in portraying the Egyptians as rudimentary in their engineering skills, pave the way for speculations on the AE not having been the true creators of the pyramids. Even if they don't agree, it's the best theory we have. That alone should mean it is promoted as the correct thesis, only when a better idea comes along should it be changed. Isn't that the whole point of academic study and peer review, I mean they tout that all the time in dismissing other alternate theory such as those by Chris Dunn et al

  • @AN-yv8qi
    @AN-yv8qi 2 года назад +180

    Crazy that assassin's creed developers took Houdin's theory more seriously. I'm glad at least scanpyramids did get published. Hoping in the future our progress in understanding the pyramids won't be hindered such. Thank you very much for your quality work on this video, you deserve many more subscribers. Hope you keep this up and you get there 🙏

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Год назад +1

      @@МаркелСосипаторыч It all really ties onto the assumption that they're assuming we (homosapeins) built it when it was probably Homomagna around the Mediterranean.

  • @ruijikisu
    @ruijikisu Год назад +84

    i just found this channel and i cant believe how many villains there are in Egyptology!

    • @WaaDoku
      @WaaDoku Год назад +7

      Like in every institution, there are corrupt forces at play.

    • @af2w131f
      @af2w131f Год назад +5

      Same here, I wasn’t even much into Egyptology but this channel really opened my eyes how amazing it is. I can’t believe it’s the same narcissistic “trust the experts” “don’t do your own research” villains who wish to control literally everything and this guy on RUclips has to expose them.

    • @pcbassy9404
      @pcbassy9404 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@WaaDoku ...and all crippling ego.

    • @you2be839
      @you2be839 9 месяцев назад

      They're not villains, they're Set's acolytes!

    • @davidlloyd1526
      @davidlloyd1526 6 дней назад

      I get the feeling that the author has his own "biases"...

  • @louislux
    @louislux 2 года назад +95

    I remember watching the video about Houdin's theory a long time ago. I'm glad I stumbled upon an update. It's a shame Houdin's work is still met with so much skepticism even though it has a lot of merit and is very intriguing.

    • @stevelangstroth5833
      @stevelangstroth5833 2 года назад +10

      No, they KNOW Houdin is onto something. That's why they are so dismissive of him. It's there way of saying, "Pay attention to me, instead!".

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 2 года назад +6

      Skepticism is all well and good, but when someone makes testable predictions that are well within the ability to check (although it takes permission), then philosophy is the wrong tool. Get out there and make the measurements. Oh wait, they did, and that just pissed off the authorities even more.

  • @patrickblanchette4337
    @patrickblanchette4337 Год назад +2

    Thank you for your fair & balanced take on the Internal Ramp Theory.

  • @milanetc4865
    @milanetc4865 2 года назад +37

    Never heard of the great step before. Love your antique photo of how it looked. So great. Subscribed :)

  • @SculptyWorks
    @SculptyWorks 2 года назад +35

    I like Houdin's ideas, because they push thinking in different directions. But at same time, I think some aspects of his hypothesis are too complicated. The ancient Egyptians were incredibly practical people who found solutions to complex problems through 'simple', if yet labor-intensive or time-consuming means. Their priorities were different than ours.
    And Egyptology has some of the worst gatekeeping around! It's really sad!
    Regardless, this is an excellent video! Great job! 👍👍 ❤❤

  • @Useless22
    @Useless22 Год назад +248

    It’s kind of infuriating to think about the fact that the only reason why we aren’t actively solving the mystery of the pyramids and sphinx is the ego and greed of men who at this rate will die before ever uncovering it’s secrets.

    • @taimoorshah8230
      @taimoorshah8230 Год назад

      yes and all that because of that asshole minister.

    • @JosephFuckinStalin
      @JosephFuckinStalin Год назад +3

      Beautifully put, but still very sad. I'm sure there are other capital interests preventing us as well, depending on what the true purpose of the pyramids are

    • @pkrmkn31
      @pkrmkn31 Год назад +2

      @@JosephFuckinStalin tombs obviously

    • @nonyobussiness3440
      @nonyobussiness3440 Год назад

      For thousands of years foreigners, distant rulers in Europe and Middle East conquered and ruled Egypt. Taxing Egypt, exploiting Egypt, marveling at its structures, stealing its treasures and marveling at its history while exploiting Egypt.
      They now are now an independent self ruling nation state with complete control of its marvels.
      I can’t blame Egypt and the man in charge of telling the rest of the world to fuck off, you cant explore and dig up and take our “shit” away for your entertainment and in the name of knowledge.
      I don’t think there’s much more to learn about the pyramids. They’re stone giant tombs with some tunnels. There are some mystical secrets in them.

    • @ZpLitgaming
      @ZpLitgaming Год назад

      They want to farm it for tourism so they think they need to keep the mystery alive. They probably assume that it's in their best interest to make sure that investigations fail

  • @charlestaylor3195
    @charlestaylor3195 9 месяцев назад

    From all I've seen Jean-Piere has the most compelling information I've seen.While it may not all be correct, it certainly should NOT be dismissed by any means. Great video.

  • @ldugois
    @ldugois 2 года назад +25

    Thanks a lot of the critical analysis of Houdin's theory. I always like his internal ramp approach and it is great to have a serious review of its probability, as you did. I just hope, like everyone, that we will know in our lifetime

  • @jasonbull6560
    @jasonbull6560 2 года назад +67

    36yrs ago doing my bricklayers apprenticeship we were asked to explain or suggest how the pyramids were built. I came up with almost exactly the same theory, I was ridiculed and laughed at.
    I used too blush a lot, VERY Humiliating. Much thanks.
    Always ask a Builder.!x

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 2 года назад +6

      Many years ago I also had the thought that the pyramids could have been built using a spiraling ramp built on the structure itself, although I imagined it as being on the outer surface. I see that the idea of an internal ramp does away with some of the problems of the external spiral that I had imagined. It's kind of surprising to me that the general idea of a spiral ramp didn't come to the foreground long, long ago. It seems like a rather obvious solution.

    • @klubstompers
      @klubstompers 2 года назад +6

      As a union mason i would have said, "go ask a hod carrier, keeping me stocked is their problem." :D
      Iv'e always thought an internal ramp would be the best solution as well, with the ramp being right being the casing stones.

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 2 года назад +4

      The Pyramids suggests to me that whoever built them really knew around the architectural structure of it, various "blueprints" and mini-models with accurate calculations was probably very much present before they started building. The shape of the Pyramids suggests a bottom to the top building process with layer on top of layer. Lifting stones for the most part doesn't seem necessary, but more likely "dragged/pulled" and then carefully dropped into place. How they adjusted the precision with other stones I have no idea, but surely some imperfections must be found as well.
      If internal ramps were used it has to been a core part of the structure, meaning that the ramps was a part of the building process from the beginning, and then they somehow pulled and dragged stone-blocks into place to build floor after floor. If they actually did create internal ramps they must have been operational all the way to the top, or close to it. If this would be the case then these ramps should still be there inside the Pyramid today as a part of the structure, or at least one may think, unless the "Egyptians" had some kind of plan on how to fill the ramps with stones as well on the way down after the Pyramid was finally built.

    • @klubstompers
      @klubstompers 2 года назад +5

      @@karlkarlsson9126 The theory is that the ramps are still there, but they were filled with stones. They would have to slide a block all the way to the top, and then put another just below it, until they hit the bottom of the ramp. Using log rollers under the stones to move them up the ramps, would be the way to go. I have moved wood stoves and inserts, weighting up to 1000lbs with broom sticks as rollers.

    • @garymitchell5899
      @garymitchell5899 2 года назад +1

      Why are you lying dude. 4,500 years we haven't a clue but some kid gets it in five mins. FFS.

  • @billywild5440
    @billywild5440 2 года назад +10

    Thank you for supporting Houdin's work and keeping it in the public eye.

  • @mecandes09
    @mecandes09 4 месяца назад +1

    Very informative. I like the way you present the information and your theories. Bravo.

  • @mikethemaniacal
    @mikethemaniacal 2 года назад +67

    i love your stuff. well thought-out, well-presented, and a joy to watch. thank you for sharing these ideas.

    • @mikethemaniacal
      @mikethemaniacal 2 года назад +3

      heres my two cents. im 100% on board with the internal spiral ramps. the grand gallery being a counterweight system holds a lot of water with the evidence, such as the scraping along the sides throughout the gallery and the older photos of the great step definitely looking like some sort of guiding notch. however, i also think that it is a facade of deception, so to speak. i think the great void is a double-chamber burial room (or perhaps triple) as in the interior of the red pyramid (snefru). the way the air shafts from the kings and queens chambers bend and turn suggest another chamber in the interior as well. i think this is the real final resting place of kufu, with the current broken sarcophagus placed in the pyramid in an already broken state via the non-load-bearing block directly in front of the sarcophagus on the northern wall. the “official” (but completely hidden) access to this area being the hallway-like void behind the chevron blocks above the regular entrance (or perhaps some northern entrance yet to be discovered). i think there were meant to be two sections of the pyramid once it was completed, and i believe they were meant to be separate as in the bent pyramid before the connecting tunnel was dug. perhaps there was the “public pyramid” which we currently have access to, and the “private pyramid” which is the aforementioned hidden chambers. deception seems like a theme in this pyramid. i also think the subterranean chamber was for doing cult worship but was intentionally unfinished so people would just do their libations and not go looking for anything, but thats another thing. kufu seems like the kind of guy who would troll robbers “hey you got through the granite plugs in the ascending corridor, ill trick you with the immensity of the grand gallery only for you to end up with a broken coffin. oof, looks like someone beat you” all the while being tucked in safe.

  • @Tailss1
    @Tailss1 2 года назад +74

    It's nice to see John Pierre Houdein's theory is still alive, I would love to see it actually tested.

    • @THE-zv7vj
      @THE-zv7vj Год назад

      it failed miserabley .. there are interior stones 30 ft long weighing 900 tons .. Those farmers did not build these pyramids.. Not one mummy found inside . not one hyroglif inside... this is ancient.. long before them ..

    • @itzjcee557
      @itzjcee557 Год назад +8

      You and me both , I think his theory makes the most sense

    • @CalzRants
      @CalzRants Год назад +1

      @@itzjcee557 I feel the same. I've never read any other theory that makes as much sense.

    • @nilslundstrom8671
      @nilslundstrom8671 Год назад +2

      Its crazy to think they made a ramp who is larger than the pyramid it self, noway they did like this

    • @atlantic_love
      @atlantic_love Год назад +3

      @@nilslundstrom8671 Why would it be crazy to think they could do that? For Heaven's sake, they built the pyramid! The stone used to make such a ramp could then then be dismantled and used elsewhere.

  • @stephenjohnson9560
    @stephenjohnson9560 2 года назад +17

    Another great presentation and constructive analysis. It was great that you gave tribute to Houdin as with all theories whether we think they are correct or not they give us another avenue to the truth. Look forward to the next video and thank you.

  • @marcmarc172
    @marcmarc172 6 месяцев назад

    Always the highest quality content on this subject. No one else on this planet matches your work.

  • @nefernefer19
    @nefernefer19 Год назад +19

    Amazing content, honestly! I just can't get enough!
    I always defended the point that Archeology should be joined by Geologists, Engineers and Architects as they would have a lot of light to bring according to their knowledge and experience.
    The best pyramidologist that I've known in my life started his career as an Economist! He travelled to Egypt more than 120 times in his life and he's is one of the few people that has visited and filmed the whole pyramid inside, even the well-shaft. He sadly pased away in 2020 but I'm sure he would have enjoyed a lot your videos.

  • @lowtuned
    @lowtuned Год назад +41

    if you know about this theory, especially the gallery and its purpose, you can apply it to other buildings.
    there is the stepped pyramid with its "chimney". inside the "chimney" there are marks of slabs or something and nobody knows what they were for.
    but if there were counterweights used to lift stones up high... it makes perfect sense to have a vertical shaft, and to stop the weights with slabs from falling all the way up or down that shaft.

    • @kxkxkxkx
      @kxkxkxkx Год назад +1

      Fill the chimney with water and you can just attach floatation to the blocks and lift them effortlessly using buoyancy ☝️

    • @untitled6391
      @untitled6391 Год назад +1

      @@kxkxkxkx no way they had the technology to make it all watertight.

    • @kxkxkxkx
      @kxkxkxkx Год назад

      @@untitled6391 yeah no way they could get hold of any bitumen 🤭 genius

    • @kxkxkxkx
      @kxkxkxkx Год назад

      @@untitled6391 obviously you're too dumb to understand my subtle rejoinder, so just read this if you can: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bituminous_waterproofing

    • @untitled6391
      @untitled6391 Год назад +4

      @@kxkxkxkx do you have any idea how high the pressure would be at the bottom

  • @JaiPritchett
    @JaiPritchett Год назад +10

    Why the F would anyone decide to "restore" the "step"?
    Cant they just remove the material that was used to fill in the funnel?
    I love this theory! Its not conclusive. I can not wait till there are more discoveries of records that explain evidence.
    Such a wonderful mystery we were all left with! Thank you whoever left us with these incredible ancient relics
    JUST A CONSTANT WOW

  • @nikimccrossan9497
    @nikimccrossan9497 2 месяца назад

    Great video and G.P. Houdin is the man! I think he's bang on, internal ramp but yes from half way up on the staging area sounds more manageable and appropriate. The grand gallery being a functional counterweight chamber...the evidence is right there, it's pretty obvious and glaring really now that it's been pointed out. Brilliant work by Houdin, I think he needs to be given great credit, he deserves it. Nice to see you've given him much credit and added a few of your well balanced and logical amendments for which I credit you sir!

  • @daos3300
    @daos3300 2 года назад +37

    wonderful presentation of houdin's brilliant work and your own observations. i'm convinced the great void is another lifting gallery. and i was genuinely shocked about the great step restoration, it is difficult to overestimate the damage done by hawass to egyptology.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +10

      The more I read/hear about Hawass the more confused I get.
      How does someone who is no longer in the head position at the Antiquities & Tourism Ministry still hold so much power over the various excavations and investigations in Egypt?
      It sounds like he is still in top position in all but name for whatever reason.

    • @HistoryforGRANITE
      @HistoryforGRANITE  2 года назад +11

      I believe a significant portion of the current Ministry owe their careers to him.

    • @Taz6688
      @Taz6688 2 года назад +7

      @@mnomadvfx Zahi Hawass was removed as head Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs, however he has surrounded him self with people who only share his views, anyone with any view not aligned with his, will get no access, no permits and excluded from any form of research, he has still got his face front and centre, and appears on almost TV semidocumentary about the pyramids, he has lost support and then gained it again, I believe he still heads the ScanPyramids science committee, I feel he is the reason we are still just scratching the surface, he is determined to stop any investigation which might show history is not as he says.
      There was talk of using a small probe to investigate the "void" nothing is seen of that and I guess it too is shut down, funny how many people over time have reported hammering and drilling, heavy-duty power cables being run into the pyramid, should anything be ever found I don't think we will see another Tutankhamun, it will be all hidden until they are sure its "safe" to release and confirms their current views.

    • @lorimiller4301
      @lorimiller4301 2 года назад

      @@Taz6688 🎯

  • @Jack-Hands
    @Jack-Hands Год назад +8

    I remember watching Houdin's documentary.
    Quite enjoyable.

  • @turin357
    @turin357 2 года назад +87

    This is quality work, well thought out. I have never been a big fan of Houdins ramp theory, and still think in whole it is unlikely, but I was unaware of the full extent of his exclusion. It saddens me that Houdin was never given enough access to develop his theory while undoubtedly showing that he was graced with all the humility that never made it into Hawass at his making. I could be wrong, but I believe you made this as a homage not to Houdins theory but the man himself, and your objective approach combined with knowledge of the field of Egyptology has resulted in something I would have said belongs on the History channel. In truth, your work far exceeds anything they have produced n at least the last 2 decades.

    • @Tailss1
      @Tailss1 2 года назад +9

      Those blocks didn't get up there on their own and until mainstream archeology/Institutional Egyptology can tell us how it was done (that actually isn't silly) Houdin's theory is the best in my opinion we have got.

    • @otherkorean
      @otherkorean 2 года назад +3

      Can't be on the History Channel without aliens, though. Also, great vid.

    • @turin357
      @turin357 2 года назад +5

      @@Tailss1 I agree, it is far better than many mainstream ideas, and it is why it saddens me he was able to develop the theory further because he could have overcome some of the problems with the theory. But the theory didnt even attempt to solve all of the unknowns. I would personally like to see more work on the geopolymer idea, I believe it is a fairly low tech solution that removes much of the logistical and precision issues that most other theories dont even try to explain.

    • @turin357
      @turin357 2 года назад +3

      @@otherkorean There was a point about 15-20 years ago when I could say that I had seen the entirety of the History channels catalogue. The majority of it multiple times. When H, Disc, and Sci went to hell, I quit watching TV altogether, cant say I miss it.

    • @KameraShy
      @KameraShy 2 года назад +2

      Politics and egos rule.

  • @wmfwoodworking
    @wmfwoodworking 2 месяца назад +1

    "New fangled technology" ? ...what?
    Thank you for your content and dedication. I respect and appreciate all that you have done for this community. Thank you. ❤

  • @daveburrows9876
    @daveburrows9876 2 года назад +16

    It felt really good to hear this. It comes across as authentic, objective and unbiased. You asked questions and pointed in rational directions for answers about many of the things I have also been thinking. I'm not a scientist, but I've been fascinated by Egyptology for nearly 60 years. Zahi Hawass is an enigma. It's not unusual for people who have a lot invested in being very certain to feel easily threatened. Scientists, after all, are merely more focused, more neurotic versions of anyone else.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 2 года назад +2

      Apparently you're a person who doesn't live in a social sphere where you've ever met many or any scientists. The scientists I've known have tended to be more down to earth, psychologically balanced people than the average. They also tend to be kind of outdoorsy and more physically fit than the average schlepp. After all, you're talking about people who have had the discipline and mental resilience to master huge volumes of knowledge over many years of professional educational training. This kind of person tends to be emotionally stable and generally maintains a high level of health.

    • @KameraShy
      @KameraShy 2 года назад

      History will not remember very well scientists who unreasonably protect their theories only to have them debunked years later.

    • @markuse3472
      @markuse3472 Год назад

      @@donnievance1942 Hawass was replaced or, fired yet, all university and other tech institutes professors teaching evolution as fact still have their jobs.
      You mistake me on Hawass: no, I don't condone his dishonesty. Saying that, it is outright brainless to support evolution when it has been proven a total lie by Honest science, specially and most importantly, in mathematics/numbers (the only none bias and none prejudice science), not only millions, not only billions, but Trillions of times beyond the point of Probability. Many scientists are overall honest, but evolutionists are Not scientists but counter it instead. Oh, yeah: most scientists on biology, archaeology, anthropology, geology and a few more, are not as you said "down to Earth..." but arrogant, overly proud and ignorant when challenged, specially when it comes to creation, in which there is much evidence for.

  • @bobbyhunt100
    @bobbyhunt100 Год назад +38

    Thanks so much for the amazing interpretation of evidence and the evidence based conclusions which you reach. It always tickles me when you thank everyone who watched to the end as a team of wild horses couldn't drag me away! Your channel always introduces logical and often overlooked evidence which, with your enlightened perspective, makes obvious sense. Thank you.

  • @stephenr7424
    @stephenr7424 2 года назад +32

    Thank you for your pragmatic and [traditional] scientific approach to analyzing all of these theories and emerging technologies. It is quite shameful for some "scientists" to be so easily dismissive of credible theories when it is commonly agreed upon that there are new discoveries still awaiting to be made at this vast archeological site. Keep up the great content!!

    • @GroberWeisenstein
      @GroberWeisenstein 2 года назад +1

      It's a myth that they (scientists) are not aware and are dodging alternative theories. Most alternative theories are unfounded with little to no evidence and emotional flights of fancy. If a theory is credible and has gravitas it eventually finds its way into consideration. This whole "scientists being dismissive" drama is perpetuated by guys with books to sell appealing to anti-establishment anarchists. Scientists don't seek to sit on old paradigms they prefer to publish and get credit for new discoveries which creates new grant money funding, better and bigger projects with accolades.

    • @stephenr7424
      @stephenr7424 2 года назад +6

      @montalbahn I was remarking on how Hawass and his mainstream peers simply discredit the muonography results as unproven technology due to its early development (alright, I see their point). But they also shut down any supporting non-invasive experiments to help give merit to the prior findings. Alternative theories are the foundation of the scientific method, and shouldn't be politicized based on someone's lack of understanding of newer technologies.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +1

      @@stephenr7424 Honestly I think it may indeed be as HFG said:
      Hawass covering for inept management of his days renovating the pyramids.
      He seems obsessive about appearances of activities in Egyptology more than the practices themselves, which speak to a political mind rather than a scientific one.
      Nothing is more likely to put a politician on the defensive than having their greatest 'accomplishments' shown to have been even partially destructive, whether intentionally or not.
      Regardless the moment something proves the theory right he will take credit for the discovery too - just as with politicians who often vote against spending/legislation that they disagree with, they will still drink of the benefits and claim that there is no good reason why they would not after the fact.
      To summarise I think that the pseudo archaeology crowd that swarms around Hancock's adherents have Hawass completely backward - he doesn't steal artefacts (which is their main claim), he just steals credit and destroys anyone he doesn't feel conforms to his views on the subject.
      He is an obsessive gatekeeper - but then again I fear without such an individual you might get someone that is too liberally minded that allows just about any kind of investigative mission short of full blown explosives.
      Needless to say too much freedom could turn Egyptology backwards in a fashion that nobody (sane) wants to see.

    • @GroberWeisenstein
      @GroberWeisenstein 2 года назад +2

      @@stephenr7424 you are right in pointing out that he was not functioning as a dedicated man of science his role was more that of a government official in a rare economic post serving the needs of the state. Likely not an easy position tasked with preservation of the antiquities while safekeeping tourism which is intrinsically tied to new scientific discoveries and revelations. Few jobs such as this anywhere on this planet. A juggling while balancing act.

  • @Guitar6ty
    @Guitar6ty 2 месяца назад +2

    As Bulls were worshipped in ancient Egypt I wonder if they were used extensively for heavy hauling of stones rather than humans pulling them. In our recent history heavy draught horses were used for heavy work such as ploughing and pulling heavy wagons. Apis Bulls could have been trained from an early age to haul stones and building blocks. Humans will always find a way to get out of heavy work or make it easier to do.

  • @keithfitzpatrick4139
    @keithfitzpatrick4139 2 года назад +34

    It seems greatly probable that the lower third was done with a large external ramp. It also seems highly probable that the grand gallery had a lifting function and that an internal spiral ramp was used to complete the upper portion.
    I look forward to more discoveries.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 2 года назад +2

      It's not like this was the first pyramid built, I'm sure the had developed multiple ways of delivering materials where they needed to be. Some of those would have worked great for smaller pyramids and then not scaled well or only covered the base of a larger pyramid, like a fixed ramp.
      I know the "spiral outside" method has a problem of hitting corners and having to turn large blocks, but what if the scaffolding earth was laid down in a circle rather than sticking closely to the perimeter of the current level? Then the blocks would still have to be turned, but they'd be turned _continuously,_ without any sudden changes of direction. The disadvantage is, of course, that you're not taking the shortest path, but that may have been an acceptable price to pay. A round mound will also be less prone to collapse, since it is already closer to a relaxed, slumped state.

    • @SyntheticSpy
      @SyntheticSpy Год назад

      @@mal2ksc I guess they could’ve also rotated them the correct direction on the ground, and then pulled them from different sides in one direction, switching at each corner

  • @yotday
    @yotday 2 года назад +85

    Any plans on doing a video on the 2nd largest Pyramid? Not many know that a lot of it's base is actually bedrock and a lot of the stones along the base are more megalithic than most of the stones that make up the Great Pyramid. The builders would have also had to have cut out and flatten out the bedrock for where it's base is located. The base they created is also fascinating since it is made up of megalithic blocks that were laid down and locked into place to create a surface for the base of the Pyramid.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +12

      Megalithic is a really dumb word, it just means big stonework.
      Please stop using it - it's stone, not magic and its use confuses the subject matter needlessly.

    • @yotday
      @yotday 2 года назад +52

      @@mnomadvfx Megaliths, derived from the Latin mega (large) and lith (stone).
      Only one bringing up magic is you.

    • @pii-chan8804
      @pii-chan8804 2 года назад +26

      I really don't get your disproval... the term is accurately used in this instance.
      Only children believe in magic, so why even bring it into a discussion 😆??

    • @DriftWizard750
      @DriftWizard750 2 года назад +5

      @@pii-chan8804 any civilization with sufficiently advanced technology, would be indistinguishable from magic. Please try harder next time!

    • @johnwalker1553
      @johnwalker1553 2 года назад +5

      @@pii-chan8804 Where in the text did you read about magic? Building foundations are one of the most critical elements of any project, even though they aren't visible when the home or structure is complete. On this Article, I refer you to a book by Mark Lehner.
      However, you should know what you are writing.
      Magic and Demonology in Ancient Egypt
      (Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East)
      Public Lecture by Rita Lucarelli
      War of the Magicians: Si-Osiris and the Nubian Sorcerer
      Papyrus Westcar (The King and the Magician)
      The Concept of Heka.
      I AM HEKA !
      To Become A Magician
      -- Wim van den Dungen

  • @jiraiyagoketsu5092
    @jiraiyagoketsu5092 Год назад +27

    A long time ago I was privileged to see a presentation by some university students who invented muon scanning. They actually scanned the Khafre pyramid, and found voids within it.

    • @saturno_boom3490
      @saturno_boom3490 Год назад

      Hi! Are you saying that also in the pyramid of Khafre they find some kind of void? 😯😯😯

    • @merlin9702
      @merlin9702 Год назад +1

      ​@@saturno_boom3490 No there were no voids found

  • @philmorton4590
    @philmorton4590 Год назад +2

    Why build a great step without a ladder? It was definitely a channel for pulleys, the void is obviously another such chamber. The internal spiral method has promise, but more likely it was in mirror image on both left and right sides for only the top half. This allows for 3 work crews, one left, one right, and one middle.
    This increase productivity by preventing blockages and traffic congestion. It also utilises the available personnel. The middle ramps became the galleries. And the side a way of count weights back and forth to leverage blocks into position.
    Furthermore internal ramps creates less waste and makes it safer for the workers, even cooling workers as the pass through shadows provided by such ramps and shafts. All of which can be back filled to prevent us seeing them, the outer limestone case added by a fourth crew for Further counter weights.

  • @midnightrider1100
    @midnightrider1100 2 года назад +22

    Enjoyed the video. Just shows that no matter how many resources we throw at this, we still don't know much more about how these things were built than we did 40 years ago when I first got interested in the topic.

    • @arturama8581
      @arturama8581 Год назад +1

      Maybe that has something to do with scientists keeping a closed mind to the obvious? The Egyptians didn't build the damn things! They were there long before the first Egyptian laid eyes on them.

    • @Arwiiss
      @Arwiiss Год назад

      Main reason for slow progress is politics. This theory could easily be proven/disproven if it was allowed to continue scanning and gathering more date to improve resolution. However current political will is against it and any1 who wants to do it has a long fight ahead.

    • @ozhinz
      @ozhinz Год назад +1

      @@arturama8581 was about to agree with you until you lost your goddamn mind

    • @arturama8581
      @arturama8581 Год назад

      @@ozhinz And what moment was that exactly?

    • @ozhinz
      @ozhinz Год назад

      @@arturama8581 “the egyptians didn’t build the damn things”

  • @Alpay-zu1yt
    @Alpay-zu1yt 2 года назад +48

    I have read a lot about Houdin's theory, and I can say that you summarized well and made good additions. I also thought it would be more convenient for the internal ramp to start where the external ramp ends. I have been waiting for the update on this theory, thanks a lot =)

    • @Yamaha.ha.ha.ha.
      @Yamaha.ha.ha.ha. 2 года назад +2

      This is very possible. But jean h went to Egypt years ago and went to another already destroyed pyramid and he along with his sponsor found an internal ramp in the destroyed pyramid. Its on RUclips. I wondered if the internal ramp started higher up but adding an internal ramp would so so easy to build as the pyramid went up I think it begun at the bottom. Then the external ramp could have been dismantled and carried up the internal ramp to the top. The internal ramp would have been very easy to space out and construct as the layers went up and would actually save stone and possibly time as the void would have gained construction time. I guess both make sence but just an external ramp to the top of the grand gallery would have made it harder to then dismantle the ramp and carry them stones up to the grand gallery. Unless the pulley was still being used right up to the end. Possible. Either way fascinating ideas to ponder.

    • @davidcorbett1713
      @davidcorbett1713 2 года назад +4

      Houdin's theory is the best theory to date. He shows wear and tear from top to bottom in the Grand Gallery where the GG was a Counterweight work area to lift the Kings Chamber stones. I do believe the internal ramp was started at nearly halfway up. The bottom 2/3rds was built from an outer step ramp built up a stones height at each completed level.

    • @byronsmithinc
      @byronsmithinc 2 года назад +4

      That would make no sense as the long ramps blocks were used to build the upper portion and needed to the ramp needed to be deconstructed in order to use those filler blocks which again lends it to the lower internal ramp as Kean Pierre describes

    • @JeanPierreHoudin
      @JeanPierreHoudin 2 года назад +2

      @@byronsmithinc That make sense🥸

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 2 года назад +2

      @@davidcorbett1713 I'm wondering if the potential "void space" detected is, in fact, a _second_ smaller counter-weight shaft, used to facilitate the top third of the structure after the top of the first shaft was sealed in.

  • @nikolai7314
    @nikolai7314 2 года назад +5

    Way to give a truly unbiased perspective on the pyramids, and the scientific politics in Egypt. 👏🏼

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Месяц назад +1

    2.6 million views in 1 year? Well done lad 🥂

  • @HAL9000.
    @HAL9000. 2 года назад +12

    Not a Zahi Hawass fan then, huh? 😂 Another great video. Working my way through them. I'm a fan of Bob Brier from years ago. Such an accessible way of learning.

  • @doronron7323
    @doronron7323 Год назад +12

    Another fascinating video, thank you. I admire your humility when considering all aspects of the pyramids and your evaluation of what is available to you. I'm quickly consuming these presentations and appreciate how much work is put into them. Please continue.

  • @seeerr5570
    @seeerr5570 Год назад +13

    Thanks for this. Houdin's theory always fascinated me, and it is so disappointing that the antiquities leadership, current and past, as well as the vast majority of the egyptoligy community has done everything it can to get in the way. At the end of the day, it should be about finally determining how the pyramid was discovered.

  • @TannerSwizel
    @TannerSwizel 9 месяцев назад +2

    Ramps aside, I think parbuckling would be a much easier way to move the large stones up the pyramid. Sleds make sense for delicate and asymetrical objects like statues, but rolling the stones themselves by ecasing the ends in some sort of wooden structure like how the Greeks move many of their temple stones would make more sense than sledding them or rolling them over loose timbers

  • @RobertBreckenridge13
    @RobertBreckenridge13 Год назад +26

    Hawas fancies himself the Walt Disney of Egyptology. He wants to be a larger than life character, charming, immortal, omniscient. He wants to be a modern pharaoh, basically.
    He also doesn't care who he has to trample or how many lies he has to tell to achieve it.

    • @urnicer1
      @urnicer1 Год назад +3

      Hawass is the worst. Cant believe he was never charge .

    • @DennyTolhurst-BARCH
      @DennyTolhurst-BARCH Год назад

      Well, he did everything in his power to come as close as he could to completely controlling ANY and EVERY research effort approached or done in/on ancient Egypt for a very long, very long time. We can be sure that 99% of what we all know of, when it comes to ancient egypt from the past 40 years or so, has been directly controlled and or limited by the controlling grip of Zawi Hawass indeed. Shameful legacy that Egypt is going to have to bear for many, many years to come.

  • @-Gumbo
    @-Gumbo 2 года назад +39

    I like Houdin's theory, it is the best so far I think, but what really annoyed me is when Bob didn't prepare properly to inspect that void. He should have taken an inspection camera or something. I also agree with you about the casing stones. It serves no purpose to finish them before transportation.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +3

      "but what really annoyed me is when Bob didn't prepare properly to inspect that void"
      To be fair it really isn't his area of expertise and he did the best he could given that fact.
      The problems extend far beyond that to the gatekeeping effort preventing a return to investigate with more equipment.
      "It serves no purpose to finish them before transportation"
      Of course it does - transportation weight.
      That being said I don't believe they transported it all the way from Tura that way, possibly from the base to the top of the ramp.

    • @lubumbashi6666
      @lubumbashi6666 2 года назад +3

      Considering the difficulty and sensitivity obtaining permission, it might have been prohibited. If Bob suddenly whipped out a fancy piece of equipment the Egyptian handlers could have stopped the filming.

    • @JeanPierreHoudin
      @JeanPierreHoudin 2 года назад +19

      Bob was not supposed to inspect the cavity behind the notch...He stumble on it when he went up there...Big surprise for him...
      As for me, the Secretary General of Antiquities prohibed me to climb with Bob...Too afraid that I could discover something...
      By the way, this cavity was known since the 16th Century and I've many ancient text from the following Centuries which are about it.
      It disappeared from the "news" in late 19th Century...and was brought back to life by Bob and I in 2008.

    • @dollyhadbraces9361
      @dollyhadbraces9361 2 года назад +2

      @@JeanPierreHoudin i respect you

    • @johanzuidema353
      @johanzuidema353 2 года назад +3

      @@JeanPierreHoudin Isnt the issue more that u couldnt/wouldnt pay Hawas ? (In my experience money turns an Middle-east no quick in a YESS!-Sorry if I insulted one.)

  • @Larry-n3w
    @Larry-n3w Год назад +1

    Well done! I really enjoy your detailed approach and great background work. I like your very honest appraisals and "Calling it like you see it" style. Outstanding content in all your work. Keep it up!

  • @claudio2874
    @claudio2874 2 года назад +4

    One of the best if not the best video I've seen about the construction of the pyramids. My sincere congratulations. I believe that we will only go further in this direction when we remove a "big block of the way": Zahi Hawass

  • @hawkeye1370
    @hawkeye1370 2 года назад +9

    I didn't realize the motivation for scan pyramids was driven by Jean-Pierre Houdin and his theories, interesting, so yes without him it probably never would have happened.

  • @ashleyking6743
    @ashleyking6743 2 года назад +12

    So glad I found your channel back at the very beginning. Your channel is growing pretty fast which is awesome to see. Keep up the great work mate. I’m really enjoying your vids.

  • @MW-jm8qb
    @MW-jm8qb 4 месяца назад +1

    This channel is underrated. Brilliant.

  • @hm5142
    @hm5142 2 года назад +4

    That the ancient Egyptians came up with this incredible approach is really remarkable. The fact that they could build the pyramids at all is really amazing.

    • @TalkingGIJoe
      @TalkingGIJoe 2 года назад

      it really isn't... this was world wide knowledge for a long time... it was lost to the earth cataclyism cycle. ruclips.net/video/Kywa1QsvwKc/видео.html

  • @delta99nine
    @delta99nine Год назад +29

    This was a great video. Filled with rare footage. I was pretty unaware that the scanned void was tied to the internal ramp guy

    • @mantid83
      @mantid83 Год назад +1

      Hawass has done way more harm than good.

    • @johnwhitehurst474
      @johnwhitehurst474 Год назад

      @@mantid83 Agreed he is a stumbling block period, always has been. He must announce any New discovery, others not really allowed. The ancient Egyptian's did not Build it. It is older than they say. The Pyramid math is today for us a big eye opener the ancient Egyptians did not know it. It was built by others thousands of years before.The math is to complicated for any Egyptian or man, 5000 years ago! They would not have that knowledge, to build it so mathematically perfect. REALLY THINK, to have the knowledge, build it, and the alinements clearly say Man in this life cycle did not build it. Common Sense needs to be used. It is a Library of sorts left for us before the earth was destroyed again, they wanted to leave a notice to watch the heavens. And a universal mathematical puzzle even today. No rewrite just common sense observations that explain it. Evidence is all around the earth of a pre civilizations more advanced than us today. Perfect stone blocks no seams you could get a hair in between, stones so perfectly cut we could not do it today! Common sense, yes common sense not some fantasy of how did they do it? Man is older then he thinks by thousands of years, We have evolved before, evidence is in plains site but people will not believe it. They have their tales and are sticking to it, who funds them, and then you start to see why?

  • @JPCollectables
    @JPCollectables 2 года назад +5

    Yes! Just found your channel and binge watched everything! Been hanging for the next upload.

  • @donwilliams3848
    @donwilliams3848 Год назад

    Phenomenal. I appreciate the frank discussion and courage required to put this together.

  • @cfluff6716
    @cfluff6716 2 года назад +25

    To me The shafts are just as impressive as any other construction… can you imagine cutting all the stones perfectly to align the shaft🤯 horizontally or vertically yeah but diagonally in a triangle shape😵‍💫 just insane

    • @TheGahta
      @TheGahta Год назад +2

      On site adjustments make this seem imoressive but not really insane

    • @nimblehorse
      @nimblehorse Год назад

      the stones are not cut but are synthetic, cast in shuttering, similar to cement.
      see: Geopolymer institute

    • @junicohen7918
      @junicohen7918 Год назад

      Lines be like that on these big jobs

  • @AFowkingPanda
    @AFowkingPanda 2 года назад +12

    When I found out Hawass is no longer director I jumped for joy but as you pointed out, institutional Egyptology still has more Hawass' standing in the way of actual investigations... Thank you so much for making a new video and I cant wait for your next!

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад

      Which means.... he's not alone in the way that he thinks, not even remotely.
      He's 75 so he will die or retire within a decade or 2, but the institutional mindset will remain, mark my words.
      This is what comes from treating Egyptian archaeology like a strip mining operation since Napoleon led his own expedition here before the English and various others started blasting their way through things.
      The western nations fostered this gatekeeping attitude in many Egyptians - and only continues to reinforce it by refusing to return countless ancient Egyptian artifacts.
      You can bet that if Houdin brokered a return of French kept ancient Egyptian relics to the Cairo Museum that he would go from being treated like 💩to being treated like 👁Ra himself overnight, and get his own little plaque on the new exhibits to boot.

    • @UnitSe7en
      @UnitSe7en 2 года назад

      I believe that Hawass himself is still standing in the way. As the video says, even after being relieved of position, he still took the authority upon himself (no doubt with blessings) to determine what is right.

  • @kiwiwelch3620
    @kiwiwelch3620 2 года назад +5

    Why should Zahi Hawass be the gate keeper, Egyptian or not this knowledge is owed to every human on earth because we all have a connection not just Egyptians.

  • @The.BansheeRose
    @The.BansheeRose 7 месяцев назад

    Beautifully explained, easy to understand and follow. Thank you for your time and efforts to create this video. Kudos

  • @dropnoelfield295
    @dropnoelfield295 Год назад +5

    Your interpretation of Houdin's work is reasonable. Much food for thought, especially the void being "another" pulley chamber. Very interesting and informative, thanks mate 👍👍😁🤷‍♂️

  • @n3d.studio
    @n3d.studio Год назад +35

    I didn't think an internal ramp needed to start at the bottom either when a single ramp was probably used too. Houdan's ideas are really intriguing and one day will get the credit he deserves. The grand gallery as a construction device is really eye-opening, the marks and those slots. the void, we'll never know because you'd have to deconstruct the pyramid and that won't happen but it likely was used in the construction. glad you covered this documentary and construction theory.

    • @youtubecomments5951
      @youtubecomments5951 Год назад

      Imo. Anything they find out now is all thanks to houdan his is the one who got the idea to solve it. Only to be cut off with someone with more power and has the ability to get permission to do work on the pyramid. Scan pyramid will be know as scam pyramid for taking credit on others ideas.

    • @hawaiianprestigecars8493
      @hawaiianprestigecars8493 Год назад +3

      the internal ramp is very likely the key

    • @someoneout-there2165
      @someoneout-there2165 Год назад

      They know they can't take it apart because they wouldn't be smart enough to put it back properly. People were obviously much more intelligent back then. 👍

    • @n3d.studio
      @n3d.studio 5 месяцев назад

      @@hawaiianprestigecars8493 I'm not sure it had to be internal ramp, but I do think it was a ramp along the outer edge starting from where the straight ramp ended. I think an internal ramp would have been overly complicated when you could have it on the outer edge but still within the footprint of the structure.

  • @karlkarlsson9126
    @karlkarlsson9126 2 года назад +78

    I think the Grand Gallery being used as an construction ramp is so cool, especially when they walked through it on the documentary, just standing there seeing all the markings for it, it felt very conclusive, it was used for something all right. It's a shame people behave like children when all people are trying to do is to just figure out how something were built.

    • @franciscorompana2985
      @franciscorompana2985 2 года назад +8

      Hawass wanted to appear on TV, that's all. 📺

    • @LBCAndrew
      @LBCAndrew 2 года назад +8

      The slope of the grand gallery is about 26 degrees. I'd love for someone to demonstrate using sleds and pulleys, the moving of an 80 ton block of granite up such a steep grade with manpower.

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 2 года назад +17

      @@LBCAndrew Counter-weights an trolleys.

    • @gjh42
      @gjh42 2 года назад +9

      I believe the idea is that the Grand Gallery is a path for counterweights, not that the big blocks were pulled up in it.

    • @greg1161
      @greg1161 2 года назад +4

      @@gjh42 , same group(s) can reset counter weight while first sled descends back for another larger block. Pretty freakin' clever. I believe the "mystery voids" were there for the functionality of the pyramid. Used to have a moat around it too. Perhaps that's why the main door is located above ground level. Perhaps the drummers/caretakers took boats over. Tesla designed his Colorado Springs wireless energy device after the great pyramid's setup.

  • @buddafingahz9057
    @buddafingahz9057 Месяц назад

    This is by far the the best theory I have seen so far regarding how the great pyramid was built. Much evidence to support the theory. It might not be perfect but I really believe he's on to something.

  • @ashrafulhaque8759
    @ashrafulhaque8759 Год назад +6

    Another incredibly educational and informative video.
    You are surely becoming one of the leading authority explaining Pyramids secret.

  • @smole321
    @smole321 Год назад +12

    You only need one ramp for the counter weight and the block lifted. If you have the counter weight long and thin it could fit in the groove under the raised section on the walls with the places for the wooden rollers to go. This way one block goes down underneath as the other raises up on top on the rollers. The stairs could have been carved after or placed after. The only missing part would be a larger roller for the rope connecting the counter weight and block being lifted to connect around

  • @Tr1Hard777
    @Tr1Hard777 Год назад +57

    This is actually a genius theory. The grand gallery might have been nothing but a channel to hold the counterweight and they could have had a ratchet and pully system. We for some reason give meaning to the grand gallery as a magical tomb or something.

    • @paulallen8109
      @paulallen8109 Год назад +7

      *Nobody* ever claimed the grand galley was a tomb. Because no sarcophagus or ornaments or anything remotely resembling a final resting place has ever been discovered there.

    • @kxkxkxkx
      @kxkxkxkx Год назад

      Plenty of people claimed it was the "entrance to the underworld" butt actually it's just a channel that was filled with water to float the blocks in ☝️

    • @Epiphany-818
      @Epiphany-818 Год назад +18

      ​@@kxkxkxkx float...
      Float the STONE blocks which are denser than water.. UPHILL???

  • @wktodd
    @wktodd Год назад +2

    YES! Building the internal ramp higher up saves a huge amount of work and means that the weight on the chamber would be reduced considerably.
    subscribed :-)

  • @silvijosokol9539
    @silvijosokol9539 2 года назад +6

    After all those pyramid chanell that I come across this one is amazing, pictures, videos, and narration are on the point, and really amazing, keep up the excellent work.

  • @ettepet9308
    @ettepet9308 2 года назад +13

    Ha! Two of my very favorite Egypt theorists combine. Thanks for your added constructive musings. And thanks to those ancient Egyptians for constructing this colossal mystery. :)

    • @dutyrover946
      @dutyrover946 2 года назад

      Ancient Egyptians found the pyramids they didn't build them. the pyramids and the sphynx have water erosion meaning they were there during a time of great flooding wich was around 12000-8000 BCE and the ancient Egyptians carved out an Egyptian head from a lions head. Nobody wants to hear this but it's true.

  • @flikersprigs5641
    @flikersprigs5641 2 года назад +4

    I found one video from your channel, a day later I'm going down an ancient egypt rabbit hole and designing a pyramid dungeon for dnd. your videos are great and you should keep them up

  • @davidbowerman6433
    @davidbowerman6433 Год назад +2

    And the video examination confirms a lot. Now they have to accept the scans. And hopefully soon, open the corridor they found and explore further

  • @wilhallman2890
    @wilhallman2890 Год назад +15

    Even so, the sheer magnitude of the pyramid, the amount of material, etc is just insane

    • @Bassalicious
      @Bassalicious 11 месяцев назад

      I think these construction and engineering possibilities make them all the more fascinating. "Hundreds of thousands of slaves" brute forcing it is impressive but less so than much fewer skilled workers making use of brilliant techniques with limited material quality and relatively low technology imo.

    • @JuisSekasi
      @JuisSekasi 3 месяца назад

      ​​​​​@@BassaliciousRome before its collapse, before Constantinople, was largest city by population in the world, with just over million people, yet somehow there was hundrets of thousand slaves in egypt... when romans "refound" egypt, the egyptians told stories if the romans visiting there, possibly thousands years before... yet by romans there was only 4-8 million people in whole of egypt at the time, bit over thousand years after the pyramids were built.
      Russia has bit over 540 000 soldiers in ukraine, and they have population possibly 36 times larger than egypt at roman times, with moscow alone having same population as whole egypt back then. USA that hosts 20% of all prisoners in the world has just 1.2 million prisoners , with US population being 333million.
      at the start if the civil war USA had 3.9million slaves, about 40% of all slaves ever in USA, and the whole us population was 31million, 7,7 times more than in egypt even in roman times.
      hundrets of thousands if slaves, even 100k slaves seems impossible, and prolly is.

  • @WolverineOfficial
    @WolverineOfficial Год назад +7

    i am really happy that i saw this video , the host of this video or the creator of this video actually have a better idea then most of the scientists itself and that makes me feel really good about the information provided , thank you soo much for this beautiful information provided by you and thank you for making this video ♥

  • @jordanwilson2470
    @jordanwilson2470 Год назад +20

    Zahi Hawas, thinks he is the Egyptian version of Indians Jones!! That portrait of him with the “Indi Hat” is just precious.😂

    • @evarichieangelo86
      @evarichieangelo86 4 месяца назад

      😂

    • @bastadimasta
      @bastadimasta 2 месяца назад +1

      Wrong. Zahi Hawas thinks George Lucas created the Indiana Jones character after Hawas himself.

  • @brahmburgers
    @brahmburgers Месяц назад

    Thanks for the well-narrated video. The graphics are also top notch.

  • @Incandescentiron
    @Incandescentiron 2 года назад +4

    I was looking for an update on this story less than a month ago. Thank you so much for posting!

  • @tristambre632
    @tristambre632 2 года назад +5

    Matt from Ancient Architects presented Houdin's work on his channel a while ago, but you're presenting so much more from Jean-Pierre's background, which makes his works even more valuable than I thought

  • @TheForce_Productions
    @TheForce_Productions Год назад +80

    I'm starting to accept the idea that we'll never get to know certainly how these wonderful masterpieces were built.

    • @Hansen710
      @Hansen710 Год назад +24

      they used the force, you of all people should know

    • @Qwepzy
      @Qwepzy Год назад +6

      Watch the videos on it being found by Ancient Egyptians years after. It was used as an Eectrical hub given everything in those videos is great insight.

    • @Dorsidwarf
      @Dorsidwarf Год назад +45

      @@Qwepzy good grief, you ancient aliens people really do descend like the plauge of locusts onto anything egyptology dont they

    • @Qwepzy
      @Qwepzy Год назад +1

      @@Dorsidwarf And you with your BS religious beliefs are just all made up rubbish

    • @nathanrykers7588
      @nathanrykers7588 Год назад +1

      I think one day we will know , maybe not in our life time but it would be cool to know before I die

  • @geoffreykeane4072
    @geoffreykeane4072 9 месяцев назад +3

    I concur with the view on Sarah Parcak. She was a real darling of National Geographic about 10 years ago. I remember seeing one of her documentaries on something she had "discovered" from a satellite, and I was waiting for the bit where they check it out with a dig - but no such thing and the credits rolled.
    No problem with her identifying possible targets - but summarily declaring "discovery" before any site inspection is ridiculous.

    • @johnsolo123456
      @johnsolo123456 3 месяца назад

      Shouldn’t she be laughed out oh the community? It’s clear her ego clouds her professionalism to the point of travesty.