@mileshamblen9982 If you listened to the introduction, he said, himself, that he was nervous and we could probably tell. My comment was reassuring him that there was no need to be nervous because he killed it; in an effort to boost his confidence. I'm a musician who plays live quite often and I'm here to tell you, it CAN be controlled... By being confident.
I hope the audience appreciates the tremendous effort that has gone into compiling the raw evidence that enables a scientific approach to connecting the timeline dots as you so eloquently put before them. Mainstream archeology must take your work seriously and explore more of the depths of the Giza Plateau and other sites with ground penetrating (LiDAR) scanning to find unspoiled evidence of highly advanced predynastic civilization.
Sat glued to the screen, simply amazing, and what little imagination is left is is based on solid foundational facts which you covered in stunning detail. Ben your presentation was extremely well done and how you kept the information flow going from your own recall was amazing in itself.
This is a really good introduction to the theory. I love that you classify the 'out of placeness' in ways that are easy to understand. You have amassed so much evidence that there is no doubt in my mind. There was an advanced civilisation in very ancient times. If only academics would take an unbiased look at the facts.
The hot preamp sounds good, Ben. Listen to the first Aretha Franklin albums... they loved overloading preamps back in the day! As always, thanks for making the world bigger and more fun.
An eye (and mind) opening presentation ; great work, sir! You're presenting mind-boggling evidence, asking the right questions without jumping to hasty conclusions ; that's the right thing to do.I dream of a video where Egyptologists would participate and debate those questions with you and Christopher Dunn, for instance. That'd be interesting, to say the least, but unfortunately, I highly doubt any of them will ever take the -chance- risk 😜
For those who use the, "then where are the tools" argument, go to any major construction site that's completed, and sift and dig through the dirt and debris. What you'll find are the common and cheap tools, like hammers, screwdrivers, chisels and pliers. What you'll never find are the powered tools that did the hardest work. That did the detailed work. That's how construction always works. And any archaeologist that doesn't know that should get into another line of work.
@corwinzelazney5312 But the point is that if these "powered tools" existed and were of the size and complexity implied by this theory then not only would you expect fragments of machines or machine parts to turn up somewhere in the archaeological record, you'd have an even greater expectation of finding remnants of the colossal industrial scale apparatus that would've necessarily existed to produce them in the first place. Therefore this objection isn't unreasonable.
Even if the construction site was in the middle of the City of London, enough time has passed for everything but stone to turn to dust. ( My guess is.. )
Hey Ben, just a small correction. Schist is not a “hard stone” this is actually why the Egyptian “Schist Disk” is extremely enigmatic, as carving something like that out of a delicate fragile stone like Schist (~4 on the mohs scale) would be extremely difficult! Love your work ben - been following your research since around 2020 and I am always fascinated by your insights!!
Between 3 and 7 on the mohs scale depending on the mineral composition - hard to tell which end of the scale the disk is on but if it was 7 that's as hard as Granite.
@ considering the disk was found broken into fragments, and then re assembled in modern era to be put on display at the mesuem, I’d imagine it’s not quite that high. It has been described by those who have studied it as fragile, thin and hard to work with. Almost like Shale, but a little tougher. And extremely thin in some areas. I am speaking mainly about the artifact, not just the stone and it’s varying properties.
@@brosettastone7520hardness has nothing to do with it broken apart. It's brittle no matter how hard it is and when very thin you could easily break it into pieces
I agree with the constant emphasis on the work being reductive. That the original material was even larger and heavier than the finished piece. I don't understand the nervousness. First, most of the people going to the conference wanted to hear your presentation. Second, you did it at the first Cosmic Summit and didn't seem at all nervous. One could argue that the first summit was actually more tense. It was the first and the controversy made it more fraught with tension. I guess it's old hat by now, but being able to handle vase fragments found in a pyramid before the vase measuring project was fascinating.
Always enjoyable and illuminating presentations Ben, thank you for your dedication and passion, which I share in large measure for all to see on my own channel... The mystery which to me is even larger than the question of how these ooparts were fashioned, is WHY are so many of them unfinished? Why are the inner Osireon walls only partially smoothed? Why was the obelisk at Aswan abandoned 70% of the way through? Why are the huge stones at Balbek still sitting in the quarry? Why is the box at Elephantine island uncompleted? Why are the lower courses of the Menkaure pyramid only partially leveled? Why is there a 'stuck box' in the Sarapeum passage? What event made craftsmen at so many ancient sites throw down their tools ( figuratively speaking, since the actual tools are nowhere to be found ) in the middle of their tasks and disappear? And for that matter, why are there no tools in the archaeological record that could have performed the work we see? Until we can formulate a thesis that combines/explains all of these questions and more, we will remain in the dark about what went on thousands of years ago at these sites.
Outstanding presentation Ben! You make a great case for pre-dynastic advanced tech thousands of years prior to the standard narrative. The conventional "Egyptologists" should be ashamed of their scientific negligence.
Your correct the mic was pretty hot there was a bit too much gain on the preamp which caused some saturation. Otherwise, it was another great presentation from you. I hope to make it to Cosmic Summit next year if I can. Bravo.
I was just watching one of your videos in which you are showing granite that is flaking/ falling apart, and wondered as to what causes it. Well, granite that has been submerged in salt water for some time, and then allowed to dry out will cause that. In granite, soluble salts cause sand disaggregation and superficial detachments affecting the stone surface. sulphates, especially gypsum, are responsible for the flaking and degradation of granite. It would seem to me that the granite that is flaking has been under salt water for some time, and then has been reintroduced to a dry climate. Love your videos. Keep up the good fight.
Idk whoever doesn't at least CONSIDER this theory is really close minded. How can you not? There's so much information and evidence that is suspicious at the least.
One of the best examples of inheritance made, which I've never heard you mention, is the Inca who told the Spanish invaders of that time that they did not build the great stone works themselves. They had found them and decided to rebuild what the ancients had left behind.
Thank you for update 👍🍀 great to see you. With weights and leverage a drill press is made. The early Egyptian defo had that tech. Hardnesses of drill bits and materials then are only issue's. Im sure they had diamond cutting tech, paste's etc as lube agents and maybe Corrosive agents too. Mostly.🖖
I really enjoy your videos, but I don't know of any videos you have done on the Kailasa Temple in India. It is one of the most incredible structures ever created.
keep on noticing things brother. i hope all our questions get answered, even if it isn't what we expect. classical archeology certainly has dickall to say about it
Need to add Summerian Cylinders to your lecture, made of hard stone materials with some of the smallest artwork ever carved...used for making clay impressions...Morgan Library has a good video about them 🤪
I just had an idea: what if the dynastic Egyptians tried to float a huge stone down the Nile, it sank the barge, and then the Nile was blocked because they couldn't get the stone out of the river. So they had to re-direct the river, and that could account for one of the times in history when the Nile changed course or otherwise moved from where it used to be.
A human cannot draw a perfect 90-degree angle by hand without the use of tools such as a protractor or a square. Human hand-drawing is inherently imprecise due to factors like muscle control, hand-eye coordination, and perceptual bias. Studies or experiments evaluating freehand drawing accuracy suggest the error rate typically falls within ±2 to ±5 degrees for most people, depending on the skill level of the individual. This is what I find most fascinating about these high precision objects.
How can it be possible, after all the studies and excavations, we still havent found the tools they utilized to cut these huge slabs and blocks even though the telltail signs are everywhere?
Metal is precious and easy to recycle. Conquerers come through, loot anything metal, and repurpose it however they wish. Which actually happened to me a couple of years ago, minus the conquering. I woke up one morning to a portion of my copper gutters stripped from my very old house. The odds the thief kept my gutters as gutters is essentially 0. They went to someone to melt them down, and sell them as scrap. Rinse and repeat that throughout all of history.
The data you've collected on the vases is monumental, it's rewriting history, I would love to get some similar data on some larger objects. Do you have the ability and intention to measure/scan any of these other things like the columns?
Thank you so much for this amazing video! I need some advice: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
If placed out in the weather. How long does it take for diffrent metal materials to rust into a pile of unrecognizable dust? Kind of important to know don't you think!!!! Iron. Steel. Damascus steel. Copper. Aluminum. Brass. Bronze. Wood. Diamond Quartz All rock types. Crumble to dust. To date things these kinds of studys must be done, and be carried out for many human lifetimes.
I am not a fan of this but rock softening would go a long way toward explaining pretty much most of the artifact evidence we find at VERY old sites around the world. Scoop marks are a real conundrum that could also be explained. I have NO idea how rock softening would be done and am not saying it IS the answer but as a theoretical exercise???
Versadoco has a video on stone softening, which is the only instance I've seen where someone presents a legit argument. Here on YT and worth checking out.
Sound tech and cameraman want sacking! Cameraman is using feckin autofocus and the sound man is clearly deaf! well done for swimming against the low ability tech tide Ben.
The fact that Ben can talk nonstop without notes or water is AMAZING!!
When you get to talking about something you’re really passionate for, you can do that
That’s what happens when you actually know what you’re talking about
The nerves were unwarranted; great talk, Ben!
Why would you criticize him for something outside of his control? The comment was unwarranted; awful remark Sean.
@mileshamblen9982
If you listened to the introduction, he said, himself, that he was nervous and we could probably tell. My comment was reassuring him that there was no need to be nervous because he killed it; in an effort to boost his confidence.
I'm a musician who plays live quite often and I'm here to tell you, it CAN be controlled... By being confident.
I've been searching for a good video to listen to while at work to finish the day today, and here he is, in his finest glory.
I hope the audience appreciates the tremendous effort that has gone into compiling the raw evidence that enables a scientific approach to connecting the timeline dots as you so eloquently put before them. Mainstream archeology must take your work seriously and explore more of the depths of the Giza Plateau and other sites with ground penetrating (LiDAR) scanning to find unspoiled evidence of highly advanced predynastic civilization.
Ben, thank you for your exceptional research and presentation! 👍
Hey man don't be nervous, you're a good dude and we enjoy the channel. Keep up the good work
Imagination is more important than knowledge. Uncharted X is a fountain of imagination! 😎👍
We love you! Thank you for the research
Sat glued to the screen, simply amazing, and what little imagination is left is is based on solid foundational facts which you covered in stunning detail. Ben your presentation was extremely well done and how you kept the information flow going from your own recall was amazing in itself.
Thanks for your hard work it will be a library for learning for youth for years
Awesome to see this live
Sweeet!!! Friday and new Uncharted X
AWESOME!
thank you for providing the evidence you always do.. you are actually proving what the holy book says with or without knowing it..
Awesome ~ thanks for
sharing here! 👍👍❤
This is a really good introduction to the theory. I love that you classify the 'out of placeness' in ways that are easy to understand. You have amassed so much evidence that there is no doubt in my mind. There was an advanced civilisation in very ancient times. If only academics would take an unbiased look at the facts.
Excellent presentation! Fascinating evidence of sophisticated technology!
I watched your presentation on the CS channel, but the added images and clips make it even more fascinating.
Brilliant presentation, you didn't seem that nervous mate, you bloody nailed it! Surely, common sense will prevail soon, love your work 🙏
🌹Great presentation 🌹
This is amazing. What a treat. Keep up the good work brother! 👏👏👏
Those vases are for me the smoking gun for advanced tooling. The maths do not lie.
37 minutes in, I wasin't going to watch this presentation. I'm loving it Ben! your did a good job mate.
Get it!!! Always love some me some new info from you!
Doctoral Thesis lvl presentation. Fantastic.
The hot preamp sounds good, Ben. Listen to the first Aretha Franklin albums... they loved overloading preamps back in the day! As always, thanks for making the world bigger and more fun.
Twitter is going to be fun today. Good thing I don’t have any plans. 🤙
An eye (and mind) opening presentation ; great work, sir! You're presenting mind-boggling evidence, asking the right questions without jumping to hasty conclusions ; that's the right thing to do.I dream of a video where Egyptologists would participate and debate those questions with you and Christopher Dunn, for instance. That'd be interesting, to say the least, but unfortunately, I highly doubt any of them will ever take the -chance- risk 😜
Nice work Ben. You are one of the few folks I trust to bring me the real history of this complex era
Gud vid 💯💥
thank god a new video XD
A really great presentation. So proud of what you are doing and that you are doing it so well. All very educational.
For those who use the, "then where are the tools" argument, go to any major construction site that's completed, and sift and dig through the dirt and debris. What you'll find are the common and cheap tools, like hammers, screwdrivers, chisels and pliers. What you'll never find are the powered tools that did the hardest work. That did the detailed work.
That's how construction always works. And any archaeologist that doesn't know that should get into another line of work.
They would’ve definitely been stolen by a Tweaker by now
Good comparison tho
@corwinzelazney5312 But the point is that if these "powered tools" existed and were of the size and complexity implied by this theory then not only would you expect fragments of machines or machine parts to turn up somewhere in the archaeological record, you'd have an even greater expectation of finding remnants of the colossal industrial scale apparatus that would've necessarily existed to produce them in the first place. Therefore this objection isn't unreasonable.
Okay, Einstein... where the hell do all the 13 mm sockets go then?
Even if the construction site was in the middle of the City of London, enough time has passed for everything but stone to turn to dust. ( My guess is.. )
Hey Ben, just a small correction. Schist is not a “hard stone” this is actually why the Egyptian “Schist Disk” is extremely enigmatic, as carving something like that out of a delicate fragile stone like Schist (~4 on the mohs scale) would be extremely difficult! Love your work ben - been following your research since around 2020 and I am always fascinated by your insights!!
Between 3 and 7 on the mohs scale depending on the mineral composition - hard to tell which end of the scale the disk is on but if it was 7 that's as hard as Granite.
@ considering the disk was found broken into fragments, and then re assembled in modern era to be put on display at the mesuem, I’d imagine it’s not quite that high. It has been described by those who have studied it as fragile, thin and hard to work with. Almost like Shale, but a little tougher. And extremely thin in some areas. I am speaking mainly about the artifact, not just the stone and it’s varying properties.
@@brosettastone7520hardness has nothing to do with it broken apart. It's brittle no matter how hard it is and when very thin you could easily break it into pieces
great speech ty Ben these tube drill spirals look like examples of berklin currents or electric, plasma
Great work Ben. Super organized and informative
I agree with the constant emphasis on the work being reductive. That the original material was even larger and heavier than the finished piece.
I don't understand the nervousness. First, most of the people going to the conference wanted to hear your presentation. Second, you did it at the first Cosmic Summit and didn't seem at all nervous. One could argue that the first summit was actually more tense. It was the first and the controversy made it more fraught with tension.
I guess it's old hat by now, but being able to handle vase fragments found in a pyramid before the vase measuring project was fascinating.
Great presintation ! Bravo
thanks for share
Always enjoyable and illuminating presentations Ben, thank you for your dedication and passion, which I share in large measure for all to see on my own channel...
The mystery which to me is even larger than the question of how these ooparts were fashioned, is WHY are so many of them unfinished? Why are the inner Osireon walls only partially smoothed? Why was the obelisk at Aswan abandoned 70% of the way through? Why are the huge stones at Balbek still sitting in the quarry? Why is the box at Elephantine island uncompleted? Why are the lower courses of the Menkaure pyramid only partially leveled? Why is there a 'stuck box' in the Sarapeum passage? What event made craftsmen at so many ancient sites throw down their tools ( figuratively speaking, since the actual tools are nowhere to be found ) in the middle of their tasks and disappear?
And for that matter, why are there no tools in the archaeological record that could have performed the work we see? Until we can formulate a thesis that combines/explains all of these questions and more, we will remain in the dark about what went on thousands of years ago at these sites.
All excellent questions!
Outstanding presentation Ben! You make a great case for pre-dynastic advanced tech thousands of years prior to the standard narrative. The conventional "Egyptologists" should be ashamed of their scientific negligence.
Your correct the mic was pretty hot there was a bit too much gain on the preamp which caused some saturation. Otherwise, it was another great presentation from you. I hope to make it to Cosmic Summit next year if I can. Bravo.
I was just watching one of your videos in which you are showing granite that is flaking/ falling apart, and wondered as to what causes it. Well, granite that has been submerged in salt water for some time, and then allowed to dry out will cause that. In granite, soluble salts cause sand disaggregation and superficial detachments affecting the stone surface. sulphates, especially gypsum, are responsible for the flaking and degradation of granite. It would seem to me that the granite that is flaking has been under salt water for some time, and then has been reintroduced to a dry climate. Love your videos. Keep up the good fight.
Idk whoever doesn't at least CONSIDER this theory is really close minded. How can you not? There's so much information and evidence that is suspicious at the least.
One of the best examples of inheritance made, which I've never heard you mention, is the Inca who told the Spanish invaders of that time that they did not build the great stone works themselves. They had found them and decided to rebuild what the ancients had left behind.
Thank you for update 👍🍀 great to see you.
With weights and leverage a drill press is made.
The early Egyptian defo had that tech.
Hardnesses of drill bits and materials then are only issue's.
Im sure they had diamond cutting tech, paste's etc as lube agents and maybe Corrosive agents too.
Mostly.🖖
I really enjoy your videos, but I don't know of any videos you have done on the Kailasa Temple in India. It is one of the most incredible structures ever created.
keep on noticing things brother. i hope all our questions get answered, even if it isn't what we expect. classical archeology certainly has dickall to say about it
0:29 Nerdrotic was there..nice
Way cool
Skilled masonry work indeed. That level of craftsmanship could build the pyramids themselves or the Tower of Babel.
Great presentation! Just in reference to the tube drill cores. Wouldn’t those cores be what they would use on lathe to make those vases?
Need to add Summerian Cylinders to your lecture, made of hard stone materials with some of the smallest artwork ever carved...used for making clay impressions...Morgan Library has a good video about them 🤪
Bad ass. Now I have something to do tonignt.
Have you tried using a quality hole saw to core soft, or even hardwood, to see if it cuts quickly enough to create a spiral groove?
I just had an idea: what if the dynastic Egyptians tried to float a huge stone down the Nile, it sank the barge, and then the Nile was blocked because they couldn't get the stone out of the river. So they had to re-direct the river, and that could account for one of the times in history when the Nile changed course or otherwise moved from where it used to be.
The sold stone plates from turkey need scanned they are amazing a stone frog I seen also amazing
A human cannot draw a perfect 90-degree angle by hand without the use of tools such as a protractor or a square. Human hand-drawing is inherently imprecise due to factors like muscle control, hand-eye coordination, and perceptual bias. Studies or experiments evaluating freehand drawing accuracy suggest the error rate typically falls within ±2 to ±5 degrees for most people, depending on the skill level of the individual. This is what I find most fascinating about these high precision objects.
Feel like Ben is doing more work and has more passion than academia
We gots to get into that unexplored chamber in the great pyramid.
"Sorry, but the real princess is in another pyramid." 😆
@Shin_Lona I feel out of the loop idk the reference -feels like a zelda situation but guessing
How can it be possible, after all the studies and excavations, we still havent found the tools they utilized to cut these huge slabs and blocks even though the telltail signs are everywhere?
Metal is precious and easy to recycle. Conquerers come through, loot anything metal, and repurpose it however they wish. Which actually happened to me a couple of years ago, minus the conquering. I woke up one morning to a portion of my copper gutters stripped from my very old house. The odds the thief kept my gutters as gutters is essentially 0. They went to someone to melt them down, and sell them as scrap. Rinse and repeat that throughout all of history.
If i ever get down that pyramid basement, ime smoking a joint.
The data you've collected on the vases is monumental, it's rewriting history, I would love to get some similar data on some larger objects.
Do you have the ability and intention to measure/scan any of these other things like the columns?
Thank you so much for this amazing video! I need some advice: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
I wonder if those vases that spin were ancient mixers.
If placed out in the weather.
How long does it take for diffrent metal materials to rust into a pile of unrecognizable dust?
Kind of important to know don't you think!!!!
Iron.
Steel.
Damascus steel.
Copper.
Aluminum.
Brass.
Bronze.
Wood.
Diamond
Quartz
All rock types. Crumble to dust.
To date things these kinds of studys must be done, and be carried out for many human lifetimes.
Oh, sanity. A video that captures my mine.
Ww3, elon sex robots, diddy, and this is what i want to watch on my saturday night
Can I ride my unicycle around egypt?
Ben got coke from snake bros
I am not a fan of this but rock softening would go a long way toward explaining pretty much most of the artifact evidence we find at VERY old sites around the world. Scoop marks are a real conundrum that could also be explained. I have NO idea how rock softening would be done and am not saying it IS the answer but as a theoretical exercise???
No sign that these stones were ever manipulated out of their original composition and reformed.
Versadoco has a video on stone softening, which is the only instance I've seen where someone presents a legit argument. Here on YT and worth checking out.
Vase not Vaize
Take a shot every time he mentions Johanna or whatever her name is.
In 100 years the Titanic will be gone. In 1000 years it will be subject of Ancient Aliens on The History Channel.
"Some kiiiiind of underwater alien base..."
Surely, there isn't enough copper to make the tools to make these statues...
blo roc
Sound tech and cameraman want sacking! Cameraman is using feckin autofocus and the sound man is clearly deaf! well done for swimming against the low ability tech tide Ben.
yo was that nerdrotic?
Such a silly little man😂.
Are you talking about yourself?