Ancient Ice-Making Machines Found In Persian Desert, The Yakhchāl

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Ancient Desert “FREEZER” Invented Around 400 bc In Persia, The Yakhchāl
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @LeafofLifeWorld
    @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад +12

    Subscribe www.youtube.com/@LeafofLifeMusicOfficial
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  • @mrferrer9485
    @mrferrer9485 2 года назад +1784

    I'm from Iran and I've seen the structure of yakhchals used in "Zoorkhaneh"(ancient gym). This kind of structure helped ancient body builders not to sweat.
    That kind of ancient gyms go back to more than 1000 years ago. They also had one or a few musicians called "Morshed" who perfomed music during exercises and sometimes gave them peptalks and words of wisdom which is amazing. In addition to body building, they also practiced wrestling in zoorkhanehs.
    Edite: Thank you guys 🙌🏻🙏🏻

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +91

      Thats so interesting!

    • @BeReal918
      @BeReal918 2 года назад +67

      Other _activities_ and debaucheries were also performed in these structures 😉

    • @MK_ULTRA420
      @MK_ULTRA420 Год назад +55

      @@BeReal918 It's all Greek to me!

    • @googlesmostwantedfrog147
      @googlesmostwantedfrog147 Год назад +15

      @@MK_ULTRA420 You misspelled " projection "

    • @КЛИН-е2з
      @КЛИН-е2з Год назад +7

      Wow, they must have been walthy to keep a musician in the gym

  • @thetruth4116
    @thetruth4116 2 года назад +4032

    Just goes to show how innovative ancient peoples were. It annoys me to no end when people ascribe the construction of wonders like the pyramids to imaginary aliens rather than giving our hard working and intelligent ancestors proper credit!

    • @davidschmidt270
      @davidschmidt270 2 года назад +85

      Amen 👏👏👏👏👏✝️🛐🐧🌵

    • @beback_
      @beback_ 2 года назад

      The human brain has been constantly shrinking since 10000 years ago.

    • @RearrangeGinger
      @RearrangeGinger 2 года назад +117

      True even though we really don't know the history with the Egyptians and with more info on ufos lately I wouldn't be surprised if aliens helped.

    • @DungeonMiser
      @DungeonMiser 2 года назад

      It's only because people look at the complete imbeciles that inhabit these ancient places and don't understand that the people who built those wonders are long gone.

    • @thepotato405
      @thepotato405 Год назад +180

      Ancient people apparently can't build a triangle but they can create refrigeration thousands of years before electricity..

  • @joegran
    @joegran 9 месяцев назад +56

    it even looks like soft serve

  • @jamiefoyers2800
    @jamiefoyers2800 Год назад +414

    I love the shape of these ice stores. Pretty cool and purpose built...ancient builders knew what they were doing.

  • @beut6151
    @beut6151 3 года назад +515

    In Viet Nam, it’s called “giếng trời”. We saw the same structure from caves and found that it really helps reduce moisture, increase air flow for cooling. But we do not make a refrigerator out of this though, we apply to home architecture. It still a challenge. A vacant ground and hollow like vertical space is necessary for this type of home design, but there is not much space to do so. Some construction companies used this idea to attract homeowners, and it turned to be a complete failure (the lands were just too small)

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  3 года назад +39

      wow, thats very interesting thank you for the information

    • @nelsondog100
      @nelsondog100 Год назад +19

      Greetings from the Philippines! Thank you for informing us about this. I think it is very interesting and will research the topic more. Have a nice day.

    • @nbeizaie
      @nbeizaie Год назад +18

      there are many old houses with similar construct in Iran too! actually the whole Yazd city was made out of those kind of buildings because it is in a desert. Many of the homes goy ruined several years ago due to earthquake and some got demolished to make room for "modern" homes but there are sill many of those buildings left that people are actually living in/using.

    • @StrangersIteDomum
      @StrangersIteDomum Год назад +9

      Seems like the ground is too wet in Vietnam for this?

    • @TDQ_Gaming
      @TDQ_Gaming Год назад +12

      @@StrangersIteDomum Ya, the video didn't get into how evaporative cooling works but you need dry air flowing over water. Evaporating the water takes energy and cools the air.

  • @TheSunTheSea
    @TheSunTheSea Год назад +63

    I love how “yakchal” is the word used for the modern refrigerator today

  • @AnyoneCanSee
    @AnyoneCanSee 9 месяцев назад +39

    Interesting and very impressive. Especially in the desert heat.
    Stately homes in the UK had icehouses and they also have pointed roofs. They'd put ice in them in the winter and it would last the summer. They also built massive ones by the Thames and they would ship ice from Norway store it in them and then have ice deliveries around London. Restaurants would just get a big block of ice delivered into led-lined rooms and store food in it. This is how people refrigerated things before fridges were invented.
    If you Google "ice house found under London street" this is one from the 1700s discovered under a London street in 2018.

    • @scotthughes7440
      @scotthughes7440 4 месяца назад

      Desert heat? Deserts get cold too genius. That's why they take ice from a frozen pond..

    • @zaxmaxlax
      @zaxmaxlax 2 месяца назад

      In the 1800s there was a whole industry of harvesting and shipping Ice from norway/north america to the rest of the world. You could get a cold drink in brazil or egypt in the middle of summer.

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Год назад +145

    The engineering and architecture of these structures is amazing.

    • @queweamiraitantofeoculiao5826
      @queweamiraitantofeoculiao5826 Год назад

      yet westerners love to pretend ancient civilizations were savages.

    • @falilousarr2744
      @falilousarr2744 Год назад

      And without computer for simulation 😊

    • @shapursasan9019
      @shapursasan9019 Год назад +2

      The Sassanian Persians were amazing people--and then came Islam and ruined everything!

    • @KoroushRP
      @KoroushRP Год назад +5

      @@shapursasan9019well we had the islamic golden age which was carried on by Persian muslims.

    • @shapursasan9019
      @shapursasan9019 Год назад +1

      @@KoroushRP None of them were muslims. They were all Zoroastrians like their forefathers before them. They just had to pretend to be the same religion as their Arab slave-masters in order to be accepted in science and academia. Islam has been a dark plague upon Persian civilization from day one-as it has been to every other civilization it conquered and destroyed.

  • @ronliebermann
    @ronliebermann Год назад +278

    This isn’t a secret, evaporative coolers have been around for centuries.
    But there’s an interesting detail which isn’t mentioned in this video. Thousands of years ago, they used evaporative coolers exactly like this building to condense water out of the desert air. The coolness of the water in the pool is used to cool the upper bricks by thermal conductivity, so that more water condenses, and then drips down back into the pool, resulting in an endless cycle.
    It’s a self-powered condensation well.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад +24

      Thanks we did mention it here though 4:46 ruclips.net/video/kSEv2v55lQA/видео.html

    • @80xdplays88
      @80xdplays88 Год назад +11

      yeah thats why its called ancient Iran had these since atleast 400bc

    • @jacksonblack9408
      @jacksonblack9408 Год назад +19

      But I thought Dune was set in the future

    • @ronliebermann
      @ronliebermann Год назад

      @@jacksonblack9408 It was. But the vagrant Spice-Heads time-travelled into the past to water the Rodeo Worms.

    • @htomerif
      @htomerif Год назад +11

      I hope you understand that using an evaporative cooler to condense water is literally meaningless. You would condense, at most, exactly the same amount of water you would evaporate.

  • @j.tamburello4053
    @j.tamburello4053 Год назад +95

    they did it without refrigerants or polluting. I love it.

    • @monkeymanwasd1239
      @monkeymanwasd1239 5 месяцев назад +4

      Other countries had ice houses too this is just a big example with a large drainage system underground

    • @scotthughes7440
      @scotthughes7440 4 месяца назад +7

      they didn't freeze it themself genius...they took it from a frozen pond..My lord people are weird

    • @monkeymanwasd1239
      @monkeymanwasd1239 4 месяца назад +2

      @@scotthughes7440 dude we already know that and technically they did have ponds that they actively built or maintained for this purpose you're the one that's being weird here

    • @DonOmarRamiro
      @DonOmarRamiro 3 месяца назад +4

      yeah, and a lot of hard work. I just press a button and get ice.

    • @GaydolfShitler
      @GaydolfShitler 3 месяца назад

      Is it feasible for a population of over 7 billion people? Keep dreaming...

  • @Ramash440
    @Ramash440 Год назад +73

    I've heard of these ice storehouses before but I never realized the ice was made in situ. We all hear about how cold in can get in the desert during the night or in the shade but it's hard to realize how cold it can get. Honestly I thought they simply transported the ice from colder, high altitude regions.

    • @waterzap99
      @waterzap99 Год назад +10

      I used to live in a desert. I have pictures of myself standing in the middle of the day with a thick parka on in the winter. At night it would easily go below freezing. There wasnt enough moisture to make ice, but it would get extremely cold.

    • @teeanahera8949
      @teeanahera8949 Год назад +17

      The ones that kept ice all year round were from high altitude desert locations and were several degrees below 0ºc (freezing point). (Btw he said lemon juice was in the mortar but he got that mixed up with lime from which mortar is made.)

    • @Wolffur
      @Wolffur 11 месяцев назад

      I presume that they simply brought the water in and let it freeze. Bringing in more as needed.

    • @mansari7310
      @mansari7310 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@waterzap99 what desert you are talking about .Iran isn't like Arab countries. no body live in desert in Iran are like Grand Canyon or Utah desert as opposed to sand desert that exist in Arab countries .
      in the winters in Iran we go and ski and yes, on the snow not on the sand
      ruclips.net/video/M-9KuF2vWxc/видео.htmlsi=WgLoEsYiyUWRHOpE

    • @FlyGuy2000
      @FlyGuy2000 10 месяцев назад +1

      Look up cold sinks for an example of how they funneled the cold air into these mechanisms to make the ice.

  • @Cyrus52
    @Cyrus52 Год назад +105

    The word yakhchal [ یخچال ] literally means "ice pit".; the Persian word for refrigerator is also yakhchal.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад +1

      ​@AZ-zn9lgWhat the hell is wrong with you?

    • @CLXCL
      @CLXCL Год назад +24

      ​@A Z I think you are confusing Persian with Arabic. No surprise here coming from ignorant phool.

    • @alecempire1499
      @alecempire1499 Год назад +8

      @@CLXCL i agree. many are confusing it. but both languages are very different. espacelly in their melody

    • @Svettulf
      @Svettulf Год назад +13

      @AZ-zn9lg Why would you even type out a comment like this?

    • @Thefire591
      @Thefire591 Год назад +9

      @AZ-zn9lg???

  • @alibeyzae7445
    @alibeyzae7445 2 года назад +89

    fun fact we still call the refrigerator "yakhchal"

    • @sorousha.s9002
      @sorousha.s9002 Год назад +10

      @@juli_gotshal iranians

    • @NemoNoone-p3p
      @NemoNoone-p3p 2 месяца назад

      So what do you call a cooler?

    • @smarsh6340
      @smarsh6340 Месяц назад

      @@NemoNoone-p3pinterestingly the word Cooler is used for AC or air conditioning system in Iran and what we call ice chest or cooler in the US is “Yakhdan” if I’m not wrong, and the freezer is freezer 😆

  • @gseric4721
    @gseric4721 Год назад +92

    Would be awesome seeing the process of one of these things working and operating in current times. That would be extremely cool.

    • @janalee6358
      @janalee6358 Год назад +11

      Literally 🙃

    • @RedPillSurvival
      @RedPillSurvival Год назад +7

      Really. Would be nice to know the actual temperature inside vs outside.

    • @iMadrid11
      @iMadrid11 Год назад +2

      They should built a replica nearby to demonstrate how it works.

    • @Yosemite-George-61
      @Yosemite-George-61 9 месяцев назад

      better not... the energy tycoons would kill you...@@iMadrid11

    • @koriifaloju2051
      @koriifaloju2051 5 месяцев назад +1

      There is a few recently built around the world using such old architectural solutions
      The office complex in Harare Zimbabwe is a great example, fully passive cooling using thermal mass subfloor storage, natural biomimicry, conduction and convection
      Also in Mexico they (re)deploying similar techniques used long ago but recently revived, to keep buildings cool without a/c energy demands
      Humans (& nature) have always figured out how to adapt when necessary

  • @tomadams2319
    @tomadams2319 Год назад +31

    You shoud do one on "Bad Girs" wind catchers, which are ancient Iranian "swamp coolers", and also do one on Quanats, Iran's underground aquaducts, which bring fresh water from mountain slopes to desert valley towns and farmers fields.

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Год назад +7

      Handed down from the Sumerians. Sumerians invented all this "tech", everyone later merely improved on it. They kept ice, cooled water etc....cooled by evaporation using straw

    • @originsdecoded3508
      @originsdecoded3508 Год назад

      @@vondahartsock-oneil3343 meanwhile, Aztecs, mayans, Ancient south America looking at you asking, everybody?

  • @LesterMoore
    @LesterMoore Год назад +77

    While not Persian/Iranian, I still take pride as a human from our ancients who so capably demonstrated genius.
    This ice making factory demonstrates pure ingenuity.

    • @sigertjohansen
      @sigertjohansen Год назад +8

      Of course, Thinking the ancients were less intelligent or creative than the moderns is a common prejudice. They knew a lot of things we slowly rediscovered along the centuries, and some technics are lost forever.

    • @LesterMoore
      @LesterMoore Год назад +2

      @@sigertjohansen Your words and thoughts are so sadly true. I greatly anticipate every new archaeology discovery.

    • @rahulk2633
      @rahulk2633 5 месяцев назад +2

      Until islam came

  • @MaxwellBenson80
    @MaxwellBenson80 Год назад +24

    I had no clue that these structures existed. Thank you for sharing this with us!!

  • @yazdtourism
    @yazdtourism Год назад +85

    Ancient tech is awesome sometimes.
    Something they used to do in India. In the state of Rajasthan there is a desert and lack of rain. They used to build water tight terrace and attach pipes so that the rain that fell on the terrace can be stored in an underground tank. Then they also build rooms next to this tank which will be cooled...

  • @lyyliesther984
    @lyyliesther984 Год назад +11

    I like it when useful things actually look beautiful

  • @Alex-dw9im
    @Alex-dw9im Год назад +233

    I am 70 and remember using Ice from Yakgchal before refrigerador came to our life in Tehran, some year water could freeze and fill the yakhchal, some year not, so They were bringing ice from the mountain. Afer refrigerator came, these yakhchal were converted to zoorkhaneh for traditional bodybuilding before gym came to our life. another genius design in Iran was cool water reservoir, thousands were built in deserts for travelers totally self maintained. and Qanat, amazing. Iran was amazing country till islamic regime came and destroyed iranian culture.

    • @Natty183
      @Natty183 Год назад

      The predator that is my "government" had to destroy your beautiful country for the centralized control of the world's resources. They were busy sequestering resources and tech and now they will pretend that 80 years of sequestered tech is "alien." Don't worry though, the predator turned on those that created it, too. These idiots in this country still don't know what they've funded and abided. Try to tell them, lol... doesn't work, they only hear what their masters tell them. You knew their original power, they've gotten a bit more advanced and are basically their own civilization now and Americans think they work for us. 🤣 💔

    • @alvarorubiodomech8327
      @alvarorubiodomech8327 Год назад +13

      Still a lot of Iranians mad at the Arabs for their invasion. Also, the Mongols, The Middle East have jet to recover from the mongol's destruction.

    • @JS-jh4cy
      @JS-jh4cy Год назад +1

      How or what where the design characteristics of these resovairs

    • @lol-fm4yp
      @lol-fm4yp Год назад +15

      islamic regimes were part of iranian culture for the last 812 years, at an age where the roman empire was still standing. free to you to deny it and cry, unless you are talking about THE islamic regime after the last revolution

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Год назад +4

      Sumerians did this first, and everyone later just improved on it.

  • @originsdecoded3508
    @originsdecoded3508 Год назад +13

    This can be used for more then just ice or preserving food, it can literally be used as a home with constant air cooled environment from the heat of the dessert by manipulating certain factors about the design.

  • @Marathayash8672
    @Marathayash8672 Год назад +82

    Ancient Persians were such a developed society ❤

    • @bostonbruinsfanboy
      @bostonbruinsfanboy Год назад +5

      Now 😔

    • @sweetLemonist
      @sweetLemonist Год назад +27

      My fave ancient people!
      Today's Iranians are also absolutely amazing. Very smart and hospitable people. I hope they can get rid of their oppressive government soon...

    • @occamraiser
      @occamraiser Год назад +1

      Mesopotamia DID do most things first - hardly a shock since that's where agriculture (and hence cities) started.
      The people who start first DO often win.

    • @Bakaaahsjflflakahhdkf
      @Bakaaahsjflflakahhdkf Год назад +2

      @Darin Stallings funny how you have to specify that there were no undeveloped areas😂😂

    • @husndymabjr6763
      @husndymabjr6763 Год назад +2

      @@bostonbruinsfanboy its call being sanction. when you steals every one natural resources. its easy to be a developed society. real smart come from using what you have around you to developed your country.
      Europe was the most backwards place before the Romans gave them ME and Asia stuff.

  • @jimmycricket7385
    @jimmycricket7385 2 года назад +12

    Very clever. The Persians / Iranians have always been clever.

  • @LisaG442
    @LisaG442 Год назад +71

    So they weren’t ice “making machines”, but clever structures to store ice in the heat. Many ppl’s did something similar. Digging pits in the ground and insulating with sawdust was common in North America before the first home refrigerator was invented. This was simply a cabinet you put an ice block in a top compartment and the coolness would sink down to the lower cabinet where your food was. My FIL was an ice delivery boy for this purpose. So not that long ago in our history.

    • @SlayerBG93
      @SlayerBG93 Год назад +12

      The ponds were designed in such a way that they could make make Ice with the air above freezing. At night if there are no clouds objects radiate heat into space. The ponds were filled with cool water at dusk so they would freeze open to the sky despite the air around being a few degrees above freezing. So in a very real way they were making ice. Just not under any conditions. Obviously measures were taken to make sure the water is a cool as possible prior to flooding the pond.

    • @olisk-jy9rz
      @olisk-jy9rz Год назад +12

      @@SlayerBG93 They were freezing with temperatures above freezing point? Absolute nonsense. As they explain in the video, the ice was brought from nearby mountain tops. Iran is colder than you think in some places. Or they made ice in the ponds when it was winter and freezing temperature outside.

    • @thierryfaquet7405
      @thierryfaquet7405 Год назад +5

      @@SlayerBG93 "radiation to the sky" means absolutely shit…

    • @SlayerBG93
      @SlayerBG93 Год назад +8

      @@thierryfaquet7405 Well how do I put this. There is scientific facts and then there is your opinion. I choose the former.

    • @thierryfaquet7405
      @thierryfaquet7405 Год назад

      @@SlayerBG93 yeah sure buddy, thermodynamic just launch a whole new "magic freezing" section.
      God the idiots in youtube comments are so pathetic. Don’t forget the earth is flat too…

  • @muhammad-bin-american
    @muhammad-bin-american Год назад +37

    No pollution. No greenhouse gasses. Just common sense. Remarkable!

    • @ksgraham3477
      @ksgraham3477 10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh, but the permitting process and zoning!

  • @NK-xw8ok
    @NK-xw8ok Год назад +3

    This is definitely one of the beautiful things that comes from having the ability to access internet! It’s amazing knowing that we have
    the ability to discover and Learn about such amazing things! Without having to travel to said places! Amazing !

  • @wgt7537
    @wgt7537 Год назад +3

    What a marvel of technology! Almost unbelievable!
    Lovely video essay mam, keep up the good work 😁👍

  • @TheNewMediaoftheDawn
    @TheNewMediaoftheDawn Год назад +7

    So cool, the genius of “primitive” civilizations, like us moderns could do that…. That is straight science and engineering right there🎉

  • @bold58
    @bold58 2 года назад +74

    It would make sense considering that in the 19 th century even in Europe and America they had ice houses some of which were simply layers of ice with layers of saw dust between them stored in a building with a large dug out area to keep the ice below ground level.

    • @riversedgegoatdairy297
      @riversedgegoatdairy297 Год назад +15

      Ice sheds are still used by the Mennonite community here in Ontario. I also recall my grandfather harvesting ice off of Lake Ontario each winter in the 1950s. My father was a kids and use to buy a block of ice for a nickle each week or 3 to 5 days. Add this block to the ice box cooler in every home.

    • @philip5940
      @philip5940 Год назад +10

      During gold rush times , ice was shipped by clipper ships from America to Australia. Winter in northern hemisphere is Summer in southern hemisphere.
      Both the Pacific and the Atlantic/Indian Ocean routes are feasible . Three to five weeks for the journey.

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Год назад +4

      I remember going to the ice house with my dad clear up til the 70s

    • @olisk-jy9rz
      @olisk-jy9rz Год назад +5

      The ones built in northern countries weren't simple layers of ice and saw dust. Most of those were buildings as big and complex as the ones in this video, but built underground or with just the roof poking up from the ground, which is ten times harder but much more effective.

    • @NadeemAhmed-nv2br
      @NadeemAhmed-nv2br Год назад

      @@olisk-jy9rz you do know the northern countries basically imported the ice by sawing it off as they had nothing as fancy as seen in the video above as they had no need for to invent something like above because they had naturally occurring guys

  • @Hey19834
    @Hey19834 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love the excellent engineering and foresight of the Persians!!! thanks for sharing

  • @jaybee1570
    @jaybee1570 Год назад +41

    It would be cool to see one still in operation today!

    • @wenmoonson
      @wenmoonson Год назад +15

      Icy what u did there.

    • @TheEyeOfHorus69
      @TheEyeOfHorus69 Год назад +5

      It is...if you freeze the video you will see and ice in the making.

  • @yosemitejam
    @yosemitejam 3 года назад +100

    We need these in Arizona!

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  3 года назад +11

      Agreed 👍

    • @idk9637
      @idk9637 3 года назад +9

      For what? We have freezers, refrigerators, and air conditioning...

    • @yosemitejam
      @yosemitejam 3 года назад +39

      @@idk9637,
      Is energy independence is not something you want to achieve, or even being more energy efficient?

    • @abuhajaar2533
      @abuhajaar2533 3 года назад +5

      @@yosemitejam If you have the property and water access then go for it but it's probably a full time job attending to it too, not to mention building it and maintaining it. Also, you should make sure the night weather in Arizona is cold enough for this to work.

    • @earthlingjohn
      @earthlingjohn 2 года назад

      @@idk9637
      Defeatist

  • @danielpaulson8838
    @danielpaulson8838 Год назад +12

    Real evidence of real human history. In global regions where there are lave tubes from old floes, ice forms naturally in those caves. There are a few low end tourist stops in Oregon and Idaho to stop and see, "The Ice Cave, Natures Desert wonder." In Bend, Oregon there is one about ten miles out of town. Pre-electricity, they used to cut huge blocks of ice, pack them in sawdust and transport them by wagon to town for refrigeration and ice.

  • @OpTiCu
    @OpTiCu 3 года назад +25

    They don’t collect ice from mountains and during winter, they freeze it at near by site by the big walls, night at dessert ante very cold , the construction is as that it keeps water as cool as possible, at lowest temp of the night they freeze and they store it before sunlight next day, they also keep foods and harvest flog that community village

    • @pussiboos21t
      @pussiboos21t 2 года назад +3

      it does say that in the video........

    • @Sayhoun
      @Sayhoun Год назад

      Its a historic fact that ice has been collected from mountains, which also makes sense when during day more than 40 degrees Celsius, while at night high up the mountains near or below freezing. Methods developed over time.

  • @JazminKing-g9v
    @JazminKing-g9v Год назад +6

    It would be cool to see one still in operation today!. Ancient Persians were such a developed society .

  • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
    @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Год назад +5

    ALSO, we still had "ice houses" in my town in the 70s. Same concept, only sawdust was used. No electric.

  • @dondouglass6415
    @dondouglass6415 Год назад +4

    I have no words.... Utterly amazing!!!

  • @doubleslit9513
    @doubleslit9513 Год назад +7

    Have any real world tests been performed to see these things in action in present day? Are they still in use at all?
    This is fascinating ! 🖖

  • @AkkashMalhotra
    @AkkashMalhotra 8 месяцев назад +2

    LOVE PERSIA , HISTORY & CULTURE ❤

  • @luongo7886
    @luongo7886 Год назад +13

    I have been an early admirer and lover of Persian History, culture and people for a long time. My hat is off to these fine wonderful people!

  • @Maryam-tt3wl
    @Maryam-tt3wl 5 месяцев назад +1

    i was in Yazd this Nowrouz and i visited this place! Breathtaking!

  • @EndlessResentment
    @EndlessResentment Год назад +4

    Even the wall that shelters the pit from the water is beautifully designed and decorated

  • @paulmaxwell8851
    @paulmaxwell8851 Год назад +1

    An amazing bit of engineering. And an impressive bit of construction too! Those folks really were a lot smarter than we give them credit for. This would work today!

  • @danityvanityinsanity
    @danityvanityinsanity Год назад +13

    Beautiful! Besides their simple and elegant passive design, I love how they are aesthetically pleasing to the eye! We can learn so much from the ancient people that existed all around the world!✨💖✨

    • @jaredsmith112
      @jaredsmith112 Год назад +1

      They could learn multitudes more from us

  • @michaelvandamme2694
    @michaelvandamme2694 Год назад +3

    I want to build one of those and use it as my house. I live in Phoenix Arizona where summer temperatures frequently top 110°f and has a record of 122°. That would be sweet to keep it cold and cheap

  • @princesschariclea
    @princesschariclea Год назад +3

    I saw in a series about Ancient China that they had ice. Couldn't believe it, but it's true then! Whoa what an invention. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @The_Real_Indiana_Joe
    @The_Real_Indiana_Joe Год назад +2

    Very interesting. I hadn't heard of these before. Great video!

  • @wmpetroff2307
    @wmpetroff2307 Год назад +2

    I always enjoy history from the great Persian Empire.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 Год назад +1

    That's amazing. Thanks for researching this for us. Very cool.

  • @smartduck904
    @smartduck904 Год назад +5

    How big is your refrigerator?

    • @ellisburton8733
      @ellisburton8733 5 месяцев назад

      Definitely not thattt big, but not that beautiful either... 🤭

  • @Seekay-oe3qz
    @Seekay-oe3qz 10 месяцев назад +1

    I learnt something, that's bloody brilliant ! Necessity is the mother of all invention.

  • @simsarabin
    @simsarabin Год назад +3

    In Iran we still use the word Yakhchal (یخچال) for home fridges

  • @danak.9513
    @danak.9513 Год назад

    Finally an interesting side of RUclips, thank you for your videos

  • @willemvanlent6955
    @willemvanlent6955 Год назад +11

    FANTASTIC, WE SHOULD USE TECHNICS LIKE THESE AGAIN!!!❤

    • @notapplicable430
      @notapplicable430 Год назад

      Slave labor was required to carry the ice. Electricity and refrigeration prevent the enslavement of others. Why work harder when we can work smarter.

    • @SilverSergeant
      @SilverSergeant Год назад +1

      LOL!!!! Ridiculous.

    • @vondahartsock-oneil3343
      @vondahartsock-oneil3343 Год назад +2

      We did up til the 70s. We had an "ice house" in my town next to the rail station. Same concept except the packed the ice in sawdust. Kept in a building, dugout in the bottom.

    • @guyincognito1406
      @guyincognito1406 Год назад +1

      We do. Conductors and insulators. It’s not about electricity it’s about energy. Learn thermodynamics.
      You bring enough solid mass of cold to overpower the poor conductive properties of air while sitting in a dug out pit avoiding contact with conductive surfaces, materials science is ancient and ever important to date.
      Air conditioners or refrigerators use every bit of the same “technique” it’s not gone. Just advanced to where we can use energy a lot more freely with devices to directly move what energy we want where.

  • @GaryMcKinnonUFO
    @GaryMcKinnonUFO Год назад +1

    Cool :) Liked and subbed.

  • @friedrichvolkmann
    @friedrichvolkmann Год назад +7

    Same principle as the ice cellars (Eiskeller) we had in Austria. If find it interesting how peoples all over the world (see also @beut6151's comment) developed the same techniques independently, like convergent evolution.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Год назад

      Except the Incas and Aztecs.

  • @flutsjah
    @flutsjah Год назад +9

    Interesting that nowadays we have so many educated people but i doubt many of them (including myself) would be able to come up with this idea. Shows you not to underestimate the knowledge of our ancestors.

    • @ShamanJeeves
      @ShamanJeeves Год назад +1

      While I agree with your point about not underestimating the ancients, I think you're actually underestimating us modern folk. Bear in mind that necessity is the mother of invention; most educated people aren't spending their time trying to figure out how to make ice in the desert because we have ways of doing it. I'd be willing to bet that were the electrical grid to go down worldwide, a lot of these sort of ancient innovations would be rediscovered, likely independently and in separate areas, much as they were in the past.

  • @mattycakes1161
    @mattycakes1161 Год назад +6

    Ancient peoples were very creative and worked with what they had, just like we do today. I'm willing to bet these types of innovations go back a lot further than we'd believe.

  • @jul1440
    @jul1440 Год назад +7

    Before anyone thinks of building one (lol) he failed to mention that they only work because the are connected to an underground water tunnel called a _qanat_ that bring water from distant mountain outwashes to farms and cools the _yakchāl_ using evaporative cooling. Without a _qanat,_ the storage of ice year around in a desert _yakchāl_ is not possible.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  Год назад +1

      They can be made with or without a qanat, the trick is the ancient ac system they use to keep it cool, which we will explain further in this sundays new video, stay tuned

    • @maytee672
      @maytee672 Год назад

      Yakhchal is not related to qhanot. They are dfferent structures. The water to make the ice during cold winter nights could have come from a creek, well or ghanot and yakhchal was designed to preserve it for long warm momths ahead.

    • @jul1440
      @jul1440 Год назад

      @@maytee672 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qanat#Applications_of_qanats

  • @drgeoffangel5422
    @drgeoffangel5422 Год назад +4

    To cool anything, you need to extract heat from that object, and providing that you continue to extract heat from the object at the same rate, or a greater rate than the object is being heated by the ambient heating conditions, then slowly the temperature of the object will fall. This is basic physics. Thus to cool water held in a vessel, whilst the outside ambient temperature is very hot ie 40 degrees Celsius, is a challenge, but not impossible. Bedouin tribes cool water down in large clay vessels, that are being blown across by the warm desert winds. The clay vessels " weep" and the moisture on the outside of the vessel is subject to natural evaporation by convective air currents. The evaporation of the water on the vessel walls, cools the walls of the vessel, which then by conduction through the wall of the vessel, cools the water therein. The process continues and the water within the vessel, again, providing that the vessel does not gain heat from the surroundings at a greater rate than the coolth being extracted, will continue to cool down. Evaporation can lower the temperature of water by 10 degrees Celsius. If the water within the clay vessel, is continually cooled down, it could reach 2 to 3 degree Celsius, however , I am not aware of this cooling mechanism being able to freeze water! To cool the water to 0 degrees Celsius, demands a huge amount of energy extracted from the water, which is not provided by the evaporation cooling process alone. The Bedouin tribes know what they are doing! Chilled water in the middle of a flaming hot desert! My hat off to them!

    • @0ooTheMAXXoo0
      @0ooTheMAXXoo0 Год назад

      You can see ice, frost, on plants when the air temperature is above freezing. Heat is lost, radiated to the cold of space. In the desert they would make shallow ponds with walls around so the radiation lost to space was greater than how much the ambient air flow would heat it and so be able to create ice in the desert night when temperatures were in the mid forties.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 3 месяца назад

    Very interesting. Thank you.

  • @BeReal918
    @BeReal918 2 года назад +7

    Guys 2000 years ago : Hey baby, you wanna come over and chill?
    Girl: It's too hot.
    Guy: I know a spot!!

  • @JS-jh4cy
    @JS-jh4cy Год назад +1

    Been looking for this the 2nd time in two years and finally RUclips algorithm finally finds this... After two years of searching on the topic

  • @paulaldo9413
    @paulaldo9413 Год назад +3

    Modern thermodynamics and fluid dynamics hadn't even discovered yet, and these people already knew what they were doing. that's beyond amazing.

  • @Lppt87
    @Lppt87 3 месяца назад

    Persian people were amazing. What a treasure, never allow it to get lost please.

  • @shafiqshah3
    @shafiqshah3 Год назад +3

    In Afghanistan we still have these! In fact most houses are built around these. And we also call freezers or refrigerators yakhchal

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад +1

      Same as us Iranians. Allthough, these ancient yakhchals aren't used much anymore, since everyone has a refrigerator these days.
      We have much in common!

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад

      Same as us Iranians. Allthough, these ancient yakhchals aren't used much anymore, since everyone has a refrigerator these days.
      We have much in common!

  • @alanschuetz9552
    @alanschuetz9552 8 месяцев назад

    I’ve never heard of this before. Thanks for sharing!

  • @TIGERZY2K
    @TIGERZY2K 2 года назад +5

    Reviving of the ancient Persian giant cooling towers technology called Yakchals deserves to be revived in the 21st century ASAP for fighting the menace of global warming.

    • @audigit
      @audigit 2 года назад

      This would be a great experience!

  • @mariharrik5987
    @mariharrik5987 Год назад +2

    I so admire my ancient ansestors so innovative

  • @johnpluta1768
    @johnpluta1768 2 года назад +5

    To think that these structures have been recorded in the history of Iran. Some of them being around today is proof of it

  • @facitenonvictimarum-2245
    @facitenonvictimarum-2245 10 месяцев назад +1

    Not a freezer or an ice maker, just a place to store ice from the winter as long as possible into the summer. Many cultures stored winter ice for later use.

  • @beberodriguez2358
    @beberodriguez2358 3 года назад +9

    Wonderful documentary ... I learned much Salud ✨✨✨

  • @sbdiaries
    @sbdiaries Год назад +1

    Very impressive design 👏 and thought of the engineers and builders of long ago .
    Put such to same when you think about it.
    Greetings from England 🇬🇧 Simon and Beth ❤🙋♥️

  • @alexcarter8807
    @alexcarter8807 Год назад +12

    this is amazing. I like to think of what "modern" things that, say, the ancient Egyptians could have had and the list is surprisingly long. And includes ice, apparently. A stunning example of this is that they could have had the phonograph. The original phonograph is stone-simple and considering ancient people invented electroplating, it's not too far a leap at all to imagine the phonograph being a 1000's of years old technology.

    • @customsongmaker
      @customsongmaker Год назад +2

      The ancient Egyptians of the Old Kingdom didn't have the wheel, so they couldn't have had a lathe to make a phonograph record.

  • @NO1jkpg
    @NO1jkpg Год назад

    Ty for this video, this was a question i wondering for a very long time.

  • @GRcorolla-bt3mn
    @GRcorolla-bt3mn 2 года назад +15

    Hide this, because Indians will claim that they made it. Saying it as an Indian.

  • @markvisconti4507
    @markvisconti4507 Год назад +5

    Absolutely amazing. There are several english castles/estate houses that added these designs for ice storage "houses" in the 1800s. Best I've seen are in Warwick.

  • @dmgcaster904
    @dmgcaster904 Год назад +2

    People were just as smart(perhaps smarter) as they are today. They didn't sit around waiting for high technology to save them. They needed ice preserved, they invented a building to do exactly what they wanted. Never underestimate human potential.

  • @JamesMarcosChocolate
    @JamesMarcosChocolate Год назад +3

    These would be great places to be during the heat waves and heat domes happening now. Also using them to condense water out of the desert air is a great idea

    • @zezegambles
      @zezegambles Год назад

      you realize when these were built it wasn’t a desert it was a lush rainforest

  • @d-obvious
    @d-obvious Год назад +2

    Excellent content! thank you

  • @JS-jh4cy
    @JS-jh4cy Год назад +3

    Do you have any information and drawings on the ancient sun and air conditioning towers used in the upper class homes of the ancient near East

  • @mattsmith1126
    @mattsmith1126 Год назад +1

    These structures helped cool the building. They did not get cold enough to produce ice. Not even close.

  • @prxnceyxng9002
    @prxnceyxng9002 2 года назад +32

    For anyone who knows extensively about these things does the size play a role in how long the ice is kept

    • @davidschmidt270
      @davidschmidt270 2 года назад +1

      Would be nice to find out....I already want to try my hand at it

    • @archeofutura_4606
      @archeofutura_4606 2 года назад +7

      The size is what helps keep the cold air underground and force the hot air up and out of it. I think the depth under the ground is the most important thing tho. I looked it up one day and if the ice is layered between straw it loses only 20% of its mass to melting by the end of the summer (in places that can reach well over 40C). These also work best in places that experience large temperature swings, with a low temperature at/around freezing

    • @prxnceyxng9002
      @prxnceyxng9002 2 года назад +3

      @@archeofutura_4606 so if you wanted to replicate this thing you would need a decent amount of land and in a area like the Caribbean

    • @archeofutura_4606
      @archeofutura_4606 2 года назад +7

      @@prxnceyxng9002 oh this wouldn’t work at all in a place like the carribean. It’s far too hot year-round, and the temp underground isn’t cool enough either. Colder winter temperatures are the key

    • @prxnceyxng9002
      @prxnceyxng9002 2 года назад +2

      @@archeofutura_4606 thanks really appreciate it

  • @webstercat
    @webstercat Год назад

    Thanks for creating this.

  • @johnwang9914
    @johnwang9914 Год назад +6

    They also had an interesting way of producing ice right in the desert instead of bringing the ice in from the mountains. They would have a deep narrow north south long pit or rather canyon dug out such that the bottom wouldn't get any Sunlight for most of the day and they would have pools of water at the bottom which would freeze overnight due to the heat radiating to the sky even though they were in the middle of the desert. They also had an interesting way of building cold rooms through evaporation from an underground aquaduct passing under their houses. The aquaduct concept was discontinued in the modern era because it tended to spread diseases between the homes.
    Now outside the middle east, you had ancient Roman villas which would have chimneys painted black so solar heat would create an updraft in the chimneys through the day and they would have clay pipes with drainage holes drilled into them buried underground so the outside air being sucked into the house through the pioes to make up for the updraft would first pass underground at a depth which would cool the air. Further afield the ancient civilization in India would have terracotta vases where they would put dry bushes or straw and then they would put water in the vase so that the wind blowing past the bushes would evaporate the water drawn up by capillary action to cool the air.
    There's a lot of fascinating ancient technology but it is clear that only the wealthy benefited from much of it and that's the main difference, more of our population benefits from modern technology then of the ancients from ancient technologies.

    • @apteryx7080
      @apteryx7080 Год назад +1

      This is fascinating, thank you for sharing this.

  • @PlanetJigobotTV
    @PlanetJigobotTV Год назад

    I always have wondered about ice in ancient times. This is awsome!

  • @schottschott6825
    @schottschott6825 Год назад +3

    I’ve seen ice formed in lava tubes in northern Arizona. The cave entrances full of ice. Yet not inside and the outside temperature was well above freezing. Like 60 degrees.
    I thought how is that ice forming in this 6 to 12 foot area lining the cave entrances.

  • @jandoerlidoe3412
    @jandoerlidoe3412 Год назад +1

    The Amazing ingenuity of the ancients who where not primitive at all....

  • @johnmckenzie6252
    @johnmckenzie6252 Год назад +2

    The first picture , with the two towers , looks amazingly like the same structure that Mars Perseverance Rover filmed on Mars !

  • @HCLSalt
    @HCLSalt Год назад +1

    Why the click bait title? The reality of keeping ice frozen is impressive enough, no need to exaggerate it into “making” ice.

  • @israelpacheco7670
    @israelpacheco7670 2 года назад +11

    Very interesting! Awesome learning about other cultures!

  • @peacefulscrimp5183
    @peacefulscrimp5183 4 месяца назад

    Great video 👍

  • @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99
    @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99 Год назад +7

    I've seen this sort of thing around country parks in the UK, usually on the sites of old manor houses, with lakes that froze in winter. Usually the ice wasn't consumed, but used to keep other foods, such as desserts, cool.

    • @cheesybellend6842
      @cheesybellend6842 Год назад +1

      Really I live in Yorkshire we’re there is plenty of manor houses and never seen one of these ?

    • @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99
      @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99 Год назад

      @@cheesybellend6842 I saw one in Lydiard Park. Google "Lydiard Park Ice House".
      Lydiard Park was the grounds of a manor house and was used for royal game, in particular deer. Henry III gave a license for it to be made an official royal deer park in 1259 and it was used for that purpose until 17th century. It was still owned by the same noble family until the 20th century.
      It had a tour around the manor house, and they explained the use of ice from the ice house.

  • @joebidet2050
    @joebidet2050 Год назад +1

    Thank you
    Merci

  • @MrHunterseeker
    @MrHunterseeker 2 года назад +16

    Wonder if these were what they were trying to build the ancient pyramids for? They were building big ones for big communities. Would explain why they found bulls in the giant stone boxes in the pyramids. Preservation, instead of tombs (which many do not believe is what the pyramids were. ) Would explain also the water in the bottom of the lowest areas of the pyramids. Would also explain the "Wells" in Peru that are round, circular wells with steps leading down to the underground rivers. If there is a water source and it's cold enough it could keep your ice frozen year round.

    • @LeafofLifeWorld
      @LeafofLifeWorld  2 года назад +2

      Thats very interesting thank u!

    • @edmis90
      @edmis90 2 года назад +3

      No, pyramids didn't have any opening at the top.
      At the very top of the pyramid would have sat a capstone, known as a pyramidion, that may have been covered in gold.

    • @szaki
      @szaki 2 года назад +2

      I heard this theory before, that pyramids were used for storing food, grain and keep it cool in the hot desert.

    • @niagarawarrior9623
      @niagarawarrior9623 Год назад +4

      I've read a fair bit about the great pyramids and they always get more interesting. From a material sciences point of view its a pretty fascinating achievement, even if their purpose isn't 100% known.
      there is no conclusive evidence to support the discovery, but its speculated the pyramids could have created a fair bit of 'free' electricity using its weight alone...
      The inner chambers and shafts leading upwards are mostly made from granite, which has piezoelectric properties when under extreme pressure (because of the quartz content) ...
      +5 million tonnes of limestone on top of granite would, in theory, compress the granite sufficiently to make it generate an electrical current and release electrons.
      The capstone, being coated in a mixture of gold and electrum would have been an excellent conductor to channel these rogue electrons.
      the end result (in theory) ... it could either attract lightening strikes, possibly internally in recently discovered and seemingly pointless vertical shafts, or output enough electricity to charge large batteries - that did not exist.
      all speculation of course, but its fascinating how more and more discoveries are made within the pyramids with every passing year.
      With the 'recent' advancement in muon topography, a lot of interesting and previously unknown shafts and chambers have been discovered within.

  • @fullcircle4723
    @fullcircle4723 Год назад

    This is new to me. Thanks for the video.

  • @davidb2206
    @davidb2206 Год назад +4

    Transporting lake ice along the coast by ship was a very profitable industry in the U.S. until the late 1800's when industrial ice-making (refrigeration) was invented, with huge ammonia pipes in a floor. It's a fascinating story.

  • @JenniferMeachamIsHere
    @JenniferMeachamIsHere Год назад

    Loving this desert-cooling "hack"!

  • @timp1293
    @timp1293 6 месяцев назад +10

    It’s ice preserving, not ice making. It’s impressive as an ancient technology but there’s a big difference between preserving and making ice.

    • @lady_leaf_in_the_wind
      @lady_leaf_in_the_wind 2 месяца назад

      This only shows that you don’t need to have some ice industry or electricity to create ice. Some nature is all you need. God provides.

    • @ivantzonevski9283
      @ivantzonevski9283 Месяц назад

      they did make it, from the frozen water next to the building in winter. did you watch ? they kept the sheet of water thin enough to freeze, which wouldnt if it was deeper

    • @rw4614
      @rw4614 Месяц назад

      It’s being made because there’s an intervention process. A wall being built to protect the water from heat in the day. The water then freezing at night being collected. Without the intervention the ice would not have formed. It’s being made.