Exploring the Great Pyramid Mission & the future of Egyptology

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History for GRANITE

History for GRANITE

Күн бұрын

The history of scientific experiments conducted on the pyramids of Egypt is fraught with controversy. Fortunately, advancements in non-invasive technologies such as muography are allowing us to get a better understanding of the pyramids than ever before.
In 2017, the ScanPyramids mission shocked the world with the announcement of the ‘Big Void’ within the Great Pyramid of Giza. This empty space is enormous, nearly equal in size to the Grand Gallery and sits above it in relatively vertical alignment.
After this unprecedented discovery, the Exploring the Great Pyramid mission was launched to follow up on this discovery. Still in the planning stages, the EGP mission may allow a 3D visualization up to 100x greater detail than previous scans.
However, entrenched interests within Egyptology do not have a great track record of sharing fame and recognition with outsiders. Can the EGP mission overcome the doubt and adversity that previous missions have faced?
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0:00 Intro
1:11 EGP Mission planning
2:50 Improved scanning
4:35 Obstacles to overcome
5:43 History of pyramid scanning
10:24 ScanPyramids
13:07 Zahi Hawass & Mark Lehner's book
17:45 David Lightbody 'Questioning the Void'
19:33 Relieving Space?
21:49 Unprecedented discoveries
24:15 Opportunity for success

Пікірлер: 1 000
@thisguy555
@thisguy555 2 жыл бұрын
The fact alone that Mr. Hawass gets as heated as he does when it comes to any line of investigation that contradicts his opinion of Egyptian history should be investigated in itself. Yet another great video! Thanks much for the addition to a great collection 👍🏻
@soldtobediers
@soldtobediers 2 жыл бұрын
''I believe that time wounds all heels.'' ~John Lennon
@masaharumorimoto4761
@masaharumorimoto4761 2 жыл бұрын
@@soldtobediers I named my cat Yoko Ono because she never shuts up :)
@forgingmagick4470
@forgingmagick4470 2 жыл бұрын
Hawass is part of a group of people that are trying to keep all this shit a secret from people and tell lies like the stupidest lie of all the Egyptians built the pyramids that's complete bullshit
@Reptilia12
@Reptilia12 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve long suspected a big reason he reacts this way is that the “mainstream” historical view supports a particular narrative of the prevailing middle eastern religious agenda
@thisguy555
@thisguy555 2 жыл бұрын
@@soldtobediers 😂 truth.
@MikeAnderson-oh9po
@MikeAnderson-oh9po 2 жыл бұрын
“Personality driven obstacles” - picture of Hawas lol.
@spo616
@spo616 2 жыл бұрын
👍🏻😂
@Vulturefist
@Vulturefist 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha, lovely! 👏🏻
@carlres8371
@carlres8371 2 жыл бұрын
Hawas is just scared what might be found and probably know its not build by egyptians, but long before..
@teeanahera8949
@teeanahera8949 2 жыл бұрын
The author is pretty good at satire. As an Aussie I do laugh at his pronunciation of “A rab”. Like there is a space between A and rab.
@Loowis1549
@Loowis1549 2 жыл бұрын
You wrong for that😂😂
@danoconnor1536
@danoconnor1536 Жыл бұрын
"Personality-driven obstacles", coupled with Oscar winning editing was beautiful
@bigm383
@bigm383 2 жыл бұрын
True scholars should welcome this type of non destructive exploration. Sure, this scan may, or may not add to knowledge but surely this will drive the development of progressively higher resolution and more accurate technology. Especially when academics are doing it for free. Anyhoo, thanks for a very informative video.
@Olebull93
@Olebull93 2 жыл бұрын
I remember Bob Brier an American Egyptologist wanted permission to climb one of the Giza pyramids and explore a well known crack in the pyramid with a borescope (Same as a endoscope) That's all he wanted, climb up there and stick a camera inside a crack, he waited for years on getting a permission and he never got it. He wanted to find evidence in the internal stone structure on how a spiral ramp might have influenced the stone pattern's inside the pyramid.
@simonxmathews
@simonxmathews 2 жыл бұрын
In all seriousness, he could probably have paid a local ‘fixer’ to sort out access for a few $100 bucks and just gone ahead with his borescope inspection. In 2004 me & a group of 30 people paid a local ‘fixer’ to allow us a private 2 hour tour of the great pyramid. I explored every known nook & cranny inside except for the well shaft, which was blocked off.
@Olebull93
@Olebull93 2 жыл бұрын
@@simonxmathews Bob Brier is a full Egyptian scholar. And a professor in paleopathology what he would or could have written would go down in the books. I think personally people like Zahi Hawass keept him on a distance thru his office.
@UnitSe7en
@UnitSe7en Жыл бұрын
Hawass is a crook. If you don't know, then you can't possibly imagine.
@bryanburdick2508
@bryanburdick2508 Жыл бұрын
@@simonxmathews That's awesome ( I plan to do the same thing if and when I visit in the future) ... To quote the million dollar man .. everyone has a price.$$
@johngriffiths118
@johngriffiths118 Жыл бұрын
My Dad was there during the war . For a Shilling the guide would ignite a magnesium flare in the Kings Chamber !
@HistoryforGRANITE
@HistoryforGRANITE 2 жыл бұрын
Hey everyone, it’s a slightly different focus for this video, but the news was too big to pass up. You should get a lot of information that isn’t shown in the news articles floating around. Also, I promise future videos won’t give as much attention to Hawass, Lehner, etc., but I felt it was important to get their conflicting statements on record. Professional Egyptology is a very small crowd, and many are unwilling to give others credit if they can get away with it.
@MelbaOzzie
@MelbaOzzie 2 жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that Hawass is on record aa publicly ridiculing Gobekli Tepi as something "of no significance whatsoever". This single statement undercuts his credibility significantly; and this is before we even mention the allegations of corruption that have been made in relation to his activities.
@catman8965
@catman8965 2 жыл бұрын
@@MelbaOzzie Can you provide a link for the quote you just made, or are you just making this up? FYI I know this hasn't occurred to you, but Zahi Hawas happens to be an EGYPTOLOGIST and NOT a Gobekli Tepe-ologist.
@PatFleck
@PatFleck 2 жыл бұрын
@@catman8965 There is a youtube video of hawass disregarding Gobeki Tepi to Graham Hancock, shouting 'Shame on you! Shame on you!' I've seen it. There is something very shady about that guy. I wouldn't let him near the pyramids. FYI. The point about Gobeki Tepi is that it has been dated at 13000 years old when humans were supposed to be hunter gatherers and hunter gatherers did not build huge temple complexes. So how come Gobeki Tepi exists? I think the argument came from the claim by some experts that the pyramids are much older than currently estimated. hawass said this could not be true as humans were hunter gatherers before the pyramids were built. Gobeki Tepi blew that assumption out of the water.
@catman8965
@catman8965 2 жыл бұрын
@ History for GRANITE You do a pretty good job of bashing Zahi Hawass, and Egyptologist in general. Why don't you try reporting on something positive that he has done. Can you even name ONE? If you can't that really is a problem with YOU. He's RIGHT!!! Conspiracist will not be happy until there's a drill hole in every square inch of Egypt. At any one time there can be more than a hundred researchers in Egypt. Zahi Hawass is responsible for the preservation and protection of Egyptian antiquities WHILE allowing for RESEARCH and TOURISM. He actually does a very good job at this. Now consider what happens when things go wrong. Are they going to hold YOU accountable or Hawass? It's all too easy criticizing the work of others when all you do is just sit back at a computer screen. I found three mistakes you made in your video (without even looking for them). Should I rant about about it, or THANK YOU for the good job you did? BTW: I have seen archaeological sites destroyed by archaeologist digging up hidden rooms that "ADVANCE SUBSURFACE IMAGING" found that weren't there. Still the work you did is good. THANKS FOR THE UPDATE.😁
@catman8965
@catman8965 2 жыл бұрын
@Pat Fleck Please Correct Me If I'm Wrong. 1) Gobekli Tepe is in Turkey - RIGHT? 2) Zahi Hawass is an EGYPTOLOGIST - RIGHT? 3) EGYPT is in EGYPT - RIGHT? QUESTIONS: 1) Why would Zahi Hawass be so concerned about what's going on in Turkey? That's not HIS SPECIALTY - got it? 2) You, like many other people, are so determined to BASH him. Okay, but why are you not bashing archaeologists working in Turkey for not knowing what's going on in Egypt? Wouldn't that be fair? GRAHAM HANCOCK: Graham Hancock's hypothesis assumes the existence of Atlantis. In order for his idea to be accepted as SCIENCE, he has to be able to produce TESTABLE evidence for the existence of Atlantis. Have you seen one skeleton, one pottery shard, or item that you know for a fact, and has been proven to show that it has come from Atlantis? That's the reason why his ideas are not accepted by mainstream egyptologists. AGE OF THE GIZA OF PLATEAU PYRAMIDS: Contrary to what Graham Hancock may have told you, the pyramids at Giza have been dated to the dynastic times. I'm providing you with the instructions on how to download the data for your evaluation. How to download ancient Egyptian carbon-14 data. 1) Google "3874-3545-1-PB" 2) CLICK ON "repository" "Arizona" 3) Download paper 4) Search other carbon 14 papers on Ancient Egypt at that repository. According to Mark Lehner, archaeological sites in Egypt go back 17,500 years (yes that's preGobekli Tepe). However these are primitive sites - probably Stone Age type villages. That's probably why Zahi Hawass made the statement that prior to dynastic times, IN EGYPT, things were Stone Age. That may be true. The current year is 2022. We still have people living in near Stone Age conditions today.
@CaliforniaCarpenter7
@CaliforniaCarpenter7 2 жыл бұрын
Hawass can pretend all he wants that he cares about the sanctity of these great sites but his actions prove otherwise. He stole from these sites and was convicted of doing so. He has been caught lying on camera more than once, and to me, his actions actually show that he simply wants any loot or major discoveries to be made behind closed doors, so that his Government can disseminate whatever they choose, whenever they want and make things disappear. 16:12 reminds me of a toddler passionately declaring their innocence of snatching some cookies off of the table when they have chocolate smeared on their face. Any scientific study of these great structures that is independent of the Egyptian Antiquities ministry is study that I support! Great work as usual, my friend!
@harrywalker5836
@harrywalker5836 2 жыл бұрын
watch, praveen mohan, same thing in india, gold temple, door you cant open..& somawathi temple. 1.5 ft crystal spire,,why................
@Addman99999
@Addman99999 2 жыл бұрын
Such a fantastic channel, it's so hard to find quality content on Egyptian pyramids which doesn't devolve into aliens or the paranormal etc. I'd love to see a video on the relieving chambers, in particular how they were discovered and how they are accessed.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 2 жыл бұрын
Ant rational adult adult who dares to look at the available evidence knows for certain that they were tombs for the 4th dynasty kings and that they were built from quarried stone blocks of solid stone. kzfaq.info/sun/PLSSFj6Q5TZYQnX74l-gL231kNMJAmsV06
@harrywalker5836
@harrywalker5836 2 жыл бұрын
well, you live in ignorance of our past & the truth. why do you think hawass doesnt want them explored.?, because they will find that egyptians didnt build them, they have never been for burials, they were never, built by humans. you,live in a fantasy.. can you handle the truth, if not, live in ignorance. if you can, then watch viper tv, sumerian tablets, & revalation of the pyramids. we are lied to.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 2 жыл бұрын
@@harrywalker5836 You: "well, you live in ignorance of our past & the truth." Me: “Psychological projection is a defense mechanism in which the human ego defends itself against unconscious impulses or qualities (both positive and negative) by denying their existence in themselves while attributing them to others. For example, a person who is habitually rude may constantly accuse other people of being rude. It incorporates blame shifting and can manifest as shame dumping.” 1. Someone called “Q” was saying a lot of things online and a lot of people believed it. They got scammed because they had faith in what they were being told. If you warn the believers of the Q-cult and warn them about scammed…they will disagree with you…and even get angry with you for suggesting that they are being scammed….because they have been successfully brainwashed. 2. Shining white televised mega-churches and their lear jet flying televangelists get people to hand over their money … using their faith in what they are bing told as the main tool. If you warn them that they are being lied to…they won’t believe you. Many of them have invested years of their lives believing in these institutions and watching it on their TV set. It would be too psychologically painful to accept the idea that they have been scammed after years of exposure to the cult. 3. Politicians scam the public over and over and over...and yet they keep getting voted back into office. Too many people have faith in what politicians from the party they support say while they are out on the campaign trail. People don’t seem to wake up and expel them. 4. Starting in the 1800s, men were selling fake medicinal elixirs to settlers heading out west and new comers to the city from the countryside. If you warned them at the time, “Hey, those bottles he is selling are sugar water. It’s just a scam. Buying his bottled b.s. won’t do anything for you except make you a little poorer.”….they would call you crazy. There is one of them portrayed in the famous Clint Eastwood movie The Outlaw Josey Wales. 5. Fake call centers from India take inexperienced people’s money using nothing more than a cell phone every day. Their victims are usually very sure of themselves at the time…and don’t discover until later that they have been $cammed. 6. In The Wizard of Oz, Dorthy meets Professor Marvel just before the tornado hits her home. He is the traveling crystal ball scammer, who becomes the wizard in her dream, scamming the citizens of Oz … all to maintain his power and authority over them. 7. There are many people today who are living inside of a KZfaq video created dreamworld that resembles Oz….watching their favorite KZfaq wizards like Hancock, Forester, Carlson, Dunn, UnchartedX and others. The world we live in is full of scammer$…and inexperienced people getting $cammed by them. When you warn them that they are being scammed…they won’t believe you…and even get angry with you for suggesting that they are being scammed….because they have been successfully brainwashed from months or years of watching their favorite wizards. The hardest thing for most of the victims of KZfaq pseudoscience is to face the idea that they might be getting duped in the first place. It would be too psychologically painful for most of them to accept the idea that they have been getting scammed … after years of being one of their online groupies. Ignorance carries a very big stigma in today’s information driven, modern world and facing the idea that you have been wasting your time following a lie is naturally hard for people to accept. Plato discusses this in his allegory of the cave, how most people are not only comfortable in their ignorance, but will fight with you and get angry at you if you give them new information and attempt to challenge what they have already been led to believe in. Also, for most of these people, there is no societal pressure for them to change their minds anymore. Unlike believing in Santa Claus as an adult, in which they would be laughed at and ridiculed, it doesn't actually cost them anything to keep believing in “alternative history" videos they watch, regardless of how accurate they really are, because there is now an entire online community of other misled people to engage with on social media sites, which makes the entire thing almost self perpetuating.
@davidleomorley889
@davidleomorley889 2 жыл бұрын
@@harrywalker5836 You: "why do you think hawass doesnt want them explored.?, because they will find that egyptians didnt build them, they have never been for burials, they were never, built by humans." Me: It's time for you to do some soul searching. You my friend, are gullible. I hope you find the ability to escape whatever isolation you are living within, and you begin to figure out more about the world around you. We are all are our own stage of learning about life. I'm on mine, you're on yours. Take a look at this: kzfaq.info/sun/PLSSFj6Q5TZYTY2ztjDpket3xaXSbnMIXf
@monsterinhead214
@monsterinhead214 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidleomorley889 Exactly so. This comes up often in my careful research into the Elder Gods. When I tell people that Cthulhu is a genuine threat to our future, they dismiss my 'claims' with hostility and ridicule. And all I am trying to do is convince them their entire conception of reality is flawed. Harrumph.
@crichtonbruce4329
@crichtonbruce4329 2 жыл бұрын
I am in no way an Egyptologist. Nevertheless, (like almost everyone else) I have been fascinated by archeology, including the pyramids, all my life. For many years of watching his statements and comments I developed the (totally subjective) opinion that Mr. Hawass more resembles a used car salesman more than a true scholar. All science must be subject to re-analysis by new data, and new means of collecting that data. I suggest Flinders Petrie would have been overjoyed with new technology giving the opportunity for new discoveries. Resistance to new techniques of discovery is to me a "Big Red Flag" that a person is more invested in protecting their own opinions than furthering the science.
@masaharumorimoto4761
@masaharumorimoto4761 2 жыл бұрын
I had just been reading Petrie's reports from the 1800's, fascinating stuff, they just were like "we had to leave so we buried the entrance, came back next season, all was well" HAHAHAHA!
@crichtonbruce4329
@crichtonbruce4329 2 жыл бұрын
@pyropulse I just don't have enough information or facts to know if my intuition is true
@scotth6814
@scotth6814 2 жыл бұрын
Hawass is a megalomaniac, like Trump and Putin. He doesn't think anybody else is allowed an opinion or an idea of their own. He thinks everyone should see him as The Expert.
@raytrevor1
@raytrevor1 2 жыл бұрын
Science used to be about continually questioning the status quo. If you do that now you are a denier and must be cancelled. "Nullius in Verba".
@bodystomp5302
@bodystomp5302 2 жыл бұрын
100% agree. Hawass is a disaster.
@TheRealUnknown01
@TheRealUnknown01 2 жыл бұрын
I like how you showed Hawass when talking about obstacles in relation to furthering Egyptology
@BungieStudios
@BungieStudios Жыл бұрын
It's just a coincidence. 👍
@SK-mf1mi
@SK-mf1mi 2 жыл бұрын
Egypt should encourage all non destructive testing to get a clear view of any possible voids that could hold more secrets and historical information about the Pyramids and ancient Egypt. More hype, more tourism can only benifit them. Its a win-win for Egyptologist and the rest of the world
@FirstBornProtoType
@FirstBornProtoType Жыл бұрын
It seems this guy is the only person doing videos on the Pyramids with what appears to be no agenda. I don't always agree with him but the respect he has for the science and those whose opinions differ is refreshing at least. Excellent work sir. Thank you 🙏
@TaheerahA
@TaheerahA 6 ай бұрын
My degree is in Astrophysics, and in my final year one of the projects I did was a (well-established) experiment to measure the mean lifetime of a muon. I also have been interested in Ancient Egypt as far back as I can remember and am now studying Egyptology academically part-time. The ScanPyramids project excites me for so many reasons - not least of which is that it combines two fields I have great love, fascination and interest in, and the non-destructive nature of exploration is a perfect use of this technology. If I do happen to progress my studies to an actual career at some point then this is probably exactly the line of inquiry I'd like to go into. It frustrates me endlessly that there is so much obstruction and dismissal of applying newer technology and approaches to Egyptology - if the field is to advance in knowledge in any meaningful way then it will need people to keep an open mind and apply the scientific method to research and exploration without falling back on biases Fantastic video as always
@anna_in_aotearoa3166
@anna_in_aotearoa3166 Жыл бұрын
A year later, it's awesome to see Scan Pyramids' results in the chevron corridor verified via endoscopic camera, and a new bigger ETP scanning mission in discussion (albeit not yet funded). Really hope progress of this sort may continue despite the obstructionist attitudes of some. New knowledge is always good! What really ground my gears was seeing some media sources attributing the SP discoveries to the antiquities ministry, where IRL they seem to have been more a hindrance than a help...?
@paulstewart6203
@paulstewart6203 2 жыл бұрын
Its Extremely sad that the authorities in Egypt will not let scientist physically explore the Great Pyramid.
@commanderjameson2708
@commanderjameson2708 Жыл бұрын
Now that everybody knows about this hidden chamber, it's inevitable that it will be explored. The question is whether this is done by scientists in full view of the world, or quietly in secret by friends of the Egyptian authorities. I predict one day they will suddenly announce that, yes they found a chamber, but that - _gosh_ wouldn't you know - it was completely empty! Nothing to see but an empty room!
@manchesterexplorer8519
@manchesterexplorer8519 Жыл бұрын
They're suppressing the truth . The Egyptians that we were taught about in school did not build these structures , they basically claimed them . The Pyramids as well as many unexplained precision made stone ruins found throughout the globe are much , much older than what we're being told . Also the Great Pyramid was not a tomb . Scholars are based on an ideology that was basically made up 150 years ago and they cannot break from it . Modern discoveries and studies make a ton more sense . kzfaq.info/get/bejne/oZuAi7V8qsrYpqc.html
@PronatorTendon
@PronatorTendon 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos have all the qualities I look for in science and history based channels. High standards of evidence, refraining from making unsubstantiated claims, a lack of excessive speculation, and holding the feet of dishonest people to the fire
@JC-wh7jj
@JC-wh7jj Жыл бұрын
I am absolutely convinced that there are plenty of features in the great Pyramid that we don't know about, at least engineering features if not rooms. Imagine if the ancient builders did not dig the service access to the chambers above the Kings chamber to inspect damage, we would not have a clue about these voids.
@terryjones573
@terryjones573 Жыл бұрын
At this point we DO have the technology to be able to detect those voids. Obviously, it’s not without issue, but I’m confident we would have discovered them eventually even without those tunnels. Of course, assuming we push past the mentioned obstacles and continue investigating.
@JC-wh7jj
@JC-wh7jj Жыл бұрын
@@terryjones573 If the voids are back-filled they will not show up on a cosmic muon scan or whatever it's called.
@tinymetaltrees
@tinymetaltrees 2 жыл бұрын
If we reroute power from the holodeck through main engineering directly into the main deflector dish and create a tachyon pulse channeled into the rift then we’ll have made as much sense as Mark Lehner and Zahi Hawass do when they jabber out their egyptological version of technobabble.
@jplonsdale7242
@jplonsdale7242 2 жыл бұрын
Great comment 👍
@PolumbiusTheThird
@PolumbiusTheThird 2 жыл бұрын
agreed. love me some tachyon pulses.
@jdc1957
@jdc1957 2 жыл бұрын
Blinking will tell Linking, Linking will tell Nod, and Nod will tell Barney.
@camielkotte
@camielkotte 2 жыл бұрын
i don't like your comment. Startrek has inspired generations of people. Hawass does not inspire a single person but himself.
@francischambless5919
@francischambless5919 Жыл бұрын
you forgot to reverse the phase polarity of the interphase grid which is why you got erroneous results.
@MrJamesnight
@MrJamesnight 2 жыл бұрын
12:16 You are the first youtuber who spoke of the N1 Notch the french scan pyramid crew discovered. It's such an important discovery tho as it kind of strengthen Jean Pierre Houdin theory of an internal ramp.
@derbi4stunt
@derbi4stunt 2 жыл бұрын
I hope they get the fundings needed for this mission, can't wait to hear more about that big void.
@harrywalker5836
@harrywalker5836 2 жыл бұрын
theres miles of underground tunnels, 4 stories deep. your not allowed into. brian foerster, egypt..
@christosvoskresye
@christosvoskresye Жыл бұрын
It's worth pointing out that this technique should be applicable (sometimes as a test) to other structures. One I am particularly interested in is the tomb of Qin Shi Huang, but it might be worth applying it to some Mesoamerican pyramids as well.
@Raycheetah
@Raycheetah Жыл бұрын
It is already known that at least some Mesoamerican pyramids were built as expansions of smaller, earlier pyramids, and that passages remain between the outer and inner structures. A comprehensive survey of all such structures could prove revelatory of both religious and engineering concerns in their evolution. =^[.]^=
@nokiangage
@nokiangage 2 жыл бұрын
Another video with a solid preparation behind it and I can’t wait for the next one man, keep up the good work 🍻
@treetoplake
@treetoplake Жыл бұрын
When I first found your channel I didn't expect much but wow! Excellent imagery and focused original commentary .. thank you for using your originality and avoiding the sensationalist approach used by others. The way you present makes me want to come back for more as I learn about this fascinating subject with fresh eyes. Thank you!
@scottfaudree7201
@scottfaudree7201 2 жыл бұрын
Great work. I watch allot of channels with this content. Most just have random pics. Up to date info and is what I’m looking for. Glad I subscribed.
@maxmulder
@maxmulder 2 жыл бұрын
I am so glad your content exists. Love his channel a lot, very well researched videos showing those little hidden features I yet didn't know. And I guess I've watched all of main Ancient Egypt, and even more, Egyptian Pyramids videos that my wife would understand my need to! Happily awaiting your/our next video to keep asking the question: Do I take my history for granite?
@hr37ic
@hr37ic 2 жыл бұрын
Great work yet again. I had a good chuckle about your use of zahi images. I’m definitely no fan of that criminal. Your vids are always informative & I really appreciate your perspective. I’ve been researching ancient construction for many years and not considered some of the ideas you’ve postulated. Really good work. Thanks!
@Jonnygurudesigns
@Jonnygurudesigns 2 жыл бұрын
So happy I found this channel! Very well put together videos!
@svetovidarkonsky1670
@svetovidarkonsky1670 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the update and what the future of the scanning that may take place. Great vid as usual!
@masaharumorimoto4761
@masaharumorimoto4761 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome upload timing!! Thank you for the level headed Pyramid videos, it's refreshing to listen to critical analysis, I appreciate that :)
@bobbyhunt100
@bobbyhunt100 Жыл бұрын
An amazing channel which deals with facts but also delves into the rarely discussed details of often "difficult to research'" subjects. I always enjoy your sarcastic overview of the current situation in dealing with Egyptian antiquities. The incredible irony of the entire situation is that the persons controlling the research on the pyramids are Arabs who were as non-existent in ancient Egypt as were camels, and yet they claim it as their own. Arabs that is, the camels couldn't care less!
@nickt1475
@nickt1475 2 жыл бұрын
Checking every day hoping for another video!!! Watched and listened to all of your videos several times now!
@MM-zh8yd
@MM-zh8yd 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing summery. Please give us more! I'm hyped!
@iMattC
@iMattC 2 жыл бұрын
I sincerely appreciate your efforts at providing an objective view of the pyramids. I watch all of your videos and eagerly await any new ones. I’d like to definitely see the one you mentioned about the portcullis’ in the pyramids. Very curious what your findings are.
@guycaizzi2540
@guycaizzi2540 2 жыл бұрын
I said it before and I'll say it again very well- researched great presentation keep them coming
@williamglidden7461
@williamglidden7461 2 жыл бұрын
Very balanced exposition of both the science and politics surrounding this project. Fascinating!
@benjaminalexander7043
@benjaminalexander7043 2 жыл бұрын
History For Granite Videos are always the 1St video I will ever watch on my sub!
@rickmacland3120
@rickmacland3120 2 жыл бұрын
Keep going with these videos. I can't even explain why i like them so much. Maybe because, no one else is really doing it. But i really enjoy the way you frame your thoughts and how you insert facts to back them up. Just fantastic work...
@HistoryforGRANITE
@HistoryforGRANITE 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your kind words. I started this research mostly because I couldn't find any research seriously attempting to answer the questions I had. Many amazing lines of inquiry hadn't received any attention at all! I wasn't sure how best to share my work but comments like these prove that KZfaq was absolutely the best choice.
@edgarsnake2857
@edgarsnake2857 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the refreshingly open approach and assessment of emerging information and misinformation about the Great Pyramid. All I can say is: I crawled to the King and Queens chambers 30 years ago and the GP is one fantastic pile of rocks.
@KaYem_inc
@KaYem_inc 2 жыл бұрын
Always a treat to see a new video dropped
@RasCricketSmallAxe
@RasCricketSmallAxe 2 жыл бұрын
Really great video!! Thank you so much for keeping us informed
@hibernative
@hibernative 2 жыл бұрын
You are now up there with UnchartedX, Ancient Architects and Bright Insight. Great content.
@nhender
@nhender 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your videos they're very informative and well-researched. I can tell there's a lot of work put into it and really shows. I look forward to the next video
@ashleyking6743
@ashleyking6743 2 жыл бұрын
Oh damn I’ve been waiting for your next vid. This is gonna be awesome as usual.
@Gravitacionimanevar
@Gravitacionimanevar 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome job as always! Glad you made a video about this, it's very interesting!
@brandonb3279
@brandonb3279 Жыл бұрын
I've recently become enamoured with the mysteries of ancient architecture in Egypt, and your channel is a wonderful new resource! What I've learned has been bitter-sweet however, as I'm coming to realise the extent of scientific gate-keeping due to raging egos and nationalism. It's grotesquely ironic that the greatest achievements of the human race are evidently being smothered by humanity's ugliest traits. I suppose I shouldn't be surprised; as that's a recurring motif throughout history (Library of Alexandria being a prime example)! And now that I come to think of it, recent and current world events also qualify, all too well. I should try not to get so caught up in the frustrating aspects of Egyptology, but it's just so infuriating how much knowledge has been blocked, for such petty reasons. I used to occasionally wonder "how come there doesn't seem to be any new groundbreaking discoveries coming out of ancient Egypt; surely there must be plenty more to discover, especially with modern techniques the past couple decades?!" Well hey, at least now I know why! Anyway, thank you for your clear, concise, and *scientific* coverage on this channel. When(if) those incredible new discoveries are made, I confidently trust this channel to accurately inform about them!
@ancientalternativeview9011
@ancientalternativeview9011 2 жыл бұрын
Really looking forward to your content it's a pleasure to be here all the best Phil aav.
@cristianantunovic8430
@cristianantunovic8430 2 жыл бұрын
GREEEEEEEAT VIDEO!!! i'm so amazed with this YT page. Thanks, History for granite. You're are geniuses!
@fabcol
@fabcol 2 жыл бұрын
great video, very complete! Great job, loved it.
@stephenjohnson9560
@stephenjohnson9560 2 жыл бұрын
Would be great if they found something, unless Hawass has already had it cleared out sometime ago, hence the difficulty of getting authorisation for excavation.
@jplonsdale7242
@jplonsdale7242 2 жыл бұрын
They've been pissing about in that thing for 100s of years there's nothing in it and if there was it'll have been removed long before that. Those Chambers they found will be empty because smarter people have come and gone and they will have known about them but didn't smash in
@kricketflyd111
@kricketflyd111 2 жыл бұрын
They will find his finger prints in the void.
@ingurlund9657
@ingurlund9657 2 жыл бұрын
That's what I wondered. There's a stone in the burial chamber wall that is not load bearing and can be removed. Apparently it shows signs around the edges that it has been. It made me wonder if during one of those periods that he shut off all access to the pyramid that he and conspirators entered a passage and explored that void space hoping for great wealth in there that he could sell secretly to some billionaire and get stinking rich.. If so they were out of luck and it was empty as Hawass doesn't seem to have started buying mansions. But it would still mean that he'd have to deny the existence of any such space else it might come to light that he already explored it and people would want to know why he did so in secret.
@jam1701
@jam1701 2 жыл бұрын
I’m not an expert so my opinion carries little weight but I have always seen Hawass as more of a politician than a scientist.
@miserychannel666
@miserychannel666 4 күн бұрын
Gatekeeper
@kevinlucko2902
@kevinlucko2902 2 жыл бұрын
These videos actually give me chills they are so good!
@topcatcoast2coast579
@topcatcoast2coast579 2 жыл бұрын
Subbed. You will get so many more viewers in the future my guy.
@joshpack
@joshpack 2 жыл бұрын
Love this channel! Keep it up!
@Ash-nd4pn
@Ash-nd4pn 2 жыл бұрын
I vote for a second "gallery" Btw if the grand gallery had been discovered by an engineer it would have been called the "internal ramp"
@23and2
@23and2 2 жыл бұрын
You're excellent and your videos are fascinating. Keep up the great work.
@davesradioshack
@davesradioshack Жыл бұрын
Another great video! I didn't realize I had missed this one. Love your channel!
@tjrubicon5463
@tjrubicon5463 2 жыл бұрын
Hawass bases his position on assumptions that benefit himself and tries to stand in the way of truth. He would argue the world if flat if it benefit himself.
@bumpstockbilly4263
@bumpstockbilly4263 2 жыл бұрын
"personality driven obstacles" - bwahahhaha, imagine what will be revealed once the old-guard has "moved-along".. love your vids bro = )
@ClericPreston_
@ClericPreston_ 2 жыл бұрын
The German physicist Max Planck said that science advances one funeral at a time. Or more precisely: “A new 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.”
@barbmccafferty4533
@barbmccafferty4533 2 жыл бұрын
You're so smart! Looking forward to any new videos.
@sophrapsune
@sophrapsune 2 жыл бұрын
I’m really enjoying your channel. I have no doubt that you’ll be at 250k subscribers before too long. Keep up the good work.
@andrewporrelli8268
@andrewporrelli8268 2 жыл бұрын
Loving all your videos! Watched them all. In this video, the closing image of the pyramid, notice the 3 distinctly streight and horizontal layer "sections"? It's like they achieved for themselves a compleatly level layer, built a bit more haphazardly and then re-defined exact level after several courses. I can see 3 or 4 particular layers that stand out as more accurate than the rest. Like a 3 or 4 layer cake.
@joesweeney6152
@joesweeney6152 2 жыл бұрын
There are a few courses that are thicker than the others and they do correspond with interior features like chambers and passages.
@llibressal
@llibressal 2 жыл бұрын
I think Hawas's protectiveness is justified in many cases but when the research is completely non-destructive it doesn't make any sense.
@cocouatiye3140
@cocouatiye3140 2 жыл бұрын
Who knows it's not destrustive!! Destruction is not only material, it may lay in the guided conclusions!! I would also like this man to let the researchers do their job. But knowing all that his colleagues egyptologists are capable of, all the lies they fabricated in past, he might be right being so cautious. Maybe he has to keep something hidden
@llibressal
@llibressal 2 жыл бұрын
What valid reason would there be to hide something? ....(other than perpetuating the mysteries to protect tourism money)?
@nickauclair1477
@nickauclair1477 2 жыл бұрын
Love this channel
@MrSixxshooter
@MrSixxshooter 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are very informative . Thank you so much .
@cole5013
@cole5013 2 жыл бұрын
Hawas has been preventing historical discovery in that region for about 15 years or more. He needs to be ousted from his position.
@dumbcat
@dumbcat 2 жыл бұрын
just do a kickstarter and they will raise the money in a matter of weeks
@fredyair1
@fredyair1 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your analysis and insight in this promising mission.
@amanuelamanuel
@amanuelamanuel 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this dude. I love your videos and scientific approach
@scottzema3103
@scottzema3103 2 жыл бұрын
I as a practicing architect with a Master's degree in the subject appreciate this opportunity to express opinions on everything about this pile. I must say I would like to take the deluxe tour with Dr. Hawass because I am in awe of this gentleman and his knowledge, but I would hesitate to question anything about the orthodoxy of ideas regarding the pyramid because many of my ideas are indeed unorthodox and I don't want to upset the atmosphere. For instance, take the idea that the chevrons on the north face ACTUALLY REALLY TRULY INDICATE THE MAIN ENTRY into the pyramid. This is an idea which discards opposing theories that favor a granite-plugged tunnel in the ceiling for the Main Entry into this place. The void behind the chevrons indicate the straight main passageway into the pyramid interior behind these chevrons as shown in an early section by Petrie. In fact, it is incomprehensible that the pyramid could have been effectively built or utilized IF this idea of a straight passage for everything from Pharaohs to golden statues to granite sarcophagi to granite BEAMS is NOT entertained. The entry to the pyramid is right in front of us. Like a huge neon sign saying 'Here is the Entry'! AND SO ask yourself, where did Khufu enter the pyramid when he came up the single ramp to the entry on the north (when he was ALIVE on Sunday outings to the Tomb; not yet dead!)? Did he enter the freeway -straight passageway to the interior ON ELEVATION with the Grand Gallery and serdab so-called 'Queen's Chamber' beyond? Or did he instead go down into the descending corridor and have an obliging Nubian slave push his ass up the ceiling? NO! Khufu and everybody and everything else went in the FRONT DOOR and towards the Grand Gallery as ritual, construction, engineering, religious, and architectural logic and OVERALL logic really dictates. Other ideas: There was no spiraling ramp of any description revealed by the muons on the interior of the pyramid and so that effectively KILLS the notion of a spiraling construction ramp used to build this structure, because as Houdin realized there would be more engineering and materials needed to build and maintain an EXTERNAL ramp than that pile of stones deserved, and you are faced with that pesky problem of trying to work the pyramid fascia on the building under the external ramp works. Pretty hard that! So that leaves really two methods for construction; 1) By building with crane and pulley each successive layer of stones to the top, simple and straightforward or 2) By mixing concrete at each level and pouring block from materials and water hauled up by crane or on the backs of workers. This would have required crushing the limestone quarried in blocks nearby for incorporation in casting materials as a more efficient way of utilizing materials than by hauling limestone blocks everywhere. Another idea concerns the great void above the Grand Gallery. Well, we know a significant void has to be there simply from looking at the ceiling, because it shows lapped slabs of granite forming the roof. These slabs cannot carry weight in tension, so there cannot be weight or solid masonry ABOVE the ceiling. There must be a void. They had to have room also to lay down the slabs when they got to that level of construction and they could not pile limestone on that granite. Also, I believe that the pyramid was robbed by someone who helped build it. Details if requested.
@MrAchile13
@MrAchile13 2 жыл бұрын
That surely was an interesting read. I don't think the geopolimer hypothesis holds much water, as the limestone blocks are numulitic limestone, still containing fossils. Also, the stones are irregular (and contain mortar), which would not be the case if cast (in fact I see no reason for individual blocks, if cast). Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the ceiling of the grand gallery made of limestone, just like the walls? There is a precedent at Meidum, where roof of the antechamber of the ruined pyramid is a false one and above, there is a corbelled chamber. It was discovered in 1999/2000. They drilled a hole and inserted an optic fiber camera, I hope they do the same at Giza. I don't have much knowledge about structural architecture (though I found my love for it after watching the courses of professor Stephen Ressler) but I would love to learn more about it. Can you explain why the roof of the Grand Galley wouldn't be able to resist to tension stress?
@scottzema3103
@scottzema3103 2 жыл бұрын
Individual blocks used at each level would allow for more flexibility in accommodating details associated with vertical shafts and chambers penetrating each layer added to the rising structure. And mortar is used with cast concrete block construction for instance. But equally if the blocks are NOT concrete, then that in my mind doesn't offer many alternatives to how the pyramid was built other than by manipulating limestone blocks by crane from one stage to the next. The exception would be a single entry ramp leading from the floor of the desert on the north side of the structure and sloping up to the elevation of the main chevroned entry and Grand Gallery, so granite slabs could be hauled into the pyramid (and anything or anybody else wanting to enter the building). On the ceiling of the Grand Gallery: the answer is because stone, whether limestone or granite or concrete works better in compression than in tension. Flat stone if subject to a heavy perpendicular load causes it to crack which can happen anywhere along its span. Stone acts better in compression with loads paralleling its longer axis if its used as a structural roof like the hipped stone roofs above the King's and Queen's chambers, where loads from above are transferred to either side of the chambers with the roofing slabs acting in compression to carry the load of the pyramid above to either side of each chamber and so prevent the weight of the pyramid from crashing into the rooms below. This is the same concept that's behind the horse-shoe reverse curve of a large dam like Hoover dam, for instance. The weight of the river water behind the dam acts to throw the dam structure into compression and so strengthens the concrete structure; if the dam bulged out the opposite way, the force of water behind it would cause the concrete to fail in tension; it would tear the structure apart. And by the way the double chevroned stone fascia above the so-called abandoned entry may telegraph a double stone hipped roof over the corridor behind it because if the corridor behind the chevrons extends long and deep into the pyramid, then it might have needed a double chevroned granite ceiling to keep it sound as it tunneled horizontally hundreds of feet into the structure, again with a hipped ceiling acting in compression to protect the corridor space below.
@MrAchile13
@MrAchile13 2 жыл бұрын
@@scottzema3103 Thank you for the response. I know stone is weak in tension and beam loading creates tension on the bottom of the block (I was shocked to see the sandstone slabs spanning around 6 meters, in the temple of Kom Ombo, though it's true, they have no force loading above), but my question is, wouldn't the roof of the grand gallery be strong enough to resist on it's own? The shorter the span the more force can be applied to the post and lintel configuration. The access tunnels of the pyramids are themselves post and lintel structures and they handle the weight above due to their short span, don't they? The span of the floor of the Grand Gallery would be too long for a flat ceiling, but the corbel reduces that span, to a flat roof similar in width to the access tunnels. That's why I'm asking, wouldn't this be short enough so the limestone blocks would be able to bear the load by themselves?
@scottzema3103
@scottzema3103 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrAchile13 In looking at the KNOWN structure of chambers and corridors in section of the Giza pyramid, I see that special structural consideration in the form of hipped stone roofs grace the topmost spaces in the pyramid against the weight of the pyramid above. In the case of the access corridor to the queen's chamber there is no need to structurally reinforce the ceiling because the bulk of the structural load of the pyramid is taken up by the Grand Gallery and King's chamber assembly directly above the corridor. Now IF the corridor behind the North Face 'abandoned' entry proves to have a double granite ceiling assembly then the structural thinking is shown to be consistent by the architects in providing what they thought was the correct assembly, a double slab topped structure for that area of the pyramid to protect the corridor itself and by extension I guess any structurally created sloping tunnels occurring under the pyramid, again from the dead load of the structure above. With respect to the Grand Gallery, its got a long, sloping, shingled stone roof with nothing to reinforce it against the dead weight of the structure above. So it makes sense as you say to expect a structural space above the Grand Gallery where we might observe some sort of again granite chevron hipped roof, or perhaps a termination of the corbelling with no flat top; in any case a structure that protects the Grand Gallery below and its intermediary flat stone ceiling. That ceiling alone was probably not felt to be sufficient to support the load of the pyramid above even given its short span. Hence a space above this ceiling.
@harrywalker5836
@harrywalker5836 2 жыл бұрын
hawass is a lieing ass. he doesnt want egyptology, to end, as a lie.. revalation of the pyramids. i believe whats written in clay, not hawass.. viper tv, sumerian tablets. ancient people wrote, drew, painted, as they saw it. there,is a grain of salt for you.. brain foerster, praveen mohan, this, is world wide, inc. china. they are not,never have been, burial chambers.. go find a rock,of granite, get your copper chisel, & form a perfect flat surface & polish it, with your copper chisel. not happening. then, lug 20 ish, 50 ton, ''sarcophoguses, '' into the serapian. not happening. then, dig out miles of underground tunnels, levels, for what.?.. 4 stories deep. over 100 ft. those structures were there before this bs was invented you spout..& hawass..lieing ass..
@art-traim1678
@art-traim1678 2 жыл бұрын
😃 Brilliant coverage and all points nicely put, thanks. Hawas does have some points, but seems to be very possessive for some reason, and his arrogance doesn’t help him. What an incredible structure this is - who wouldn’t like to know what else there is possibly hidden within? ? 😀 Well done !
@bensargeant7729
@bensargeant7729 2 жыл бұрын
Another great video! thanks for making these
@machtschnell7452
@machtschnell7452 2 жыл бұрын
Well researched and even better presented.
@roylcraft
@roylcraft 2 жыл бұрын
The should start a GoFundMe page. Millions could be raised I'm sure!
@BottleBri
@BottleBri 2 жыл бұрын
You couldn’t build the great pyramid leaving empty ‘spaces’ here and there willy nilly. It would collapse. Any voids of any size would need to be engineered that way.
@XiledGamer00
@XiledGamer00 2 жыл бұрын
You would think the pyramids would be as solid as possible given they have been there for 4000 years. The roman colosseum wouldn't of lasted 2000 years if there were empty spaces in the foundations.
@BottleBri
@BottleBri 2 жыл бұрын
@@XiledGamer00 I think hawass was trying to say there are spaces and gaps in the blocks on the inside of the pyramid, as if they just ‘left a block out’ here and there and that’s what they might pick up on? I doubt the builders would build it like that! It seems he’s preparing the ground to write off any spaces found as made by small gaps in construction. Well that won’t work, because the scientists operating the system will soon put him right on that. There have long been rumours that HE has done secret digging inside the pyramid at times when it was closed to the public? I wonder what he’s afraid of being found?
@awuma
@awuma Жыл бұрын
Your videos are wonderful! Thank you for a full review of the current work on this fascinating problem. The EGP muon imaging experiment is hugely exciting, and its cost is modest compared with most physics, astrophysics and space experiments. I'm a bit puzzled by Zahi Hawass' ambivalent attitude... perhaps he wasn't offered enough co-authorships on papers. BTW, your excellent introductory cartoon ( 0:14 ) omits Djedefre's now sadly dismantled pyramid (it would lie between Khufu and Khafre). Is there a good depiction in the literature of how it may have actually looked?
@poughkeepsieblue
@poughkeepsieblue Жыл бұрын
The idea of a void to distribute weight off the top of the gallery, does make perfect sense. Its the same concept of having an attic in your house, the empty space keeps excessive weight off the ceiling in your living room, and the load sitting on the roof is distributed to the outside walls, for bearing strength. It is a simple concept, and does make sense, considering the millions of tons over that gallery.
@onetimes1
@onetimes1 2 жыл бұрын
“Untold damage” ? …what has he done besides lie and steal everything and anything he can find. How is Zahi “DaAss” still even able to work there? Someone should “get rid” of him 🤫
@bodystomp5302
@bodystomp5302 2 жыл бұрын
Hawass got bounced from director of Egyptian antiquities in 2011, but it appears he’s still allowed on the property, however regrettable.
@harrykouwen1426
@harrykouwen1426 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder what other particles and energy forms are able to pass through objects, and are able to reflect or change speed according to the type of material the object consists off. Too early to state anything yet, it is time for any scientist to behave modest about his or her findings now. Knowing that you don't know and admitting is the bravest sign of intelligence and the least arrogant one as well. The resistance felt in those who can't admit is tangible in every look and image.
@mmaximk
@mmaximk 2 жыл бұрын
You produce highly agreeable mind-fodder. Many thanks.
@scottzema3103
@scottzema3103 2 жыл бұрын
I want to throw some more ideas into the mix about the Khufu pyramid. The first idea is that the elevation of the entries to the pyramid ties in more or less with the floor elevation of the Grand Gallery. This elevation is important not only to describe the beginning of the corridor which I posit and which the muons may indicate heads horizontally into the pyramid with a possible terminus at the Grand Gallery, but also because this elevation indicated a crucial decision point indicating where the tomb was to be installed as the pyramid was being built, whether to continue with the chamber underground, or possibly place the tomb higher up into the monument and so take advantage of its bulk. On the day 4600 years ago while Khufu and his engineers were mulling the issue, the pyramid was in the following state of construction: it had been built layer by layer with cranes and pulleys to bring up stone blocks and manhauling stone block, mortar mix, and scrap stone to each succeeding and diminishing stone platform (or perhaps by casting block and mixing concrete to create blocks at each level by manhauling water and mixing materials up the pyramid and pouring blocks into forms). Fascia at this stage was not present. So the pyramid now had the shape of a truncated stepped platform, with another important addition. This was a ramp starting from the top of the platform and sloping down perpendicular from the platform top to the desert floor to the north. This ramp was installed to allow easy access onto the construction site for engineers, workers, vendors, architects and last but not least Pharaohs, who along with thousands of people would appreciate a dignified on center causeway to inspect the premises and later, to be carried into the pyramid in the burial ceremony, and not have to shove everyone and everything up or down a hole in the ceiling of the descending corridor! BTW IT ALSO served the people who closed the pyramid by allowing a dignified exit out of the structure through the main corridor leading out of the main entry. This causeway would also serve to bring blocks and granite and other materials more conveniently up the already built lower portion of the pyramid without having to hoist materials all the way from the bottom of the pyramid to the top. At the top of the ramp on that broiling day in the 4th Dynasty, Khufu was presented with two choices. One was to descend into the hole the engineers had prepared for him leading to the underground rock chamber, or as he stood there he thought no, I want to be higher up! So the decision was made to bring the tomb higher up into the pyramid and so the lower tunnels were capped off and plugged (This included the Grotto, which I think was a tomb). Now the construction could proceed on the structures which arose from this platform, including the entrance corridor and its granite roofs, the corridor leading to the Queens chamber, the Grand Gallery, the King's Chamber, and other features, serviced and assisted by a Grand Gallery elevator lift, a wooden platform manipulated by ropes and which lifted goods and people from the base of the Grand Gallery to the Kings Chamber and other areas higher up in the pyramid. Another idea is that the pyramid was robbed by someone who had a supervisory engineering or construction managerial role in the building of the pyramid. Later on that.
@evanpenn1
@evanpenn1 2 жыл бұрын
A load-relieving feature for the grand gallery does seem a likely explanation for the void. The location and shape seems too coincidental.
@hansburch3700
@hansburch3700 Жыл бұрын
Da es klarerweise eine Maschine ist, die seismische Wellen bündelt, könnte der Dichteunterschied einen ausgleichenden Effekt haben. Also keinen Grund hinein zu schauen.
@nokiangage
@nokiangage 2 жыл бұрын
Just watched it a second time and “they were over engineering because they have never really done this before” LOL - this “certainly” explains why inside the chamber you can’t fit a piece of paper between the granite blocks, but yeah they left gaps as Swiss cheese all around and that was completely normal… and maaan, those are one of the most popular people with tons of experience who share this logic with the whole world…
@BungieStudios
@BungieStudios Жыл бұрын
Do you believe in the Great Pyramids? 😱
@nokiangage
@nokiangage Жыл бұрын
@@BungieStudios I have been in Egypt and I have seen the a good potion of them outside and inside, yup they exist and I believe in them. If I am not misunderstanding, please elaborate the question 🍻
@THEMUDBUSTERS4
@THEMUDBUSTERS4 6 күн бұрын
I found your channel a couple days ago. I’ve always been enamored with the pyramids ever since learning about them in middle school. I’ve been watching your videos in order and I’m learning so much. I’d love to hear a discussion between you and Joe Rogan.
@philorkill
@philorkill Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your videos. You relighted my curiosity and wonder for those fascinating structures.
@GAS.M3
@GAS.M3 2 жыл бұрын
I don't believe anything that thieve HawAss says. Regardless, Amazing video and information as always. You definitely deserve way more subs. Thanks you for all your hard work. Hope they can get the funds they need for this project.
@Itsjustme-Justme
@Itsjustme-Justme 2 жыл бұрын
This arguably is one of the most interesting archaeological research projects ever planned. Once the technology is proven functional, it should be shipped to many other archaeological sites that possibly have unknown structures inside. I don't know why there is so much opposition from Mr. Hawass and others when it comes to any kind of new discoveries in Egypt. it makes no sense. Every new discovery makes Egypt even more interesting to tourists. The only idea I have is they have something to hide. Maybe they already found something in secret, private excavations. Maybe Hawass even is a tomb robber, selling stuff illegally. I don't like to think ike that but even after a lot of thinking I'm unable to find a better idea on why there is so much opposition from the same few guys ever and ever again.
@DogSerious
@DogSerious 2 жыл бұрын
There are no tombs in the Pyramids to rob, they're all in the Valley of the Kings. The Pyramids are all monuments to God, built over periods of ancient time of prosperity. They were stopped being built after God decimated Egypt at the Exodus. There hasn't been a new Pyramid since. Because they know God stopped blessing the country after the Passover/Exodus.
@ZerstreuterProfessor
@ZerstreuterProfessor 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome. You deserve much more attention
@antonellocossu4319
@antonellocossu4319 2 жыл бұрын
This video comes from the high quality side of science information sharing. But the big impression made by all the events here described is that personal resentments and interests seem driving Egyptology more than science and discovery. Good luck to researchers, scientists and archeologists: may they be able to overcome personalism to gain knowledge for all of us bystanders
@libertyauto
@libertyauto 2 жыл бұрын
I lost all respect for Zahi Hawass when watching a documentary on the pyramids, it showed him and a group of students inside the pyramid when one of them asked to leave for a bathroom break. He refused, then publicly chastised her for soiling herself within the "sacred pyramid". Thank you for your videos that not only teach, but also avoid celebrating this man.
@jplonsdale7242
@jplonsdale7242 2 жыл бұрын
That can't be real? lol
@libertyauto
@libertyauto 2 жыл бұрын
@@jplonsdale7242 Yeah, crazy isn't it? Might have been one of the documentaries mentioned in this video.
@masterofthepanflute7261
@masterofthepanflute7261 2 жыл бұрын
I remember that show, cheap reality show crap
@TheMissPoovey
@TheMissPoovey 2 жыл бұрын
I saw that one! He acted like she had taken poop in the corner. After he wouldn’t let her leave, because she couldn’t go alone. I think the science channel played it years ago.
@libertyauto
@libertyauto 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheMissPoovey , thanks for the confirmation.
@jeromebirth2693
@jeromebirth2693 2 жыл бұрын
The biggest fear of the Egyptologists is truth. A truth that reveals facts showing that the Pyramids, Sphinx, and the entire Giza plateau including its subterranean tunnel systems were all constructed by a civilization that predated the Egyptian civilization by 37,000 years. The Egyptians inherited all these ancient structures. The Egyptian Kings even went so far as to have their names carved into the stone to claim it as their own in a vain attempt at immortality. This knowledge of the Egyptians not being the builders of these ancient wonders is the truth that Egyptologists fear.
@UliMuliko
@UliMuliko Жыл бұрын
Maybe best channel so far, is there any other this kind of quality channel?
@trickbear
@trickbear 2 жыл бұрын
First I wanna say that you’re producing some of the best information I’ve watched about the pyramids on KZfaq. What I don’t hear anybody talking about is can you compare scans of known empty spaces to what the supposed empty space is? Also it seems to me that there would be massive slabs of granite to support the roof of another empty space. do the scan show anything about that
@HistoryforGRANITE
@HistoryforGRANITE 2 жыл бұрын
The EGP scan may reveal the ceiling designs. The Big Void could also be corbelled like the Grand Gallery is, and not require large ceiling chevrons/lintels.
@buttersstotch6752
@buttersstotch6752 2 жыл бұрын
"Unforseen costs associated with working in Egypt" :D It's okay, you can say it, we know what baksheesh is, and how shamelessly certain figures find ways to get their hands on the money. Call it ... "Hawassment Pwobwems." Obstructing archaeological research for cash is like a national pastime.
@jamessmith530
@jamessmith530 2 жыл бұрын
Rubbish absolutely your opinion
@lucillejerome5511
@lucillejerome5511 Жыл бұрын
What are you talking about? Egyptians have the right in their own country to agree or disagree with others coming in to do research.
@osliverpool
@osliverpool 2 жыл бұрын
Here's the thing that gets me... Even if any apparent voids turn out to be "swiss cheese", or simple contruction artifacts, or stress-relieving voids... well, surely even knowing that is of great archaeological significance, isn't it? I simply don't understand why the critics don't appear to want to know.
@8armdevil
@8armdevil 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the quality videos!
@jameshudson7053
@jameshudson7053 Жыл бұрын
These videos are awesome just like Ancient Architects channel. Thanks
@belliott538
@belliott538 2 жыл бұрын
Once HowAss dies Egyptian Studies can truly begin again…
@jamesknauer540
@jamesknauer540 2 жыл бұрын
One huge tell is how defensive Hawass gets, and how he's self-anointed himself and his committee as gate-keepers to investigations, their interpretations, and heaped with pre-denial of any conclusions that run contrary to Egyptology, which lacks the expertise to interpret the engineering required to erect monoliths. The tell comes in when he calls fellow scientists "they" and "them" like some Mongol hoard come to take his book profits. It's a shame because he sounds increasingly angry and defensive as he ages.
@dorkfish6663
@dorkfish6663 2 жыл бұрын
Another excellent, informative video!
@frankwren8215
@frankwren8215 2 жыл бұрын
Hopefully with how old he's getting and disgrace after disgrace, Hawass won't be able to stand in the way of progress & education much longer.
@jplonsdale7242
@jplonsdale7242 2 жыл бұрын
Wanna bet? He's got another good ten to twenty years of standing in the way of progress in him
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