Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh - Expert Reveals The Pyramids LOST Technology
Episode Date: March 14, 2023What up people, today we independent researcher and creator of UnchartedX Ben Van Kerkwyk to explain WHY the pyramids couldn't have been built the way archeologists say. He showed us the drilled cores... from ancient power tools, perfectly balanced pots that couldn't be made by hand... and even shows what the pyramids could have been used for all along... Limitless energy? INDULGE! 00:00 Join us on our Ancient Egypt adventure 01:19 The precision of the Pyramids are insane 06:40 Tools they claimed Egyptians used doesn’t make sense 09:20 Engineers’ impact + pyramids represent the precision of the Earth 16:06 There was a lost civilization + humans have been around for a LONG time 23:39 Water damage on the Sphinxes 27:07 Gobekli Tepe discovering changed everything 28:42 Sphinxes have a peanut head 33:11 We’re in an ice age + Younger Dryas period was VIOLENT 40:34 Meteors - Great Chicago Fire + Apocalypse + Bones were decimated 47:59 Ancient underground cities - Derinkuyu + Gobekli Tepe 50:28 Impacts in NA caused Younger Dryas 54:14 Religions across the world talk of a great flood 59:14 Ancient Egyptian vases having insane precision 01:11:27 Evidence might be buried + Pyramids across the world 01:15:46 Why are Pyramids so significant? 01:18:43 Pyramids had function = energy source? 01:36:25 Ancient Egyptians talked about a time before them 01:39:25 Unreal craftsmanship - Giant statues + heritage 01:44:27 Ancient cities across the world + South American Precision 01:54:50 Asking for evidence of tools applies to all explanations 02:02:02 Understanding our history will help properly prioritize 02:04:13 Drugs helped + Climate Change = cold is real problem 02:10:48 Dynastic Egyptians deserve credit + hieroglyphs in Australia??? 02:15:02 Scale of mass + hieroglyphs don’t talk about pyramids 02:22:18 Giants + G. Blacki is the actual name + Neanderthals were lit 02:29:04 Aliens ayy LMAO + Exodus into space 02:33:24 Antarctica + Ottoman Maps + Military power 02:38:11 Challenging your beliefs and being open to change
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Everything you know about ancient history is wrong.
The Egyptian pyramids at Giza are undoubtedly one of the most, if not the weirdest structures on earth.
They are full of secrets that have not been exposed.
Who built these incredible structures?
Was it really the ancient Egyptians?
What's the speculation?
There are realms of science that sit outside of our understanding.
We'll know more tomorrow in 10 years, in 1,000 years about science.
There is evidence of techniques and tools that we use
that simply do not match the things that we find in the archaeological record.
It goes so much further than the pyramids to me.
We're looking at the remnants of a lost civilization.
We say they're tombs, and Google might say they're tombs,
but there's very, very little evidence that they're tombs, almost none.
and Google might say they're tombs,
but there's very, very little evidence that they're tombs.
Almost none.
Everything you know about ancient history is wrong.
What?
And we've got a roadie from Metallica here to explain it to you. Let's go.
Okay, give it up right now for Ben.
Ben Kirkquick is in the building.
We've got him here.
Okay, Ben, I'm so excited.
I've been talking to you and then stopped talking to you the entire morning as We got him here. Okay, Ben, I'm so excited. I've been talking to you
and then stopped talking to you
the entire morning
as you've been here.
I want to bring people in.
Obviously, people are familiar
with the pyramids.
They see these great structures.
They go, oh, this is amazing.
They've heard people say,
oh, the aliens built them, et cetera.
Can you just break down
why the pyramids are so amazing
outside of just the visual stimulus
that we've
all seen in postcards well yeah i mean the reality of them is probably stranger and more interesting
than anything people can think up in terms of fiction it's just they're they're for the longest
time have been not only like the tallest man-made structure but they've been some of the most
precisely man-made structures we've we've ever accomplished like we didn't uh it wasn't until
like the 1700s that we even developed enough precision
to be able to define just how accurately
those things were aligned to things like True North.
We're still discovering crazy coincidences about them
in terms of, you know, they're encoding
these fundamentals of nature.
The Great Pyramids, like I can talk about it a bit.
It's a scale model of the Northern Hemisphere.
What do you mean by that?
Well, there's...
Let's break down some of the precision.
Sure.
So the Great Pyramid, mostly that's the one that's been studied.
We actually haven't done a whole lot of studying on the other pyramids.
It's something that's severely lacking.
In fact, we've not even cleared off the bases
of some of the other pyramids up at Giza.
It's crazy. We still, to this day, haven't done that. But that pyramid itself, the Great
Pyramid, the one that we all know and look at, the biggest one, it's aligned to true north within
just a fraction of a degree off. I mean, we just don't build with that type of precision even
today. In fact, the only building we made that was that precise was like an observatory in France
that was the first one we ever made
that even came close to that degree of precision.
They made that in the 1800s.
That's just one aspect of it, though.
It's insane, apart from it being just
the tallest building for forever
until the Eiffel Tower was built.
So the traditional historical narrative
is that these were built, what, 4,500 years ago?
Something like that, somewhere around the 2500 BC realm.
So they build this in
2500 BC and then
it takes us until
1800 AD
in order to build something
taller.
Just taller, not even as precise.
Yeah, not nowhere near as precise.
4,000 years later, 4,500 years later, whatever it is.
So you can understand why people start to question
the historical narrative.
Well, it falls apart under any rudimentary examination,
just the logistics of trying to build that thing alone.
So you have to, the way that they,
there's very little evidence that actually ties it to the guy,
they say, who built it.
It's a guy named Khufu,
who's like a pharaoh of the fourth dynasty, old kingdom.
And they have to try and tie it to,
well, because the whole story is like it's a tomb for him.
So, you know, when he came to power, he probably said,
we're going to build this thing as my tomb.
So they had to get it done inside of his reign.
Right.
So that sort of pins it to like, well, 20 to 25 years.
Okay.
So you can break it down from there.
Okay.
And say, well, it weighs like 5 million tonnes.
No kidding.
And it's made up of somewhere between 2 and 2.5 million blocks of stone
weighing, you know, any of it like two, three tons, some of them.
Some of the big granite blocks on the inside weigh like 70, 80 tons.
It's insane.
And these blocks are coming from quarries that are...
Some of them, yeah.
The granite came from quarries that are like a thousand kilometres away to the south.
They had to be shipped up.
A lot of the limestone, so it's made up of granite in the inside.
The outside is two types of limestone.
The core masonry is this limestone.
A lot of it did come from Giza, not all of it.
There's actually nowhere near enough quarrying
to make up for all of it.
The Cairo area and then the outside casing stone
is something called Tura limestone.
It's a very fine white version of limestone
that came from a fair distance away.
But you can break it down from there.
So if you go, well, it's 25 years,
two and a half million blocks of stone,
it basically means you, for 25 years,
you have to be putting one block of stone in place,
finished, shipped, carved, quarried,
put in place every five minutes, every day for 25 years.
24-7, nonstop.
24-7, nonstop.
And now that-
No union hours.
No union hours.
Yeah. Overtime. No breaks, no whatever it is. 24-7, nonstop. And now that... No union hours. No union hours. Yeah.
Over time.
No breaks, no whatever it is.
I mean, it's crazy.
And that is only the pyramid.
And you've got to remember also, pyramids are part of a complex.
There's two other pyramids there, and then there's like three little...
There's a bunch, yeah.
There's like nine or ten there originally.
But there's just that one pyramid.
It's not just when you build these pyramids, they're part of a complex, not the other pyramids, but they have a causeway. They have these,
they call everything's a temple or ceremonial, but there's temples. There's years of work just
in preparing the ground, the whole foundation of what's around the pyramid. I love going to Egypt
and showing people, everyone stands there and they look up at the pyramids. I'm like, look down at
your fucking feet. Look at what you're standing on.
There's these massive floor tiles that have been put into the ground.
Some of these things weigh up to like 200 tons.
Oh, wow.
And they fit together like a geometric puzzle and it's done so precisely
you can't stick a razor blade in between the gaps.
I didn't know that.
Oh, imagine.
I didn't pick up on that at all.
So you're saying that they dug down and then created a flat surface.
A foundation.
And then tiled the foundation.
Yeah, but some of these, I mean, you're talking tiles this thick,
some of them even bigger.
In fact, the middle pyramid is even more impressive in that regard
because it's built into a side of a hill.
It's literally a sloping hill.
So they dug down on this side and they raised it up on this side.
They made this flat platform for it.
And it's just astonishing engineering.
So you've got to factor in, and of course, these types of projects,
you don't just make it up as you go along, right?
So how long does it take to design it, plan it, put the plan?
That's years.
Doing the foundation work, that's probably years.
You have to make sure there's enough stone to even achieve it.
Just logistics is this massive problem.
I actually would love to do the exercise of working backwards
because we've done some experiments on things like,
okay, using really primitive methods,
which is what the mainstream guys say they used,
it takes this long to cut stone.
And we've done a few little experiments here and there,
but you can use that and work backwards,
try to estimate how many cuts of stone do we need,
how long would that have taken,
how long is it going to take to ship this ship?
Oh, that's right.
You can see based on, what is it, axe and chisel or whatever it is?
Yeah, chisels.
So, well, this is the thing.
Hammer and chisel?
The stupidest thing about it all is you see these wonders of ancient Egypt,
the pyramids, these giant granite single-piece statues and columns,
and they tell you that it was all made with round balls of stone
and flint chisels just like repeatedly bashing on them.
So let's assume it was.
Or like grinding on them with sand.
But let's assume it was.
You could calculate.
No, no, no.
But even if we were to,
you could calculate how long it would take
to take that round stone and the chisel
and chip away and create these perfectly,
they're not even symmetrical,
but like these perfectly shaped blocks.
Which you wouldn't even be able to get them perfectly symmetrical, but like these perfectly shaped you know blocks
you wouldn't even be able
to get them perfectly symmetrical
but even
as close as you could
you could count how long
it would take
and have you tried
to do that math?
no but it's on my list
of things to do
in particular I'm interested
in like the granite as well
because the granite's
so hard to cut
granite's so hard
there's a few things
involved in the granite
it's
you know they say
well they grinded
on it with sand
like they get a copper bar and we've done these experiments it takes it's much harder like, they say, well, they grinded on it with sand and, like, they get a copper bar.
And we've done these experiments.
It takes, it's much harder.
Like, that's the other thing that people try to compare,
like, the work of the Romans and a lot of times the Greeks.
They all worked in marble.
Like, this is a very, very soft stone relative to granite.
Like, frankly, granite's a stupid material to try and do this stuff in.
It's so, it's harder than steel.
It's like a 6.57 on the Mohs scale.
You know, diamonds at a 10, your fingernails at a 2, coppers at
3, bronzes at 4, steels like a
5 and a 6. What is marble
out of curiosity? Marble's like, I think it's like
a 3-ish. So this is theoretically
twice as hard as years earlier.
Super hard. You had mentioned
molecular manipulation.
Yeah, so that's the speculation
realm, but it does to, and you can see a bit more of that,
I think, you go like South America,
because a lot of the real megalithic stuff in places like Peru.
And just so we can define megalithic.
A megalith is just a giant stone.
Giant stone walls, yeah.
I call stuff that's megalithic, I would define it as like, yeah,
walls and structures made up of massive single pieces of stone,
typically showing signs of precision in how they're built
and just perfect alignment.
Like making these sort of mortarless walls is not easy.
Like we don't do that today.
Like this is what, you know, mortar between walls.
So I think this is one of the cool things that you've exposed
and a lot of your contemporaries have exposed
is that ancient history isn't studied by,
it isn't studied by architects.
Do you know what I mean?
Or engineers.
So they're applying these ideas and principles
to the information that they have,
but they don't know what the fucking Mohs scale is.
So they're finding some tools,
and they're seeing some locks,
and they're going, okay,
this is how they probably chopped up the rocks.
And in their mind, engineering is limitless.
You can do whatever,
whereas an engineer would be like, no, you can't. Well, an engineer shows up, and then he looks at the granite and goes, wait, they did chopped up the rocks. And in their mind, engineering is limitless. You can do whatever, whereas an engineer would be like,
no, you can't.
Well, an engineer shows up and then he looks at the granite and goes, wait, they did what with the granite?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's the engineers that come along
and in a lot of cases, the whole, like,
all of the problems that come up with that orthodox story
when it comes to engineering topics,
that's been raised by engineers.
It's a strange thing to me.
It's like you wouldn't ask an archaeologist
to design the chair that he's sitting on, right?
Yeah, yeah.
But if it's an ancient chair, he's going to claim domain over it
and dominion over it and say, I'm the expert, I don't care what you say.
So a lot of that happens.
That's not to say they haven't tried to make studies into it
and that's part of my work.
I dive into these studies and kind of tear them apart
because they're ultimately really silly.
And when you go to Egypt, you take engineers, construction experts,
architects, people look at it and they just see it immediately
and go, this is nonsense.
Yeah.
Like, this isn't the work of a primitive civilization
or a Bronze Age civilization with simple tools.
And then, yeah, you come back to the pyramid
and when you start to realise, like, there's so much more involved in this,
there's evidence of this, of the people that build it having,
you know, cosmic knowledge, having knowledge of the planet, the dimensionality of the Earth
to a crazy degree.
Like, so if you take the, here's an easy statistic,
if you take the height of the Great Pyramid,
you multiply it by 43,200, you get the polar radius of the Earth.
What does that mean, polar radius?
So from the centre of the Earth to the north polar radius.
If you take the perimeter length of the Great Pyramid,
you measure around the perimeter of it,
and you multiply that by 43,200, you get the equatorial circumference of the Great Pyramid. You measure around the perimeter of it and you multiply that by 43,200,
you get the equatorial circumference of the Earth.
So the length of the equator.
And where is this 43,200?
This gets into Randall-Carlson territory.
It's a 432, 727.
It all relates back to, I guess, the cosmic sort of cycles
and all of these processional numerology when you talk about, you know,
procession of the equinoxes.
Are you familiar with this term?
So it's the great year.
You know, right now we're in the age of Pisces.
It's that 26,000-year cycle that's defined by where the sun rises
on the solstice and it's like under what constellation does it rise?
So right now we're in the age of Pisces where we're transitioning into,
there's a whole song about this, you know what the next age is?
Aquarius.
Aquarius, the age of Aquarius, right?
And in fact there's references in the Bible about this.
It literally, this, you think about it,
like Jesus kind of represents the age of Pisces in a lot of ways.
Oh, that's the way they have the fish on the back of the car?
Yeah, they have the Jesus fish on the car. It's always a giggle because it's like,
okay, it's Jesus, but you're actually, it's an analogy for the age of Pisces that we live in.
And, you know, he was, you know, he was a, part of his disciples were fishermen. He fed people
with bread and fish. The age before Jesus, 2,000 years ago,
was the age of Ares, the ram.
So think about another biblical figure that existed in the old time.
Well, Moses as well, right?
And he blew the ram's horn, you know?
And before that...
I wonder if that was him trying to talk
because he had a speech impediment.
I wonder if they thought it was a ram's horn,
but he was just like, hey.
Maybe, it just sounds like a ram's horn.
Yeah.
Yeah, it could have been.
But that's okay.
Yeah, Moses.
Yeah.
Well, and it goes further too.
It's like you go back further and the age before that,
another 2,000 years before that was the age of Taurus the bull.
So the sun's rising under the constellation of Taurus
on that spring solstice.
And the story about Moses, do you remember what happened
when he came down from Mount Sinai with the commandments from God
when he was, you know, when he found his followers doing?
Yeah, worshipping Baal.
Yeah, worshipping the golden calf.
And he murdered all those motherfuckers for it
and they smashed the idol up.
It's sort of representation of age of Taurus is ending.
Now we're in the age of Aries.
Now we're in the age of Pisces.
And then there's a part in the Bible, I can't, just going from memory,
they're talking about Passover or the Last Supper
and one of Jesus' disciples asks him,
you know, what will we do without you, O Lord?
Like, what happens when you're gone?
He says, you know, have no fear, go into town,
find the man bearing a pitcher of water,
follow him to his house and there you will find sustenance.
So, you know, how is Aquarius described or shown?
It's like a man bearing a pitcher of water, right?
They're literally telling you.
So it's this cosmic knowledge that's encoded in these stories.
Okay.
And it's encoded in monuments like the pyramid.
It's not, you know, they even have knowledge of the pyramid.
It encodes the specific shape of the earth.
By that I mean the earth being this oblate spheroid, right?
We're a little bit fatter around the edge than we are around north-south, right?
Because we spin.
Yeah.
So we're not a perfect sphere.
That ratio, you'd call it the ratio of latitude to longitude.
So if you take that grid of latitude and longitude,
you spread it out on the planet,
you go down to one quarter of one degree and you measure it
so it's a little bit further sort of east-west than it is north-south. That ratio of latitude to longitude is expressed in
the pyramid because it sits on something, and we talked about the foundation, it sits on something,
sits on the foundation called the socle. So it's like they call it, it's a cubit high, it's about
this high, sticks out about this far. So it gives you two ways to measure the perimeter length,
right? You can measure the base of the right? You can measure the base of the pyramid
or you can measure the base of the socle,
the socle being slightly larger.
And when you ratio or you compare those two numbers...
It's longitude and latitude.
It's latitude and longitude.
And bear in mind that we couldn't figure out
how to measure longitude accurately in our own civilisation
until the turn of the, what, the 19th century.
I think that's when it was.
James Cook's second voyage of discovery.
We could not measure longitude to save ourselves
until we developed chronometers and watches accurate enough to do so.
And you're saying, according to the traditional archaeologists,
4,500 years ago, and you believe probably much longer,
they knew... Yeah.
So if we're accepting...
If we're accepting traditional
archaeology, there's just all these crazy
coincidences, and none of that,
they had no idea that if you
multiply, it's a longitude, longitude, and latitude.
At that time, they just were not aware.
They were not privy to this information. There's no proof
to show that they were. They say it's a coincidence.
All of these things, you keep coming up with them
because there's other, you know,
there's some people make an argument
that the speed of light is encoded in the damn thing.
You know, there's all these crazy golden ratios and metrics
when you get into like the King's Chamber
and the geometry of that.
It relates back to the meter.
There's so many interesting studies about it,
but it's generally all described and hand-waved away as well.
It's just coincidence.
And it's like you can find this stuff and you can analyze anything.
You're approaching this and, like, a lot of people in your position are going,
these are a lot of coincidences.
And it might be easier to look at these people who built the pyramids
as a different group of people than the dynastic Egyptians
that live, you know, 4,500 years ago.
Exactly what I think.
I think what we're looking at,
and it goes so much further than the pyramids to me,
we're looking at the remnants of a lost civilization that left stuff. They might
have left cultural knowledge. They might have left architecture and objects that were inherited by
essentially a Mesolithic people that developed into a Bronze Age culture that we call the
dynastic Egyptians. I think we have a good understanding of the dynastic Egyptian civilization.
The tools that we found, the way they live their life,
that's the job of the Egyptologist.
And I think we're right about those guys.
I just don't think you can say they made everything.
And, in fact, they themselves don't say that.
Like their own history goes back 40-something thousand years.
So when do you think they're made?
Oh, so it's a lot of, I think, pre-cataclysm, a lot of this stuff,
and I'm not saying the pyramids as they are.
You do have to kind of look through all this stuff with the lens of,
I need to preface this because it's like there were thousands
and thousands of years of renovation, reuse, rebuilding, adaptation,
and then thousands of years of deconstruction, quarrying.
Like they've literally been ripping stone off these pyramids
for the last couple thousand years and selling it.
Yeah.
Up until about 50, 60 years ago.
Oh, wow.
So it's just that, you know, you have to look at it through that lens
and the Egyptians spent many thousands of years working on this stuff
and renovating it, using it for their own purposes.
But I think a lot of this stuff goes back to before the cataclysm,
like the Younger Dryas period, which we can talk more about,
but potentially goes back way further than that.
If I'm going to speculate, I mean, hundreds of thousands of years,
potentially 50, because, and this is where it gets interesting
because there's so many other vectors from modern science right now
that should be affecting that story of history, right?
The last 20 years we've seen incredible advances
in our knowledge base, not just the cataclysm stuff.
To me, that's the key that kind of unlocks the whole picture,
but even the history of the human race itself.
We thought for the longest time,
if you're a creationist, 6,000 years, okay?
But for the longest time, Victorian era,
like, well, maybe it's 50,000 years as a species.
Then once we start dating human remains,
we get to like 190,000 years old,
like we found some stuff in Ethiopia.
And then recently in the last couple of decades.
Something like 300, right?
Morocco.
They found a modern anatomically correct, yep, Morocco.
You nailed it.
And that takes it to about 300,000 years old.
That's still the oldest actual thing in the fossil record,
but now we've got DNA studies.
There's a study that's done recently that shows like we diverged,
us Neanderthals like diverged from a common ancestor
somewhere in the 800,000 year old range is what they're guessing.
And then the latest thing in the last couple of years,
studies into teeth morphology, like the really nerdy studies
into how teeth evolve and grow over time,
and they're putting it back at 900 to a million years old as a species.
So there is a chance that human beings have been here for a million years.
In our current form.
Yeah, and modern, anatomically correct humans.
You could shave one down and put him out in the street.
It's like Brendan Fraser and, you know, Encino Man.
Yeah.
Now, yeah, that's crazy.
Now, we see how much changes within 1,000 years.
We see how much changes within 200 years.
Yeah.
Right?
Like from the 1800s to now.
A lot fucking changes.
So it is very possible
there could be a civilization
that pops up,
achieves immense success,
gets wiped out,
happens again,
like almost on some
Matrix shit.
Yeah, it's a cycle.
I actually do think
that's a long,
convoluted thing to get to
about why this stuff's important
is I do think there's a cycle
almost of civilization
and catastrophe or cataclysm.
And we've been through it.
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You want to put some money down on it.
But if you can be a rational bettor or just say fucking throw caution to the wind.
That's what I think.
I think the beauty of March Madness is you don't even really have to know basketball.
Yeah.
College basketball, there's so many upsets.
Just throw a fucking, just put a few bucks down.
Throw it out.
Ask your girl who's going to win.
Ask your girl.
Just say the name of the universities and be like, yo, who got this?
Which sounds right.
That's it.
Go with it.
And you know what's good about BetOnline.ag?
What's that? You get free money when you sign up.
Oh, wow. Look at that. Look at that.
They match your initial deposit up to $1,000
by 50%. That's right. So if you put in
$1,000, you get $500 free bucks. Why not
run that on some March Mad? Go get some
money, boys. Can you just explain,
I think it was Robert Shock
had the theory about the
Sphinx with water erosion. That's right. And I think that kind Robert Shock had the theory about the Sphinx with water erosion.
That's right.
And I think that kind of begins this conversation
about Younger Dryas, right?
It begins, it ties it back to an era
that happens to coincide with the Younger Dryas
and also, for that matter,
Atlantis and Solon's and Plato's story
of the destruction of Atlantis and Solon.
All of a sudden, the dates start lining up.
They really do.
It's amazing.
So break this down.
What is his theory?
Great.
We shouldn't forget, rest in peace, John Anthony West.
Oh, yeah.
So he and Robert Shock, he's the guy who invited Robert Shock.
And John Anthony West looked at it at the Sphinx.
So the Sphinx, you know, it sits down at the end of the,
there's a causeway connected to the middle pyramid complex.
It's in this big enclosure.
The Sphinx is not like a built thing
like they carved down into the ground
and then they, you know, they shaped it
out of bedrock. It's what, it was originally what you would
call a yardang. Yeah, it's a crazy name. But it's
like this limestone outcropping
that sticks up out of the ground. That was essentially
its head. So they carved this big pit and they
shaped this thing out of
limestone, out of bedrock.
So there's been a study done.
So Robert Schock is a geologist, I think,
a professor of geology at the Boston University, if I'm not wrong,
went and looked at the erosion that is present on the enclosure walls.
Now, the Sphinx itself has been repaired and worked on for,
like, the Old Kingdom.
There's records of – there's another thing.
There's actually records of the Old Kingdom people fixing it when they supposedly built it, which is like, how does that make
sense?
The Romans did it, the New Kingdom guys did it, you know, our modern guys have done it,
the British were working on it.
So the Sphinx itself is hard to get those indicators, but the walls of the enclosure
are untouched.
So he went in and studied it and he's looking at these vertical fissures and going, that's
rainfall erosion.
But it takes a tremendous amount of rain
to create these vertical fissures in the limestone.
And remember, we're talking about the Sahara Desert.
It doesn't rain a whole lot.
I've seen it happen.
But you're talking about like a lot of heavy rain,
thousands of years of it.
Now, studies of the climate and the history of the region,
we know that takes us back to 10,000 BC.
You see these types of fissures if you go to look at any of, like,
the canyons in the United States of America,
and I'm sure there's other places,
but you see these cracks in the stone,
and that's exactly how it was described to me.
It was like, this is water erosion, sometimes heavy rain,
or sometimes there'll be, like, water actually coming through the canyons,
but these are these vertical cracks that exist in it.
Fissures.
Sorry, yeah, vertical fissures.
And so it was really cool
when it was pointed out
on the Sphinx
and I'm like,
well, where the fuck
would the water come from
that would create these?
Because it's intense
amount of water
that has to create.
It's rain,
usually super heavy rain.
It's a different,
if that was like filled up
with water,
you'd get a different
type of erosion.
That's a whole other thing.
There does seem to be
some evidence for that
in some other areas,
which is like,
holy crap,
because the evidence
for mega floods in Egypt is there as well.
But this specifically is like rainfall erosion.
So that's where he dates it back to, you know,
10,000 to 12,000 sort of years ago, right in that period.
Now, when he presented this, and if you, by the way,
if you take that, an image of those fissures and that limestone wall
and you present it to pretty much any geologist
without the context of saying, oh, this is the Sphinx enclosure,
they're going to take its rainfall erosion.
Even the arguments to this day, because they don't want to admit it,
they're really weak source arguments against Shock's theory.
But when he went and presented it, he kind of got laughed.
He thought he was doing something that was going to really advance
our knowledge base, but he kind of got laughed out of the room
by the old boys' network.
In fact, it was Mark Lehner who's like, show me the pot shards.
What is this date of like 10,000 BC?
Now, the funny thing about that is,
is then along comes Gobekli Tepe,
because that's a site in Turkey, ancient site,
discovered mid-90s by the German Archaeological Institute
and Klaus Schmidt, he's like, try not to say Klaus Schwab.
Don't say that.
Wrong Klaus.
Although, yeah, sadly, Klaus Schmidt has passed away too.
But that site's been carbon dated,
and they know it was deliberately buried.
It's bang on in that time period.
It's not very far away.
They built giant stone megaliths and pillars and stuff,
you know, 10, 20 tons.
There was a culture doing that at that time.
It's like, here's your answer.
The time is 9,000 years ago.
Yeah, well, 9,000 BC. 9, your answer. The time is 9,000 years ago. Yeah, well, 9,000 BC.
9,000 BC, so that is 11,000 years ago.
Around that.
And there's not only, but now it's Karahan Tepe and all these tepes.
There might be dozens of sites now that are even bigger than Gobekli Tepe.
So you know that there is an ancient civilization creating some cool megalithic shit around 11,000 years ago.
And then it just so happens if you look at Egypt around 11,000 years ago,
it was kind of wet.
Right, in that period, yes.
There was rainfall erosion.
But, you know, look, I also know that it wasn't just that period.
And I know, like, Shock has had to be pretty, you know,
political and cautious in his estimates.
Yeah.
But I do know that he also does push it back further.
Like when pressed, I mean, he can go back further,
like 50, 60, 75,000 years old.
Because, you know, there's other correlations with the Sphinx,
the age of Leo.
Okay, explain that.
So this is what I think is quite interesting.
So let's just say we're operating in that like 9, 10, 11,000 year range.
The Sphinx, as we see it now, is this like lion that has a human's head.
Yes.
Right?
But the head is too small for the body.
That's crazy.
And if you were a brilliant,
what are they called?
A stonemason?
Yeah, yeah.
Stone carver.
Stone carver.
You're not going to make a mistake like that.
If you're the same people that build the pyramids
to exact proportions,
you're not going to have this tiny little head and be like,
oopsie, I guess we didn't figure that one out.
So what a common theme is, is that they came across the Sphinx
and it had a lion's head.
And then witch pharaoh chopped it up and made the human one.
Yeah, we don't know.
Well, it's attributed to Khafra, the owner of the middle pyramid,
the son of Khufu, the big pyramid, fourth dynasty.
That's generally what they say.
You're absolutely right about the head.
When you go there and look at it, the head's too small.
And the Egyptians, look, they were master craftsmen
and they made a lot of statues, did a lot of work,
absolute masters of proportion.
I don't think they would have got that wrong either.
And there's an interesting thing about that too.
It's like this story about the erosion
because it goes back to the, you know,
the fishes on the wall in the enclosure.
They say, oh, that's wind and sand erosion.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like this is what they say.
And you're like, okay, well, if you give that thing 50 years,
you know what happens, right?
It fills up to its neck in sand or its chest in sand.
Yeah, yeah.
So how long?
When we discovered the Sphinx, I don't know how long ago.
Oh, yeah, I mean, Napoleon ran across.
I mean, we knew it was there.
We've known about it for a long time.
But when it was discovered, it was buried up to the head.
It's tons of pictures.
We didn't even know it had the body.
Yeah, it's like this head sticking out of the ground.
All the pyramids, too.
Like, they've had to excavate to get to the bottom of these pyramids.
Oh, yeah, to get to the actual bottom layers, yeah.
Yeah, so you're basically saying it was protected by sand.
It can't be eroded. So that's the thing how long does it take for this to
be exposed for it to be to get this wind and sand erosion on it yeah and then you know what you don't
see on the head wind and sand erosion you don't see these vertical fissures but that's the part
of the sphinx that's sticking up above the sand that would be hit by wind and sand all the time
yeah yeah so what is this telling you is like okay so, okay, so is this top, is this head just,
it's the same type of limestone.
I mean, it varies in layers.
Yeah.
But it's like, this is way fresher.
The head's way fresher than the rest of it.
So let's assume they did carve a head out of the lion's head, right?
A human head out of a lion's head.
Yeah.
And let's assume the Sphinx, like the pyramids,
had some sort of astronomical connection.
It does.
It does.
What does it line up with now?
Well, now, I actually, I don't know.
So it faces the sunrise, right?
So it's, well, I guess it's Pisces.
It's where the, generally the way these goes
in terms of the astronomical age or pointers,
it's like the spring solstice or it's one of those dates
where it's
astronomical significance.
Basically my question is
what was it 10,000 years ago?
Age of Leo the Lion.
So you have...
Yeah.
Ah.
So it literally lines up
as a marker.
It lines up 10,000 years ago
when we're talking about the age
like the sun rises in.
Now it's...
Pisces.
Pisces is going to be Aquarius
and the constellation
that was fucking rising on
was Leo.
It's got the body of the Leo.
It's got this tiny
little shrunken head,
right,
which could have been
carved out of a lion's head.
There's a lot of things
that are making sense
for this time.
Question about the head.
Is the...
Are there chisel marks
on it?
Are the chisel marks
as precise on the Sphinx's head
as they are
in the rest of the pyramids?
Good question.
Because if they're imprecise,
that would speak to the ancient Egyptians
not having the technology.
I don't think there's any of what I would call the advanced tool marks
on the head of the Sphinx, no.
What about the unadvanced ones?
Yeah, are they like kind of jagged?
Yeah, it's very similar to a lot of the work in the quarrying that you see.
Because it's so big and it's relatively rough, it's huge, right?
But it's also limestone, which is much easier to carve than granite.
Yeah.
But there's not, I mean, when you get into tool marks,
maybe we can talk about that in a bit,
but it's like these tubular drills and the actual saw cuts,
the circular saw cuts.
You see all that stuff in basalt, granite, you know, diorite,
the really hard stones.
You don't see it as often in limestone.
That was much easier to work.
I do think
it was very, very likely
the dynastic Egyptians who recarved the head of the Sphinx.
I 100%. And dynastic
Egyptians, for everybody listening, that's 4,500
years. From the start, yeah. Up until
about 30 BC. So their civilization
spanned like, you know, a good
3,000 years
thereabouts. Like from like 20,
yeah. 2,500 to 30 BC.
2,500, 3,000, 2,500 to 30 BC
with Cleopatra with the snake.
Game over.
Okay, okay.
So, okay, now that takes us
to the Younger Dryas.
Right.
So what the fuck is happening?
Well, first, can you explain to people
why an ice age isn't like the movie?
I think the common perception for humans
is when it's an ice age,
everything in the world is completely frozen over.
Nothing can live except a little squirrel with acorns.
It's called the ice age.
It makes sense.
Well, we're in the fucking ice age.
We're still in it.
We're in an interglacial period in an ice age right now.
So if there's glaciers...
It's 53 degrees in New York while we're filming this.
Ice age is fire.
Ice ages are great.
Well, yeah, it's not snowball Earth.
Like, it's not this planet snowball idea.
Millions and millions of years ago,
there may have been periods like that.
But no, Ice Age and the glacial maximum
refers to like when we had the Laurentide,
the Corderan, and the European glaciers,
you know, these two miles of ice
that were sitting up on top of the northern hemisphere
of the planet.
It was generally colder, but there were plenty of temperate zones
and even tropical zones along the equator.
So essentially it's a percentage of glacial ice that qualifies a time period to be an ice age.
They generally go on like the extent of the glaciers.
And so we can see from, you know, glacial till and the moraines
and all of these geological features about how far the glaciers extended.
We've been buried under a couple of miles of ice right here
back in that period.
But the sea levels were 400 feet lower because all that water's
up on the land now and all that mouth, sea levels rise,
all that stuff.
And, yeah, so that abruptly ended.
And so we've known it's kind of interesting.
It's all work that's happened in the last couple of decades really And, yeah, so that abruptly ended. And so we've known, it's kind of interesting,
it's all work that's happened in the last couple decades, really,
that has really advanced our understanding of what occurred at the end of that last glacial maximum.
Because it was violent.
Like, that's the thing.
It turns out it was tremendously violent.
Again, so we understand this.
The Younger Dryas is the Ice Age
or is the violent time?
The Younger Dryas is essentially
the boundary between
what we would call the Pleistocene,
which was the glacial,
like the end of the,
like we would generally call it the Ice Age,
but that's like the glacial maximum,
and the Holocene,
which is the era we're in now.
This nice warm weather
that's been pretty stable
for 10,000 years or so.
Like that's where we live. It's the reason
why we've got a civilization.
The Younger Dryas is the
transition point between that
and it gets crazy wacky in terms of
something happened 12,000 years ago.
12,800 years ago. It's a period
between 12,800 years ago and
11,600 years ago. And if you
go back, it's this tumultuous time.
We kind of have learnt this from ice core data.
So we go and drill down in Antarctica and Greenland
and we drill down right down into the ice
and extract these big tubes of ice because every year, you know,
the snowfall gets laid down on there and it's compacted
and you can do analysis on it and look at things like oxygen isotopes
and determine temperature and accumulation of snow
and all these different things about the past.
So a similar thing almost like with trees and rings.
Yeah, pretty much.
You're doing that with ice.
With ice.
And you can go back hundreds of thousands of years.
So what we've learned is that something happened.
Like we're coming out of this more or less warm, gentle,
we're warming up from this, you know, glacial maximum.
But then all of a sudden it just goes boom down to these severe cold
for like, you know, 700, 800 years and then it's boom,
jacked back up again by another event and then it's sort of,
it's this gentle warming thing that gets us up to more or less
the temperature we have now.
But there's this really violent period in between called the Younger Dryas.
You go back further, there's ups and downs as well,
but the other thing that correlates to the Younger Dryas
is this extinction
event. We've known about that forever,
right? We've dug up mammoth bones and
you know, saber-toothed tigers and American
lions and short-faced bears, like all these giant
animals. It's not the dinosaurs,
but they were here. Animals that
exist now. Animals, well no, it's no
animals that were here, but only some 12
to 13,000 years ago. So it's the megafauna
extinction. Think about the mammoths, like some people get it. What is a megafa years ago. So it's the megafauna extinction.
Think about the mammoths.
What is a megafauna for the people? Well, megafauna is like any mammal or large animal with a body weight,
I think, over like 40 kilograms.
So a woolly mammoth.
Yeah, a woolly mammoth.
We are megafauna.
Oh, us too.
Me in particular.
100 pounds.
Oh, wow, wow, wow.
Definitely megafauna.
Yeah.
Yeah, so that's 80 pounds-ish, something, 90 pounds, something like that.
And the crazy thing is as many species of megafauna that there are alive today,
that's basically how many went extinct in a very short period of time,
also in that Younger Drys period, like 11,600 to 12,800.
So Younger Drys is not the event.
It's the time period after the event before things start to normalise.
Yeah, so it's this period of time
where it's this tumultuous time,
we've got these crazy swings
in temperatures,
we've got these massive sea level,
like these melt water pulses
where the sea level rises
tremendously, very violently,
and we've got an extinction event now.
All tied into this one period
from ice core samples
and now, since 2007, there's more than 160 papers
that have also shown there was a cosmic impact at that time.
So digging in that layer, so in that same layer in the dirt,
you dig down in the strata layers, you can date all that stuff,
where those megafauna bones are,
a lot of the extinction bones at that same layer,
that's where we find what you call impact proxy.
So shock-synthesized nanodiamonds.
What does that mean?
So it's basically the impact and it's the byproducts
of extreme heat and pressure and like layers and carbon
and like all these different indicators of basically cosmic impacts,
like these gigantic explosions.
So this is what the Carolina Bays thing is?
Well, the Carolina Bays may or may not.
It seems like it ties into this event.
Let's not go there then.
Yeah, it's almost like splash damage.
Carolina Bays is just a byproduct almost of a big cosmic impact.
This is like just unimaginably violent events, these cosmic,
either it's airbursts or it's huge impacts of stuff that's like a mile,
two mile wide,
coming in at, you know, 40,000 kilometres a second kind of thing
and just pounding into the Earth.
And then it creates these tellers,
these microscopic telltale signatures
like magnetic carbon spherules, shock sensor sized nanodiamonds.
There's a whole list of them.
There's a lot of these scientific papers
that have now figured that out. Sensate evidence of impact.
They call it impact proxies.
So it's the thing we don't
quite have at Craters. Now that's stuff
that Randall is working on, but you've got to also
imagine some of these impacts, they might not
have all been impacts. They might have been airbursts.
There was a good...
What is an airburst? So it's where it blows
up before it hits the ground. It's kind of what we see
now with like, what is it,
shooting stars and stuff like that.
Yeah, there was a big one in Tunguska in Siberia.
Yeah, that's the Russian one.
Yeah, the Russian one.
But isn't that impact though?
No, it was an airburst.
And it would flatten a giant area.
It was only a tiny little rock compared to what we would see.
So it flattened an area despite it being an airburst?
Oh, yeah.
Think of like a big bomb going off.
It's just a shockwave comes down and just goes.
Oh, massive problems.
Maybe we need to get a picture up of that to show it
because it still hasn't even recovered.
Yeah, in Siberia, right.
Well, there's pictures of all these just trees locked down by matchsticks,
but, you know, like acres and acres of it.
So some people go, well, where are the craters if there's this massive impact?
And what you're saying is you don't need a crater
in order for the impact to have extreme damage.
Well, that's right.
So you might have some remnant.
It could have been an airburst.
A lot of people mistake the research.
The latest research really shows it was a series of impacts.
It was all airbursts.
It wasn't just like one big one.
There was a whole range of them.
It's like an asteroid belt almost.
It was actually a disintegrating comet.
This is a funny thing.
So it's Comet Enki.
Now, this came into our solar system a long time ago.
It's been broken up.
There's actually a – it's formed what's a meteor stream.
It runs around the sun and loops out.
And we cross through it twice a year.
It's the torrid meteor stream.
I think it's like June and October.
So we sort of cross over it twice, right? I think Graham talked about it in his series. It's the torrid meteor stream. I think it's like June and October. So we sort of cross over it twice.
I think Graham talked about it in his
series. He does. And it's like
we don't know if there's large chunks
still in this. Like we do run into this same
period. And there's a lot related to
that time period in October. The
Chicago fires
of I think it's like 18 or 19
something. The
Great Chicago Fire?
The Great Chicago Fire.
Was started by a comet?
It may have been an airburst or it might have been a remnant
or even a gas bubble that came in from something
because also on the same day you had the Pashtigo Forest Fire,
which was like I think in southern Canada or somewhere like that.
It's one of the craziest stories you'll ever hear
because this huge area in the same timeframe,
this massive fire spread,
like it's unimaginable conflagration
as well as what happened in Chicago,
all in that same time period,
the same time period when Tunguska hit,
that same time of year
when we're crossing this meteor stream.
So it's like, you know, this is not always the,
you know, these little shooting stars
aren't always the friendliest of things.
I think a lot of that ties back to this meteor stream
and potentially this, yeah, this event.
This blew my mind a little bit when I was watching Graham's piece
because I think my perception is probably similar to most people,
which is like, there's been a couple comets that hit the Earth,
like one or two every 65 million years, and then it's done.
And then Mark showed me this picture
of all the comets that have hit the Earth, right?
He just sends me the picture.
He goes, hey, look at this.
And then I look and I go, wow, that's a lot of comets.
And then on the bottom of the picture it goes,
since 1994.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I thought this was all that ever hit it.
So, and I think it was, I don't know if it was you,
but I know Rogan was messaging me about this too.
Yeah, here's a picture.
1994 to 2013.
Just in 2013.
What, 19 years?
That's crazy.
So, and Rogan said this as well to me.
He's like, yeah, we're in a shooting gallery.
Cosmic shooting gallery.
And it's better we don't think about things like this, by the way.
True.
It's better we assume it's just a big one hits and then like, okay, that's why there's that little hole near Cancun.
And then the dinosaurs go away and then we're back to normal.
Yeah.
It's better for the average person because I don't recycle as it is now.
But if you told me it's possible that next year we're going to get hit by some big shit, I'm not recycling ever.
I'm not going to do a single good thing for the environment.
Yeah, I was thinking that.
Like, dude, these political arguments we have, like, how many genders are there?
Have a million.
Who gives a fuck?
Yeah, yeah, it's over.
We're going to die in four days anyway.
It's over, baby.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay, so this is happening between 12 and...
Yeah, 11,006.
11,000 years ago.
So that's the Younger Dryas period, right?
And that's the true key to me
that unlocks the story of civilization
because if that event happened today to us, our civilization is gone.
If we survive it, we will be knocked back to hunter-gatherers
and in a generation or two, we'll be sitting around the campfire
telling ghost stories about plasma TVs
and dancing around with black shiny rocks,
trying to turn it on and say,
well, this thing will give you an answer to anything
and we can talk to someone on the other, you know, it's magic.
Can you paint that picture a little bit?
Like if Younger Dryas happens today,
what happens geopolitically?
Like does a wave come in?
It happens to the entire world.
It depends where it lands, what happens.
I mean, if you're anywhere near the actual impact site
or the areas, I mean, you're just gone.
Every building?
Oh, done.
I mean, if you're anywhere near it,
it's just instantly disintegrated. The entire planet? Well, if it's big enough, I mean, you're just gone. Every building gone. Oh, done. I mean, if you're anywhere near it, it's just instantly disintegrated.
The entire planet?
Well, if it's big enough, I mean, that's the problem,
is that you go back far enough in these extinction events.
I mean, some of them have eliminated like 99.9% of Earth,
of life on the planet.
If that happens, it's game over.
Like, we're back to microbes and let's start again.
But it's, you know, we're back to rats.
It's whatever the hell crawls out of the pond the next time
and give it a billion years and see where we end up.
But it's, no, if something mediums or relatively small,
Younger Dryas, I mean, that's an extinction event, right?
It knocked humans around, knocked off half of the big animals
on the planet at the time, all of the woolly mammoths.
I mean, there's literally anything near that event.
We see this in some of the bones of these mammoth graves, right?
It's absolutely crazy.
Think about an elephant's femur,
how much force it takes to break the femur of an elephant.
There's literally, these elephants had their feet in mud
and their leg bones are just snapped clean off
and there's hip bones up near their heads
and they're just jumbled up.
There's whole caves.
Oh, oh, oh, I get what you're saying.
You're basically looking at this skeleton and you've never seen an elephant skeleton
being absolutely destroyed like this.
Just destroyed.
And there isn't an animal big enough that's alive that's going to do it.
It's not like there's some King Kong that's running around snapping elephant legs, right?
Yeah, at the ankle.
It has to be.
They're either falling off a cliff.
Well, their feet are in the ground.
Like there's literally, they're stuck.
So their feet are still in this mud
and then their bones are snapped off
and they're all jumbled up.
I mean, there's-
Oh, so they're standing there
and then they just got smacked.
Like this, yeah, this shockwave hits them.
In other places, there's all these megafaunas
mixed up, bears and tigers and cats and trees
and just this like forest just all smashed up
and jumbled together.
They found things like that.
Like a landslide, but it's much more violent.
Like essentially I think what you're looking at is these things were hit by a shockwave as a result of this.
Now, paint in the picture, if it hits anywhere near an ocean or if it lands in an ocean.
Tsunami.
Tsunamis.
So you have these, you know, giant tsunamis moving at the speed of sound that might be half a mile high or whatever.
It's just going to – water destroys everything,
knocks out all the cities.
You probably have – I mean, forget electricity and grids and stuff.
I actually think this is why some governments around the world
are making these giant underground bases,
which may have also been what happened in the past.
That's what happened in Turkey, right?
Well, Derinkuyu, yeah, but also Egypt.
There's evidence for this all over the world.
And, you know, there's all sorts of strange stories.
We have in Colorado, the airport.
Yeah, exactly, the airport, the Cheyenne Mountain up there in Colorado,
that's like where NORAD is and everything.
There's giant underground bunkers you can go.
I saw a TikTok of a guy driving a big-ass truck,
and you can just, like, huge cabins.
And this isn't even conspiracy.
This is known, right?
It's like a doomsday bunker.
I don't know if you say doomsday,
but yeah, it's an underground bunker
that's twice as big as the airport or whatever.
Yeah, and they can hold like 4,000 people
or something like that.
This is end of civilization shit.
The government's thinking about it.
I saw an RFP.
I know a guy who knows a guy
who is involved in some government stuff.
They put out an RFP.
What does that mean?
Like a request for proposal for tech companies
to go, we need a drone system.
You know the Prometheus movie?
Yep.
Where they throw it up in the air and it runs off and maps these underground.
They wanted that type of system that can work without GPS
because they're interested in fighting wars in underground cities.
Because they think that that's where it might go.
They think that may be where it might go in the future,
so they're trying to prepare for tech.
They're thinking about war even after a mass extinction event.
That's us, man.
If there's an extinction level event,
there's going to be violence
followed very quickly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
For a time it's a virus.
You would love a series about this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it depends where you are on the planet
and how your luck holds wherever you are.
What were you saying about the turkey thing?
Derinkuyu?
Yeah.
Well, so there's evidence for underground cities,
ancient underground cities as well.
Yeah, all over.
Yeah, I think so.
Definitely places like Cappadocia
and Derinkuyu in Turkey
that could have held
hundreds of thousands of people.
Have you seen any of these?
No, no.
This is incredible.
So they basically carve cities out
underground with access to air
and water.
There's underground rivers.
So they knew where the river was and the water line was.
So you have everything you need.
And that speaks to being very advanced.
100%.
Underground city, and we know where the water is,
we know how to access the water.
And how many people could they hold?
Well, Darren Cue, I'm pretty sure, was the figures.
Look at that.
That's only a tiny part of it.
It's like an air column.
It could have been 100.
I've heard up to like hundreds of thousands of people,
certainly more than 50,000 people.
But same thing in Egypt, and there's rumours of this stuff all over the place.
I mean, there's giant underground networks of tunnels underneath Saqqara,
I think underneath Giza, all over Egypt.
Now, is it possible that they're using this during the time
where there's tons of comet impact?
I think that's probably why, I mean, it speaks to someone
who they may have known it was coming. Like, you've got
these indicators, like if the Sphinx is marking
the age of Leo, and you've
got these alignments, I mean, they're pointing at that for a reason
because that time period is also that
of cataclysm, right? It's, at least in
the last processional cycle, the last
26,000 year period, it kind of
lines up to it, and Gobekli Tepe
has a lot of research done into that site as well.
It may be an astronomical calendar and a historical one,
but it seems to point at this time.
It's like they're transmitting a message down through time.
It's possible.
That's telling us, look at this time.
Like, this time means something.
This was bad.
Like, figure it out.
And if they knew it was coming, maybe they were preparing these things
as, you know, the doomsday bunkers and place you could survive
until it was, the outside was nice enough to come back out
and go, holy shit.
What's the stone that has the different constellations on it
in Gobekli Tepe?
Graham talked about it.
Yeah, it's like Pillar 13 or Pillar 7 or something like that.
Closure 5 or whatever, yeah, I'm not 100%.
But basically has this like,
maybe he might be taking liberties on it,
but like they have an organization of the constellations
that happens to,
the last time the constellations were organized in that manner,
there was a global cataclysm.
Right, right, right.
So it's like, they're not usually organized like that,
but when they are, this is when,
it was basically go time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it lines up with the Younger Dryas.
Okay, and where do they think Younger Dryas did hit
and what do they think the damage was?
So I think it was a northern hemisphere impact.
I think you're mostly looking at ice impacts
onto what was the Laurentide and Calderon ice sheets
covered most of North America and Canada.
I actually think that some of the Great Lakes region,
Randall's doing a lot of really good research
into what could be actual impact formations in the geology
of the northern United States and Canada today.
Because the other thing is we know that that's where a lot
of the meltwater from these glaciers came out, right?
This is the evidence for, have you guys ever been up to the scab lands,
eastern Washington State?
No, I've seen the videos.
It's crazy.
It's amazing.
These giant coolies.
You're talking one of these coolies,
just one of several of them.
What's a coolie?
A coolie is like a canyon but with no water.
Yeah.
So it's like this giant, like thousand,
think of like the Grand Canyon,
but you know, much, super wide,
thousand foot high or 800 foot high walls.
It's also a racist term for Indians in South Africa.
So I got a little bit uncomfortable when he kept saying it. But continue, sorry. It's also a racist term for Indians in South Africa. So I got it. I got a little bit uncomfortable when you kept saying it.
But continue, sorry.
It's with a U in it. Okay, I got it.
But it's
yeah, it's the channeled scablands.
And it's basically the outwash of this
water, this tremendous floods.
We know now that, you know, this all happened
at the end of the Ice Age, but it completely
destroyed that environment. It carved up,
it ripped through this land.
I mean, you're talking about a single one of these channels
and there were multiple of them.
It's, you know, like 50, 100 times the volume of all the rivers
on the earth at once.
Oh, wow.
Like, you know, just almost like a billion cubic feet per minute
at where it all gathered up.
It's just the catastrophic flood.
And just tore through this.
It just tore through it. Like the flood, so where it all gathered up. It's just, the catastrophic flood, it's just tore through it.
The flood, the way it's carved that channel,
the actual water was probably 300, 400
feet above that, and it just
ripped through here.
All the national parks in the United States of America
are just remnants from the latest cataclysm.
Yes, American...
Cataclysms make some cool shit. They do.
This is stunning. And if you go
down to, where was I?
Like, southern Utah
and stuff like that,
you see these, like,
even, they're not cataclysms,
but you see,
exactly, like,
the damage from,
the water damage from canyons
creates some, like,
stunningly beautiful things.
Why can't it just be, like,
gentle erosion
over millions of years?
Well, that was the argument
for a long time
until you had guys like
J. Harlan Bretts
was a catastrophist.
And then Randall Carlson
is doing a lot of good work
in this space.
And now this, at least up here in the Channel Scablands,
they have swung around.
So it's a long story.
It comes back to religion, funnily enough,
because the story of religion was always catastrophism, right?
What's the story in the Bible?
It's Noah's flood.
It's the great flood, right?
So that was always where we got our answers from.
So you have the age of enlightenment, the age of reason starts,
science has its beginnings, geology emerges as a fledgling science
and for something like 60, 70 years a stated goal of geology
was to get as far away from the catastrophism of religion as they could.
So think of it as like a massive overcorrection.
They went out there and said you go out and you have to explain every feature we see on the landscape
with gradualism or uniformitarianism,
which is the gentle, slow, erosive processes that we see in place today.
Like, you know, streams slowly eroding stuff,
hills and shapes taking form.
So that's what ends up in all the textbooks.
And some stuff is still explained like that and it's frankly nonsense.
But now we're sort of coming back in the other direction and going,
you know what, some of these landscapes and features
are the result of catastrophic flooding.
And at least up here in Washington State, they're like, yes,
there's still arguments going on.
Some people think it's like 50, 60 floods.
Randall thinks it was one or two.
I think Randall's right.
He has significant evidence for it.
There's all sorts of problems with like how ice dams reform.
It's kind of a convoluted long story.
But this does align, this model, this environment aligns
with like the meltwater pulses.
So everything wraps up and shows that in that period,
that Younger Drys period, we had all this ice on land
and it all ended up in the ocean in a big bloody hurry.
It's like, and it just, that's, and we don't,
you need an external source of energy for that.
If you took that lump of ice that was on top of North America
and you plopped it down in the warmest waters at the time,
say somewhere around Indonesia, it would take 30,000 years to melt.
For it to melt, yeah.
It would still be here.
But it melted in an incredibly short period of time.
So you need this source of energy.
Turns out, then you combine that with all of the strata work.
So it's like the macro scale and the micro scale.
The macro scale, we've got these catastrophic landscapes,
the work of Randall Carlson.
The micro scale, we've got all the work of the Comet Research Group,
160-plus peer-reviewed papers looking at the science.
So we've narrowed in.
We're like, God damn, this was a violent period.
It probably knocked our species.
Graham says we're a species with amnesia for this very reason.
It's a great analogy.
So turn all of this around.
I think that's why catastrophes and the Younger Dryas
is the key that unlocks this longer story of civilisation
and human history because now you've got all this other evidence,
these stories that are embedded in religions and origin stories
and cultures that speak of earlier times.
Every culture out there is like, hey,
our ancestors went through either flood or fire.
It knocked them down.
They had to rebuild.
It's like, is this all bullshit?
Yeah, there's a flood myth in Mayan mythology.
There's a flood myth in like Christian.
I'm sure there's Indian.
I mean, everyone.
And this makes sense if these comets were hitting more regularly
and then you were experiencing these floods.
I think some of these towers include basic eyewitness accounts
of these floods.
If you go to the other vectors directory on there,
you can pull up a few.
The Mahabharata literally talks about swarms of meteors
coming out of the sky.
Revelation 8 and 9.
What's the Mahabharata?
It's Mahabharata.
A Hindu story.
Oh, okay. Hindu epic, yeah. Yeah, go to other vectorsata? It's Mahabharata. Yeah, okay. The Hindu story. Oh, okay.
Hindu epic, yeah.
Yeah, you got other vectors in there?
Oh, in this one?
Yeah.
That's the one down, yep.
Now, I guess my question is
if there's a gap between
Hinduism's 4,000 years old,
the Younger Dryas period
is as many as what,
12,000 BC?
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, no.
12,000 years old?
12,000 BC?
No, just 12,000 years ago. 12,000 years, yeah. 12 no thousand years old 12 000 bc no just 12 000 years
12 000 years yeah sorry so there's an 8 000 year gap how does that story hold up for 8 000 years
if theoretically we went back to and i'm not saying this to pick at you i'm just curious and
i'm sure you've thought this through uh if we went theoretically back to a stone age how did we
maintain these these eyewitness accounts for 8 000 well years? Well, I think that's, they get deified, they get put into stories.
That's how we, that's like the oral tradition,
that's how we transmit the data down through time.
Not only, I think, are there eyewitness accounts and stuff like this,
I mean, Revelation 8, Mahabharata, all of these stories,
I think it's an oral tradition.
And there's also evidence in all of these stories for celestial knowledge,
for those, that same processional numerology I talked about. There's a whole book called
Hamlet's Mill. It's a complicated book, but they essentially showed in that, that from all these
cultures all around the world, there seems to be that same processional numerology, these 72s,
this stuff that correlates to the cycles of the heavens and the cosmic world is also encoded in these tales.
In some cases, in civilisations where we know
they had no clue about this.
All of it points to like these, like a common ancestor,
a common progenitor of this story.
I think that, I mean, to be fair, some of these things,
the biblical flood, the flood of Moses, for example,
might have been related to an event that happened
called Burkle Crater, which was about 5,000,
I think it was 5,000 BC or 5,000 years ago.
They may be smaller events that have generated floods.
Like this isn't the only impact.
Like Burkle Crater was a, I mean, it would have flooded
the Middle East right around the right sort of time.
It landed in the Indian Ocean.
800-foot tsunamis hit Madagascar and the coast of Western Australia.
Yeah.
I thought it fucked India up too.
Yeah.
It would have washed up north, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, so I think that a lot of this stuff gets transmitted
down through time with oral traditions,
and it gets put into these stories and characters and deified
because that's how we retain that data and transmit it down through time.
And what was the timeline of the pyramids,
the Great Pyramids and the Younger Dryas?
Well, I mean, they're not,
if you ask the Orthodox Egyptologists,
they're not related.
So Younger Dryas, 12,800 years old to like 11,600.
Pyramids started about 4,500 years old
according to the mainstream story.
So, you know, 2,500 BC.
But it's possible that those pyramids could have been made 30,000 years ago.
It could be, or at least the structure, the base of them,
a form of them that was there.
Like I said, you can't really –
it's very difficult to distinguish what the dynastic Egyptians did to it.
They probably worked on them, repaired them,
maybe have done some of the work.
We just don't know.
That's part of the challenge of looking at this stuff.
You have to factor in that a lot of it's been reused.
And we have strong, strong evidence of that
when it comes to things like statues.
Because it's not just a pyramid.
I've recently done a lot of work in looking at the precision
that's evident in these vases that come from the earliest time.
That was crazy.
Yeah.
This vase stuff is, can you get up some of the vase images?
I mean, this...
It's a vase directory.
This is mind-boggling.
Because really what you're trying to do
is if your argument is that there was an ancient civilization
with a much more sophisticated technology,
you can prove that through artifacts
that existed at the time
that were beyond the scope of the technology
that traditional archaeologists believe
existed. So, if you have
its hammer and chisel, is that the term?
I mean stone pounders and chisels.
Okay, so stone pounder and chisel. If you have stone
pounder and chisel, but you also have an artifact
that couldn't possibly be created with
stone pounder and chisel, that comes
from that time or time before it,
there either is
another technology that is now long gone,
or the timing is off on the pottery.
Yeah, you've just summarized.
Or not even pottery, the vase.
So explain this vase thing.
This blew my fucking mind.
Yeah, so you did a great job summarizing it right there.
There are these artifacts that exist from,
I would say, pre-dynastic times
up until the very earliest of dynasties,
like the Old Kingdom, right?
But you talk going back 15, 15, 15.
Just give the time period for those.
Some of these have been found in sites that have dated back 15,000 years.
So they've been found in sites that date back...
Primitive burials that date back to 15,000 years.
And everything else about these burials, they seem Mesolithic, right?
It's a guy curled up in the fetal position in a shallow grave.
A place called Toshka, for example, is one of these sites.
They found this.
And there's primitive pottery in there.
Very much matches the, you know, Mesolithic times.
So it's mixed with the primitive pottery.
And keep in mind, this is not pottery.
This is not pottery.
These are vases that are made from extremely hard types of stone.
Granite, diorite, porphyry, shit.
If I'm an archaeologist, and I see some pottery,
and I see this vase,
I see it in this grave site, I'm gonna go,
okay, it's probably made around the same time,
this all makes sense to me, I'm not an expert
in fucking geology, I don't know what this stone is
or that stone, what's that? Engineering.
I'm gonna throw them all together, this
makes sense. Then you get some fucking engineering
nerds to look at it, and they go, wait a minute.
This isn't pottery.
This is granite.
Well, hard stuff even, right?
Okay, so what was this?
Yeah, so this one right here.
Yeah, I mean, so these vases display
remarkable engineering characteristics,
also precision.
And so there's a lot of challenges
when it comes to making this sort of stuff.
It is tremendously difficult.
So it's very hard to explain with the primitive tools and technology
that we know those people had.
So as you said, it either means there was a whole other technology
and engineering process available to them that we have no evidence for
or the timing's off.
And so they may have inherited them because, again,
you're also writing about how they date stuff in ancient Egypt.
If it's buried on a site
and somebody wrote something on that site
and they say, then they just pretty much go,
everything from here is from this period, this time.
Yeah.
Based on the writing or based on the context
of where it's found.
And it makes sense.
These guys aren't experts.
They're not, well, they're not engineers.
It does, but it also rules out this idea of inheritance.
It's funny enough that so many of these have been found,
like 40,000 to 50,000 of them were found beneath one pyramid.
50,000?
40,000 to 50,000 of these hard stone vases,
these remarkably engineered objects,
beneath one pyramid, Joseph's Step Pyramid,
supposedly the first pyramid at Saqqara.
And even then the mainstream Egyptology has been forced to admit that,
okay, most of these were probably inherited.
Like he didn't have them made.
They have to admit that.
And they say, well, they were probably first and second dynasty,
which is also nonsense because they go back thousands and thousands
of years before that.
But after that period, like the third and fourth dynasty,
this is what's so important about these vases,
I think, is that they kind of disappear from the record.
Like they don't keep making them.
And why would you start making something
that was so prolific?
It was so easy.
And well, they make an inferior product after that,
made out of alabaster.
You can see it's all handmade.
They're beautiful.
There was a whole other industry.
But doesn't have the precision.
Not remotely the same thing as these.
Explain some of the precision though.
This is where it gets wild.
This is crazy because most of these are under lock and key.
Look at that thing.
This is mind-blowing.
Yeah.
So they're remarkable, right?
Hardstone, very, very hard.
Harder than steel.
Put it this way, some of these vases, there's even a corundum one,
or a lot of them have, like, inclusions of corundum.
That's a nine on the Mohs scale.
The only thing harder than that is diamond.
Is a diamond.
Is diamond.
And they've shaved it down with this level of precision.
And symmetry.
It can stand like it's standing on the tip of an egg.
There's no flat bottom.
Right.
This is a rounded bottom.
So the vase needs to be evenly distributed in the weight
in order for it to stand like that.
If I saw that today at a crate and barrel,
I'd be like, how y'all do this?
A million dollars.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, dude, some of them on the market, they go for big
money because they are. People understand the
value in it. And I think the ancients understood the
value in it, too. Well, that's why they're buried
under the fucking thing. Like, if you have 40,000 of them,
they're treasures. And they knew that they were
treasures, and that's why they took such good care
of them. They knew that there was something
different going on when these vases
were made. And that's why you find them all in the same place.
Why were they never looted? Well, in some places they were.
I think Joseph probably looted them from older tombs
and buried them with him.
And a lot of these were looted.
He buried so many of them.
I think a lot of them were smashed up.
Probably had, at some point when they were looting down there,
at that point the tomb raiders were probably trying to break them,
looking for, like, are these full of gold?
What the hell's in here?
There's so many.
And then some of these assholes would scratch their names
into them with a chisel and it's just horrible writing
that's on a couple of them.
And that suddenly lacks the precision and all that.
Oh, 100%.
So the precision is what's interesting.
We've been able to eyeball these things.
You can kind of look at them.
No one yet until just recently has been able to actually
analyse one of these things in detail.
Now I, and I've put out a couple of videos recently about this.
I've been working with some guys, professional metrologists
who work in the aerospace industry, making like turbine blades
and super high-end, like these are guys,
no-shirt professionals in this space.
They have taken one of these vases that belongs to a guy,
actually lives here in New York, like a private collector
because you can't get to these in a museum.
They're not interested in studying the engineering
of these things.
But we got one of these pre-dynastic granite vases
and we scanned it with a structured light scanner
that scans it down to like the thousandth of an inch,
or for all the people out there that hate the imperial system
that harass me all the time, 25 microns or less.
No, no, we don't do that shit.
Give us the inch.
It's a thousandth of an inch.
I'm fine with that too.
It's just, ugh, this is just,
nerds go crazy about this shit.
But it's, and the results are truly astonishing.
What we found by analysing these,
the scans of one of these vases,
it has to have been designed and manufactured
with a system that is incredibly precise.
They can get things down to a thousandth of an inch.
Now, bear in mind, the width of a human hair
is between two and three thousandths of an inch.
So you're talking about precision and levels of geometric
sort of sophistication that's half the width of a human hair.
What is down to a thousandth of an inch?
Well, so what you do is, and if you go to VaseScan,
there's a directory called VaseScan.
This is just pictures of the vase, but I've got a directory called vase scan.
You look at it and you go, okay, so the top of the vase,
we can define how flat that is, right?
And we can also say, well, think of that as a horizontal axis.
Yep.
And then there's the mouth of the vase.
And what they do, if you go to vase scan, the directory,
when you scan this thing, that's the vase that we scanned.
So if you go to like the second and third picture here.
So yeah, so essentially we're taking the top of that vase,
we've mapped it like a horizontal axis to it.
Now we're mapping a cylinder to the neck of the vase
using more than I think it's 10,000 points of reference.
So a very accurate representation of that neck of the vase.
And you can compare it to that top. so we know, okay, that cylinder,
once you map a geometric object to it, you can perform geometry on it,
figure out what's its centre line, what's its centre point,
all that stuff.
It's perpendicular to the top of the vase perfectly within
one thousandth of an inch.
Oh, wow.
Basically the top is really even.
Well, it is super even even but now you've got
think of it
now this vase
we've defined
like a horizontal axis
and a vertical axis
now we can go
and map
geometric shapes
to other parts
of the vase
the cylinders
to the lug handles
cones to part
of the vase body
or a sphere
to part of the vase body
I just want to make it
like digestible
because I heard you
talk about this before
and so just
for that top part
basically
if we assume the bottom is flat,
the top is almost perfectly parallel to the bottom or the ground it's standing on.
That's what you're trying to say in terms of precision, right?
Perpendicular and parallelism.
Perpendicular is when this fake column that you guys are doing.
But I'm just trying to explain
like how flat the top is
and that's why it's so impressive.
It's flat,
I think if you go to the first one,
it's flat within like
four thousandths of an inch
or something.
It's insane.
And then no ancient tools
as we know them
would be able to do that.
You'd need a level.
The point of this is
this is so far beyond the realms
of some dude
banging on it with a rock
or grinding on it with sand
and a stone, which is how they say they were made.
It's impossible to explain this with hand tools.
But this is the thing that's so interesting to me
is that there's this sophistication
bestowed upon a quite meaningless object.
Right.
It's a whole other thing.
A pyramid is different.
And 50,000 of them.
It is.
And 50,000 of them.
Yes.
So you need to be able to replicate that. Maybe they add factors. Over and over and over thing. A pyramid is different. And 50,000 of them. It is. And 50,000 of them. Yes. So you need to be able to replicate that.
Maybe they add factors.
And over and over again.
Now we're talking.
There's an industrial process at point A.
And so there's a longer discussion you can get into
about the relationship between precision and function.
You only develop this type of ability to work in these precise measures
if you are getting a functional return.
Think about it this way.
And then once you have that capability, right, to work in these precise measures if you are getting a functional return. Think about it this way.
But once you – and then once you have that capability, right,
your manufacturing capability can be very precise,
you can then apply it to everything, right?
So I think there were functional objects.
Some of these – either it's the sites, might be the pyramids,
might be these giant bloody boxes that are underground everywhere. Yeah.
I think a lot of that that seemed to show the same type of precision,
I think they had a functional purpose.
I think that's why they developed this level of precision.
But then they just applied that manufacturing process to everything.
Think about, like, if you ever owned a car from the 60s.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah?
Like, you have to turn the wheel this far to make it actually
the wheels before they start to turn and the panel gaps are wide
and the rain gets let in in cars today.
They're beautiful.
They're all put together.
We don't need that, but our manufacturing capabilities has robotics.
They've been refined.
Much better.
That precision in manufacturing gets applied,
and I think that's what we're looking at here.
I actually think there may be functional purposes for these things.
They could have acoustic properties.
There might have been parts of other machines.
We don't know.
That's the other crazy part about this is like it's the temptation.
It's always there to look at us and say, how would we do this?
A Vsus is not a Vsudem.
It might not be.
It might be more than ours.
Exactly.
It might be.
It might be something else.
Here's a question I have asking for a frame of reference.
This civilization was much more advanced than we were up until recently.
Around what time did our modern civilization
become as advanced as they were, if at all?
No, I think so.
We could do, if we put the time and effort
and money and resources to it,
I think we could replicate a lot of this stuff.
We haven't ever done it.
It's too expensive.
It's like no one's got the backbone
or the resources to do it.
That's not to say we couldn't do it.
And our technology, I think, is different.
I think when you look back at technology,
you think about like you talked about the progression of technology
over a couple of hundred years, right?
We've gone down this electromechanical route of how we work
and the world works.
The temptation is there to then apply that to the past.
But think of like in 50 years, 100 years, 1,000 years,
we're going to know so much more about all these other realms
of science and technology.
I just think some of the answers and the paths that this
civilisation may have taken could be outside of our current
understanding or perspective.
I think they may have taken different routes.
Their technology might have been very different.
So it becomes really hard to kind of guess at what it is.
And we have to assume that because there's no evidence
of the electromechanical technology.
Well, yeah, there's nothing. because there's no evidence of the electromechanical technology. Well, yeah, there's nothing.
Like, there's no computers.
There's no, and there's the whole where are the tools argument
is one that gets raised all the time.
And that's a reasonable fucking argument.
It is.
It's like you've got these things that can't be made
with these ancient tools.
The ones we found.
The ones we found.
So where are the fucking tools?
And I think you hear this a lot of times with, like,
the skepticism about ancient civilizations.
It's like, okay, well, where they live?
Where are the homes?
Where are all these things?
These are good questions.
I think that we should be asking these questions
and I think it's good that you don't get defensive
about those things.
I think, yeah, they're valid questions
and I think there's a lot of,
we haven't looked in a lot of the places
where I think this stuff's going to be for starters
and I also, well. Where do you think it's going to be? Well, I think Graham Han a lot of, we haven't looked in a lot of the places where I think this stuff's going to be for starters. And I also, well.
Where do you think it's going to be?
Well, I think Graham Hancock makes a great point about this,
but it's like sea levels rose 400 feet all over the world.
There's like 10 million square miles of land that went under
that would have been coastal and inhabited
during these periods when the sea levels were far low.
We don't look at that stuff.
Marine archaeology is 100% focused on shipwrecks.
We just don't look in these places.
Like the Amazon, thanks to deforestation in the Amazon,
we're finding the remnants of cities.
Thanks to it, yeah.
Well, thanks to one good thing.
One good thing of all that.
We're finding the remnants of cities that have no place in the story of history,
but they're the size of like London in the 1800s
and there's hundreds of them.
Like we have no clue where that's coming from.
They're finding these massive pyramids still.
I think the biggest one they've ever found
is La Danta in Guatemala, I believe.
I'm not sure.
I thought the biggest one by mass
might have been Cholula.
Oh yeah, yeah.
That was the one that was also in the...
In Mexico somewhere.
Yeah, yeah.
Cholula, Mexico.
Yeah.
But yeah, it is just fascinating to see it,
like how much is covered up.
I mean, if you even see like the,
where are the pyramids outside of Mexico City?
What are those?
The Temple of the Pyramid of the Sun and the Moon.
Yeah, I've forgotten the name of the.
Whatever, I went over there and they showed images
before they started scooping out all the land and everything.
They just look like mountains.
How many mountains, how many hills exist right now
that little kids
are playing on top of?
Give me a stone structure.
That there are fucking houses
built on top of
that are actual old pyramids.
They said that thing
about one in,
I think,
Albania.
Yes.
That one's disputed.
It's disputed.
Bosnia, you mean?
Yeah, Bosnia.
Yeah, so I personally think
that's a natural formation.
That's not to say
that there's not tunnels.
There are tunnels
and structures in it, but that one, you always see it from that one angle. It's not to say that there's not tunnels. There are tunnels and structures in it,
but that one,
you always see it
from that one angle.
It's just the one picture.
Get on Google Earth
and spin around.
You're like,
oh, this is just part
of a mountain range.
But there are pyramids
all over China.
They look exactly like this.
They've literally been
deliberately planting over them
since the 80s.
I mean,
trees and hills now,
but they're pyramids.
If we assume
that the Sahara back then
was completely lush, if it looked like the Amazon, if that's just, but they're pyramids. If we assume that the Sahara back then was completely lush,
if it looked like the Amazon, if that's true,
right, how many cities,
pyramids, other megalithic
structures are just covered in sand dunes?
Could be tons.
Even today, archaeologists
and Egyptologists will tell you
70 to 85% of
ancient Egypt is still
buried beneath the sand. I mean, think how big they need to make the pyramids
for us to even see the tips of them.
Yeah.
Just the tips of the fucking pyramids
and barely the head popping up of the Sphinx.
That's how massive it had to be to weather, what, thousands of years.
Well, yeah.
I mean, yeah.
I mean, at least thousands of years, potentially a lot longer.
Because those dunes shift around too, right?
They do.
In fact, yeah, you can – I know guys that bank on that.
You actually go and as the dunes shift, you kind of every few years,
you might go and look at the area between the dunes
because it's kind of uncovering more ground
and you go and find like stone tips and arrow points and heads and stuff.
Yeah, so there's a lot of parts of the world we haven't looked.
A lot of the areas, there was a lot of devastation.
I think we don't – it's hard to comprehend just how much,
with the end of the Younger Dryas, like the sediment layers,
like stuff might be buried at the bottom of the ocean
under hundreds of feet of water.
I mean.
But under 200 feet of sediment as well.
Which one is this one?
That's the Pyramid of the Sun, I think.
It's Tehuatacan, yeah.
Tehuatacan.
So this is the one in Mexico City, right?
Yep.
Yep.
I mean, look at how it looks.
Yeah, there's the Sphinx's head sticking out as well, yeah.
I don't even believe in mountains anymore.
It's crazy.
Some people think there's a pyramid in Antarctica.
Oh, you showed me that crater impact.
We do know that there was a massive crater impact, right?
Yeah, probably many.
There's probably been tons over the years.
So I'm curious, why is the pyramid so significant?
Why has it been replicated by every culture?
I don't know.
It's a very significant thing, though, isn't it?
It seems to be, I mean, a lot of this,
a lot of the arguments that the mainstream uses
is what they call, it's like cultural coincidence,
or it's like they're solving,
people all around the world solve the problem the same ways.
I think a lot of that's nonsense
when it comes to megalithic building.
It's like you're literally choosing
the hardest and most difficult way to do something.
But like fire.
Pyramids.
Every culture develops fire.
Yeah, fire all the same time.
Or napping and making a spear.
Right, and that's all coincidence.
That's not, yeah, that's all like,
we're solving this particular problem.
Right.
And what about the wheel? I don't think we can apply it to this. That happened around, yeah, that's all like, we're solving this particular problem. Right. And what about the wheel?
That happened around the world around the same time, right?
Yeah, more or less.
People got there.
Yeah, I mean, it's just, that's just invention.
I mean, the pyramid thing,
like everybody developing a pyramid at the same time
doesn't really strike me as the most peculiar thing
because that's just how you would build something.
You can't build straight up.
It falls over.
It's also very difficult to build straight up. So we just build
in this kind of like, what are they called?
The step. Step in a mastaba. So it started
the way they described it. It's like, well, we started
by digging a hole and burying people in that. And then we
started, you know what, we'll build a little mound
over the top of the hole. And then it became
this step structure. We called it a mastaba,
like a platform. And you know what, we'll start
stacking these mastabas. And then you see that in Central
America. And South America, where they're like these these mastabas. And then you see that in Central America. That's this shape.
And South America where they're like these pyramid structures
built on top of pyramid structures.
Right.
Which makes it much easier to build
because now you're not redoing this foundation.
You're just kind of building on top of it.
Yeah.
And they've become massive.
It's strange though.
I don't buy it in a lot of ways,
the tomb theory with this stuff too.
It's like I had a conversation with someone recently
that said,
you know, the easiest way and tons of less effort is if you really want
to hide a burial tomb for someone is you dig down into the ground
and then once you're done you collapse it all in after you.
It's so much less work than building a giant pyramid
and trying to bury someone in there and hope that no one's ever
going to get into it.
It's not the most efficient way.
Oh, was the idea that the pyramid would provide protection
for the person buried inside?
It's supposed to.
Well, it's a monument,
and then, yeah, it's supposed to, like,
stop tomb robbers from getting,
that's what they, that goes with the tomb theory,
which I don't think these were tombs.
There's, fuck all evidence that they were,
these big ones were tombs.
Some of them were used later on, undoubtedly,
as tombs and repurposed that way, but not these ones.
The big ones, I don't even think the dynastic Egyptians
got into them,
frankly.
I think they couldn't get into them.
I think we'd see a lot more evidence of it if they did.
You don't think they could because of just the sand, like,
just blocky old ones?
I mean, you've got to imagine, like, when these things were covered
in the casing stones, it's, like, super white.
It would have, like, reflected the sun like a mirror
and there's no visible joints.
You cannot pry those stones out.
There's no obvious entrance to it.
You know, it's just, it's really difficult to look at that.
The top of the middle one still has some of those casing stones
that are weathered over time.
But can you imagine these just perfect white pyramids
that are just like, what the fuck are these?
You know what this doesn't need?
Some giant triangles.
If it's not a tomb, what would you conjecture is the purpose?
I think I personally, and it's speculation,
I think they were functional.
I think they did something.
I think they're all broken now.
They don't work anymore.
I think they were a functional device.
What that is, I don't know.
There's lots of theories out there.
A guy named Chris Dunn, a good friend of mine,
a very good author, engineer,
he really has moved this whole field forward in a lot of ways
when it comes to ancient precision and technology.
He has a theory that it's like the Giza power plant.
His theory does explain all of the elements of the pyramid.
He used it to correctly predict what was behind Gatenbrink's door,
which is one of those little things in one of the shafts
in the Great Pyramid. Can you explain this to us? Yeah things in one of the shafts in the Great Pyramid.
Can you explain this to us?
Yeah, so there's really weird aspects to the Great Pyramid.
These are not functional, by the way.
These are your bracelets?
Yeah.
You clang them together?
Dynastic Egyptians, not that functional.
Exactly.
Dynastic Egyptians did not get it, dude.
Yeah.
The ancient Scythians...
It looks great, though.
Yeah, they understand visuals, for sure.
They did.
Okay.
Yeah, so Gatenbrink's door, well, there's these strange features in there, they understand visuals for sure. Yeah. They did. Okay. Yeah, so Gaten brings door.
Well, there's these strange features in there, right?
You've got...
So we're inside the Great Pyramid.
So you go in, there's three chambers, right?
There's a subterranean chamber that's down way below it in the bedrock
with a shaft that goes through the pyramid.
Can we access that?
Because I don't think I went...
I went inside.
I don't know if I went down.
So not unless you do like a special permission.
Every time we rent it out for two hours, they open
a lot for us.
If you go in on a tourist ticket,
you can go into the Grand Gallery and up into
the King's Chamber. That's where most people go.
There's also a chamber below that called
the Queen's Chamber.
Both the so-called
King and Queen's Chamber have these shafts.
The ones in the King's Chamber
go to the outside.
We know this because at some point, you know,
some of these crazy British guys were rolling cannonballs down them and they ended up in the King's Chamber like, ah, that connects.
Oh, wow.
So they just found cannonballs in the tomb and they were like.
Well, they were just like, hmm, there's an opening.
We think it might have been on this shaft.
Let's find out.
Oh, hilarious.
They're probably damaged.
I mean, there's rods.
There's explorations of these shafts,
there's like big long steel rods that they've tried to probe them with.
But the ones in the Queen's Chamber are more interesting
because they don't go to the outside,
they terminate somewhere inside the structure.
Now, this is like a four to six inch square shaft, right?
Wait, wait, wait.
Four to six inch.
It's this big.
It's how the hell do you make, it has to be
made when you're building the structure.
Like it has to be planned. We don't know
where they go but eventually
we sent robots down them
and it turns out they go to what
looks like a little door. There's a
little door at the end. It's a limestone
plug and it looks like it's got, if you go to like
Gatenbrink's door, maybe there's
pictures of it there, I don't know. Maybe this.
Yeah, that's it there. Well, that's after
they drilled through it. So they're actually
and on the door, these two
what they say are copper
handles, but one of them's eroded more than the
other. It's almost like it's an anode cathode.
Like it may have been part
of some sort of function. Like a fucking battery?
Yeah, something like that.
So part of Chris Dunn's theory, that's it there.
So this is what's at the end of this shaft.
Get the fuck out of here.
And then eventually...
It's like a socket.
Yeah, it's like a socket.
Well, those little copper things that are on there.
No, the hole they drilled.
They drilled it.
You see the drill bit there.
So Chris Dunn anyway,
so he explains all of these features of the pyramid
in his Giza power plant theory.
And using his theory before they drilled through the hole,
he said what they're going to find is another void
and another little door.
And they drilled through the hole,
they drilled through this wall and guess what they found?
Another void and another fucking door.
Yep.
Holy shit.
So I think he was onto something.
And again, it lines up with your theory.
It's too advanced for it not to be functional.
Yeah, there's no...
They're like, oh, this is where the soul would have escaped
and gone up towards...
This is nonsense.
It's such an achievement.
Building a pyramid, that shape is the most functional to build.
This is a functional thing.
That's why we're going to build it in a pyramid shape.
100%.
Yeah.
That is fucked.
And they haven't drilled past this.
This battery theory?
They didn't drill past the second door.
No, as far as, well, so no, there's, God, yeah,
there's a lot of nonsense going on about this for a long time.
Like, Gatenbrink sent his robot up the wrong shaft as well.
He went and had a look in there and he was,
threw him out of Egypt.
And so there's been a lot of intrigue.
There's a dark, like, there's all sorts of stories
when you dive into Egyptology,
in particular in the last, let's say, 30, 40 years
of what's going on in these pyramids
and on these sites and about who's done what where.
There's a lot of stories that all revolve
around certain particular characters
that have been in charge of some antiquities departments in Egypt.
Can you speak to the politics of why you can't start
just excavating more of these shafts?
It's controlled by the Council of Antiquities.
It used to be called the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt.
And for a long time, a guy named Zahi Awas was in charge of that.
And this is, you know, this comes back to the labyrinth story as well
that we mentioned before or we talked about before.
And, you know, they really tightly control what goes on on the sites, right?
So you can't just roll up there and say, hey, I want to dig.
The way that works is you have to partner with the council to do anything.
And part of that is also they will want to know what your purpose is,
what are you trying to find,
and then they get to control the release of information at the end of it.
So typically what happens is you have institutions like universities
from France or Belgium, Austria, America, wherever, Britain,
they have access to a particular site to do research in a certain way
and then that information is very slowly released
whenever the Egyptian authorities deem it necessary to do so.
Why are they so protective
of this theory of history?
Why are they?
Why are the people who are kind of...
That's their claim to fame, my boy.
That's all they got.
I guess, but to me,
science is constantly disproving other science.
They don't give a fuck about science.
They give a fuck about like,
yo, we're Egyptian.
These pyramids are fire.
Everybody loves these pyramids.
We made them.
And if this dickhead comes over there and goes, nah, I was some other people 30,000 years ago.
You just bumped in on it.
They're like, man, shut the fuck up.
I'm not going to let you discredit our whole shit.
I guess in my mind, they're still Egyptian.
And it would still be like, yo, we survived motherfucking apocalypse.
We came back.
We're still here.
That's a good, there's a good argument to that.
But I think they might look at it like,
man, we didn't really do shit since back in the day.
It's not even necessarily Egyptian that's driving this too.
It's kind of mainstream Egyptology and archaeology.
Also, yeah, they don't want to take the L.
And also, I'm sure there's a religious component,
which is like, you know, if you're dating the world,
you know, 6,000 years ago,
and then you come in and it's 50,000 years.
It's 100,000 years.
Yeah, millions.
It operates a bit like a religion, to be honest.
And unfortunately, there's a lot of domains of science
that suffer from that type of embedded dogma to one extent.
And it does tie back to these, essentially, what's history, right?
It's a story that you cobble together from a collection of incomplete facts.
Now, when more new facts come up, when Younger Dryas
and all this new scientific work, we should be taking that into account
but, you know, the problem arises when it starts to pull the rug
out of the people that have really set what that story is
and it, honestly, the story of history and civilisation
hasn't changed for around 100 years.
It still hasn't changed even with Gobekli Tepe.
We still say, well, civilization started 6,000 years ago
with the Sumerians, then the Egyptians,
and then the Greeks and Romans, Chinese,
all this other stuff.
Yeah.
Is there a framework here for how this could be
conducting energy and power and what that power is used for?
Yeah, Chris Dunn's keys of power plant theory
takes into account all of this stuff.
I don't, I'm not an expert on it,
but it's like it's,
it has a lot to do with acoustics.
The Grand Gallery has a bunch of these Heimholtz resonators in it.
It's a really interesting theory.
There's like different fluids and chemicals used in these shafts.
There's a lot to it.
And there's a lot of evidence for it as well.
Like those shafts in the Queen's Chamber, for example,
I mean they don't even come out into the Queen's Chamber.
They terminate like six inches from the wall.
So there was a guy running around like literally tapping on the wall.
He's like, oh, that sounds a bit different behind there.
So what, do they get a sledgehammer and they bust the wall open?
They find the shafts.
Like there's nothing.
And when they first found the Queen's Chamber, by the way,
it was covered in like six inches of these crystals
that may have been the by-product of some sort of chemical reaction.
And in fact, I've got in here.
I shouldn't have gone in there.
But they've been doing these experiments.
So they unlocked one of these gates.
There's like a shaft and a little grotto area that goes in
because there's this alcove in the Queen's Chamber.
But you can go right into the masonry behind it
and it opens up into a little grotto area.
I crawled in there and I filmed it.
And you can still find chunks of this crystal
and all these weird growths that are
because they cleaned it all up and carved it all off
when they cleaned up
the inside of the pyramid but
there's a lot of this weird evidence like something else
was going on. And what is his theory as to what this power
could have been used for? Some form of
energy
I don't know some sort of microwave energy
that they could have used if they had a receiver for it
they could have done it. Essentially they think it may be coming from like this harmonic tone
or this generation that comes from the earth.
There's a lot of complex theories on it.
I don't know.
I think his theory is the best one that we have
that explains it with our tech.
My personal opinion is I think it's probably broader than that.
I think we don't quite understand what it's for,
but I do think it was functional.
Can you explain this resonance theory that you shared?
I think it was on the Concrete podcast that you did.
Right, so yeah, I mean,
this one thing you find when you go in,
and you probably found this when you went into the Kingstown,
like it's insanely resonant, right?
It's just like there's,
the acoustics in there are off the charts.
Yeah.
And there is,
it could be coincidence.
It's also very underwhelming,
which makes me feel like it wasn't a chamber.
The chamber?
The chamber itself, you're in there,
you're like, oh, this is just like the awe-inspiring view of the pyramids on the outside.
And then you get into this king's chamber, right?
Yeah, it's a box.
It's a box.
But this is made out of like 70-ton granite monoliths.
There's no question.
Like the feet in order to execute placing these 70-ton granite blocks around it is very special.
But when you look at the grandiosity of like the dynastic Egyptians,
it's not reflected in this room in any way.
And if that was the king's room, like for a king,
then I think it'd be a little different. It makes way
more sense to me that this is a power factory
because that looks like the source of the
power or the battery's hooked up or whatever
it is. That, to me, makes way more sense
because if I'm the king and that's the room you made me,
you're dead. Do we know him, Brandon?
Do you know what I mean? I'm not dying here, motherfucker.
I need more shit. And it is just barren.
It's empty. We'll bury you here.
It's a functional-ass place.
Yeah.
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Do we know if granite has any functional properties that could be?
Yeah, it's piezoelectric.
It's a conductor.
It's piezoelectric.
If you hit it with enough pressure, it generates electricity.
There's a lot of quartz content in the granite.
I've done experiments with guys.
We've actually seen different electrical conductivity properties
between granite, basalt, and limestone.
They have different properties.
So you see these types of stones lined up
and sites made of these different types of stones
that have these different electromagnetic properties to them.
I think there's possibilities.
I think that's where we should be experimenting and doing work
to try and figure it out.
Is there evidence of cities close to every one of these pyramids?
Because that makes sense if it's the power plant for the city, right?
But if they're just out there in the middle of nowhere
and there's no city around it,
then the power plant theory kind of like goes away.
We don't know.
The city's probably built
on top of the remnants of older cities.
I mean, you see this in Cusco and other places too.
Yeah.
So each of those pyramids,
that's the interesting thing about those pyramid sites
is that they are all,
I call them like the sunbelt.
From each one, you can see the next one.
So starting up at Abiruwash up on the hill,
you can see Giza, then you can look down to see, you know,
Abusir to Saqqara to Dashur,
and you see each other on the horizon.
So, I mean, I don't know, maybe they're all connected.
There's been rumours of underground infrastructure
in between these sites.
I've heard that story.
Oh, get the fuck out of here. Yeah. Connecting all the... Pot sites. I've heard that story. Oh, get the fuck out of here.
Connecting all the... Potentially.
I've heard that story. I don't know. Which would make sense
functionally if you need to power the whole city or whatever.
So now, something so monumental
as the Pyramids of Giza
and the fact that perhaps maybe other
people built them and then they were discovered by
new people and then those people died out and discovered
by new people. Why was it eventually just left
so barren for so long?
Well, it was used as a
quarry. Eventually it's like, you know
what's easier than digging up stone from
the ground? Taking the stone from this damn thing.
And quarries, just for anybody to listen, it's just
a sourcing place for stone.
There were sources of quarries. People would just
take stone from it. People lived
up until
probably less than 100 years ago,
people lived at these sites in Egypt, the temples, the pyramid places.
Before they became these tourist attractions,
people would like pitch their tents and they'd cut holes in the stone
to tie the camels up, donkeys or whatever, and they'd live there.
Same as all the temples.
People just lived there, turned into markets.
I mean we blackened the ceilings of these temples from cook fires.
Oh, really fires for generations.
And then eventually the government came along and said, you know what?
You guys get all the F out. We're going to turn these into
tourist attractions. So in some
ways, we've inherited them,
these sites today. We use
them as tourist attractions. We've renovated them
as tourist attractions. You would think that the neighborhood
around the pyramids
would be like
Central Park property.
You know what I mean?
It was slums.
It is not.
There are people out there
who probably live in
really lower income homes
that have a perfect view
of the most amazing thing
that humans have ever created.
My buddy Yusuf,
he lives in Nazlut El Samam,
which is the village
near the Sphinx entrance.
And he's got his shop there
and his little balcony
is on the fifth floor of this building,
and we sit out there and play music or whatever
and just stare right at the Sphinx and the pyramids.
Like, that's the view he grew up with.
It's insane.
Wow.
Yeah, it is cool.
And they're trying to knock it all down now.
The government wants to go in there and knock it all down.
They want to build hotels and do all this stuff.
Yeah.
But it is really interesting.
So it must have been, like, so normalized to them
that they wouldn't try to build around it.
That's what's peculiar to me.
You know, it's a roof over people's heads in a lot of places,
particularly the temples, man.
They just don't care and they'd cut holes in it
and a lot of people would scoop out,
they'd get a blade and scoop out material
and take it as some sort of healing powder or whatever
or you're taking a piece from the gods and stuff like that.
Right.
But the people that actually build this,
how advanced they were,
there's no necessarily
a theory as to why
they went away
or why they left
or were they killed.
I don't know.
I mean,
the stories they tell
was cataclysm.
That's how all
of these ancient stories
come back to cataclysm.
Not Younger Dryas for them
or maybe it was.
We don't know.
We don't know.
We'll put it this way.
So the Egyptians themselves,
I don't think you can
separate the dynastic Egyptians
from what you might call the builder culture, right,
the advanced culture.
The Egyptians themselves call themselves a legacy culture.
So they describe two time periods before the dynastic civilization.
The oldest one is called Zep Tepi.
It's when the gods themselves walked to the earth.
They had mystical capabilities.
It went for like
25,000 years. Yeah.
And it's like those were the
gods that then get worshipped as gods in their
pantheon. They supposedly walked the earth.
This is Horus or Cyrus. Yep.
And then after they went away
for whatever reason there's a time called
Shemsu Hor or the followers of Horus.
Again, these semi-divine mystical
beings with all of these crazy powers
that you could interpret as magic or technology,
and they reigned for like 15,000 years or something.
As disciples.
Well, yeah, they have these king's lists of these rulers,
and it adds up to like 15,000 years for the Shemsu Hor
and like 25,000 years for Zep Tepi,
and then Menes is the first king of the first dynasty,
and it goes right on.
Until they know.
And we decide.
They look at that.
That's our history.
And it's our academics that decide, you know what,
Menes, that's actually where the history starts
and before that's all myth.
And the Egyptians themselves didn't make that distinction.
Now let's assume there's a cataclysm.
Yeah.
Happens tomorrow, God forbid.
A thousand years from now, and it brings us back to hunter-gatherer,
a thousand years from now,
if people were telling stories about these ancient humans
that had little blocks that they could see each other on,
we would sound like the gods.
You would.
We would sound like the gods to people a thousand years from now.
We could send messages to people across the planet in one second on a, yeah, just email.
Through the air.
You know what, the idea of a satellite is so foreign.
It literally seems like we're just sending messages.
It's magic.
We had objects in space that could track people at any point.
You could have a self-automated weapon that would kill one person.
Like a drone sounds like the craziest thing.
The angry gods that would strike down the wicked.
And you might even imitate it.
You might find a black shiny rock and carve it to look like that
and try and do it.
And that's, I think, what's happened in ancient Egypt
because across these categories of artefacts and objects,
you see like a tale of two industries.
You have the advanced objects
and then you have the primitive objects that match the primitive tools.
So I think there was a lot of imitation and replication going on.
I think a lot of these places like these ancient sites,
the Old Kingdom sites, the pyramid sites,
eventually became ceremonial sites by the ancient Egyptians.
They were the ones dancing around the campfires trying to turn them on again
because they've got some cultural memory of something happening,
of something working.
It's an oral story.
We would do the same thing.
It's human nature.
How do we get this thing going again?
So this is still Egyptians?
Yeah, because, look, I think some of the statues,
we haven't really talked about the statues.
The statues are astonishing.
There are statues.
Oh, you bring up these statues.
Yeah, go to like giant objects.
The precision of the statues is just unbelievable.
There's a directory of the giant objects or statues is another one.
But some of these statues
have the same type of precision.
We've analysed them for symmetry.
They're absolutely
not makeable by hand.
They're very challenging.
And some of them range up to the size of, take the
Statue of Liberty.
Just the lady. And imagine
it's made out of one piece of granite.
That's the size of these things, like 1,000 to
1,500 tons.
This is granite, these statues.
Yeah, they're all granite. Single pieces of granite.
I'm sorry, there are statues that are
the same size as the Statue of Liberty?
Yeah. More than 1,000 tons.
Go to, there's a
directory, sorry. In height?
Well, just the lady
herself, yeah, like 100 feet high.
Yeah, it's insane.
And where are they located in Egypt?
So there's a bunch of them.
There's at least, I know of at least three or four.
Again, if you go, the other directory of,
I think it's huge objects, the third one down.
There's some pictures of it.
But you find them at, there's a place called,
one of my favourites is at a place called the Ramiseum.
And it's probably the biggest piece of one of these things
is laying over on its side.
That's it there.
So you see the head there?
You see the girl standing next to it?
That's its head.
So pan right and you'll see the human.
Like she's standing next to it.
Oh, wow, wow, wow.
Yeah, so that was a seated statue, single piece granite.
Just the pedestal it sits on is 450 tonnes.
But this thing out of rose granite was a single-seated statue
that's fallen over.
There's evidence for standing statues of a similar size.
Keep going.
Next one.
Yeah, so that's the shoulder and arm.
That's the shoulder and hand of a standing statue.
That's at Karnak Temple that we've put back together.
And that thing is made out of an even crazy material.
That's composite quartzite, which has chunks of flint in it.
And flint goes up to like an 8.5 on the Mohs scale.
That is a much harder material to work than granite.
Sorry, where did you say this was?
Karnak temple, which is in Upper Egypt in the south.
And how far?
Yeah, go, go, Mark.
I was going to ask just for these materials, how far away are those quarries? Well, a lot of the quarries for granite was in Aswan in Upper Egypt in the south. And how far? Yeah, go, go, Mark. I was going to ask just for these materials,
how far away are those quarries?
Well, a lot of the quarries for granite
was in Aswan in Upper Egypt.
But there's, so if you go to the next picture,
that's a foot that's about the same size
as the feet of the Statue of Liberty.
You see the big toe?
Now, that's made out of granite.
That's in the north of Egypt.
That's at Tanis.
That's more than 1,000 miles from the quarry for this stone.
So they moved a piece of stone that's probably 1,500 tons
from somewhere down 1,000 miles away,
shipped it up to this place in the delta,
and then there was a giant statue made from it.
Is it possible?
Mental, but yeah.
Is it possible that the reason why there's so much evidence
of the granite statues is because those are the only ones that made it.
I think they're so high on the Mohs scale
that they weren't absolutely disintegrated
like a limestone statue would be potentially
over thousands of years of erosion.
Yeah, I think so.
Well, granite, if you're going to make something
because you want to last, you make it out of granite.
Or you make it out of this tough stuff like this.
So it's possible they also
worked with limestone
and they worked with other things.
Those are just gone.
I think so.
And so this is where it comes back
to that question about
are they Egyptians?
And why I don't think
you can separate
the dynastic Egyptians from them.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Go back one.
That's the colossi of Memnon.
Fucking hell.
And that's all granite.
That's all granite.
Well, actually quartzite.
Has this been placed back together?
It has, yes.
The Romans actually rebuilt one of these. Holy shit. They're uncovering big statues here all granite. Actually quartzite. Has this been placed back together? It has, yes. The Romans actually rebuilt one of these.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
They're uncovering big statues here all the time.
This is at the, I think it's the Temple of Amun-Apap,
something like that.
It's on the west bank of the Nile, near where this is.
And so here's the connection to me.
I think, and it's one thing you see,
you go into all the temples from the Old Kingdom
to the New Kingdom, the consistent look
and feel of these kings and pharaohs interacting with the gods,
all of the iconography doesn't really change that much.
It's the same look.
It's that traditional Egyptian look, what you guys, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's, I think they get that.
It's like, I get the question like, well, if you think the statues
are so old, how come they look like dynastic Egyptians?
I'm like, I think it's the other way around.
The dynastic Egyptians copied the old statues.
I think they inherited this iconography, that look.
It's like every time you see their rulers,
they put themselves in amongst the gods.
They're trying to become one of the gods,
like take some of that power, that significance.
And they put themselves in those shoes.
Eventually they got really arrogant
and they'd take these big statues,
they'd hammer their own name into them.
There's tons of examples of where they were, these overwritten names,
and they'd put their, this is me now.
It's like, I'm the biggest, that's Ramsey's the Great,
Ramsey's the Second, did that everywhere.
He just graffitied his name deeply into all this stuff
and it's acknowledged that's what he did.
Oh, wow.
But I think that's why you can't disconnect them from that culture. I think they're part of it
but they have a gap and the gap's probably due to
cataclysm, probably knocking them back
to the Stone Age and hunter-gatherer
and then when they came back, they had some
knowledge and some artifacts and some
understanding but they didn't have the capability.
Now typically with these types of
amazing monuments, there's
amazing cities nearby, kind of like what he was talking
about. Now I'm not familiar with Egypt specifically,
but are there great cities, great ancient cities that you can still see
or like remnants or ruins of those cities?
Or are they completely built over?
Thebes, yeah, I mean, Heliopolis.
No, there's still remnants.
Like up in the north, there's Memphis.
There's a lot of like dynastic Egyptian cities that are there.
Yeah, it's still a part of it.
I mean, they're built,
they're generally built
over the top of it.
Are the cities as advanced
in terms of like infrastructure
and city planning
as the monuments are
and technology?
Oh, you're talking about
cities that reflect...
Dynastic Egyptian cities?
I mean, no, no, no,
pre-dynastic.
Like, let's say
there's only the, you know,
Empire State Building left.
We can look at it and say,
oh, there's an equally interesting city
of people that are using the same remnants.
So with the fascinating monument,
is there a city with granite roads?
Is there a city with water structures and aqueducts?
For example, go back to Litepe, right?
You saw that one spot,
and then as you did that kind of LIDAR,
what is it, like a subterranean scanning or whatever?
You found that there was a bunch of other
versions of those structures that were built
do you see that type of
city planning around the Great Pyramids
of Giza? Has that been covered by
Cairo? Yes it has
so we wouldn't be able to tell
it might be underneath. It's inhabited
that's the thing you change it over time
generation even more so than
potentially these pyramid sites.
Where you can see some of that though,
it was really interesting, is Cusco, like
in Peru. In Peru, this is fascinating.
Cusco is like, I think, one of the
most unique cities in the world.
It's, because it's
the bottom layer there, it's megalithic.
Like it has, so I think there's a similar story
I think this builder culture was one that was
probably global. These were the Incas?
Well, the Inca is who they attribute it to.
Gotcha.
So the Incas are like the dynastic Egyptians.
Yes.
But much, I mean, they're much closer to us.
Like it was like 1500s, 1600s, like not that long ago.
Right.
And that empire, as great as it was,
the Inca had a fascinating and amazing civilization,
but it was really like 150 years.
Go to woe, like when the Spanish came in and they all died as a result.
And, but they say they built everything,
but that's really not what you see.
The difference between the technological levels in South America
is night and day.
Can you bring up, do you have some images from?
Yeah, you go to South America, the directory, there's a,
you'll see it there.
But Cusco is the only city in the world, I think,
where you can see these different layers
of construction civilization built up on top of each other.
You have megalithic, you have Inca,
you have colonial Spanish, and you have modern,
all stacked up on top of each other.
It's really cool.
That's Egypt.
The next one is...
What is it called?
Tehuama or something like that?
Sacsayhuaman.
Sacsayhuaman.
Sacsayhuaman.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've probably got...
Yeah, this is a good example.
Here's like the...
Oh, this is great.
...Inti Punku, the sun gate.
The megaliths at the bottom.
Megalithic work.
And then you see what the Inca did on top of it.
Like this is...
That's actually really good Inca work on top.
They continued it in a way that they could.
They were very respectful.
Yeah.
They rebuilt stuff and they repaired it,
but the loose stonework, the small stonework,
is totally what their capabilities are.
This is down in Bolivia at Tiwanaku,
which is an extremely unique place as well.
Incredible precision in the monuments down here.
These are called the H blocks
for obvious reason.
Yeah.
But yeah, amazing flatness.
Like there's been some work
done here to analyze this.
Frankly, all of this stuff
needs deeper analysis
and scanning
and investigation.
There's great walls.
I think they're in Cusco.
These massive...
I've definitely got them
in there somewhere.
Yeah.
No, no.
It's the one with the
polygonal...
There you go. Yeah, that's the streets of Cusco, right? This is just in the street. Yeah. No, no. It's the one with the polygonal. That's it there. There you go.
Yeah, that's the streets
of Cusco, right?
This is just in the street.
Yeah.
In the city center,
it's made of granite.
Those are granite blocks.
And then you can see the...
Look at this.
That's Sacsayhuaman.
This is fucking outstanding.
Yeah, some of these blocks
are like 150, 200 tons.
Very hard form of limestone.
And you can, again, you see the delta between the big technology
and then the little rocks, right?
The Inca came along and did the little rocks.
Now, with these gigantic rocks, the megalithic rocks here,
they seamlessly fit into one another.
Yeah, it's crazy.
So one would look at it and go,
okay, there's been some stonework done
so that these stones can perfectly puzzle piece.
Is it stonework or is this just 20,000 years of weight?
I really don't know.
Dude, this is the one place, you know, Egypt,
a lot of the masonry in Egypt, it's kind of easier to look at
because it's like flat lines.
It's straight lines.
You have the same precision here, but you have these compound curved surfaces,
which is ridiculously more difficult.
More difficult.
It almost seems like they were flexing.
And it's not like, yeah,
it's not like they're just like joining them up at the front.
It's like if you look behind,
if you go on top and you look at the joins,
like these joins are perfect all the way through the depth of the stone.
So it's like they're having fun.
They can make the even cuts,
but they're like, what would be sexier?
Yeah. Right?
It is far easier
to just cut these into regular
straight locks. Like artistically done. I mean, it's difficult
still to get them so precise that you can't stick
a razor blade in there. But same
thing here, but now you're curving surfaces
and these mating surfaces are stupid precise.
If ever there was a case
for when you get into this molecular softening
tech like you said earlier,
like, this thing, just, like, make this thing like Play-Doh or Toffee
and just shove it in there and have it form its shape next to it
and then it hardens.
Explain this to us.
Well, it's just speculation.
So we were talking about this when I mentioned this before
about the pyramids and, like, using granite and things like that
and moving them from so far.
And he had mentioned this on a different show
where he was basically saying that it's possible
that the molecules can be manipulated to make
it not have the same toughness.
Yeah, it's like science fiction,
but it's... It's science fiction, but it would
be very similar to the idea of
heating up a metal in order to morph
it. Because we do do it with certain substances.
You heat up gold, and then you can
bang away at it, or you heat up
steel to make a sword.
Malleable. If you could make a rock malleable, it would be much easier to do this.
Yeah, it could be.
Yeah, that's – I just – I look at it and go, I can't imagine a guy.
I'm going to shave a little bit off here, shave a little.
Then I'm going to put this 15-ton rock back on and check my fit
and take it off again and just shave a bit more.
Like I don't understand.
Unless you go the other route as like it's fully designed and mechanised and produced
with a manufacturing rig similar to, you know, the Vase
and other stuff where you can just, I design it,
I click go and it just carves it.
Right.
There may be some other tech involved and this almost looks like,
you look at the front of these things too and there's all these weird
scoop marks and indentations, it's almost like, you know,
they were holding, it's almost, you know, you're pushing stuff up
or you can imagine some of these nubs marks and indentations. It's almost like, you know, they were holding, it's almost like, you know, you're pushing stuff up or you can imagine some of these nubs that forms
like almost like a heat extrusion nub.
It's complete speculation.
I'll be very clear.
Is there any type of like scientific basis
for that type of theory?
Is it sort of just like a fun science fiction approach?
There is.
There's a theory called geopolymer.
It's a little different to what I'm talking about.
This was geopolymer.
Yeah.
You know what that's like?
Yeah, you basically melt, you can go ahead, you melt about. This was geopolymer. Yeah. You know what that's like? Yeah, Anthony told me.
You basically melt, you can go ahead,
you melt stuff down and then reshape it.
Yeah.
Similar to kind of what you're saying now.
Like you get a bag of this mix
and you add water and shape it into a thing, right?
It's like concrete.
But there's challenges
and then there's some interesting evidence for it.
But I don't think that doesn't work for granite.
I don't actually think that's the case in Egypt.
But there is some interesting evidence at Tiwanaku potentially
for some of that sort of technology being used.
I think it's a legitimate investigation that needs to be looked at.
But the problem is you do get a lot of these stones have fossils in them
and all this stuff and we've got quarries.
But you look at it and you go, how is that not just like they made it
like Play-Doh and shoved a
shape into it, you know? Is there any
repetition in the
polygonal blocks? No.
That's another issue with the geopolymer theories.
Each one is its own fucking shape?
Same as the pyramids too, same thing.
They're not a uniform. No stone is uniform.
No, that's right, yeah. Because how would
you, yeah, you'd need to make a mould for every
stone, which is, think about, look at the wall here, right?
There's one mold and a billion bits.
Well, hold on.
That means that every stone needs to be adjusted for the last stone that was placed.
Yeah.
That seems way more difficult than just mapping out the exact size of the stones.
Unless you design it up front and it just prints it that way or cuts it that way.
And this doesn't even account for the shafts and the rooms and everything.
I'm getting, like, goosebumps.
The shafts in the room also have to be cut out before they're placed, right?
That's right.
And you have to place those stones with some pretty significant precision
for a four-inch square shaft through the pyramid to run, you know,
hundreds of feet like it does.
Right, perfectly square that a robot in the modern day could go through.
It could go up.
And it has to line up, right?
Because, you know, that precision has to be held from where it starts to where it ends
across all those layers of masonry.
Exactly.
Because you're going in a diagonal.
It's horizontal courses.
Right.
So it's X and Y axes of squares getting broached.
Yeah, exactly.
And with each block, there's a new calculation made for the next block.
And you fuck up one
it's gone right
I guess maybe they could chisel away
as they're placing it
that's kind of what I'm thinking
not chiseling
but like I guess
whatever the machinery was at the time
the machinery is advanced enough
but still if you have a different side
how could you have machinery
advanced enough to create this
but not advanced enough
to just make them uniform
because if it was uniform
we'd go okay okay, forget it.
There's no way they did this with the stone and the chisel. The fact that it's not uniform is what leaves a little bit of wiggle room
for a not super advanced society to create it just with tons of work.
And time.
And fucking time.
But I think the more you dive into what it would actually take,
it kind of gets a bit silly with some of the time stuff.
I don't, yeah, I think just with the primitive methodologies,
it's like, yeah, something else was going on.
Like that's the thing.
And we haven't done a lot of experiment.
Like we've never done, every time we've tried.
What would we need to find, Ben?
What is the, what is it called, the smoking gun?
Yeah, smoking gun.
Well, we need to either find some tools or some records
or some documents that talk about that may close.
But who knows if that stuff might have been found
and it's been taken, it gets washed away.
I've heard rumours of that sort of thing.
We have evidence of the results of advanced technology.
We just don't have the advanced technology.
Yeah, that's right.
The evidence for the tools is in the objects themselves.
Bro, the scoop thing and the core? Yeah for the tools is in the objects themselves. Bro, the scoop thing?
And the core? Yeah,
the tube drills and the, yes. So
you know what? The whole where are the tools argument,
by the way, not for nothing.
That applies equally well
to the mainstream explanation
for these saw cuts and these tubular drills,
okay? You've got to explain the tube drill
that you talk. This is, you're not
supposed to look at blocks
from 4500 years ago
and find perfect
cylindrical
carve outs
grooves
grooves
I found them at the Met
there's a couple pieces
at the Met yesterday
oh really
well yeah
there's a block in there
with two tube drills
it's pretty cool
I was like
oh yeah
these are classic tube drills
is that in tools here
it's in tooling
yeah
okay
yeah
so
there's some categories of stonework, again,
coming from the oldest parts of ancient Egypt,
like old kingdom.
And these things there, so this is a core from a tube drill
and if you go to the next picture,
you'll see the actual hole that they leave.
This has been split.
Huh.
Right?
So what happens is you have a tube drill, tube drill, whatever.
Yeah.
And it cuts down, it creates this core,
and then you snap the core off and you're left with this hole in the granite.
Now, how do they snap the core off?
Well, you get a chisel in there or you wedge it.
I don't know.
You wedge something in there and you snap it.
Oh, you just keep on moving it back and forth.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You snap it off.
You can see where it snapped off just at the bottom.
Yeah.
And so you see these in these old kingdom sites.
And again, into extremely hard stone, basalt, granite,
granite diorite, blah, blah, blah.
And they get quite large, right?
That's one that's about nine inches, eight, nine inches in width.
And again, this one's, the block's been quarried.
So normally this would just be a hole on its own
until somebody came along and quarried the block.
I think they looked for them for quarrying because, you know,
it's like a hole, so they'd try and cut,
they'd try and split the stone on the axis
of the drill hole.
And who would have quarried?
Anyone later on.
At some point it was Ramses II in the New Kingdom
was quarrying stuff from the old pyramids at that point
for thousands of years after that.
But to do it like that you would need some kind of tool, right?
What, to quarry the block?
Yeah, in that cylindrical fashion?
Yeah.
You need a tube drill to make this hole,
but you see how the stone's been split down the axis of the hole, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, so that's a very common quarrying technique
that's still in use today, essentially.
You carve little, like, divots into the rock,
then you stick wood in them and you wet the wood.
Yeah, and then you split it like that.
You're trying to split the stone
because you want to take the finished surface.
Right.
That happens everywhere.
You see that all the time.
And don't some stones have just a natural property where they do split pretty cleanly? That's what they're trying to take the finished surface. Right. That happens everywhere. You see that all over the place. And don't some stones have just a natural property
where they do split pretty cleanly?
That's what they're trying to take advantage of.
A lot of times it fails, sometimes it doesn't.
Anyway, so you see these tube drills, thank you,
they have these cores and we found a couple of these cores.
Now, a guy named Flinders Petrie in the 1800s took one of these cores
and analysed it and looked at the grooves and he's like,
you know what, this is a spiral groove around this core.
It's not like just imagine how we do it today.
You get this high-speed drilling, spinning, spinning, spinning.
It takes forever to cut through granite or like a tile saw or whatever.
It's not going to leave a spiral groove.
It's going to be all these circular things.
Well, there's going to be a lot of circular lines as you very slowly grind
down through the material.
This thing actually penetrates the stone
at like a 1 in 60 rate.
What does that mean? So if you take
that spiral, that circular motion,
you stretch it out straight. So for every
60 inches of horizontal travel, it's going
an inch in vertical travel. Yeah.
Think of like a screw. It's like a screw.
Yeah, it's screwing into
the granite and we're
seeing the result hollow
screw essentially yeah
it's like that's where
the core would exist and
so Petrie Petrie looks
at this is like what the
fuck is this a lot of
pressure Petrie was the
first guy to apply like
engineering principles
from the industrial age
to this stuff it is
though it's a mind trip
to me to think that it
took us until the
industrial age to even be able
to put some of this stuff
into a context
that we can understand it.
Yeah isn't that interesting?
We didn't
we were only then
starting to develop
machining capabilities.
Because you don't even have
the machinery
you can explain it.
If you found this
in the 1700s
you're like
no one's ever done this
before ever.
You don't know what it is.
You don't have the framework.
Yeah it's like
taking a cell phone
back to cavemen
I mean it's just trying to
we know It's just a rock to him. Yeah we know with wireless networking and all that shit it's like taking a cell phone back to cavemen. I mean, it's just trying to... Which is a rock to him.
Yeah, we know with wireless networking and
all that shit, it's like satellites.
That context you're missing, but we have the context for
it now. And we couldn't do this today.
Petrie said, well, shit, maybe they had two to
three tonnes of pressure on the tube drill.
And then Chris Dunn, the same guy I mentioned
earlier, has analysed this call
because it's in the Petrie Museum in London
and they let people play with their toys, which is really nice of them.
So he's analysed this and he's kind of furthered the work of Petrie
to define this spiral groove that's on this thing.
What's crazy about it is, and again, this may not have been a high-speed drill, right?
It might have been slowly turning, but think that penetration rate,
that's 500 times greater than we can achieve with our drills today, right?
Our drills, these high-speed things, I mean, they might go faster,
but in terms of that penetration rate into the granite,
this rate is like 500 times greater than anything.
Whereas our modern machines, I guess, are going off like torque and friction,
whereas this is going off just pure weight.
We don't know.
It could be ultrasonic.
It could have some other mechanism punching into the granite.
And you see these things all over the place and ranging
from about this big little tiny things to about nine inches big.
And it's, there's those and then there's circular saw cuts
that seem to work in the same way where they're just eating away
into this stone that we can't figure out.
What about the scoops?
Yeah, scoop marks in the quarry, same thing.
So there's all these categories of tooling and evidence.
I'm sure there are some pictures of the quarry in here as well.
So in this long story to get back around to where are the tools,
so the mainstream's explanation for these tubular drills
and for these, you know, saws and stuff.
Yeah, this is a screw marks.
That's fucking crazy.
They say, well, it was a copper bar or a copper tube
and they rubbed it with sand and like a bow drill
or they dragged it back and forth and they ground away with sand.
Now, it obviously doesn't match the tool marks
or anything remotely close to what we see,
but guess how many copper tubes or copper bars they've found?
None.
Zero. So where are the tools for your explanation? You say, where are my many copper tubes or copper bars they've found? None. Zero.
So where are the tools for your exploration?
You say, where are my tools?
Where are your tools?
I mean, it looks like a mini excavator.
Yeah, and that's straight into granite.
Like, that's at the quarry.
That's granite.
That's what I was wondering what stone is.
That's fucking nuts.
That's at the quarry in Aswan,
where they have the 1,200-ton obelisk that's still attached to the bedrock.
We got to get that one.
I think what's so interesting about this is like,
this feels like a conspiracy
that will be proven in our lifetime
that will really shake our understanding of history.
And it's really cool to learn about it.
It seems like there's tons of evidence
that would at least show
that there was more advanced technology.
And maybe at bare minimum,
we understand there was more advanced technology. Maybe maybe at bare minimum, we understand there was more advanced technology.
Maybe bare minimum that.
And then we lost it, and then we developed our own,
but there was something else going on.
That bare minimum, everybody can get on board, right?
Because we can acknowledge that you can't do these things with a stone and a chisel.
It also theoretically turns government into doomsday preppers,
which is kind of funny, and also probably necessary. Wait, what do you mean by that?
Because if you're like, yo, these guys got wiped out
by a comet or whatever,
and there was no evidence of them left whatsoever,
we should prepare for such a scenario
to happen in our lifetimes.
That is what it's, I think that's ultimately
what's important about some of this work, really,
is there's a fundamental, so we grow, you know,
what's the fundamental understanding we have
of our civilisation,
our place in history?
We all think that we went from cavemen to, you know,
striped toothpaste and space shuttles in this 6,000-year period.
Yeah.
Which is what?
It's how many?
So, you know, 60 centuries, 25 years of generation,
like 240 generations essentially from stone man to today.
Yep.
And it's like, so it's as if we have this idea,
well, this is what civilisation is.
This is a preordained path.
This is how you do it.
We don't need to worry about it.
But I think if you had the same fundamental understanding
in the same way we understand that, that, oh, no,
there's a cyclical thing going on here.
We're just the latest revolution of the civilisation wheel.
There's a relationship to cataclysm.
We've risen to great heights and we've knocked down in the past.
I do think on the long term that could change priorities, man.
We might actually start trying to solve and putting a bit more resources
upon trying to solve some of the bigger issues.
The analogy that I've figured out that I want to use talking about that
is honestly is climate change.
Like whether you agree with it or not or whatever it means to you,
that's a movement that's changed people's behaviour.
It's in a generation or two, it's a fundamental thing
that's entered our understanding of what it means to be a human.
It affects our behaviour, how we interact with others
and the world around us.
And it's changed us and I think that's the type of understanding
that if it gets into our culture and into our,
what it means to be a modern human,
then it might actually,
we might stand a chance
of changing our priorities,
worrying a little less
about fighting
with each other
in the next election cycle
and then looking
at the bigger picture.
Humans are so illogical,
I don't know if it works,
but if you're thinking
we have an existential crisis,
at any given point,
you probably don't care
as much about
critical race theory
or whatever little
government info, like, you know, these little things much about critical race theory or whatever little government info,
like, you know, these little things that we worry about.
That's what I was kind of joking about, like,
who cares how many genders there are?
If the human species, if all of Earth is at stake at some point,
we don't know when.
We should prepare for that instead of worrying about this shit.
Yep.
Or you can...
I think it makes sense.
Or you go with the expanse and it's like,
maybe the universe is better off without us
because we're just warlike talking monkeys
that are probably no good for anybody. You know, you can take the expanse and it's like maybe the universe is better off without us because we're just warlike talking monkeys that are probably no good for anybody.
You can take two approaches to it.
But I think because the long-term solution is to get off the planets
and spread out, right?
I asked you about this before, but do you think drugs
or any type of mind-altering substances contributed
to the creation of any of these?
Ooh, yeah, I'm pretty convinced of it actually.
There's lots of use for particularly DMT in the ancient world.
I mean the blue lotus flower is one that's represented in all the artwork.
I mean you literally see images of like a smoking pipe almost.
And you're getting showered with knowledge, power and stability
or life power and stability from the gods and some of those things.
It looks to me like smoking pipes.
The blue lotus flower is full of DMT.
The acacia trees, that's got DMT in it.
You see, I think there's some of those visions in those altered states,
some of that geometry and things are represented in some of the artwork.
There's been mummies found with cocaine from South America,
like in the linen.
From South America.
South America, go figure.
Yeah.
Some trade, right? They're probably trading. They're trading cocaine from South America, like in the linen. From South America. South America, go figure. Yeah. And then some trade, right?
They're probably trading.
They're trading cocaine from South America?
Potentially.
There's definitely been mummies found with cocoa.
Wait, mummies in Egypt?
Yes.
Found with South American coke?
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
Don't explain it.
But does no one else want to explain this?
Why are you the only one that's like,
we've got to talk about the mummies doing blow.
That's crazy.
Hold on.
They've got boomerangs in ancient Egypt.
The name for them literally translates to foreigner's weapon.
They're in the museum.
That's not as cool as coke being exported.
This is true.
When did they find the coke?
I'm not sure on the details.
If you look up mummy cocaine, you'd probably find the details.
Yeah, let's look that up, please.
Can I ask you while he looks that up,
what are your thoughts on climate change?
Because this could theoretically,
a lot of what we believe is climate change
could just be, you know, Younger Dryas type things.
I think that if you want to understand climate change,
you probably need to widen your scope of view a little bit
and look back a little bit further than the last century or two,
is what I would say.
Because in a lot of ways to me the modern climate change
discussion is, and to borrow an analogy from my friend George Howard,
it's like we're sitting in a car arguing about the radio station
and what channel we're listening to but we're ignoring the fact
that the car's sitting on a railway track and the train's coming.
We've got bigger problems.
I think, and look, if we burn...
Wait a minute, what do you know?
You know some shit.
Well, is there a comet coming?
I don't know.
I don't know.
On a long enough time scale, 100%,
it depends on what that time scale is.
I think he's just saying we are in this cosmic shooting gallery.
It's only a matter of time.
And it's, look, if we burnt every last ounce of fossil fuel
and the end result of that was that we averted the next cosmic impact,
then karmic debt paid.
Yeah.
Like there's nothing like the climate change that is a result
and the pollution of a cosmic impact like that.
Yeah.
You want nuclear winter?
Like that's what it is.
Like it blocks out the sun for hundreds of years.
Everything on earth dies.
You know, you can't breathe outside.
Like the half of the world is on fire kind of thing.
Like that's, it's apocalyptic.
And the words, that's what it means.
And that's not speculative.
No, it's happening.
Yeah, you were telling me that like there's a piece of the bedrock
that you could see that was on fire or the remnants of the fire.
And this exists throughout the Earth?
There's like a black mat layer.
At that
Younger Dryas boundary layer
in the soil, in the strata, there is
an organic, it's like a soot layer
almost, where it's
the calculations of something like 9%
of the organic matter on the planet
was on fire, which is
at one time.
At one time.
It's an astronomical amount of...
It's just an ash layer in the bedrock.
It's literally, yes, it's all out from the fires, yeah.
It was either flood or fire.
Like, you look at every ancient culture, it's flood or fire.
Like, it's either cataclysmic fire or it's world-ending floods.
Kind of makes you feel lucky, huh?
Yeah, well, that's the thing, you know.
People complain about it, but honestly, our climate has been the most stable.
We've had the best climate in the last sort of 10,000 years
that we've had for almost 200,000 years, like on the planet.
So when you talk about modern climate change
and we're arguing about CO2 and like a tenth of a degree,
I don't care.
It's fine.
Look, that's not to say pollution, bad.
Treat the planet good, yes.
Like let's clean up our pollution, bad. Treat the planet good, yes.
Like let's clean up our act, do all that stuff.
But the reality is also CO2 is not a problem.
More CO2 is good.
The planet nearly went into plant death in the Little Ice Age.
Warmth is great.
We've been far warmer and had far more CO2 in our history on this planet and supported megafauna and megaflora,
the likes of which don't exist at all anymore.
It's when it gets cold.
Cold is the problem.
Small cold periods associated, guess when the Black Plague was?
It was a cold period.
All of the downturns.
Oh, because the heat is going to burn off a lot of the bacteria.
Well, just cold periods are associated with famine
and less plant growth, which means your immune systems are weaker.
You don't eat as much.
And, yeah, all this stuff happens.
Bacteria can't grow in cold,
and then we're very much like bacteria in that way.
Pretty much.
I was thinking it was going to get burned off in the heat,
but you're right.
That makes sense.
And also just the weakness of the body.
If there's no, like, famine.
Winters are just rough in general.
Yeah.
Yeah, cold's bad.
And cold is worse than getting warmer. Like, this whole plants in general. Yeah. Yeah, cold's bad. And cold is worse than getting warmer.
Like this whole planet's on fire is nonsense.
Like it's fine.
In fact, the planet is greening.
Like now you've seen the evidence for this.
Like the planet's actually greening due to the slight increase in CO2.
CO2 is not a pollutant.
We shouldn't be demonising CO2.
It's fine.
Like I said, in the past we've had many times the number of CO2
that we have today.
It's not a big deal.
We've never had a runaway climate.
The climate on this planet is very stable.
Even when things like cosmic impacts happen, it recovers.
Like it's a very stable system.
And just to clarify so you don't get yelled at,
that's not to say there's no problem with pollution.
There are other problems, but it's not necessarily what we think it is.
I hate having to preface that all the time by saying,
well, if you somehow question any of the narrative,
it's like, you're pro-pollution.
Of course, pollution's bad.
Let's clean up our act.
Let's keep the oceans clean.
Two things to be true.
Let's do all these things.
Let's behave like responsible stewards of the planet.
But if polluting was making it colder,
let's not tax everyone.
That's a bigger problem.
That's a bigger issue.
Yes, I think it'd be a bigger problem too.
It would be.
Cold is bad.
Cold is bad. Cold is bad.
What did you find here, Mark?
So this is, a German toxicologist basically did a study
on the hair of a priestess that they uncovered.
Cocoa.
And they, yeah, they basically found traces of nicotine and cocaine,
which had been considered to be cocoa and tobacco plants
native to the Americas that were not thought of
and had been brought to Africa
until after Columbus's voyage.
Well, I do think the dynastic,
we don't give the dynastic Egyptians enough credit
for what they did.
I think they were probably much wider ranging.
I mean, they had bigger boats than the Vikings.
We know the Vikings got around a lot of places.
Do we know that they,
I thought we haven't found any boats from the Egyptians.
We've found plenty of boats.
They're mostly river boats though.
They wouldn't last a sea voyage.
That said, you can go to places like Hapshepsut's Temple
and there's literally scenes on the wall of ocean voyages
where there's fleets of ships.
They're even drawn underneath.
There's like ocean creatures that you don't get in the Nile.
Like they talk about an expedition to what they call Buntland
to go and get stuff at one point.
There's a place in Australia called the Gosford Glyphs
that I happen to think is probably a result of a shipwrecked
like Ptolemaic period Egyptian crew.
There's these glyphs in this place in Australia.
They think it's a hoax.
It's not a hoax.
Go to this.
Gosford Glyphs.
Gosford Glyphs.
Yeah, G-O-S-F-O-I-D Glyphs.
And you're saying that the Egyptians breached Australia?
Yeah.
Well, it's on their maps too.
They literally show like horses in America and they show –
And this is dynastic Egyptians.
Yeah, yeah.
Ptolemaic period, like late period, Greek Roman period,
that matches the glyphs that they did.
They look poor because the story that they actually –
that it tells, we had some of it translated,
was the scribe and the captain died.
I think one of them died of a snake bite.
They were shipwrecked.
So this is the results,
the carving are the results of a guy
that could probably read Egyptian
but wasn't a stone carver.
It's like you can probably read and write on paper,
but try carving it into sandstones,
see how far you get.
But anyway, so they've known about this,
literally the thumbnail for my video about it.
They've known about this, literally the thumbnail for my video about it. They've known about this since the 1970s.
The modern dogma on it, I guess, is say, well, it's a hoax.
Some guy came back from the war and was like, oh, I was in Egypt,
so I'm just going to draw some random collection of hieroglyphs on the wall.
Turns out that's not the case.
It actually tells a story.
It's coherent.
What's even crazier is there are symbols on this wall that we
didn't decipher until like the year 2000.
So they weren't in
Egyptian dictionaries until the year 2000.
They're still on this wall and been there since the 1970s
and they still want to call it a fake. I'm like, what's
so hard to believe? These guys were
seafarers. Maybe they just got
a whole bunch of storms blew them across halfway
across the Pacific and they got shipwrecked down here. They got
looked after by the local Aboriginals.
They lived their life.
They buried their dead and they wrote something about it on this wall.
Do we know what the story says?
Yeah, it says that it was the part of it,
not all of it's been decoded, but the part of it,
it says that, yeah, it was exactly that.
It was a crew that got shipwrecked here.
One of them died from a snake bite.
The captain and the scribe died
and then the locals were looking after them.
The aboriginals would look after people.
It happened a lot with the white explorers
too later on. If you could make a pyramid,
you can make a boat.
You know what I mean?
Once you subscribe to this idea...
Sorry, this would be dynastic Egyptians and we're not
sure dynastic Egyptians built the
pyramids. Right. They did a lot of them.
Look, dynastic Egyptians did a lot of amazing stuff.
They were, particularly by the end,
like the New Kingdom and the Ptolemaic period,
they had a lot of capability.
They were tremendously wealthy.
They built, like, Karnak Temple.
Sure, it's sandstone, but it's spectacular.
Can we get that up?
They built some amazing stuff.
Karnak Temple?
K-A-R-N-A-K.
You know, they embarked on,
they were a massive civilization that lasted a long time.
I don't want to undersell what they were capable of.
Yeah, we're just comparing them to the goat.
Well, yeah, there's just,
as capable as they were and as magnificent as they were,
there's just a few things that are outside
of their technological capability.
And that one top left there is,
that red one, yeah, top left there is that red one,
yeah, top left there.
This one?
Yeah, that's one of them, yeah.
So this is like these giant sandstone columns.
That's beautiful.
And that's all dynastic work.
All those rams are dynastic work.
These big pylons and walls are dynastic.
They're huge structures.
Like the Karnak Temple and Luxor Temple, they're amazing.
I think they combine, like a lot of these structures combine both elements.
It's like they built a temple on top of an older temple or an older structure
that I think does stretch back to, you know, these earlier times
with these granite artefacts, the big obelisks
and the single-piece statues made from granite
that show all these signs of precision.
Like I'm pretty careful about what I define as being this is definitely older.
And, you know, to me it has to, it's a couple of things.
It has to show the machining marks, right,
from these advanced tools that we know weren't around
or we can't explain.
They have to show precision, symmetry, like anything.
And we have to analyse it to look at that.
You can't just look at it and go,
I think that shows all this precision.
Like we need to do more work analysing these things to define that.
And there's a bunch of objects we've done some of that for.
And then I also think that anything over, say, 300 to 400 tonnes,
I think once you get into those realms,
I don't think you're moving those as a Bronze Age civilisation.
Certainly no one's demonstrated this.
Why is that?
Why is that wheat?
Well, because, and it fluctuates somewhere in there, I think,
because it's not like a, as mass goes up,
it's not like a linear difficulty scale that goes up with it, right?
When you get into really large weights,
material strength becomes an issue.
You can't be using wood.
You know, it's like the difficulty level ramps up.
Yeah.
And so particularly once you get to like 1,000 tonnes and more,
but there's plenty of stuff that I'd say I think you're up a limit.
It's probably three to 350 tonnes.
People have demonstrated, hey, we can move at 50 tonnes or 100 tonnes.
Right.
And I think they could totally do it.
But when you start scaling up to these big numbers, the obelisks and stuff,
and particularly in the environments they are,
like that obelisk in the quarry, man, is 1,200 tonnes.
What's that called?
It's Aswan Quarry, A-S-W-A-N.
I have a picture of it in my directory, but you can look it up.
Aswan Quarry, an obelisk.
And it's 1,200 tonnes.
It's made from granite.
It's in a granite quarry.
It's literally in a granite mountain on an angle that there's no room
to move this thing, but somehow they carved it out.
And they, you know what, we're going to pick this thing up,
lift it up 30 feet, and then move it across this rocky,
mountainous environment and somehow transport it somewhere.
So this was an obelisk that was never completed.
It was never completed, right.
And how do we know it was an obelisk and not just some other type of?
It's shaped like an obelisk.
It literally has a pointy end, yeah.
Oh, wow.
It's roughed out.
Like, they would often do this.
They would almost, like, leave a sacrificial layer of stone
around the outside of stuff for shipping.
Right.
And then they would finish stuff on the sides.
Ah, interesting, then they finish it.
That's really cool.
Yeah, they never detached it from the bedrock.
I mean, so it's still attached to the bedrock.
There's stones of this size in Baalbek in Lebanon.
And this is similar to the present obelisk that we see that are still erected.
This is way bigger.
Oh, this is way bigger.
Yeah, some of the other, I think the biggest other obelisk might be 400, 500 tons,
something like that.
But those are still solid pieces of...
Still a single piece of granite standing.
Oh, wow.
Well, and there's rumours in history of an old kingdom obelisk
at a site called Abu Garab.
And actually, it is acknowledged it's not a pyramid.
It looks like a pyramid.
It's actually the base for what would have been a massive obelisk.
But it's all gone.
They just think it's been quarried and made up.
Now the hieroglyphs that we all know now from Egypt,
like the guy standing, are any of those, do they tell a story
of how these pyramids could have been made?
What is that?
I don't know. Did they tell a story of how the pyramids could be been made? What does that mean? I don't know.
Did they tell a story of how the pyramids could be made?
Were they made by the dynastic Egyptians?
There's very little actually about the pyramids.
That's the funny thing.
There's no depictions or scenes that really show them
ever building those pyramids.
There are depictions in the tombs of the nobles
of them showing them making mud bricks
because after those stone pyramids, you've got to remember,
like that's one of the crazy things about those stone pyramids
is that they're the first pyramids ever made.
Like it went step pyramid straight to like, what was it,
Maidum and then the Bent Pyramid, Red Pyramid, Great Pyramid,
Second Pyramid, Third Pyramid.
Like they're the first pyramids.
These are the most precise giant structures.
After that, they kept making pyramids according to the official.
They just got shittier and shittier.
Well, they're all made from mud brick, like little mud bricks
and they're all eroding.
But they do talk about building those.
They don't really talk about building any of the pyramids.
And in fact, there's a little tomb around at Om Giza.
We'd like to take people there and show them the inscription.
It says, this guy was the overseer of the pyramid city.
He didn't say, it's very careful grammar.
It says he wasn't the overseer of like the pyramid builders.
It was the pyramid city.
It was the city that sprung up around the pyramids.
As if the city was, or the pyramids were already there.
It's as if the pyramids were already there.
He was the overseer of the land.
And that would also support your theory.
If there's no, there's hieroglyphics,
but none of them building the most impressive thing
theoretically they've ever built.
They have hieroglyphics,
then building a less impressive one, though.
That's right.
And that's typically what gets you.
So you see the same thing.
For example, there's a depiction of them moving a statue,
a big statue.
It showed up briefly earlier.
And it's like, well, see,
this is how they move the big statues. It's like, wait, this depiction is of a statue, a big statue. It showed up briefly earlier and it's like, well, see, this is how they move the big statues.
It's like, wait, this depiction is of a statue
that we know part of it still exists.
It weighed about 56 tonnes.
There's 180 guys here and that statue's made of calcite.
It's not made of granite.
You can't use that to explain how they might have moved
a 1,000-tonne object, you know.
You can move a 56-tonne object with a bunch of guys
dragging it on a sled.
Good luck trying to do that with a thousand
tons. And so it's
like that's... Couldn't they have just gotten more guys? Is that
possible if they got a city of men?
You would just, you would, no.
I don't think, not with a thousand tons,
you just, the frictional coefficient you'd
have to overcome, you just dig it
into the ground, your wooden sled that you're
sitting on this thing is going to explode.
They didn't have access to the wheel, according to them.
Like there's no depictions of them using the wheel back then.
So it's like, and then you've got to get it across places like this
where it's like literally mountains.
There's a lot of this stuff, and I think they used the Nile
because Aswan's on the Nile, but there's tons of granite artefacts
that aren't like rose granite from Aswan.
They're like a black granite or a diorite and there's these other quarries
that are way out in the eastern desert.
Like nowhere near the river.
You're talking hundreds and hundreds of miles
across mountains and valleys
and like it's a whole other logistical issue.
It's also possible that there were like
other river systems that existed back then.
Maybe.
Yeah, there's not a lot of evidence for it
in terms of you sort of see something there,
but yeah, the Nile's been there for a while.
Yeah, I saw one video,
it was a random video on YouTube,
about them floating the blocks up the Nile,
not on boats itself.
Bladders and things.
Yeah.
So, I mean, that, yeah,
I mean, even that is just really tricky,
but that makes more sense than loading it
onto some like rickety little ship
and having that hopefully not capsize.
Yeah.
It's an exercise I want to do. Particularly at the
quarry they do say well see this area here
this is the harbour where they loaded these ships. I'm like
we have examples.
Briefly it came up here there's the Russian
Thunderstone. So this is a giant
1500 tonne stone they moved in like the 1800s
from Finland to Russia.
Part of that was across water
and they had to make a huge barge to put this thing on, massive.
And then they had to tie up warships on either side of it
to keep it balanced, this massive thing.
And you're talking about this harbour that's like two times
the width of that obelisk.
And you say, you're going to put a ship in there?
Can you even get a ship that's going to displace enough water
to take 1,200 tonnes and have its centre of gravity
in the right place where it doesn't just go, you know,
which is probably what would happen if you tried.
I just don't think you could fit any ship in there
that would be even close to big enough.
Can we take like two minutes so I could pee?
Listen, let's just discredit everything that you've just said.
All right.
Do you believe in giants?
I think there's a lot of evidence for it, yes.
Look, I've had this discussion with Hugh Newman,
who's big into it, and I'm like, man, show me one bone.
I mean, show me one bone, you know.
Didn't they find some in America?
Wouldn't they find these like...
There's lots of reports of that, but there's no bone.
There's nothing that you can go see.
Now, there's some legitimate stuff involved with the –
I've since learned, since I said that to him,
and he was like, oh, actually.
So the Smithsonian has admitted to –
there is some documents where they talk about having them.
They say they don't have them anymore.
I don't – what happened was it's this, you know,
divine precedence of the human species.
So we had this attitude in Victorian eras
where we were the superior version of humans.
Like there's no one above us.
So when we found evidence for bigger, stronger humans,
there was some motives to try and cover that shit up.
So I think that might be at the origin of some of these stories.
Now that attitude doesn't really exist anymore.
So I'm like, who cares if we find giant bones?
Like it would just, we'd add it in.
We have Gigantopithecus.
Like we would just add it to our fossil species, in my opinion.
Sorry, how big are we talking?
Well, what's Gigantopithecus?
Just like one of the previous hominids,
it's like a Homo Gigantopithecus.
It's like one of our cousins in the Homo series,
the Homo species.
Yeah, like a Neanderthal, but there's Gigantopithecus.
And he was, you know, 10 feet to like giant, massive walking monkeys
like these things.
Oh, just a monkey that walked on.
Yeah, giant, again, it was just blackies, like three metres tall.
Yeah, like an ancestor, you know, we'd probably add in a giant
to like our species somehow.
I don't think it would be a huge deal.
But there seems to be plenty of evidence for it.
Put it that way.
What did you just say, Akash?
What were you just asking?
How big were they?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know, 9, 10 feet or 3 meters,
something like that is I think the realms of possibility.
Some people go a lot further than that with some of the giant talk.
Now, are the giants the same as those like weird kind of like
conic-shaped skulls you find on some of the...
Yeah, the elongated skulls.
Yeah.
Is that from the way that they're wrapped or is that...
So there is some... So skull binding is the term,
is they can get their babies and do skull binding.
There is, that is a thing that does happen,
but that doesn't explain all the elongated skulls we've seen
because even with skull binding,
you're not changing the volume of the brain, right?
It's just squished into a different shape.
Yeah.
But we've found some examples of elongated skulls
that have bigger brain pans, like bigger volumes of brain.
So it's not a result of skull binding, of cranial binding.
Whoa.
So there does seem to be some other version of, you know,
humans that could have been involved.
I actually do think that, you know, it doesn't necessarily,
if you go with the whole ancient civilisation thing,
I'm not, it doesn't have to be homo sapien.
Like I think there's, we've found that Denisovan,
like this whole, this is an emerging area of complexity for us now.
There's all these other species of hominids that are coming out,
the Denisovans, the Denisovans.
Yeah.
So there's a whole new species that they've found,
basically from a pinky bone, by the way.
Not a lot more evidence for it than that.
But there's a whole other subspecies of essentially human cousins
or hominins, yeah, from the Denisovan cave,
that we don't know much about.
And we know that, for example, the Neanderthals had bigger brains than us.
Yeah.
We don't know much about them.
Like, you know, they're built like brick shithouses compared to us.
They could have lived much longer than us.
They could have communicated in other methods.
Like, I think if you go back far enough in time,
it may not have just been us building stuff.
Some of these other species could have been responsible too.
Wait, Neanderthals had bigger brains, were stronger,
just better versions of us.
Pretty much.
How'd they die out?
I thought we killed them.
Yeah, well, that's the mainstream story.
I think fire was one of the things we had
that was really effective.
I read this in Sapiens
and obviously I forgot it.
And then also communication
and like the tribe and the herd that we have
through communication
and apparently gossip is something
that like really binds humans together.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Our language is so much better.
Oh, so we could organize a little better
than the Neanderthals.
Neanderthals were a little bit more ape-like.
Yeah, they didn't have the vocal box, like the construction.
We don't think that they could talk.
But we don't really know.
And who knows if there was other methods of communication
with other versions of these species.
We don't know.
But, yeah, that's what they say.
We hunted them out with group tactics.
But, I mean, you wouldn't take one of these dudes on one-on-one.
I mean, it's bone densities like broom sticks to axe handles.
Oh, wow.
They were on a scale in the same way like a chimpanzee,
the powder weight is so much superior to us.
That's what the Neanderthals were like compared to us as well.
Like they're just their muscle attachment points and their bone density
and their geometry was far superior to ours.
They'd rip your head right off
if they wanted to.
So you think that the pyramids
could have been built by a,
what did you call them,
a hominid?
Hominid.
Potentially some other
hominid species.
A human ancestor?
Potentially, yeah.
Yeah, that's what I was thinking
about giant humans.
I was like,
could it just be Neanderthals?
But I guess they're not that much taller. Well, that's what I was thinking about giant humans. I was like, could it just be Neanderthals? But I guess they're not that much taller.
Well, there's a few things.
So the rumors of giants is a thing.
Like you have a lot of that in parts of the UK.
You get a lot of that in Native American legends
and the mound builders and all of that.
And even biblical history, right?
Biblical history with giants, yeah.
Patagonia, there's, there is.
What makes someone a giant? That's the thing.
Like, someone could get lost in translation.
Potentially. I mean, I'm sure...
It's a relative term. It's inherently
relative. Yeah. Someone being a giant just means
like they're bigger than most people I see.
Exactly. So if you're part of a tribe, everybody's around
like four and a half feet, and then you go to like the Sudan
and you see somebody 6'6", you're like,
these motherfuckers are giants. Yeah. Right?
In the same way that like a Cyclops might have been
some guy who got his eye fucking poked out
and all of a sudden there's these one-eyed people,
yada, yada, yada.
So yeah.
It is, they do describe it if you go,
it's not just individuals either.
It is actually like a group of people.
Like they're described as a type of people
in a lot of these myths and legends
and stories and depictions.
Yeah.
It is a bit. It's not,
yeah, I understand you have individuals that are potentially giants, but they do describe
it as a group. No, I'm saying there are certain culturals,
there are certain cultures that are just taller than others and certain that are
shorter to this day. So would we
describe them as giants now? Maybe
not, but, and obviously things
are going to get exaggerated through time.
Sorry, this is not your giant theory, but I was going
over your stuff, and you have an interesting theory on aliens.
Ah, okay.
We want to go to aliens.
Well, I mean, I don't invoke aliens
for any of the ancient civilization stuff,
but I'm like pretty
convinced. I mean, I think it's a mathematical
certainty that other life exists in the universe.
But you said it was humans
that have left the planet, correct?
Oh, you're on this one?
Did I say this?
Is this on the Concrete Podcast?
Yeah.
It's possible.
So this is, and there's some other people,
it's an interesting theory.
I wouldn't say it's my theory, but yeah, it is possible.
You analyze some of the historical accounts
that there may have been an exodus,
and some of this may have even been depicted
in some of the Egyptian temples and stories
that it could be taken in that light,
that yes, there may have been a branch of humanity
in the past that left.
Would that be the first?
Oh yeah, okay, go, go, go.
If we're having fun, pre-Younger Dryas,
some humans could have escaped Earth.
Yep.
And that's why alien civilization or technology,
alien technology,
is so much more advanced.
It's just these humans from pre-Younger Dryas had built the pyramids.
Could be.
Who got the fuck out,
and now we started over,
so they have this massive head start.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're just the guys who left
and had to start over,
and they're out.
They have all their technology.
Think about it like this.
They saw the fireball coming.
Yeah.
And they're like,
well, no part of this.
We're going.
We're going to F out of here.
Maybe we'll come back when the weather's nice again.
That's the crazy part.
It's only some of them made it off too.
Yeah.
The rest of them just had to wear that shit.
Yeah.
They did, yes.
Fuck.
Yeah, you want to win the lottery in that case.
It's like, yeah, all right.
What's your social career number?
You think that's the obsession with space travel now?
You think that Elon and some of these guys,
they know that it's only a matter of time
before a comet comes
and they just want to be ready
to be out there?
You know,
Elon is interesting
in that he does seem
to have this awareness
of these ice ages
and cataclysms and stuff.
And I'm sure,
look,
we're getting better at it.
Like, we are.
We did the DART mission recently.
You see that?
Where we fired off a probe
and actually tried to deflect
like a meteor.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So we just moved it like a 15th of a degree or whatever
and enough to think, all right, theoretically,
we could probably do something about this.
So we're starting to put some resources towards it.
People do understand it.
Back when there was Space Force and Colonel Matt Lomai
was running it, you know, he was going to get Randall Carson
in to talk to those guys about catastrophism.
So I'm sure people are looking at it, yeah.
And I guess that's the long-term goal
for some of the space guys.
I don't know.
I mean, shit, that makes sense.
If it happens this regularly and it's this catastrophic,
why would we not put some resources toward it?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, the whole alien thing, no, it's like,
I don't think we need it to justify the stuff in the past.
You know, what Bob Lazar said on Rogan was interesting.
One of the things he said was, well, one of the aircraft
came from an archaeological dig.
So it's possible this stuff's been going on for a long time.
I don't see why not.
You know, it's an awful lot of space and time out there, you know,
for that overlap to happen.
We kind of think of things in our long term as the span of a human life.
It's not very – and, you know, in terms of the rest of the universe,
it's nothing.
It's, you know, you've got to.
It's a blink.
Billions of years and almost infinite distances
and to have two civilisations kind of peak and cross over
and match each other is, it would be a coincidence.
But mathematically, it's almost certain that life exists, right?
The Kepler missions, when they did that and they started to look at,
like where they found planets in the Goldilocks zone around stars.
They started to analyse the shadows in front of stars
and they could determine like the distance to some of these planets
and they thought they wouldn't find them very much,
but then they just, the numbers went up exponentially.
It's like planets are in Goldilocks zones everywhere.
And if you could explain the Goldilocks zone.
Well, it's the distance where a planet's orbiting
like a habitable solar system with a sun that works for us
and you're in basically a zone where liquid water can exist.
Yeah.
Because you're either too hot and it boils off
or you're too cold and it just rocks hard.
And so there's a little Goldilocks zone like where Earth is
where you have liquid water and everything we know about life
requires that as a basis for it and then whatever else takes place to start life and evolution.
I mean, if they find one skerrick of bacteria or something on Mars
or even something else in this Titan, for example,
in this solar system, I mean, that's case closed.
If you find life in more than one body in one solar system,
it's everywhere.
Forget it.
It's got to be everywhere.
Are you interested in Antarctica at all
in terms of geological research and pyramids and things like that?
I know that there's a big looming conspiracy regarding Antarctica
where people can't go and visit.
It's super restricted and cut off,
and it's blocked on Google Maps in a lot of places.
So I'm curious if you have thoughts on that.
You can go to Antarctica.
If you want to go skiing in Antarctica or go climb mountains, you can. There's like a summer
camp, you can fly down there and do that stuff.
It just costs a fortune. I am
interested in it and I do think that it's
that's actually a potential
zone for investigation
for remnant of, if there
was anything left of, say, a builder culture.
I think Antarctica is one of those places
we should look. We know parts of
Antarctica have had ice on them for a very long time,
like a million years.
But there's also some weird shit that comes down from like ancient maps.
You've heard this?
Like there's one of these evidences,
it's like this fragment of advanced knowledge.
We talked about longitude earlier, right?
There are ancient maps that were made, like the Piri Reis map's a good example,
made by a Turkish admiral named Piri Reis in the 1500s.
He drew it from a collection of older source maps
that he got from like the Library of Alexandria
that are now all lost to us.
So we don't have the source maps, we have his map,
which is a collection of other maps.
But parts of it show both very accurate longitude
and it also maps the coastline of Queen Maud's land in Antarctica
super accurately.
And that today is under the ice.
It's like a mile of ice or something.
And this was confirmed by the US Air Force geological map group
in the 1960s.
There's a professor named Hapgood, was it John Hapgood?
Charles Hapgood worked with the US Air Force and these guys,
the topographical department, to confirm like, yeah,
that's the explanation for this part of the map.
It's the coastline of Antarctica and what's under the ice.
And that map also shows like rivers and trees and things.
So it's like there's little fragments that come down of like
what the world may have looked very differently
in the past.
I mean, just the idea that it's habitable 500 years ago
seems pretty surprising to me.
Well, I don't think it was 500 years ago.
So this is the thing.
So Piri Reis wasn't...
He was using maps from...
He was using ancient maps.
Yeah.
Yeah, that may have been redrawn from other ancient maps.
It's like there's a couple other maps like Orontius Phineas map.
It's another one.
It shows like America and Antarctica and Australia and continents
before they were ever technically discovered.
And they show very accurate longitude,
whereas the parts that are drawn by the sailors of the time
are all over the place.
The accuracy is horrible.
So it looks like, and Pyramid shows this as well,
we were solving some of these problems like longitude
way back in the past,
and we get these little tidbits of information
that get transmitted down through time.
One's in architecture.
Another one seems to come through these ancient maps,
which, again, they're all comprised of bits from older maps
that are all gone now.
So it's like, ah, it's like little tiny bits of information.
But it all seems to point to, like,
we had some pretty significant capability back in the day.
And military power as well.
That's the other thing that I'm very interested about.
Like, it seems like most of our society,
a lot of the advancements come out of military,
where we have these big wars,
and then we get able to, you know,
sort of democratize all the technology into society,
and it gets dispersed.
Do you find that these societies
had advanced militaries in the same way?
And these tools, I'm sure if they can build a pyramid,
they can also be used to cut off a bunch of people's heads.
Potentially, yeah.
I don't see any evidence for that.
And Graham Hancock has a – he does definitely think that this civilization
may have functioned differently to ours and had different values and systems.
I don't know.
I think if it's human, I'll have a hard time thinking
we get away from our nature, you know.
Yeah.
Right.
And our nature, to be honest, is nature's nature.
Like it's one of the reasons when you get like alien stuff,
I'm like don't yell in the jungle, bro.
Yeah.
Like we're in the jungle and we're transmitting this shit out there.
Like don't, we should be a little careful.
We're not going to be besties.
Dude, look at any, the top of the food chain in air, sea,
you know, on the ground, what's it involved?
It involves a lot of violence.
You don't stand for competition.
You eradicate your competition.
You know, it's nasty.
Like nature's violent.
What makes you think any other life out there
is going to be benevolent?
We aren't.
We aren't, right?
So these space programs that are just blasting radio signals
or sending capsules
with depictions and things.
Yeah, we're peaceful
and this is us.
Careful what comes back at you.
I don't know.
It's just like yelling in the jungle.
I'm not sure.
I think if we know the...
Look at nature on this planet
is all I'm saying.
Like at the top of the food chain,
it's savage.
And we're a representation
of that too in a lot of ways.
Yeah, of course.
Ben, anything else before we wrap this up?
This has been amazing.
Thank you.
I have one question.
We had a lot of fun.
Last question.
Have you come across any piece of information
or anything that made you question what you believe?
Ooh, great.
I've certainly come across stuff
that's refined what I've been thinking.
Like it's changed my opinion on certain things, but I can't say I've certainly come across stuff that's refined what I've been thinking. Like it's changed my opinion on certain things, but I can't say I've...
Look, and my whole perspective on this like ancient civilisation
that's lost with a high-tech whatever, that's a great way of saying it,
is I think it's...
I still think it's the best explanation for the evidence that we have.
I'm willing to have my mind changed and if at the end of the day,
you know, getting to those answers and investigating these topics
means I'm proven wrong, I'm fine with that.
I just kind of want to get to the truth of it.
Yeah, like I've learned stuff about different sites.
I've learned things about the serapium and some of the boxes
and stuff that's changed my opinion on some of those here and there,
but it's like it's more of a refinement than anything else.
I really do think that when you look at all these vectors, right,
the scientific work, the human timeline, our own history,
cataclysm, the stuff that's in all of the religious tales,
the ancient maps, the connection with these architecture
and all of this advanced knowledge, then you look
at the stonework and the evidence for high tech.
I just think the best explanation for that when you put it all together
is this idea that our history is a bit longer and more complicated
than we thought it was.
What that actually looks like, I don't know.
Like I don't really claim to know how the stuff was done
and what it looked like.
I'll speculate.
But I still think it's the best explanation for what we're seeing.
And again, but I'm willing to have my mind changed.
Like I'd, you know, for sure the dynastic Egyptians
and other civilisations, I'm not saying all of that's bullshit.
They were there, they did stuff, they worked on stuff.
They were great, they achieved a lot,
but you can't explain everything that we see in history by them,
the Inca or the dynastic Egyptians.
Something else is going on and it's an interesting story. I'm personally
fascinated by it. I think it
means something for us as a civilisation if we
can come around to this idea
with this and
with cataclysm. So
yeah, I don't know. I think it's
to me endlessly fascinating
but I think it actually means
something to us as a species if we can figure it out too.
Do you think we do?
We do figure it out.
I'd love to say yes in my timeline.
I've got some hope for the next generation of –
I don't know what shape that answer takes, you know.
Is it when the academics say yes or the textbooks change?
Because to some degrees, like, the nature of the discourse has changed.
Like, do we even need to have this in textbooks anymore?
I think a lot of people can evaluate the landscape
and they can figure it out and make up their own mind.
That said, I do have hope for the next generation
because I've been contacted by a lot of students
and people that will be the next generation of academia
and the establishment and I think they're being forced
to deal with guys like Graham Hancock and Shock and Bovile,
the stuff in the books and all of this evidence.
And that's why I'm really hopeful for things like what we did
with the vase scan.
It's a super nerdy technical topic but it's,
I genuinely think it's game changing.
Like this is hard data you cannot refute and you cannot say,
you literally have to go and prove that you can do this by hand.
Right.
I think it shatters the whole primitive tools story,
which in turn then has this domino effect on all the assumptions
and what we think was going on in the ancient time.
So I'd like to say yes.
I hope we figure it out.
I hope we at least change and open our mind because ultimately
we need to look at this stuff with an open mind.
We're going to learn things too. That's the other thing. We might actually learn
stuff from it. We might find
out something about technology or
something that we don't understand today.
So yeah.
Ultimately that's what I hope. It's just like we open up
our minds. We can investigate this stuff and
try and figure it out.
Amazing. Awesome. Brother, thank you so much.
Cheers, man. Everybody go check out
Uncharted X.
This is Ben's YouTube channel.
He has tons of pieces on there.
You're doing interviews.
You're doing like these in-depth pieces on certain sites.
I've watched a bunch of them.
They're great.
Thank you.
And check out his episode, Rogan,
and obviously all the other cool stuff he's got.
You do tours as well, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So I love taking people to these places,
going to Turkey in a couple weeks here,
Egypt later this year.
Nice.
It is good fun.
Cosmic Summit's coming up too in June.
We're doing a big conference, Randall Carlson,
Graham Hancock over in Asheville.
Livestream's available for that one.
It'll be fun.
We have a lot of scientists for that one too,
so we're trying to bring it together.
Awesome.
Stoked.
Thank you so much for being here.
Cheers, man.
Peace.