It’s cool how the museum wrote catalog numbers on this amazing art
@richmondraider716
Жыл бұрын
40 plus thousand in one location. Once again the sheer number indicates an established reliable manufacturing process rather than manual labor to produce these. Also the wide variety of product design suggests the process was very user friendly.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
All excellent points.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Ай бұрын
richmondraider716's comment does not include the words 'identical' or 'automated'. He is referring to the difference between turning stone vessels out with sticks and bashing/rubbing stones, ( manual labor ) and producing them with the aid of higher order tools, such as lathes and drills, which is a 'manufacturing process' that still involves human operators
@richmondraider716
Ай бұрын
@AncientEgyptArchitecture thank you. Once again, let me clearly state that the sheer number of items found (which most likely less than the number produced) indicates a sophisticated process.
I believe we should all thank Charlie Sheen for narrating this presentation for us.
@NathanHale253
Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love your videos 👌 👌 keep up the great research 👏 👍
@guidos5498
Жыл бұрын
Great clip very well narrated. Really hope your channel grows quickly. Keep em coming👍🏻
@JOERUESING
Жыл бұрын
Well done, sir.
@jerrymann20
Жыл бұрын
Finally! A man who understands what he actually sees! There is no way the dynastic Egyptians built these vases, no way possible!
@sparkleypegs8350
Жыл бұрын
These are incredible. I've always wondered about them. It is a very particular style.
@MegaLivingIt
Жыл бұрын
Like the detailed information on the artifacts.
@bobaphatt6977
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@scottNewworldphotography
Жыл бұрын
They are beautiful the Egyptians where truly advanced race with hidden skills and secrets they took to the grave only if we knew what they did I wonder why to this day the Egyptian authorities keep so much hidden from us . You're videos and knowledge are fantastic and i really enjoy them.
@chickenfist1554
Жыл бұрын
It's all pagan to them. If it wasn't for the fact it brought them income from tourism I'm convinced they would have levelled the lot.
@PJ_MIKE
Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your fact based, slow approach to the truth.
@SmokeyTreats
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@charlesblithfield6182
Жыл бұрын
Every time I see the vessels with the handles I wonder how they were made. It’s curious that the handles emerge from the perfect symmetric form of the vessels outer surface. How on earth were they cut?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
personally I think it had to have been some version of a pattern-makers jig lathe, or some sort of templated carving process. Of course, some commenters here are sure it could be done by handwork, pounding balls, rubbing stones and the like; Take a close look at the results of those methods and then compare to the ancient originals.
@charlesblithfield6182
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture I am an artist. I make things using many material. I have seen some videos of people trying to reproduce such work and it’s true they don’t come close. I would be very impressed with the skill of a person who could fabricate with such skill even using machine tools.
@olgaroche2929
Жыл бұрын
By the civilizations before the Egyptian, they just found them, trying to replicate later, some of them not so perfect, ???
@stuartwood4638
Жыл бұрын
Where did they quarry the truth stone
@hawkeye1370
Жыл бұрын
Very interesting, very clear evidence for high technology.
@julius7799
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps they mastered some kind of magnetic or vibrational technology and the tool moved around the material instead of moving the material with the tool. I don't think the 'machines' we're looking for are anything like what we can imagine. They could simply be tiny diamonds or crystals.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
If you can't tell the difference between Porphory and concrete you need to take a course in rock identification basics.
@joshuaspencer852
Жыл бұрын
I love that idea, I’ve always pictured a lathe but why not have a free floating tool that moves the complete opposite of a lathe that’d be brilliant
@joshuaspencer852
Жыл бұрын
Christopher Dunn the Giza power plant had a pretty neat explanation for the stone jars found in Giza they were sort of part of an acoustic machine/instrument that agitated hydrogen gas that was being pumped into the kings chamber
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Yes! At 4:24 there is an image of a peculiar type of vessel with a spherical body and a horn-shaped neck; a few vessels in the hoard have this form factor, and Mr. Dunn theorizes that they may have been Helmholtz resonators, with the varying sizes designed for specific harmonic reinforcement, and that a large array of these, suspended in the grand gallery, could have been used to produce a powerful acoustic input to the kings chamber.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
@johsua spencer Pattern makers have used such template following devices for centuries.....on their lathes.
@attyfrancisco3162
7 ай бұрын
Nice...
@edmundhapsburg4462
Жыл бұрын
Cant even dothat today
@robphillips2487
11 ай бұрын
I saw part of a video where a Japanese gentleman was aging sake in a repurposed RR tunnel, and various videos where it takes considerable time and repeat steps, foldings to make super strong steel blades. Some things take some time. There is a wooden pick to an Indian instrument that is aged in coconut oil for over thirty years. Whether they had advanced machines or not(?), what might be needed for this is something like a slow turning water powered grindstone or millstone, or situation where a jar would be inside another jar filled with sand. The technical aspect seems secondary to some old guy going out and checking these every morning, making fine adjustments every day or two, and the whole thing turning for who knows how many months. The principle and the planning seem more important than a powerful machine.
@6point8esspcee68
Жыл бұрын
I understand why the Egyptians wish to lay claim to these objects. But, this stone work points us back to Zeptepi. The late Pleistocene, in my opinion.
@joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
Жыл бұрын
5:01 - the alabaster platter, could it have been lathe turned in a soft form, and sagged after it was finished, whilst it was still in it's soft state?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
If you can figure out what would make it soft, let us know.
@al2207
Жыл бұрын
please look at uncharted X precision analysis of granite vase showing nanometre precision and computer necessity to accomplished such a fantastic job
@REKLESSWOLVES1
Жыл бұрын
Not sure if you are familiar with Ben`s work over at UnchartedX channel. He`s just uploaded a video with Engineer Christopher Dunn and his son Alex who have been given one of these Sakkara style jars for engineering analysis using the best top of the range engineering measurement devices, their precision is unbelievable. within 1000th of an inch accurate. I`ll post the link below just in case you haven`t seen it mate.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
see kzitem.info/news/bejne/xKynk6Rncpd0loY
@Automedon2
Жыл бұрын
I really enjoy these unexplained artifact videos, but they always make me want to sit the establishment experts down and slap them upside the head.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
LOL! We must try to be patient with those who are a little slow.
@michaeldeierhoi4096
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture 😅😂🤣. That's too funny because with all due respect no one else has any explanation either that has been verified!!
@tygrahof9268
Жыл бұрын
I really want to see one of these lathes. It is a winder that the vases remain but the tools do not...Did they rust away in time?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
I could reply at length but instead I will simply ask; what do you think would remain of a modern machine tool after 4500 years of exposure to the elements? 6000 years? 10,000 ?
@tygrahof9268
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture True except for the plastic parts...
@zoooooooof
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the tolerances on the headstock must have been extremely tight. Maybe it's hiding in the cellars of the Cairo museum mislabeled as door socket and pivot ;) In the 1980s an artist got a set like it replicated to use as a throwing wheel. A problem they ran into was that they replicated it a bit too smooth and the vacuum made the thing lock up like a drum brake. They could have been on to something if they were interested in low tolerance stonework instead of crude pottery.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
@Tyg Rahof When one observes the ancient works, it seems that everything was done with either natural materials or the odd bit of metal...I don't think they had plastics, although they did use organic resins for various purposes.
@artmaknev3738
Жыл бұрын
Were these vases just found in one location, or was it a common design throughtout Egypt??
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Similar work has been found all around the middle east, the Med, North Africa...but the largest preserved hoard is the one from under the step pyramid.
@emoryzakin2576
Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the video but 6:04-10:03 is blacked out. Extra run time?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for alerting me, I will fix.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Now corrected.
@emoryzakin2576
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture my pleasure, keep up the good work I know I'm enjoying it!
@emoryzakin2576
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture outstanding
@robgardner1951
Жыл бұрын
Pre flood megalithic items. Probably from the Atlantis area. Traded, buried and forgotten! Awesome
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Traded, buried and forgotten, exactly correct.
@artforartsake888
Жыл бұрын
They look melted or warped by heat.
@joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
Жыл бұрын
1:23 that bowl on the right looks similar to some weird metal thing found in Egypt. Coincidence ?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
There are no coincidences
@methylmike
Жыл бұрын
@4:46 are you saying those edges are not folded over?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Yes
@methylmike
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture boggles the mind
@LordDustinDeWynd
19 күн бұрын
Molded geopolymer? Or many many people with LOTS of time on their hands and not much to do except chip rocks?
@whatsinthat3657
Жыл бұрын
What is that image of at 5:51 ? A few details caught my eye and want a closer look
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
It is an image from a remote sensing platform in orbit, of a section of desert to the east of Cairo that I downloaded from google images. It shows structures buried beneath the sand.
@whatsinthat3657
Жыл бұрын
I can’t find it. Do you know the name of the place
@mustamuri
Жыл бұрын
Onkohan kukaan tarkistanut kääntyvien muotojen syidensuuntaa kulhon syidensuuntaan ??? 🤔
@StanJan
Жыл бұрын
Damn your good. Thank you
@dragonfox2.058
Жыл бұрын
and yet today with all our "advancement" the bearings dont' hold up for more than a few years FFS
@garypiatt4666
Жыл бұрын
I have not researched this pyramid, so I will ask here. Was ANY remnant of an actual burial of a Pharaoh found in this pyramid!? Or, like the others, nothing to indicate a burial of ANYONE!
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
The only thing found inside the 'burial coffer' in the step pyramid was part of a severed hand, which carbon dating revealed to be a mismatch for the age of the structure.
@garypiatt4666
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture Thanks for the reply!!!!!! So, as is the case of the other magnificent pyramids, or most- especially the GREAT ones, NO evidence they had ANYTHING to do with burials! Funny how the actual burial locations unearthed have the walls and ceilings covered in all kinds of regalia, art, homage and pageantry, yet these great BURIAL pyramids are blank!! Thank you for all of the FANTASTIC information you bring to us. Be safe and keep up the good work!!!
@larrytownsend8837
Жыл бұрын
After looking at these amazing stone vessels, I have also looked at photos and history of the giant obilisk, left in stone 150 tons worth and I can see core drilling marks along all edges in a 1930 photo, black and white, It is my thought that the cores from this material would be turn on lathes to make dish and vases and platters, it makes perfect sense that the cores would be used as such. No stones or copper tools did this work, this super advanced civilization would have the ability to leave the planet and save themselves from the Asteroids that are proven to have hit our planet in the past, Hence the lack of metal atifacts and tools , They took them when they left, My fear is they are coming back.
@DurpVonFronz
Жыл бұрын
Do you know of the patents from the 1800-1900's that were for man made stone?
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Yes, and although engineered or 'cultured' stone products are not always easy to differentiate from the natural versions by the consumer, they always contain synthetic binders that are easily detectable by analysis.
@DurpVonFronz
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture So this one would be detectable cause of its synthetic binders? Here is a patent I found and its recipe Rock Salt 16 pounds, Water 2 and 1/2 gallons, Iron Rust 6 pounds, Volcanic Ash 10 pounds, Silica Sand 20 pounds, Ground Asbestos 4 pounds, Powdered Rock 10 pounds, Green Vitriol 1 pound, coloring as required but not necessarily essential. This comes from ELWOOD GOSSETT, OF LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Patented Apr. 13, 1915.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Synthetic as in, having components not found in the natural versions. ( I.E., rock salt, Iron rust, ground asbestos, green vitriol. ) What are you working towards as a point, if I may ask?
@DurpVonFronz
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture Like if any of these artifacts have turned out to be man made, like they were poured. Cause it would explain many of the things we just cant explain but claim is carved.
@DurpVonFronz
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture Even when blended those materials stay the same? Is there no chemical change they go through that would result in something else being found after the mix? I dont know, Im trying to piece things together myself.
@larrytownsend8837
Жыл бұрын
I would like to suggest that that late civilization did in fact use a cnc machine to make these vessels as you would need computer control to make such thin cuts, as so many were found 40,000 plus they had to manufactured, by someone in the business of making dishes and such. not the Egyptians who in fact found them, and then repopulated the area after the waters from the flood had receded, likley caused by asteroid impacts.
@peterthomas144
Жыл бұрын
I would take issue with the assertion that these objects were ‘obviously’ lathe turned. The symmetrical nature and the handles, lips and foldings are far more likely to have been fabricated using pottery techniques. It is of course mind bending to think that the culture that manufactured these items had access to technology to manipulate some form of rock melting methodology but it would explain everything that puzzles us today. It also would explain the exactitude of the block laying and building. The one thing that strikes me about many of the artefacts you and others in this field allude to, is the casual nature of the items found. From huge blocks to stone dishes. It suggests that the techniques and technologies employed were every day abilities. Not months of work by highly skilled artisans. Where are all the practise pieces attempted by apprentices that would have been discarded as they perfected their art? How long would it have taken to to learn to craft these exquisite items? How many items could such a highly skilled person produce in a productive career? If huge lathes or industrial sized machines were employed where are they now? Where are the depictions of such technologies in the art of the times? An industrial machine doesn’t exist in isolation. It exists as part of a techscape of supporting industries. To make the individual parts of a sophisticated and powerful machine you need hundreds of other smaller less powerful machines which in turn require thousands of other even less powerful machines. No evidence has ever been found to support this at least to my knowledge
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
Even mainstream academic archaeologists agree that a great many of these vessels were made on lathes. Pottery techniques cannot be applied to solid stone, particularly the harder igneous and metamorphic types. Postulating a technology of rock melting/forming to explain the manufacture of these artifacts is a far more radical departure from accepted methodologies than turning them out on a lathe, which would not need to be huge or industrial-sized. If one were to advance the theory that the Sakkara vessels were created in pre-dynastic times ( again, an approach that has been suggested by mainstream academics ) then we must ask, how much earlier than the dynastic timeline? Is it possible that enough time could have elapsed between their manufacture and internment that all traces of the wooden ( and metal? ) tools used could have disintegrated? Organic and ferrous materials degrade rapidly if not maintained and protected from the elements.
@peterthomas144
Жыл бұрын
It is the mainstream academics that you are odds with. To summarise, their view appears to consist of, take artefact, explain manufacture of said artefact in the simplest possible terms using simplest possible tools and technology. Whilst it is possible to turn symmetrical items of any material on a lathe, a lathe cannot make lipped vessels, integral handles of curled lips. Some of the industrial Victorian lathes were capable of a kind of decorative carving they could of course only deal with wood. I appreciate that you can’t convince the mainstream Egyptologists that the items are almost certainly from an inherited prior culture. But if that is the belief that you support it also stands to reason that it would be impossible to place technological limits upon that previous culture without knowing anything about that (or those) culture/cultures. Please do not take anything I have written here as a criticism of your work, I enjoy your rather forthright presentation of the facts as you have witnessed them. I merely enjoy speculating beyond the obvious explanations usually given and accepted on these matters
@bluesdirt6555
Жыл бұрын
Seems like they could softened granite, turn it with diamond tech. Especially some of the giant columns.
@nj3957
Жыл бұрын
@@AncientEgyptArchitecture To me there is no question that advanced machinery is the only way these jars could have been made. I haven't seen a single example of anyone coming close to replicating the finest jars and the oft mentioned idea of stone softening is a non starter - many of the jars are made of crystalline rock which has clearly been cut, not moulded. Furthermore, there are many examples of machining in Egypt and elsewhere in the world, such as saw cuts and tube drills. Such a pity that so many "mainstream" archeologists do not want to accept that we are looking at something truly incredible and well beyond any known civilisations (including our own).
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
If by lipped vessels you are referring to the folded-over lobes of some examples, it is true that these cannot be replicated with conventional lathe turning techniques. However, as I have proposed in response to other comments, it is certainly possible to utilize a hybridized machining approach, where the material removal is first accomplished by conventional lathework, and features such as folded lobes/lips and side handle bosses are created with the aid of template following tools. I have seen this sort of work done in modern machineshops, and I am confident that similar methods could be implemented with fairly simple tech, no electric motors or CNC controllers required. William Flinders Petrie wrote an excellent analysis of the probable tools and techniques required to accomplish the fabrication of finely turned stone vessels, based on the shards and partial vases he found and examined, and it is my opinion that his analysis is cogent and well thought out. www.theglobaleducationproject.org/egypt/articles/hrdfact3.php www.touregypt.net/petrie/c19.htm www.gizapower.com/petrie.html
@JEviston
Жыл бұрын
Modern day artist can for sure replacate the inside. There are many videos on utube showing the prosess. No lathe needed.
@AncientEgyptArchitecture
Жыл бұрын
The makers of the many videos on youtube do not produce the requisite thinness of wall that follows the outer profile, nor do the inside walls display the even series of toolmarks from a fine, hard tool point, they are only poor copies.
@wilhelmmeyer89
Жыл бұрын
There is a simple explanation for these wonderful artifacts: They will be made with 3D printers and then LASER polished and when ready they will be brought back to the time before they were buried - of course by timetravel, what else. Otherwise we should admit that the people who made them were far superior in knowledge and technology and most likely in intelligence just because we cannot grasp when and how the artifacts were made. Simple as that. It is the same with other artifacts and monuments all over this planet.
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