1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:16,559 Here we are in Egypt, actually, at a site called Abuzeer. 2 00:00:16,559 --> 00:00:21,039 And Abuzeer is highly interesting because there you have the phenomenon of the core 3 00:00:21,039 --> 00:00:22,440 drill holes. 4 00:00:22,440 --> 00:00:25,960 This here is such a core drill hole. 5 00:00:25,960 --> 00:00:35,240 And a core drill hole essentially is if you imagine a piece of Styrofoam and you have 6 00:00:35,240 --> 00:00:42,719 a pipe and you have, and the pipe turns very, very fast at high revolutions and you insert 7 00:00:42,719 --> 00:00:48,680 the pipe into that Styrofoam and then you take the pipe back out. 8 00:00:48,679 --> 00:00:54,359 The Styrofoam remains inside the pipe. 9 00:00:54,359 --> 00:00:57,579 So that's, you've just made a core sample. 10 00:00:57,579 --> 00:01:00,679 So that's a core drill. 11 00:01:00,679 --> 00:01:02,759 And you can only do this with a core drill. 12 00:01:02,759 --> 00:01:08,819 And the mysterious thing about the core drill holes is, and you can see here, that you 13 00:01:08,819 --> 00:01:17,060 can see actually the tip of this pipe that was drilling inside the rock. 14 00:01:17,100 --> 00:01:25,140 Let me remind you, not remind you, but tell you that this stone here is diorite, which 15 00:01:25,140 --> 00:01:28,520 is a little bit less dense than diamonds. 16 00:01:28,520 --> 00:01:32,659 So it's a very, very hard and dense stone. 17 00:01:32,659 --> 00:01:34,000 Very hard. 18 00:01:34,000 --> 00:01:41,420 So the only way this could have been done is if the tip of that core drill had diamonds 19 00:01:41,420 --> 00:01:51,180 on it, in order to put that diamond, those diamonds on the tip of that pipe, you need 20 00:01:51,180 --> 00:01:56,579 a very high type of glue so that it doesn't fall off. 21 00:01:56,579 --> 00:02:03,460 And then you need very, very high revolutions and pressure to actually, to be able to, 22 00:02:03,460 --> 00:02:06,299 you know, make such precise holes like this. 23 00:02:06,299 --> 00:02:15,900 Now let me remind you that Sir Flinders Petrie reported about this in the late 1800s. 24 00:02:15,900 --> 00:02:21,740 The core drill machine was not invented until the early 1900s. 25 00:02:21,740 --> 00:02:25,659 So anybody that says, oh, well, you know, somebody just, you know, had a field there 26 00:02:25,659 --> 00:02:33,819 and was doing some core drilling there, you know, after the fact, no, because in the, 27 00:02:33,819 --> 00:02:38,859 an old, old book from the late 1800s, Sir Flinders Petrie and the original, he has, 28 00:02:38,859 --> 00:02:46,019 you know, these nice etchings, drawings that they made back then of these core drill... 29 00:02:46,019 --> 00:02:52,979 thus proving that this is ancient. 30 00:02:52,979 --> 00:03:01,859 So the critics always say, okay, fine, you know, coincidence, but here we are in Malta, 31 00:03:01,900 --> 00:03:07,460 which is a little beautiful island in the Mediterranean. 32 00:03:07,460 --> 00:03:09,100 What do we have here? 33 00:03:09,100 --> 00:03:12,540 Another core drill hole. 34 00:03:12,540 --> 00:03:18,780 So people are saying, okay, okay, Malta is a stone's throw away from Egypt, which it 35 00:03:18,780 --> 00:03:23,100 is by a flying vehicle, of course. 36 00:03:23,099 --> 00:03:38,259 But this here is on the other side of the world, in Peru, in Cusco, at the monastery 37 00:03:38,259 --> 00:03:41,180 of the Coricancha. 38 00:03:41,180 --> 00:03:47,219 And this piece here is called El Terolito, which allegedly that's how the ancients, 39 00:03:47,219 --> 00:03:51,579 they observed the sky with, with this piece of rock. 40 00:03:52,060 --> 00:03:53,060 Don't ask me how they did it. 41 00:03:53,060 --> 00:03:56,780 It doesn't look like an observatory to me. 42 00:03:56,780 --> 00:04:00,180 It's too small for that. 43 00:04:00,180 --> 00:04:08,860 But if you look closer, the hole that we have here is a bit more sophisticated, because 44 00:04:08,860 --> 00:04:17,660 do you see this line, this groove here? 45 00:04:17,740 --> 00:04:21,980 This is not the grain of the rock. 46 00:04:21,980 --> 00:04:29,820 So if this was done mechanically, the only way that a groove like this is left behind, 47 00:04:29,820 --> 00:04:38,060 if you have a piston, a pipe that is attached to a piston and it punches right through. 48 00:04:38,060 --> 00:04:44,860 And the force that's needed to punch through rock in a perfect fashion like this requires 49 00:04:44,860 --> 00:04:48,379 speed and incredible amount of force. 50 00:04:48,379 --> 00:04:55,259 So how they did it, you know, yeah, with chicken bones and obsidian. 51 00:04:55,259 --> 00:04:59,780 I mean, that's, you know, what the archaeologists say. 52 00:04:59,780 --> 00:05:08,220 Here we are in my most favorite place on the entire world, and that's Puma Punku, which 53 00:05:08,300 --> 00:05:16,180 is right next to the famous site of Teoanaku, which is next to Lake Titicaca in the Andean 54 00:05:16,180 --> 00:05:19,620 Highlands. 55 00:05:19,620 --> 00:05:24,220 And all the tourists go to Teoanaku. 56 00:05:24,220 --> 00:05:28,620 They go to the, you know, the Gate of the Sun. 57 00:05:28,620 --> 00:05:30,460 And the Gate of the Sun is gorgeous. 58 00:05:30,460 --> 00:05:31,460 It's beautiful. 59 00:05:31,699 --> 00:05:38,779 Three yards high, about a half a yard deep, thick. 60 00:05:38,779 --> 00:05:39,779 But it's not impressive. 61 00:05:39,779 --> 00:05:42,779 I mean, sure it is. 62 00:05:42,779 --> 00:05:48,899 But what nobody wants to, nobody realizes where the real mystery lies is a stone's... 63 00:05:48,899 --> 00:05:53,939 away from Teoanaku, which is Puma Punku. 64 00:05:54,420 --> 00:06:04,060 And you can see, this is my little bag here, how gigantic these pieces of rock are. 65 00:06:04,060 --> 00:06:07,779 And how perfectly cut they are. 66 00:06:07,779 --> 00:06:12,060 Has anybody been to Puma Punku in here? 67 00:06:12,060 --> 00:06:14,220 Okay. 68 00:06:14,220 --> 00:06:15,779 Go this summer. 69 00:06:15,779 --> 00:06:22,699 It'll be cool there, not too hot, so it'll be gorgeous. 70 00:06:23,459 --> 00:06:29,219 But you have these, all these things are, these stones are also diorite and andesite. 71 00:06:29,219 --> 00:06:32,740 Very, very hard, very, very dense stone. 72 00:06:32,740 --> 00:06:41,939 And the incredible thing is, when you touch these pieces, it looks rough, but it feels 73 00:06:41,939 --> 00:06:45,899 as if you're touching glass. 74 00:06:45,899 --> 00:06:50,980 So I'm sure most of you are familiar with the term vitrification. 75 00:06:50,980 --> 00:06:57,259 The only way you can achieve vitrification is with high, high heat. 76 00:06:57,259 --> 00:07:02,120 And when you touch that, the corners are sharp. 77 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:04,860 You could actually cut yourself. 78 00:07:04,860 --> 00:07:11,819 So none of this stuff was, you know, polished or, you know, done with a, scratched away 79 00:07:11,819 --> 00:07:14,860 with a chicken bone. 80 00:07:14,860 --> 00:07:18,780 And what does conventional archaeology say about this? 81 00:07:18,779 --> 00:07:26,859 Continental archaeology says that this place was built by the Aymara Indians. 82 00:07:26,859 --> 00:07:30,899 And you can still meet some of the Aymara Indians when you go there. 83 00:07:30,899 --> 00:07:36,699 You still have, you know, the heirs of the original people, the original natives that 84 00:07:36,699 --> 00:07:39,619 were there, and they still have all their oral traditions. 85 00:07:39,619 --> 00:07:45,879 They're very proud people, very adamant about, you know, transferring their oral... 86 00:07:45,879 --> 00:07:52,800 in the right and the correct way without, you know, embellishing stuff or adding things 87 00:07:52,800 --> 00:07:54,839 or taking things away or forgetting things. 88 00:07:54,839 --> 00:08:01,000 No, you have, you know, literally original stories from way back when. 89 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:06,839 And even though the archaeologists in textbooks, by the way, out of about 50... 90 00:08:06,839 --> 00:08:12,459 four even mention Puma Puncu, and then it's only a couple of paragraphs. 91 00:08:12,459 --> 00:08:15,240 Nobody goes into this in detail. 92 00:08:15,360 --> 00:08:22,360 And then they say, you know, the Aymaras built this, and when you personally ask th... 93 00:08:22,360 --> 00:08:24,480 did you build this? 94 00:08:24,480 --> 00:08:26,280 They say, no. 95 00:08:26,280 --> 00:08:29,360 Well, who built it? 96 00:08:29,360 --> 00:08:36,320 Los dioses, the gods, before the beginning of time. 97 00:08:36,320 --> 00:08:43,299 And we have only, and that's the Aymaras talking now, we have only seen this place ... 98 00:08:43,299 --> 00:08:48,039 We've never seen this place as a whole when it was still intact. 99 00:08:48,039 --> 00:08:53,459 So when the Aymaras say that, you know, this has something to do with the gods, and again, 100 00:08:53,459 --> 00:08:56,459 let me be very clear about this. 101 00:08:56,459 --> 00:09:00,899 When I talk about gods, it has nothing to do with religion, has nothing to do with a 102 00:09:00,899 --> 00:09:05,740 cult or a sect or any type of, you know, stuff. 103 00:09:05,740 --> 00:09:07,339 Space travelers. 104 00:09:07,339 --> 00:09:11,579 Like we will be two, three hundred years down the road. 105 00:09:13,579 --> 00:09:20,059 So when they say that the gods built this, then we should listen to them. 106 00:09:20,059 --> 00:09:30,659 But look at the wild, wild cuttings and masonry things that we have here. 107 00:09:30,659 --> 00:09:37,139 Where again, if you were to touch it like so, you would cut your finger. 108 00:09:37,139 --> 00:09:41,979 Here we can go closer. 109 00:09:41,980 --> 00:09:49,980 And if this weren't enough, what is this? 110 00:09:49,980 --> 00:09:50,980 Ritual object? 111 00:09:50,980 --> 00:09:52,820 I don't think so. 112 00:09:52,820 --> 00:09:57,700 Something very, very technical. 113 00:09:57,700 --> 00:10:06,180 And I read in one archeology book that this was done with a chicken bone. 114 00:10:06,179 --> 00:10:08,620 It's a diorite column. 115 00:10:08,620 --> 00:10:16,579 Well, rectangular column. 116 00:10:16,579 --> 00:10:18,579 The groove is perfect. 117 00:10:18,579 --> 00:10:21,179 You go down with your thumb, you cut your thumb. 118 00:10:21,179 --> 00:10:23,620 It's like glass. 119 00:10:23,620 --> 00:10:24,620 It is extreme. 120 00:10:24,620 --> 00:10:26,519 I mean, it's so smooth. 121 00:10:26,519 --> 00:10:33,339 In all of my travels, I have not come across anything like Puma Punku. 122 00:10:33,340 --> 00:10:41,820 There are similarities, but this is absolutely wild. 123 00:10:41,820 --> 00:10:45,540 Look at this entire field of destruction. 124 00:10:45,540 --> 00:10:48,500 All of these things were at one point together. 125 00:10:48,500 --> 00:10:53,820 And over here, of course, you know, you have these pieces that are lined up and, you know, 126 00:10:53,820 --> 00:10:55,940 archeologists move these pieces around. 127 00:10:56,900 --> 00:11:05,460 Oh, have I told you that, you know, most of these pieces range from starting at one ton 128 00:11:05,460 --> 00:11:09,820 to 160 tons? 129 00:11:09,820 --> 00:11:12,980 Now this raises the question of transportation. 130 00:11:12,980 --> 00:11:19,320 And in one book, it said, oh, no problem, wooden rollers. 131 00:11:19,320 --> 00:11:25,580 What they don't tell you is that we're at 12,500 feet, which is above the treeline. 132 00:11:25,580 --> 00:11:32,300 I'd like to know which lumber company supplied all the wooden rollers for this... 133 00:11:32,300 --> 00:11:37,180 you know, construction project. 134 00:11:37,180 --> 00:11:41,420 There will be a picture later on that shows the plateau. 135 00:11:41,420 --> 00:11:45,180 No trees, just shrubs and grass. 136 00:11:45,180 --> 00:11:51,540 And there never were any trees even a long time ago in case somebody thinks, oh, maybe 137 00:11:51,539 --> 00:11:58,620 maybe it was deforestation in order to have all the wood to transport these things. 138 00:11:58,620 --> 00:12:05,860 Wood would crumble and crush under the massive weight of these slabs. 139 00:12:05,860 --> 00:12:10,500 Here we have these pieces lined up. 140 00:12:10,500 --> 00:12:18,779 And we actually entered, measured these pieces, put them into a computer model. 141 00:12:19,500 --> 00:12:26,059 Because they're all, the six, seven pieces that you see here, they're all identical, 142 00:12:26,059 --> 00:12:29,539 as if they were prefabricated blocks. 143 00:12:29,539 --> 00:12:32,100 They remind us sort of of Legos. 144 00:12:32,100 --> 00:12:34,819 And that's what we thought of when we saw them. 145 00:12:34,819 --> 00:12:40,139 And when we did the computer model, we tried to put these pieces together. 146 00:12:40,139 --> 00:12:43,939 And they did, in fact, interlock like Legos. 147 00:12:43,980 --> 00:12:51,020 And they were very, very resistant to, you know, them being toppled over or, you know, 148 00:12:51,020 --> 00:12:57,980 from an earthquake or something like, of the nature. 149 00:12:57,980 --> 00:13:00,300 This is the front. 150 00:13:00,300 --> 00:13:07,500 These are the backs. 151 00:13:07,500 --> 00:13:20,179 And of course, you know, this is all weathered because this is at least 8,000... 152 00:13:20,179 --> 00:13:23,379 I will get to that in another part. 153 00:13:23,379 --> 00:13:24,379 Absolutely. 154 00:13:24,379 --> 00:13:26,179 Good question. 155 00:13:26,179 --> 00:13:29,019 Here we have a picture of the plane. 156 00:13:29,019 --> 00:13:33,620 No trees. 157 00:13:33,620 --> 00:13:44,620 Some of these blocks have these clamp-like impressions. 158 00:13:44,620 --> 00:13:52,700 And some archeology books say, well, you know, they, in order to keep together thes... 159 00:13:52,700 --> 00:14:03,300 stone slabs, they would pour liquid metal into this clamp-like impression. 160 00:14:03,300 --> 00:14:09,100 The metal would harden and thus, you know, keep these stone slabs together. 161 00:14:09,100 --> 00:14:16,580 We're at 12,500 feet, where it is extremely hot during the day and extremely cold at... 162 00:14:16,580 --> 00:14:24,660 Metal would break because these things move. 163 00:14:24,660 --> 00:14:27,900 So the question is, what was poured in there? 164 00:14:27,900 --> 00:14:30,160 What was this? 165 00:14:30,160 --> 00:14:37,580 And the crazy thing is that people might say again, okay, fine, that's just Puma Puncu. 166 00:14:37,580 --> 00:14:40,180 This picture was taken on the Giza Plateau. 167 00:14:40,180 --> 00:14:43,020 Does that look familiar? 168 00:14:43,020 --> 00:14:45,980 It's on the other side of the planet. 169 00:14:45,980 --> 00:14:53,539 It's as if all these ancient stone masons went to the same school, because I'm sure 170 00:14:53,539 --> 00:14:55,700 the Internet did not exist back then. 171 00:14:55,700 --> 00:14:59,659 That I'm sure of. 172 00:14:59,659 --> 00:15:10,139 This here, similar object or similar idea, is a picture taken in Greece. 173 00:15:11,139 --> 00:15:12,139 Peru. 174 00:15:12,139 --> 00:15:19,059 And this is another site called Ollantaytambo, which is another quote-unqu... 175 00:15:19,059 --> 00:15:21,539 but I want you to go there. 176 00:15:21,539 --> 00:15:28,819 But when you go, you know, the tourist bus will drop you off at the front entrance. 177 00:15:28,819 --> 00:15:33,340 I want you to be rebels and say, no, I want to go towards the back. 178 00:15:33,340 --> 00:15:35,580 I want the back entrance. 179 00:15:35,580 --> 00:15:38,139 And that's what it looks like. 180 00:15:38,139 --> 00:15:44,539 And this is where all the sensational pieces are strewn about. 181 00:15:44,539 --> 00:15:52,740 Here you have walls, rock faces, that are cut off as if with gigantic butter knives. 182 00:15:52,740 --> 00:15:58,419 Again, you touch that, it's as smooth as a baby's bottom. 183 00:15:58,419 --> 00:15:59,819 It's like glass. 184 00:15:59,819 --> 00:16:02,500 It is incredible. 185 00:16:02,500 --> 00:16:13,700 Now, the interesting thing is, again, what I'm trying to illustrate here is that the 186 00:16:13,700 --> 00:16:20,539 global phenomenon of these similarities. 187 00:16:20,539 --> 00:16:23,820 This is Greece. 188 00:16:23,820 --> 00:16:24,820 Santorini Island. 189 00:16:24,820 --> 00:16:27,240 Beautiful, beautiful island. 190 00:16:27,240 --> 00:16:28,539 You must go. 191 00:16:28,579 --> 00:16:36,299 That was my plug to go on a vacation in Greece. 192 00:16:36,299 --> 00:16:42,339 Here we have a cut, wall face. 193 00:16:42,339 --> 00:16:44,779 Very precise, also in Greece, very smooth. 194 00:16:44,779 --> 00:16:48,219 It looks, this is porous stone. 195 00:16:48,219 --> 00:16:51,259 So therefore you have all these holes in there. 196 00:16:51,259 --> 00:16:58,779 However, where the cut is smooth. 197 00:16:58,779 --> 00:17:02,580 Here we are back at the back entrance of Oiantoitambou. 198 00:17:02,580 --> 00:17:09,220 And I want you to look at these features here, how it seems like entire slabs have... 199 00:17:09,220 --> 00:17:14,660 been cut out of the face of the mountain, face of the rock. 200 00:17:14,660 --> 00:17:25,980 And the top one here is sort of doable or possible to cut out, because you cut from 201 00:17:25,980 --> 00:17:34,820 the sides, you cut from the bottom, and you slide a blade or a saw from the back or... 202 00:17:34,820 --> 00:17:38,900 however they did it. 203 00:17:38,900 --> 00:17:45,460 How did they remove the slab from the back of the rock face here? 204 00:17:45,460 --> 00:17:54,580 There is no access point from the back, the back of the slab, because that slab lies 205 00:17:54,580 --> 00:17:59,780 right next to it. 206 00:17:59,780 --> 00:18:07,780 Now at this point some previous lectures people would ask, well why is it discolored? 207 00:18:07,779 --> 00:18:14,059 The answer is, it's ancient and it was out in the elements. 208 00:18:14,059 --> 00:18:21,180 But we measured the thing and it fits in there without deviation. 209 00:18:21,180 --> 00:18:30,379 It's as if you would have taken an X-Acto knife or a carpet knife and just sliced it. 210 00:18:30,379 --> 00:18:36,299 So it wasn't like they used a big, big, gigantic blade or something, but something... 211 00:18:36,460 --> 00:18:39,099 very sharp. 212 00:18:39,099 --> 00:18:44,419 So the question remains, well how did they do this? 213 00:18:44,419 --> 00:18:48,859 And it is my conviction that they had some sort of machines with which they were able 214 00:18:48,859 --> 00:18:54,740 to cut this. 215 00:18:54,740 --> 00:19:00,980 And I will actually get to that, but before we go there, look at how this piece, which 216 00:19:01,140 --> 00:19:09,140 is by the way, this is a piece from in the bedrock. 217 00:19:09,140 --> 00:19:13,539 This is intrinsic to the rock. 218 00:19:13,539 --> 00:19:22,539 This piece here was laid on top as if formed by putty. 219 00:19:22,539 --> 00:19:27,779 You have all these different slabs laying about. 220 00:19:27,779 --> 00:19:31,019 So obviously this was a quarry, no question. 221 00:19:31,019 --> 00:19:38,539 However, you climb higher and higher because I asked them, you know, is there anything 222 00:19:38,539 --> 00:19:40,819 that's really interesting to see? 223 00:19:40,819 --> 00:19:43,019 And they said, yes, up there. 224 00:19:43,019 --> 00:19:48,420 So I hope that none of you, if you go there, you don't suffer a vertigo because it's not 225 00:19:48,460 --> 00:19:55,460 very good to go up there because the ledge is about, you know, your toes will be above 226 00:19:57,940 --> 00:19:59,539 the abyss. 227 00:19:59,539 --> 00:20:02,259 And so you can't be drunk when you do this. 228 00:20:02,259 --> 00:20:08,019 You have to be, you know, get a good night's sleep beforehand. 229 00:20:08,019 --> 00:20:15,019 And so I want you to go higher and higher on this ledge, on this little path, and you 230 00:20:15,059 --> 00:20:22,059 will come across about 50 yards up on the face of the rock. 231 00:20:22,460 --> 00:20:29,059 You will come across this, where you have this round piece of rock that was just cut 232 00:20:29,059 --> 00:20:36,059 out of the face of the mountain. 233 00:20:37,460 --> 00:20:44,460 And those are the cut marks at the bottom of that area. 234 00:20:45,180 --> 00:20:52,180 About a yard deep and about three yards wide. 235 00:20:54,420 --> 00:20:57,819 Perfection. 236 00:20:57,819 --> 00:21:04,819 You can see how these cuts go into the mountain. 237 00:21:15,339 --> 00:21:19,660 Here we are in Sacsayhuaman, also in Peru. 238 00:21:19,660 --> 00:21:26,660 You have those world famous Inca walls, which are so perfect you cannot even put a blade 239 00:21:29,779 --> 00:21:32,139 in between the stones. 240 00:21:32,139 --> 00:21:35,940 And mind you, there is no concrete in between these stones. 241 00:21:35,940 --> 00:21:38,740 There is no binding agent. 242 00:21:38,740 --> 00:21:41,139 No glue, nothing. 243 00:21:41,139 --> 00:21:44,220 It's just, it fits perfectly. 244 00:21:44,220 --> 00:21:51,220 And this is actually the first earthquake proof construction known to mankind, because 245 00:21:51,420 --> 00:21:57,299 in Cusco, we are, like here in California, an earthquake country. 246 00:21:57,299 --> 00:22:04,299 And they've, even the Spanish chroniclers, reported about earthquakes and things like 247 00:22:06,299 --> 00:22:08,299 this. 248 00:22:08,299 --> 00:22:15,299 And those walls, after these many thousands of years, still remain. 249 00:22:15,619 --> 00:22:20,940 And even there, when you ask the heirs of the Incas, who built this? 250 00:22:20,940 --> 00:22:27,940 They all say, categorically, this is pre-Inca stuff. Pre-Inca. 251 00:22:28,700 --> 00:22:33,460 So what I have a problem with is that when Western archaeologists all of a sudden say, 252 00:22:33,460 --> 00:22:37,740 no, they're wrong, the Incas built this. 253 00:22:37,740 --> 00:22:42,779 When they say, no, this was here before the Incas. 254 00:22:42,779 --> 00:22:49,779 And just because it doesn't fit into conventional acceptance, doesn't mean that... 255 00:22:54,340 --> 00:22:59,940 all these heirs of the Incas who say that this is pre-Inca stuff are lying. 256 00:22:59,940 --> 00:23:01,620 Because that's their history. 257 00:23:01,619 --> 00:23:05,859 They know what they're talking about. 258 00:23:05,859 --> 00:23:09,419 Here we are also again, Peru with the Inca walls. 259 00:23:09,419 --> 00:23:16,419 And just to reiterate the global phenomenon of these things, go back. 260 00:23:17,339 --> 00:23:20,339 Peru. Greece. 261 00:23:20,339 --> 00:23:27,339 Greece. Greece. Greece. 262 00:23:32,299 --> 00:23:39,299 Egypt. Egypt. 263 00:23:41,299 --> 00:23:45,019 And we're back in Cusco. 264 00:23:45,019 --> 00:23:52,019 In Cusco itself, you have these perfect walls that are more rectangular in shape. 265 00:23:54,459 --> 00:24:00,019 Again, I would give any one of you a $20 bill. 266 00:24:00,019 --> 00:24:05,460 And if you can find one spot where you can put in that $20 bill in between the seams 267 00:24:05,460 --> 00:24:09,539 of these things, you can keep the $20 bill. 268 00:24:09,539 --> 00:24:13,960 It's not going to happen. 269 00:24:13,960 --> 00:24:20,960 This here is Greece. So you see the similarity. 270 00:24:21,740 --> 00:24:26,619 Same identical stonemasonry type. 271 00:24:26,619 --> 00:24:30,179 Greece. Beautiful. 272 00:24:30,179 --> 00:24:37,179 Even though we've seen these crazy similarities, I haven't come across this... 273 00:24:37,539 --> 00:24:40,019 but in Peru and Cusco. 274 00:24:40,019 --> 00:24:43,699 And archaeologists say that this is a sacrificial altar. 275 00:24:43,699 --> 00:24:45,739 Okay, great. Fantastic. 276 00:24:45,739 --> 00:24:47,299 But what was the sacrifice about? 277 00:24:47,299 --> 00:24:48,899 For what? What was this? 278 00:24:48,899 --> 00:24:52,139 It looks like some sort of a safe. 279 00:24:52,140 --> 00:24:58,820 A safe deposit box. Something really technical. 280 00:24:58,820 --> 00:25:02,860 Very technical. 281 00:25:02,860 --> 00:25:09,860 So I mean, you can see there is, you know, as if there was bars inside that you could 282 00:25:13,420 --> 00:25:18,420 have placed because the holes, they're all corresponding with one another from one side 283 00:25:18,420 --> 00:25:25,420 to the other. 284 00:25:26,500 --> 00:25:32,580 And here we are at the Kurikanchi, the monastery also again in Cusco. 285 00:25:32,580 --> 00:25:38,900 And you can see how, you know, up here the wall is a bit more perfect than down here. 286 00:25:38,900 --> 00:25:43,300 In fact, I have a close-up from the lower wall. 287 00:25:43,300 --> 00:25:47,420 And here, you know, this doesn't look as perfect as above here. 288 00:25:47,420 --> 00:25:54,420 So, you know, it looks like the more perfect wall has been built on top of the older wall. 289 00:25:57,220 --> 00:25:59,500 So the older wall is less perfect. 290 00:25:59,500 --> 00:26:04,500 Well, that wall was built in 1979. 291 00:26:04,500 --> 00:26:09,620 And what you've seen here is an optical illusion. 292 00:26:09,620 --> 00:26:13,259 There is a path that goes through here. 293 00:26:13,420 --> 00:26:17,940 From the angle that I took this picture, I just wanted to illustrate that this was built 294 00:26:17,940 --> 00:26:19,180 in 1979. 295 00:26:19,180 --> 00:26:26,180 We can't do what the ancients did with our technology. 296 00:26:30,180 --> 00:26:35,519 Here we are back in Greece. 297 00:26:35,519 --> 00:26:38,220 Does that look like a pyramid to you? 298 00:26:38,220 --> 00:26:44,620 When people talk about a pyramid, they immediately think about Egypt or they thin... 299 00:26:44,620 --> 00:26:48,019 America with the Mayan pyramids. 300 00:26:48,019 --> 00:26:54,779 But this is a Greek pyramid. 301 00:26:54,779 --> 00:27:01,779 And there's two theories behind this, two hypotheses, when this thing was built. 302 00:27:02,579 --> 00:27:07,180 And one is that it might have been built during the reign of Alexander the Great,... 303 00:27:07,180 --> 00:27:14,180 356 through 323 BC, after the ancient Greeks had seen the pyramids in Egypt as an... 304 00:27:20,779 --> 00:27:26,779 However, there is the second theory that's circulating. 305 00:27:26,779 --> 00:27:33,019 And the gentleman here asked, you know, how can you date this, especially with stone? 306 00:27:33,019 --> 00:27:40,019 And here is where dating methods become very controversial, because the dating method 307 00:27:40,420 --> 00:27:47,420 virtually everybody is familiar with in archaeology is the C14 dating, where you... 308 00:27:49,980 --> 00:27:56,980 the half-life of carbon that's in the tested material. 309 00:27:57,140 --> 00:28:03,980 The fallacy or the problem with C14 dating is that you can only date organic materials, 310 00:28:03,980 --> 00:28:10,980 such as bones or textiles or coal or, you know, shards of pottery. 311 00:28:16,220 --> 00:28:23,019 So the fallacy that is committed is that, let's say you come to a site that's utterly 312 00:28:23,019 --> 00:28:30,019 foreign to you, and you find a piece of bone or a piece of textile, and you measure that, 313 00:28:31,579 --> 00:28:37,579 and hypothetically speaking, that piece dates to 500 BC. 314 00:28:37,579 --> 00:28:44,579 Unfortunately, what conventional archaeology does is, well, we found that piece of bone 315 00:28:45,599 --> 00:28:52,359 or that piece of wood in this fire pit, and it's dated to 500 BC, which means the site 316 00:28:52,359 --> 00:28:59,359 also dates to 500 BC. And that's wrong, because who says that that site was not... 317 00:29:04,679 --> 00:29:11,679 multiple times? So the only way that you can really test the age of something or determine 318 00:29:11,959 --> 00:29:18,299 the age of something is if you actually are able to test the stone, because the moment 319 00:29:18,319 --> 00:29:24,079 you work stone, there's a chemical process that takes place on the surface of the stone. 320 00:29:24,079 --> 00:29:30,159 And so I'm going to read this to you, because this is rather complicated. There is a new 321 00:29:30,159 --> 00:29:37,159 way that they came up with in 1997, an extremely, extremely expensive way to test... 322 00:29:39,599 --> 00:29:45,919 stone, and that's why nobody virtually has heard of it or nobody does this, because it 323 00:29:46,259 --> 00:29:52,940 costs thousands of dollars, and a lot of universities or foundations just don't hav... 324 00:29:52,940 --> 00:29:59,940 do this. But anyway, so here, let me read this to you real quick. In October of 1997, 325 00:29:59,940 --> 00:30:06,940 a Greek-British team of archaeologists performed the thermoluminescent analysis a... 326 00:30:07,620 --> 00:30:14,620 in Greece. This revolutionary technique called thermoluminescent analysis is the... 327 00:30:16,019 --> 00:30:23,019 dating method which can actually determine the age of stone. This method works like 328 00:30:23,300 --> 00:30:30,300 this. Felspar, calcite, and quartz, elements most frequently occurring in stone, emit 329 00:30:31,820 --> 00:30:38,820 or radiate light when the elements are heated up. The thermoluminescence originates from 330 00:30:38,819 --> 00:30:45,819 electrons which were excited through radioactive rays and then are trapped by... 331 00:30:52,399 --> 00:30:59,399 The number of trapped electrons rises over time. Thus, the more electrons have been 332 00:31:00,799 --> 00:31:07,799 trapped, the older the age of the rock. So, they were indeed, the first time, that the 333 00:31:09,240 --> 00:31:16,240 ! able to accurately date this pyramid. This is actually in Argos, about two hours from 334 00:31:16,919 --> 00:31:23,919 Athens, very easy to find. According to these new results, the pyramid was built in 2700 335 00:31:30,639 --> 00:31:37,639 B.C., which, officially speaking, is before Cheops. The first time, the pyramid was built 336 00:31:39,240 --> 00:31:46,240 I do not believe the pyramid, the Great Pyramid was built by Cheops. So, rest... 337 00:31:50,379 --> 00:31:57,379 days after these results went public, the team was told to back up and go home. They 338 00:32:01,759 --> 00:32:08,759 pulled the excavation permits. I wonder why. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. 339 00:32:08,819 --> 00:32:15,819 Here we are in Guatemala. And Guatemala is this incredible, incredible treasure trove 340 00:32:20,000 --> 00:32:25,480 of ancient astronaut evidence. And this is the Lago del Titlan, one of the most... 341 00:32:25,480 --> 00:32:32,480 spots on the entire planet where we actually extended the two times that I have been... 342 00:32:33,380 --> 00:32:39,259 We, every time, extend our expeditions for three days, four days, because the serenity, 343 00:32:39,259 --> 00:32:46,259 the beauty of that place, Lago del Titlan, is stupendous, mind-blowing. So, anybody 344 00:32:47,539 --> 00:32:54,539 will go to Guatemala, this crowd, go there. It's incredible, very special, special place. 345 00:32:55,539 --> 00:33:02,539 But, this is about 50, an hour or two away from one of the most recognizable Mayan... 346 00:33:03,940 --> 00:33:10,940 Tikal, with its spectacular towers, pyramid-shaped towers. And I want you to j... 347 00:33:14,639 --> 00:33:21,639 down here and burn that image into your minds, because we're going to come back to... 348 00:33:22,040 --> 00:33:29,120 If these are what's called steles, and in front you have these round altars, if I were 349 00:33:29,120 --> 00:33:36,120 to stand next to one of these, these steles, monoliths, would be about this tall, massive 350 00:33:36,540 --> 00:33:43,540 things, one piece of rock. And they're all over Tikal. You have all these mysterious 351 00:33:43,539 --> 00:33:50,539 buildings. Anybody remember the first Star Wars movie, the original, episode three, 352 00:33:52,539 --> 00:33:59,539 or four, I guess, the original, 1977, this was the rebel base. The X-wing fighters going 353 00:34:01,859 --> 00:34:06,859 to fight the Death Star. George Lucas actually went down there with his crew,... 354 00:34:07,859 --> 00:34:14,859 Tikal, and then later on, put the X-wing fighters shooting out of that. But that's ... 355 00:34:14,859 --> 00:34:21,859 right here. So after we saw Tikal, which as you've just seen, gigantic, gigantic... 356 00:34:23,859 --> 00:34:30,859 gigantic structures, always with these monumental stones that were used, big rock... 357 00:34:30,860 --> 00:34:37,860 have to remember, big rocks require planning, transportation, logistics, you got to feed 358 00:34:37,860 --> 00:34:44,860 everybody. We were also told, well, make sure that you go to Uash Akhtun, which is ten 359 00:34:46,860 --> 00:34:53,860 miles away from Tikal, and it's not a tourist trap, but this is the long road to Tikal, 360 00:34:53,860 --> 00:35:00,860 I mean, to Uash Akhtun. And of course, before you leave, you should always fill up your 361 00:35:04,579 --> 00:35:11,579 tank of gas. Ladies and gentlemen, ten miles. It rained four days in a row before we took 362 00:35:16,019 --> 00:35:23,019 our trip. Took us seven hours for ten miles. So I'm sorry, I'm going to have to say, I 363 00:35:23,860 --> 00:35:29,780 have the best days I've ever had. Spectacular adventure, seven hours going, seven hours 364 00:35:29,780 --> 00:35:36,780 coming back. Absolutely beautiful. This is a two-way road, so there's oncoming traffic. 365 00:35:37,180 --> 00:35:44,180 Not often, but it happens. But you arrive at Uash Akhtun, and this blows Tikal out of 366 00:35:46,140 --> 00:35:53,140 the water. Even more massive stones, bigger monuments, stone-wise. And it's just amazing. 367 00:35:54,420 --> 00:36:01,420 This stairwell here, try climbing it. You'll feel really small when you do this. That... 368 00:36:08,860 --> 00:36:13,780 when we came back to the jungle lodge, and that's the best place to stay actually in 369 00:36:13,780 --> 00:36:19,700 Tikal, if you go there, tell them Georgia sends you. They'll either love you or they 370 00:36:19,699 --> 00:36:25,899 hate you. Depends, there's different stories out there. But the people at the jungle lodge 371 00:36:25,899 --> 00:36:32,899 said, well, if you're interested in mysteries, you have to go to the Lago de Y... 372 00:36:37,980 --> 00:36:44,980 where you should visit the island of Toposhde. And the great mystery there is,... 373 00:36:45,860 --> 00:36:52,860 have remnants of the Midget Maya. I said, Midget Maya? Never even heard of such a... 374 00:36:54,300 --> 00:37:01,300 What is this? So they said, oh no, no, that's where the dwarf Maya lived. And okay, so 375 00:37:02,219 --> 00:37:08,699 we, you know, because when you travel and somebody tells you an insider thing, two 376 00:37:09,019 --> 00:37:15,099 things can happen. Either you go and there's absolutely nothing and you're like, okay, 377 00:37:15,099 --> 00:37:22,099 well that was a waste. Or you do it. And this was well worth it. Because what we've seen 378 00:37:22,659 --> 00:37:29,659 in Tikal and Ueshiktoon was exclusively all monumentally structured, gigantic, big. Same 379 00:37:29,819 --> 00:37:36,819 period. Replicas of what we've just seen. Now I'm not saying that these are miniature 380 00:37:45,379 --> 00:37:52,379 replicas of all the other sites, like, you know, building by building. But it's an... 381 00:37:52,380 --> 00:37:59,380 Stones the size of fists. Those steelies with the round altar stones in front. Remember 382 00:38:15,140 --> 00:38:18,800 how gigantic they were before in Tikal? And the 383 00:38:22,780 --> 00:38:29,780 you could hoist that over your shoulder and walk around with it. What's going on here? 384 00:38:33,460 --> 00:38:39,980 Luckily there was a university team there, so I had the privilege to talk to the... 385 00:38:39,980 --> 00:38:46,980 there. And boy, they don't know I'm doing this right now, which is great. But they told 386 00:38:47,500 --> 00:38:54,500 me. It's a mystery. We don't know what this is. And then I approach him and say, you 387 00:38:56,980 --> 00:39:03,980 know, could it be that this was basically just an imitation where Tikal and Ueshiktoon, 388 00:39:05,460 --> 00:39:12,460 in my opinion, could have only been constructed with advanced high tech... 389 00:39:12,980 --> 00:39:19,980 anybody can do this. You don't need sophisticated technology to create, you kn... 390 00:39:25,980 --> 00:39:32,980 this. So let me interject here for a moment that whenever, you know, I say that I, you 391 00:39:32,980 --> 00:39:39,980 know, I head this organization and then people immediately, they ask me, so you're... 392 00:39:45,179 --> 00:39:52,179 these crackpots that says, you know, aliens built the pyramids. And I say no. Because 393 00:39:54,260 --> 00:39:59,260 in the classic ancient astronaut theory, nobody ever said that the pyramids were bu... 394 00:39:59,260 --> 00:40:04,340 extraterrestrials. And I'm speaking of the classic ancient astronaut hypothesis, which 395 00:40:04,340 --> 00:40:11,340 I represent. What the classic ancient astronaut hypothesis says is that the... 396 00:40:11,460 --> 00:40:18,460 the ancient structures were built by human beings with the assistance of the... 397 00:40:19,760 --> 00:40:26,760 with their high tech technology that they either lent us or gave us or, you know, when 398 00:40:26,760 --> 00:40:31,760 they had, you know, this idea, let's build something, they had an obedient workforce. 399 00:40:31,760 --> 00:40:35,760 And they said, you put this stone here, you put that stone there, you can't lift it, 400 00:40:35,760 --> 00:40:42,760 okay, let me help you. But they did not dirty their hands and built the pyramids. They had 401 00:40:43,760 --> 00:40:50,760 us do it. And we were infatuated that cool man, we were able to help these guys. We'll 402 00:40:50,760 --> 00:40:52,760 be rewarded.