1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,000 Thank you. 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:04,000 Thank you. 3 00:00:04,000 --> 00:00:06,000 Thank you. 4 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:10,000 Wow. 5 00:00:10,000 --> 00:00:12,000 Wow. 6 00:00:12,000 --> 00:00:14,000 Start. 7 00:00:14,000 --> 00:00:16,000 Thank you, Malcolm. 8 00:00:16,000 --> 00:00:18,000 What a generous introduction. 9 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:21,000 I hope I can live up to it. 10 00:00:21,000 --> 00:00:23,000 Before I start, I just like to say, 11 00:00:23,000 --> 00:00:28,000 a big thank you to Chris Landriek and the crew for putting on this conference. 12 00:00:28,000 --> 00:00:32,000 Without them, the weeks go into it. 13 00:00:32,000 --> 00:00:34,000 We wouldn't be here. 14 00:00:34,000 --> 00:00:36,000 You wouldn't be here listening to me. 15 00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:38,000 I wouldn't be here talking about it. 16 00:00:38,000 --> 00:00:41,000 And everybody, we want to do on Sunday morning. 17 00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:44,000 So, and Chris Landriek, thank you both very much. 18 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:46,000 And the crew, thank you for doing this. 19 00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:48,000 It's great. 20 00:00:48,000 --> 00:00:50,000 APPLAUSE 21 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:54,000 Right. 22 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:57,000 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. 23 00:00:57,000 --> 00:01:03,000 Friends, seekers after the truth and fellow skeptics, 24 00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:05,000 because we're all skeptics. 25 00:01:05,000 --> 00:01:09,000 We're skeptical when we're told that UFOs don't exist. 26 00:01:09,000 --> 00:01:15,000 We're skeptical when we're told that vaccinations are safe and effective. 27 00:01:15,000 --> 00:01:21,000 And we're skeptical when we're told that all the pyramids will build using copper tools. 28 00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:25,000 Because that is the anomaly I would like to address today. 29 00:01:25,000 --> 00:01:29,000 But first of all, a short commercial break. 30 00:01:29,000 --> 00:01:37,000 But at two types of people in the world, those are read nexus, 31 00:01:37,000 --> 00:01:39,000 and those are about to. 32 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:49,000 If you haven't read nexus, at the back of the stand, back of the hall here, 33 00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:53,000 you will find innumerable copies with special offers. 34 00:01:53,000 --> 00:01:59,000 If you buy 10 magazines, any 10, they're in a pound each. 35 00:01:59,000 --> 00:02:03,000 We sell subscriptions 20 pound for a year, so you get it immediately. 36 00:02:03,000 --> 00:02:07,000 The point about nexus is you can keep it. 37 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:13,000 You can read a 10 year old magazine, and it's exactly the same as reading it today. 38 00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:17,000 This is the current issue with some interesting articles. 39 00:02:17,000 --> 00:02:21,000 I hope you're all familiar with the term fracking, because you're going to hear a lot more of that in the future. 40 00:02:21,000 --> 00:02:25,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 41 00:02:25,000 --> 00:02:29,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 42 00:02:29,000 --> 00:02:33,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 43 00:02:33,000 --> 00:02:37,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 44 00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:39,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 45 00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:41,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 46 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:45,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 47 00:02:45,000 --> 00:02:47,000 The problem is that you're going to have to be a new one. 48 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:51,000 You have a chance to do that today. 49 00:02:51,000 --> 00:02:53,000 If you haven't read it, there's a familiar with nexus. 50 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:55,000 We'll know that it does deliver on that. 51 00:02:55,000 --> 00:02:59,000 However, back to the subject in hand. 52 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:07,000 The technology of ancient Egypt, the traditional view of Egypt, the DRLs, 53 00:03:07,000 --> 00:03:09,000 Finx and the pyramid. 54 00:03:09,000 --> 00:03:11,000 Now that is not the great pyramid. 55 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:15,000 That is the middle of the three pyramids. 56 00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:17,000 The second pyramid. 57 00:03:17,000 --> 00:03:19,000 It's purely because it lines up better with a spink. 58 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:21,000 That's what the picture most people take of it. 59 00:03:21,000 --> 00:03:29,000 But I want to ask one question to do with the granite of ancient Egypt. 60 00:03:29,000 --> 00:03:35,000 Now, granite features quite heavily in Egypt, if you've ever been this. 61 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:39,000 Matter of interest, so many people here have actually been too Egypt. 62 00:03:39,000 --> 00:03:45,000 About 30% interest in how many people would like to go? 63 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:47,000 Oh, rest of you. Great. 64 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:51,000 It is worth going. It's a fantastic place. 65 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:53,000 Egyptians are lovely people. 66 00:03:53,000 --> 00:03:55,000 Just one point. 67 00:03:55,000 --> 00:03:59,000 When you go, you're probably warned about 68 00:03:59,000 --> 00:04:03,000 Dr. and all that to make sure you don't get dysentery and all the stuff. 69 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:05,000 It's not the water you need to worry about. 70 00:04:05,000 --> 00:04:07,000 It's the money. 71 00:04:07,000 --> 00:04:09,000 The money is all paper money. 72 00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:11,000 And if you handle the money, which you will, 73 00:04:11,000 --> 00:04:17,000 think for a minute, where has it been before you handled it? 74 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:23,000 You can't avoid handling the money, but just make sure that you don't touch your face or eat food without washing your hands. 75 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:27,000 That's the free health tip for today. 76 00:04:27,000 --> 00:04:33,000 How is this granite cut? 77 00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:41,000 The simple question, we'll see how difficult the answer is to establish. 78 00:04:41,000 --> 00:04:49,000 How is it carved? We're going to look at some of the most spectacular sculpture in the world, which is carved granite. 79 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:53,000 And also, how is it carried and removed? 80 00:04:53,000 --> 00:04:59,000 From in this case, the Aswan quarry and placed into position up to 500 miles from the quarry. 81 00:04:59,000 --> 00:05:03,000 Let's have a look at the official explanation, first of all. 82 00:05:03,000 --> 00:05:05,000 The Egyptologist explanation. 83 00:05:05,000 --> 00:05:11,000 Granite is cut and shaped using de-erite pounding balls. 84 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:16,000 We'll have a look at a de-erite pounding ball later, and you can make your own choice and decision. 85 00:05:16,000 --> 00:05:21,000 That's where you think it could achieve the results we see. 86 00:05:21,000 --> 00:05:27,000 Granite is carved using flint and copper scissors. 87 00:05:28,000 --> 00:05:35,000 Granite is carried by pulling 300 ton obelisks on wooden rollers and holding 70 ton blocks up ramps. 88 00:05:35,000 --> 00:05:41,000 I think not. It's never ever been demonstrated. 89 00:05:41,000 --> 00:05:49,000 Despite the very best efforts of certain television companies that have erected obelisks and hauled blocks, 90 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:56,000 they didn't tell you the block way to town, and it took 10 people to move it on a flat surface. 91 00:05:56,000 --> 00:06:04,000 But as we'll see, there are 70 ton blocks, 154 up in the air, that have been carefully placed into position. 92 00:06:04,000 --> 00:06:06,000 They weren't hauled up any ramps. 93 00:06:06,000 --> 00:06:12,000 So Egyptologists, back to the drawing board, get a decent explanation. 94 00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:21,000 What are the myths and legends? What's the oral history that has tried to answer these questions? 95 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:28,000 We're not trying to answer oral history despite disparagement from various academics. 96 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:39,000 Is it tends to have a degree of truth in it? The myths and legends will tell you there are stones that melt. 97 00:06:39,000 --> 00:06:45,000 What would cause that? Could it be the rock softening liquid? 98 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:56,000 Stones that float is this acoustic harmonic meditation, which is reported from around the world. 99 00:06:56,000 --> 00:07:05,000 An evidence of drills, saws and lades in Egypt. Is this machine tools? 100 00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:12,000 We'll see that that is possibly the only explanation for what is actually in Egypt today. 101 00:07:12,000 --> 00:07:20,000 It's going to have a look at Egypt. This is a familiar image of, or it's not familiar because not many people will see in the pyramid from that position. 102 00:07:20,000 --> 00:07:26,000 But we'll see a few photographs in this presentation taken by Martin Gray. 103 00:07:26,000 --> 00:07:30,000 Check out his website sacredsights.com. 104 00:07:30,000 --> 00:07:41,000 He's been 40 years traveling the world, photographing the sacred sites of the world from East to Ireland, to Kalinesh, all over the world, extraordinarily man. 105 00:07:41,000 --> 00:07:56,000 And a good photographer. This is one of his photographs. It took him six weeks, so he told me, to find the position to take that and then to wait for the weather to be clear enough, because Karas a bit dusty, be kind to it. 106 00:07:56,000 --> 00:08:03,000 But when you get nearer, you get the official view of Egypt, the camels, and then you get the pyramids. 107 00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:09,000 You notice that the middle pyramid is the one with the little covering on it. 108 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:19,000 That is the great pyramid, and this is the third pyramid. That will feature later on. 109 00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:25,000 The first thing to look at. Look at the pyramids from a satellites viewpoint. 110 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:33,000 And you'll see something which, very few people actually are even aware of. This is the great pyramid. 111 00:08:33,000 --> 00:08:40,000 It's not a foresighted pyramid, it's an eight-sided pyramid. 112 00:08:40,000 --> 00:08:48,000 What are these lines? We appear to divide it into eight. 113 00:08:48,000 --> 00:08:53,000 It's not visible from the ground unless you actually know what you're looking for. 114 00:08:53,000 --> 00:09:02,000 When you go to the pyramid, you can, if you know what, where to stand, where to look, you can see that these, the face here, 115 00:09:02,000 --> 00:09:12,000 this is the north face. That's the one that thinks is over there, west and south. 116 00:09:12,000 --> 00:09:20,000 This is the north face. I was there in March, about 10 years ago. 117 00:09:20,000 --> 00:09:28,000 And I was, you know, I said, bring ahead of yourself. 118 00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:33,000 This was the first evidence, actually, of the great pyramid having the eight sides. 119 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:39,000 It was a photograph taken from the air in 1935. Quite accidentally. 120 00:09:39,000 --> 00:09:42,000 They weren't looking for it because it didn't exist. 121 00:09:42,000 --> 00:09:48,000 And a photograph that was in the sun was in just the right position, where it was skimming the surface there. 122 00:09:49,000 --> 00:09:56,000 And I thought, okay, well, if that can be taken there, it must be possible to see it. And it is. 123 00:09:56,000 --> 00:10:00,000 This is taken. This is the north face of the great pyramid. 124 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:10,000 This is the road that runs down to the Minahas hotel, which is the hotel you should stare if you're visiting the pyramids because it's within walking distance. 125 00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:21,000 What we've got here is the face of the pyramid, the north face divided into an illuminated section and a non-eluminated section. 126 00:10:21,000 --> 00:10:30,000 And that will only be visible if the sun is striking right along the face. 127 00:10:31,000 --> 00:10:39,000 Now, what that means is that if you look along the base of the pyramid, you won't see this indentation. 128 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:46,000 But it's four feet. If you take a angle across the bottom, which is 754, if you take that, it goes in about four feet. 129 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:53,000 How did they, why did they build it like that? And how did they have the technology X, 1000 years ago? 130 00:10:53,000 --> 00:11:03,000 Because nobody actually knows when the pyramid was built. We're told 2000, 150 on BC, which doesn't make a great deal of sense. It could have been 27,500 BC. 131 00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:07,000 It depends which section of the procession you're measuring. 132 00:11:07,000 --> 00:11:22,000 Anyway, if you go inside the great pyramid to the King's Chamber, this is a room by 30 foot long, 19 foot across. 133 00:11:23,000 --> 00:11:29,000 But about the same height. These are the granite beams. 134 00:11:29,000 --> 00:11:38,000 Here, five layers of them, which have created the ceiling of the King's Chamber. 135 00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:48,000 These were taken from Assoar on 500 miles away and brought to this position, which is 150 foot above ground level. 136 00:11:48,000 --> 00:11:54,000 Each of these beams, because they span this distance, they weigh between 50 and 70 tons each. 137 00:11:54,000 --> 00:12:06,000 They are completely flat as are the walls. These are all granite. And this is the famous box or sarcophagus, or whatever you want to call it, which is the only object inside the great pyramid. 138 00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:11,000 The box itself is too big to go through the only entrance into the room. 139 00:12:11,000 --> 00:12:17,000 So it was put in the room before the pyramid was built. You have to ask why. 140 00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:23,000 This is the box. It's big enough to lie in, which is not very comfortable because it's granite. 141 00:12:23,000 --> 00:12:30,000 But if you get the charts, go in and have a look. Then you have a look at the box itself. 142 00:12:30,000 --> 00:12:38,000 It's one piece of granite, pull it out. And the walls here are parallel to each other. 143 00:12:38,000 --> 00:12:43,000 It's not rough. It's got a mirror finish as has the outside. 144 00:12:44,000 --> 00:12:50,000 Why was it necessary to do something as technically advanced as that? And how was it done? 145 00:12:50,000 --> 00:12:57,000 With copper saws and pounding deer eyeballs? No. I don't think so. 146 00:12:57,000 --> 00:13:04,000 Now, outside is the spinks. 147 00:13:05,000 --> 00:13:09,000 What will familiar with the spinks? This is taken from inside the spinks chamber. 148 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:22,000 And you'll notice around the edge here is the weathering, which was identified by Robert Shock as water erosion. 149 00:13:22,000 --> 00:13:27,000 And you can see it is serious erosion. This is not wind erosion. Wind is normally horizontal. 150 00:13:27,000 --> 00:13:31,000 There's water erosion over a long period of time. 151 00:13:31,000 --> 00:13:36,000 So when they hollowed the... Let's come back. When they hollowed this spinks enclosure out, 152 00:13:36,000 --> 00:13:41,000 where do they put the blocks that they took out? 153 00:13:41,000 --> 00:13:46,000 They put it here outside. It surrounds what's called the valley temple. 154 00:13:46,000 --> 00:13:50,000 There are two temples, just in front of the spinks. One is the valley temple. 155 00:13:50,000 --> 00:13:54,000 One is the spinks temple. The valley temple is the one you can go into when you visit. 156 00:13:54,000 --> 00:13:58,000 And this is the outside, this is the south edge. 157 00:13:58,000 --> 00:14:05,000 And if I look at the size of these blocks, these are big about 100 tons. 158 00:14:05,000 --> 00:14:13,000 Now stone is an example. This is a box, which I made of wood. 159 00:14:13,000 --> 00:14:19,000 If it was granite or limestone or sandstone, it was solid. 160 00:14:19,000 --> 00:14:24,000 It would weigh more than I do, 180 pounds. 161 00:14:24,000 --> 00:14:28,000 It would be impossible to lift. I feel the full of water it would weigh about 60 pounds. 162 00:14:28,000 --> 00:14:34,000 Granite or any stone is really quite heavy. 163 00:14:34,000 --> 00:14:41,000 So how was a block like that? 164 00:14:41,000 --> 00:14:45,000 Just lying on the ground. That is granite. 165 00:14:45,000 --> 00:14:49,000 That block is granite. This is the sandstone. 166 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:52,000 It weighs about the same, but that block is just lying there. 167 00:14:52,000 --> 00:14:56,000 And every single much of it, you can see it's got the feet of all over it. 168 00:14:56,000 --> 00:15:00,000 But it's big. We'll look at it again in a minute and close up. 169 00:15:00,000 --> 00:15:05,000 But inside the valley temple, you have granite lined all the walls. 170 00:15:05,000 --> 00:15:12,000 And this is where we start to notice these strange construction techniques. 171 00:15:12,000 --> 00:15:16,000 L shape blocks. This is granite, don't forget. 172 00:15:16,000 --> 00:15:20,000 This is not lots of play. 173 00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:29,000 They're quite heavy these. There'll be way half a ton on the smaller ones. 174 00:15:29,000 --> 00:15:32,000 And then you see something like this. 175 00:15:32,000 --> 00:15:37,000 This block here is granite. This is the lining inside the valley temple. 176 00:15:37,000 --> 00:15:42,000 There's been cut around the sandstone outside it. 177 00:15:42,000 --> 00:15:49,000 That doesn't make sense. It made no sense at all. It was another one up here. 178 00:15:50,000 --> 00:15:52,000 It looks specifically for that. 179 00:15:52,000 --> 00:15:58,000 To make quite sure that the granite didn't sort of butt up to the sandstone. 180 00:15:58,000 --> 00:16:02,000 No, it doesn't. The granite has been cut around the sandstone. 181 00:16:02,000 --> 00:16:07,000 Please geologists explain that. How is that possible? Why is it necessary? 182 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:10,000 And how is it done? 183 00:16:11,000 --> 00:16:13,000 Here's this block again. 184 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:16,000 That was outside the valley temple. 185 00:16:16,000 --> 00:16:19,000 And you'll see its granite. 186 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:22,000 And it has a beautiful curve here. 187 00:16:22,000 --> 00:16:26,000 Another curve here and a sharp angle here. 188 00:16:26,000 --> 00:16:30,000 How is that done? How is that carved? 189 00:16:30,000 --> 00:16:34,000 Everybody actually knows what this block is about. 190 00:16:34,000 --> 00:16:37,000 Then you come move around and I'll be here. 191 00:16:37,000 --> 00:16:41,000 And I'll be here. You see this lying on the ground. Ignored. 192 00:16:41,000 --> 00:16:49,000 This is a compound curve because the edge here is a three planes. 193 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:52,000 There's a three dimensional three planes. 194 00:16:52,000 --> 00:16:54,000 Flat surface. 195 00:16:54,000 --> 00:16:56,000 I'll pry it there. Flat surface there. 196 00:16:56,000 --> 00:16:58,000 And a curved surface here. 197 00:16:58,000 --> 00:17:01,000 How is that cut? 198 00:17:01,000 --> 00:17:06,000 These questions don't appear to have been asked very often. 199 00:17:06,000 --> 00:17:11,000 Egyptologists will tell you the colour of two tombs underpants. 200 00:17:11,000 --> 00:17:14,000 They will tell you what he had for breakfast. 201 00:17:14,000 --> 00:17:19,000 What is how to mummify a mummy. 202 00:17:19,000 --> 00:17:25,000 But they won't tell you how to cut granite, which is a formal, relevant question. 203 00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:30,000 So the challenge to Egyptologists is get working on it. 204 00:17:30,000 --> 00:17:33,000 Let's have a look at the S1 quarry. 205 00:17:33,000 --> 00:17:35,000 Where all this granite came from. 206 00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:40,000 And all the way, you can take a nice trip down the night on the flucous. 207 00:17:40,000 --> 00:17:45,000 Everybody interested that is the reds, the editor of Nexus. 208 00:17:45,000 --> 00:17:48,000 And you come to the unfinished obelisk. 209 00:17:48,000 --> 00:17:50,000 That's one. 210 00:17:50,000 --> 00:17:54,000 And it seems like it's just a lump of granite stuck in the ground. 211 00:17:54,000 --> 00:17:55,000 And this, it's big. 212 00:17:55,000 --> 00:18:00,000 It's about 40 odd metres long. 213 00:18:00,000 --> 00:18:04,000 And two to three metres deep around the edge. 214 00:18:04,000 --> 00:18:05,000 And you walk around it. 215 00:18:05,000 --> 00:18:07,000 And you think, oh, what's a big lump of granite? 216 00:18:07,000 --> 00:18:09,000 That's nice. 217 00:18:09,000 --> 00:18:11,000 And lots of people there. 218 00:18:11,000 --> 00:18:17,000 And you see that there are other obelisks, presumably taken from the same quarry. 219 00:18:17,000 --> 00:18:21,000 Because this is the only granite quarry in Egypt. 220 00:18:21,000 --> 00:18:29,000 And then walking down the bottom of the unfinished obelisk. 221 00:18:29,000 --> 00:18:31,000 I see this. 222 00:18:31,000 --> 00:18:33,000 These marks. 223 00:18:33,000 --> 00:18:36,000 Just there, just lying there. 224 00:18:36,000 --> 00:18:38,000 This shows them more clearly. 225 00:18:38,000 --> 00:18:41,000 There are the same marks on the top left. 226 00:18:41,000 --> 00:18:44,000 What are these marks? 227 00:18:44,000 --> 00:18:46,000 Why are they there? 228 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:48,000 Why is it necessary? 229 00:18:48,000 --> 00:18:50,000 What are these marks here? 230 00:18:50,000 --> 00:18:52,000 They're quite regular. 231 00:18:52,000 --> 00:18:55,000 They look like sort of scoop marks. 232 00:18:55,000 --> 00:18:57,000 And then picture on the right here. 233 00:18:57,000 --> 00:19:06,000 What we're looking at here is an obelisk that has been removed from the S1 quarry. 234 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:13,000 But a simple expedient of undercutting it from both sides of the left side and on the right side. 235 00:19:13,000 --> 00:19:19,000 Leaving a small piece of text in the middle and then breaking it off. 236 00:19:19,000 --> 00:19:22,000 That's why this looks fairly rough. 237 00:19:22,000 --> 00:19:26,000 It's like, push it over and it's then removed from the bedrock. 238 00:19:26,000 --> 00:19:29,000 But you have to get undercut it. 239 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:35,000 And these marks here appear around the world. 240 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:37,000 These type of marks. 241 00:19:37,000 --> 00:19:39,000 These scoop marks. 242 00:19:39,000 --> 00:19:41,000 And what are they? 243 00:19:41,000 --> 00:19:45,000 How are they caused? 244 00:19:45,000 --> 00:19:48,000 This is the unfinished obelisk itself. 245 00:19:48,000 --> 00:19:50,000 This is the trench around it. 246 00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:52,000 You'll see it's quite big. 247 00:19:52,000 --> 00:19:57,000 And the bottom of the trench are these same scoop marks all the way around. 248 00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:00,000 Quite regular. 249 00:20:00,000 --> 00:20:02,000 What were they caused by? 250 00:20:02,000 --> 00:20:05,000 Hounding dear right boards. 251 00:20:05,000 --> 00:20:07,000 Like this. 252 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:09,000 This is the explanation offered. 253 00:20:09,000 --> 00:20:13,000 I'm sorry the explanation is totally inadequate. 254 00:20:13,000 --> 00:20:21,000 If you scientifically invalid and is an insult to the intelligence of most people who would like a decent answer please. 255 00:20:21,000 --> 00:20:24,000 This is a de-ride pounding ball. 256 00:20:24,000 --> 00:20:30,000 This is John Antley West who is probably done more to bring the anomalies of Egypt to the attention of the world. 257 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:38,000 He was the person who organized Robert Schopp to date the erosion of the things. 258 00:20:38,000 --> 00:20:45,000 This is somebody trying to show how the de-ride pounding balls were used to carve down this. 259 00:20:45,000 --> 00:20:47,000 Somebody's done a calculation. 260 00:20:47,000 --> 00:20:51,000 If you've got a de-ride pounding ball and you're pounding it on the granite, 261 00:20:51,000 --> 00:20:56,000 how long would it take to remove that amount of material? 262 00:20:56,000 --> 00:21:00,000 Two foot wide trench say eight to ten meters deep. 263 00:21:00,000 --> 00:21:05,000 And the answer was 35 years. 264 00:21:06,000 --> 00:21:10,000 Because yes you can pound granite with a ball. 265 00:21:10,000 --> 00:21:13,000 You can get any old hammer and do the same thing. 266 00:21:13,000 --> 00:21:24,000 And you'll remove about an inch layer over a square foot in five hours if you work continuously. 267 00:21:24,000 --> 00:21:26,000 But if you ever tried pounding anything, 268 00:21:26,000 --> 00:21:29,000 your arms will go fairly rapidly. 269 00:21:29,000 --> 00:21:34,000 But of course we're told to believe that the same material is pounding balls that used to carve these things. 270 00:21:34,000 --> 00:21:38,000 The obelisks are at Luxembourg. 271 00:21:38,000 --> 00:21:40,000 Beautiful. 272 00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:42,000 Beautifully proportioned. 273 00:21:42,000 --> 00:21:43,000 No mistakes. 274 00:21:43,000 --> 00:21:47,000 You can't rob out an estate in granite. 275 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:53,000 And we're asked to believe that these incredible statues are the result of pounding with deer-eyed balls. 276 00:21:53,000 --> 00:21:55,000 I'm sorry, I don't go with it. 277 00:21:55,000 --> 00:21:56,000 And I don't believe it. 278 00:21:56,000 --> 00:21:59,000 And if anybody here believes that these were created by deer-eyed pounding balls, 279 00:21:59,000 --> 00:22:01,000 will they please raise their hand? 280 00:22:02,000 --> 00:22:04,000 Now, thank you. 281 00:22:04,000 --> 00:22:07,000 Thought not. 282 00:22:07,000 --> 00:22:13,000 In my view this is possibly the most beautiful sculptor I saw in Egypt. 283 00:22:13,000 --> 00:22:15,000 In the Luxembourg Museum. 284 00:22:15,000 --> 00:22:17,000 It doesn't really matter who it is. 285 00:22:17,000 --> 00:22:19,000 It's supposed to represent a fairer. 286 00:22:19,000 --> 00:22:21,000 The point is it's granite. 287 00:22:21,000 --> 00:22:26,000 And it is so beautifully finished and cut. 288 00:22:26,000 --> 00:22:31,000 Do you have to admire the sheer skill of whoever it was who created it? 289 00:22:31,000 --> 00:22:33,000 Many thousands of years ago. 290 00:22:33,000 --> 00:22:36,000 They also created these sculptures. 291 00:22:36,000 --> 00:22:40,000 Again, bigger than life-size in many cases. 292 00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:42,000 You know, exactly what you're looking at. 293 00:22:42,000 --> 00:22:47,000 They're representational of the people there intended to represent. 294 00:22:47,000 --> 00:22:52,000 And the famous sculpture of Horus protecting the fairer. 295 00:22:52,000 --> 00:22:54,000 It's about tenfold high this year. 296 00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:58,000 In the curry museum. 297 00:22:58,000 --> 00:23:02,000 The life-size ball, half-all, the ball. 298 00:23:02,000 --> 00:23:04,000 The beautiful sculptures. 299 00:23:04,000 --> 00:23:09,000 I was particularly taken with this one. 300 00:23:09,000 --> 00:23:14,000 How do you represent an animal human hybrid? 301 00:23:14,000 --> 00:23:18,000 And make it look realistic with they do. 302 00:23:18,000 --> 00:23:20,000 You're not shocked by it. 303 00:23:21,000 --> 00:23:23,000 You know exactly what you're looking at. 304 00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:26,000 You're looking at an animal human hybrid. 305 00:23:26,000 --> 00:23:33,000 This is bigger than life-size out of one block of granite. 306 00:23:33,000 --> 00:23:37,000 This is spectacularly beautiful achievement. 307 00:23:37,000 --> 00:23:43,000 It's not there with Michelangelo's sculpture of David in Florence. 308 00:23:43,000 --> 00:23:45,000 It's up there with all the great sculptures. 309 00:23:45,000 --> 00:23:49,000 Now, no sculpture today will work in granite if they can get away with it. 310 00:23:49,000 --> 00:23:54,000 Then much rather working bronze which starts as clay and is cast. 311 00:23:54,000 --> 00:23:56,000 All working sandstone. 312 00:23:56,000 --> 00:23:58,000 No sculpture would work in granite. 313 00:23:58,000 --> 00:24:01,000 It's far too much like hard work. 314 00:24:01,000 --> 00:24:04,000 But you get just to find a hard work. 315 00:24:04,000 --> 00:24:06,000 This is in the curry museum. 316 00:24:06,000 --> 00:24:10,000 This is a piece of basalt which has been carved. 317 00:24:10,000 --> 00:24:12,000 Beautiful symbology. 318 00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:15,000 It's about five foot high and real life. 319 00:24:15,000 --> 00:24:25,000 But when you get close to it, the eyes, this little feature here. 320 00:24:25,000 --> 00:24:31,000 And you can see the sheer skill that has gone into it. 321 00:24:31,000 --> 00:24:35,000 If you look really closely at this point, it's possible. 322 00:24:35,000 --> 00:24:36,000 Maybe not possible. 323 00:24:36,000 --> 00:24:42,000 There is a line that extends just beyond the point of the eyes based to finish. 324 00:24:42,000 --> 00:24:46,000 How that line was created, I don't know. 325 00:24:46,000 --> 00:24:49,000 It appears to be done with the almost with the diamond stylus. 326 00:24:49,000 --> 00:24:51,000 It's what we use today. 327 00:24:51,000 --> 00:24:53,000 This is hard material. This is like granite. 328 00:24:53,000 --> 00:24:55,000 This is basalt. This is tough. 329 00:24:55,000 --> 00:25:00,000 That's why it was used like that because it had to last. 330 00:25:00,000 --> 00:25:04,000 The eyes look like eyes. They have a raised center. 331 00:25:04,000 --> 00:25:09,000 Which is a very good way to represent the human eye at that point. 332 00:25:09,000 --> 00:25:11,000 But how is it done? 333 00:25:12,000 --> 00:25:14,000 I don't know. 334 00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:16,000 We might come up with a few answers later on. 335 00:25:16,000 --> 00:25:20,000 However, in the car room, there are other things to see as well. 336 00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:23,000 Not least to which is tooth and car room's death mask. 337 00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:26,000 Most people have seen the front of it. This is the back of it. 338 00:25:26,000 --> 00:25:28,000 Which is just as interesting. 339 00:25:28,000 --> 00:25:33,000 Very valuable piece of gold. It's also very beautiful. 340 00:25:33,000 --> 00:25:35,000 And you also find in the car room, 341 00:25:35,000 --> 00:25:39,000 you see, this is David Shildriss, who was on the trip to Egypt. 342 00:25:39,000 --> 00:25:43,000 There's a family with adventures on limited press. He is the owner of it. 343 00:25:43,000 --> 00:25:47,000 But what are all these boomerangs doing in the car room? 344 00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:50,000 They were taken from tooth and car room's tooth. 345 00:25:50,000 --> 00:25:55,000 Who died in about 1350 BC or thereabouts? 346 00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:59,000 Did boomerangs come from Australia to Egypt? 347 00:25:59,000 --> 00:26:01,000 Or did they go from Egypt to Australia? 348 00:26:01,000 --> 00:26:03,000 And how did they get there? 349 00:26:03,000 --> 00:26:04,000 Or how did they get back? 350 00:26:04,000 --> 00:26:12,000 The point is that there was the Egyptians who were perfectly capable of long sea voyages. 351 00:26:12,000 --> 00:26:16,000 The idea that they were trapped in that sanded little place called Egypt is nonsense. 352 00:26:16,000 --> 00:26:20,000 They were roaming right across the world. 353 00:26:20,000 --> 00:26:26,000 They built boats. There's one body by the Great Pyramid, which shows coral damage on it, 354 00:26:26,000 --> 00:26:30,000 which indicates that they were least in the red sea, if not further south. 355 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:35,000 They certainly went to Australia because there are harroglyphs carved into the mountains north of Sydney, 356 00:26:35,000 --> 00:26:38,000 recounting the story of a shipwreck. 357 00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:40,000 They sailed to Australia. 358 00:26:40,000 --> 00:26:46,000 If you're going to go from Egypt to Australia, the longest stretch of open ocean that you need to cross is about 70 miles. 359 00:26:46,000 --> 00:26:51,000 So it's quite within the capability of any body, even below decent boat. 360 00:26:51,000 --> 00:26:54,000 And these are the boats they use on the Nile today. 361 00:26:54,000 --> 00:26:58,000 This is taken at Luxor. This is a habitat temple, 362 00:26:58,000 --> 00:27:04,000 a few recall about 15 years ago. There were about 50 tourists from Massacre there. 363 00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:07,000 And we went after that, obviously. 364 00:27:07,000 --> 00:27:11,000 And it's very beautiful. It's worth visiting. It's really worth visiting. 365 00:27:11,000 --> 00:27:18,000 Just over that mountain there is the Valley of the Kings, where all the famous tombs are. 366 00:27:18,000 --> 00:27:20,000 And a little bit here, that's the sky. 367 00:27:20,000 --> 00:27:27,000 And you have to go 3,000 miles before you see any water again, because that's the Atlantic Ocean that you'll come to next. 368 00:27:27,000 --> 00:27:31,000 So it's a pretty special place, Egypt. 369 00:27:31,000 --> 00:27:33,000 North of Luxor is this place. 370 00:27:33,000 --> 00:27:36,000 Could I ask, how many people have been to this place? 371 00:27:36,000 --> 00:27:40,000 The Asarium. One. Two. Very few. 372 00:27:40,000 --> 00:27:43,000 Okay. It's not on the main tourist trail. 373 00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:47,000 It's not somewhere that most people, even at where else. 374 00:27:47,000 --> 00:27:52,000 But it's up there with the pyramids as a place to visit. 375 00:27:52,000 --> 00:27:55,000 You go there. It's too hard to drive north of Luxor. 376 00:27:56,000 --> 00:28:01,000 And when we went, we had to have an armed escort because they were scared that tourists were going to get kidnapped again. 377 00:28:01,000 --> 00:28:11,000 You get there. The main point of going to Abidus is to visit the Temple of Seti the First, which is actually just behind. 378 00:28:11,000 --> 00:28:13,000 Here it's over on the right hand side. 379 00:28:13,000 --> 00:28:24,000 I wasn't particularly interested in that, because the story of the Far North from Seti and all the other guys is fairly well-tled. 380 00:28:24,000 --> 00:28:28,000 But what's this about? What's this place about? 381 00:28:28,000 --> 00:28:36,000 It's called the Asarium because it is supposed to be the final resting place of Asaris, the founding god of Egypt. 382 00:28:36,000 --> 00:28:42,000 But there's no inscription. There's no indication that there's anything to do with Asaris. 383 00:28:42,000 --> 00:28:47,000 And it's made of these massive blocks of granite. 384 00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:51,000 Which just sit there. No harrogress on nothing. 385 00:28:51,000 --> 00:28:56,000 Most of the time it's flooded, you can see that the water is up. 386 00:28:56,000 --> 00:29:00,000 Which indicates that it is connected to the Nile. 387 00:29:00,000 --> 00:29:03,000 Underground. Canons. 388 00:29:03,000 --> 00:29:10,000 There are pools here. These pools have fishermen. 389 00:29:10,000 --> 00:29:14,000 Capfish. Come from the Nile. 390 00:29:14,000 --> 00:29:19,000 The water level goes up and goes down depending on the level of the Nile. 391 00:29:19,000 --> 00:29:29,000 But nobody to my knowledge has explored the connection, the underground connection between the Nile and the Asarium. 392 00:29:29,000 --> 00:29:38,000 You see these are massive. These are really huge pieces of bread. About 7,800 tons each as are these up on top. 393 00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:46,000 And then you start to notice in the walls around it, these things. 394 00:29:46,000 --> 00:29:55,000 Why would it be necessary to insert a separate stone when if you've got a broken one, you say, 395 00:29:55,000 --> 00:29:58,000 I'll let's a broken one, I'll get a proper one. 396 00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:04,000 And why are the doorways cut into this block? 397 00:30:04,000 --> 00:30:11,000 You want the doorways in a certain height. Wouldn't you just have this built up, so it got to the right of no, 398 00:30:11,000 --> 00:30:13,000 in Egypt, that wasn't the way you worked. 399 00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:19,000 You said, right, I want the doorways in this height. Oh, we need to cut a bit out here and here. 400 00:30:19,000 --> 00:30:24,000 And these, it starts to get mysterious at this point. 401 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:29,000 And right at the end, you've got the same doorway cut into the block. 402 00:30:29,000 --> 00:30:36,000 And then you get these things, these protuberances, these, what are these about? Why are they there? 403 00:30:36,000 --> 00:30:41,000 Now explanation has to be no, logical explanation has to be not. 404 00:30:41,000 --> 00:30:49,000 Right. In the temporal setting of the first, I said, which is just the right of this picture, it's over on the right hand side over here, 405 00:30:49,000 --> 00:30:54,000 is quite a famous and character. 406 00:30:55,000 --> 00:31:03,000 Which allegedly shows, and it doesn't allegedly show anything. It shows helicopter, it shows tank, it shows submarine, and it shows glider. 407 00:31:03,000 --> 00:31:05,000 Well, that's what we interpreted to look at. 408 00:31:05,000 --> 00:31:09,000 And Egyptologists, when asked, well, do they have helicopters in Ancient Egypt? 409 00:31:09,000 --> 00:31:14,000 Well, say, no, no, no, this is a palam set of the official word. 410 00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:21,000 It's two harrogress that one on top of the other, and a bit fell off one, and it made another shape, 411 00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:27,000 and that's how it came to look like helicopter. But that's there. It's about 50 foot out, it's a difficult photographic. 412 00:31:27,000 --> 00:31:31,000 But it is there, and it's not really had a proper explanation. 413 00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:37,000 So let's go to London, because what we got to look at here is the Petri Museum, 414 00:31:37,000 --> 00:31:44,000 and many people may well be familiar with this piece of gravity, what's called core number seven. 415 00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:57,000 It was recovered by Fenders Petri in Abiza, and it's basically about two inches long, two inches in diameter of about six, seven inches long. 416 00:31:57,000 --> 00:32:03,000 The point is, it's got a lot of grooves around it. 417 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:09,000 Now, I took this picture in the Petri Museum, you have to get permission to take an out of his box. 418 00:32:09,000 --> 00:32:18,000 I took a bit of thread and wind it around a groove, and they're not single circles. It's a continuous spiral. 419 00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:28,000 These are continuous spirals. They're about a millimeter apart, 10th of each part. How is it done? 420 00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:38,000 Anybody who knows their geology will know that gravity is comprised of different minerals, quartz being, main one, all of the in fellspar, my coat. 421 00:32:38,000 --> 00:32:51,000 They all have different hardlessness. So if you're going to cut into a piece of granite, you've got to have something cutting into it, which is harder than the material you're cutting. 422 00:32:51,000 --> 00:33:01,000 You need a diamond, you need a topas, we need a corundal, thanks for your next time. 423 00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:09,000 Without that, it won't cut here. You try cutting a piece of granite with a copper chisel. You won't get far. 424 00:33:09,000 --> 00:33:13,000 A copper chisel in no more than a granite. 425 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:26,000 This one here, again, the striations around it as if it had been drilled. This one has been drilled. How is it done? 426 00:33:26,000 --> 00:33:35,000 Now, it comes the official excavation because they don't dare come up with the answer, which is that they're using high-tech equipment. 427 00:33:35,000 --> 00:33:40,000 This is just piece of granite, which has been, it's about a sense of means for part. 428 00:33:40,000 --> 00:33:44,000 The UCDAN bottom here, UC stands for University College. 429 00:33:44,000 --> 00:33:49,000 The PCM is part of University College London. 430 00:33:50,000 --> 00:34:04,000 Now, when you've got something which quite evidently has cut into, there's quite clearly, you have to assume they used some sort of saw, some material, harder than the granite being cut. 431 00:34:04,000 --> 00:34:07,000 That allowed that to happen. 432 00:34:07,000 --> 00:34:16,000 And this is irrefutable evidence that drills were being used. This is a piece that was actually in the car room, is here. 433 00:34:17,000 --> 00:34:28,000 It's about the size of a half-great fruit. It looks like a ball or the start of hollowing out the ball. It's granite again. 434 00:34:28,000 --> 00:34:33,000 And they're at the same marks as if a drill has been used. 435 00:34:33,000 --> 00:34:43,000 These are the same marks. If you take an ordinary, hustle drill and drill through a piece of wood, any hard wood, you would get similar type of marks. 436 00:34:44,000 --> 00:34:50,000 Each line is the same one circular, the same down of the drill. 437 00:34:50,000 --> 00:34:59,000 The bottom here and here is quite identifiable drill marks. 438 00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:07,000 But what material could you use on a drill that will cut granite as easily as that? 439 00:35:07,000 --> 00:35:22,000 At the answer actually in modern days, we could do this very easily as diamonds. The one no diamonds in Egypt, the nearest diamond source to Egypt, my knowledge is Sierra Leart, what we call Sierra Leart today, the other side of Africa. 440 00:35:22,000 --> 00:35:33,000 But the official explanation for how these rule done is pounding balls, copper chisels and steel stone balls. 441 00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:43,000 That's it. That's your explanation. It doesn't fit. It's not accurate. It's scientifically illiterate. 442 00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:49,000 So get your act together guys and get working on it. It's no harm in trying as though. 443 00:35:49,000 --> 00:35:54,000 I just have a look at some other thing, right? We're going to do a bit of a world tour now. 444 00:35:54,000 --> 00:36:01,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 445 00:36:01,000 --> 00:36:07,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 446 00:36:07,000 --> 00:36:15,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 447 00:36:15,000 --> 00:36:22,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 448 00:36:22,000 --> 00:36:28,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 449 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:36,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 450 00:36:36,000 --> 00:36:44,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 451 00:36:44,000 --> 00:36:49,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 452 00:36:49,000 --> 00:36:55,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 453 00:36:55,000 --> 00:37:05,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 454 00:37:05,000 --> 00:37:12,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 455 00:37:12,000 --> 00:37:18,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 456 00:37:18,000 --> 00:37:24,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 457 00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:34,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 458 00:37:34,000 --> 00:37:41,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 459 00:37:41,000 --> 00:37:47,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 460 00:37:47,000 --> 00:37:53,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 461 00:37:53,000 --> 00:38:03,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 462 00:38:03,000 --> 00:38:08,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 463 00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:13,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 464 00:38:13,000 --> 00:38:18,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 465 00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:24,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 466 00:38:24,000 --> 00:38:30,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 467 00:38:30,000 --> 00:38:36,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 468 00:38:36,000 --> 00:38:41,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 469 00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:47,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 470 00:38:47,000 --> 00:38:53,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 471 00:38:53,000 --> 00:38:59,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 472 00:38:59,000 --> 00:39:03,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 473 00:39:03,000 --> 00:39:08,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 474 00:39:08,000 --> 00:39:14,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 475 00:39:14,000 --> 00:39:20,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 476 00:39:20,000 --> 00:39:26,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 477 00:39:26,000 --> 00:39:30,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 478 00:39:30,000 --> 00:39:35,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 479 00:39:35,000 --> 00:39:39,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 480 00:39:39,000 --> 00:39:43,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 481 00:39:43,000 --> 00:39:47,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 482 00:39:47,000 --> 00:39:51,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 483 00:39:51,000 --> 00:39:55,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 484 00:39:55,000 --> 00:39:59,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 485 00:39:59,000 --> 00:40:04,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 486 00:40:04,000 --> 00:40:08,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 487 00:40:08,000 --> 00:40:12,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 488 00:40:12,000 --> 00:40:16,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 489 00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:20,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 490 00:40:20,000 --> 00:40:24,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 491 00:40:24,000 --> 00:40:28,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 492 00:40:28,000 --> 00:40:33,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 493 00:40:33,000 --> 00:40:37,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 494 00:40:37,000 --> 00:40:41,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 495 00:40:41,000 --> 00:40:45,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 496 00:40:45,000 --> 00:40:50,000 We're going to do a lot of things. We're going to do a lot of things. 497 00:40:50,000 --> 00:40:56,000 Of course they could. This is Libya. Stonehenge and Libya. 498 00:40:56,000 --> 00:41:01,000 Interesting. It's not very familiar. I'm just going to discover it. 499 00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:09,000 When I read Robert Temple's book, Gibson Doen, he does some incredible research there. 500 00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:14,000 South Africa, we have great Zimbabwe. This is what the country is named after. 501 00:41:14,000 --> 00:41:19,000 These famous ruins in southern Zimbabwe. 502 00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:25,000 Until the British got there and wrote a record place, the great colonial power decided 503 00:41:25,000 --> 00:41:32,000 that they couldn't possibly be built by the locals who wouldn't have had the ability. 504 00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:38,000 She's a very arrogant stupid thing to do because they managed to miss most of the evidence of how 505 00:41:38,000 --> 00:41:47,000 they actually did build it and why. Then we come up to Jerusalem, the Temple in Jerusalem, 506 00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:55,000 and the Western Wall. You notice this little entry here. We'll go through that in a minute. 507 00:41:55,000 --> 00:42:03,000 But have a look at these blocks here. This is the bottom part of the Western Wall. 508 00:42:03,000 --> 00:42:08,000 They are incredibly well made. They're well fitted together. There's no more to hold it together. 509 00:42:08,000 --> 00:42:17,000 But these are the lower levels of the Western Wall. This is very crude up here. 510 00:42:17,000 --> 00:42:26,000 And this is about 4,500 years old. The buildings about the Jerusalem has been fought over as we all now. 511 00:42:26,000 --> 00:42:32,000 And a lot of people decided to claim bits of it. But if you go inside the tunnel, 512 00:42:32,000 --> 00:42:37,000 the Western Wall tunnel, you can now as a tourist you can go into. This is what you see. 513 00:42:37,000 --> 00:42:43,000 An extension of those same blocks. And this is about a 500 ton block. 514 00:42:43,000 --> 00:42:51,000 It's this block here. Extraordinary. And nobody seems to want to find out how it was built. 515 00:42:51,000 --> 00:43:01,000 The Temple of Jerusalem was allegedly built by one of them was built by a solid, about 1000 BC. 516 00:43:02,000 --> 00:43:04,000 And we come to Lebanon. 517 00:43:04,000 --> 00:43:10,000 Well, back. Most people are familiar with the great tri-lethan stones here. There are about 700 tons each. 518 00:43:10,000 --> 00:43:16,000 On top of another row of even more impressive stones. And of course, the famous one in the quarry. 519 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:21,000 That's the person lying on it. So it gets some idea of the sheer size of it. 520 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:25,000 The estimation is about 1200 tons. Big pieces don't. 521 00:43:25,000 --> 00:43:31,000 It's not in the quarry. Obviously it was too heavy to move. Or it was a surface requirement. 522 00:43:31,000 --> 00:43:36,000 Notice how well cut it is and how well dressed and finished. 523 00:43:36,000 --> 00:43:42,000 And most people will say, if asked, that is the heaviest stone ever moved by man. 524 00:43:42,000 --> 00:43:49,000 It's not actually just so that stones, big heavy stones can be moved. 525 00:43:49,000 --> 00:43:55,000 This stone here, the plinth of the famous statue in St. Petersburg, which is worth seeing. 526 00:43:55,000 --> 00:44:01,000 This statue is just in Petersburg. What the Isle-Tah is to Paris. 527 00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:12,000 It represents the city and the plinth on which it stands as a piece of granical, a thunderstorm, because it was knocked off a large mountain in Finland. 528 00:44:12,000 --> 00:44:17,000 And Catherine, who was succeeded, Peter the Great, decided she was going to have it as the plinth. 529 00:44:17,000 --> 00:44:24,000 And this is it being brought from Finland to some Petersburg. And notice how it's being moved. 530 00:44:24,000 --> 00:44:35,000 Channel stone channels and cannonballs. It's basically ball bearings. 531 00:44:35,000 --> 00:44:45,000 Which indicates that it was possible to do. The people who did it, it was a French engineer who, they went for the ground to freeze, because in Finland he gets a bit chilly. 532 00:44:45,000 --> 00:44:54,000 Ground froze. Lay the channels, put the cannonballs in. Using the Roman winches or castrons. 533 00:44:54,000 --> 00:44:58,000 It took about nine months to move it three miles, but they could do it. 534 00:44:58,000 --> 00:45:08,000 So it is possible to move large heavy stones. But you would need on cannonballs. 535 00:45:08,000 --> 00:45:13,000 But could the Egyptians also have done the same thing using the de-right-pounding balls. 536 00:45:13,000 --> 00:45:19,000 And they weren't used to cut the granite. They were used to move it. 537 00:45:20,000 --> 00:45:30,000 It's the nearest I can get to explaining either presence of several, several dozen de-right-pounding balls in the Assohn-Coreans. 538 00:45:30,000 --> 00:45:35,000 And the fact that these large lumps of granite were moved. 539 00:45:35,000 --> 00:45:40,000 Anyway, carrying on around the world, we come to India where we have this one-life, 540 00:45:40,000 --> 00:45:49,000 and the strange structures in India, this is in Kashmir, stone circle here, a man here, standing stone. 541 00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:57,000 In Indonesia, this was taken about a hundred years ago, where they were obviously putting ten-time blocks there. 542 00:45:57,000 --> 00:46:05,000 A lot of people to move that, moving up to the laus, the plain of jars, these strange stone jars, 543 00:46:05,000 --> 00:46:35,000 or hundreds of them lying around, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made them, they made 544 00:46:35,000 --> 00:47:04,500 the photograph, the section here, is the section here, very close to it, and on Okinawa which is very close to Yonigurini, you have something that looks relatively similar, now I don't know if I'm going to mention about this particular one, it's a solid attracted by the similarity of shapes, which indicates, and this is obviously, we're looking at it, this is above water level and this isn't, so what's the something there, water level's rose, 545 00:47:04,500 --> 00:47:15,300 is a result of melting ice cups, and a visage 10,000 years ago, and this is a visor, it's defined in 54 to water, whatever it is, 546 00:47:15,300 --> 00:47:26,000 now we're carrying on in an east-led direction from Japan across the Pacific, and we come to this place, 547 00:47:26,000 --> 00:47:37,000 and not many people have even heard of this place, and you can look it up on the map, it's a micro-neezer, it's the Federator States of Micronesia, 548 00:47:37,000 --> 00:47:51,000 it's a group of islands west of New Guinea, obviously north of Australia, it's southern, the western side of the Pacific, this is what you find, if you get that, 549 00:47:51,000 --> 00:48:04,000 these extraordinary basalt blocks, some of them are weighing about 50 tons each, it's have been erected in what looks like an intelligence-they constructed fashion, 550 00:48:05,000 --> 00:48:15,000 maybe you know as why, maybe you know as you did it, maybe you know as how they, the blocks come from the other side of the island, the island is called a ton of paint, 551 00:48:16,000 --> 00:48:31,000 but how do they get there? 10 miles across the island, quite a hilly island, legend has it, they were floated, not on the water in the air, who buy, maybe not, maybe these guys, 552 00:48:31,000 --> 00:48:43,000 we had places trying named off because that was the date that was discovered by the Dutch recently, hundreds of miles around the island, 553 00:48:43,000 --> 00:48:55,000 they all looked at the same and some of them are vast, we're going to size a this guy, there's big as any obelisk in Egypt, obviously they could cut it easily, 554 00:48:55,000 --> 00:49:10,000 this how they cut it cut out of the volcanic rock on that big and they could be moved, how, maybe you know why, maybe you know who buy, maybe you know, 555 00:49:10,000 --> 00:49:23,000 we can guess, maybe you know as a circle, and on East Island you get this, maybe on East Island you get this, remains of this wall, 556 00:49:23,000 --> 00:49:39,000 and down the bottom, more detail we see, well we've seen before we saw that in Egypt, this architecture, this ability to insert a piece of stone to something which doesn't appear necessary, 557 00:49:39,000 --> 00:49:54,000 but obviously we see that all over the place, we get us out America, matching peaches is the tallest view of matcha peaches, but inside it, 558 00:49:54,000 --> 00:50:06,000 you see these things, the protruding things again, this incredible ability to work style, now this is in South America, this is called Andesite, 559 00:50:06,000 --> 00:50:21,000 andesite in South America as the same as Granite in Europe, it's called, it's volcanic, it needs diamonds to cut it, these guys could cut it easily, they're having a laugh, awesome left, 560 00:50:21,000 --> 00:50:31,000 this is obviously, we got bored once at the afternoon and thought, ah, complicated, come we really make it, how would we do it, there's no more to holding these together, 561 00:50:31,000 --> 00:50:47,000 we've got these protrubreenses here, this is in Cusco, this is a long way from Egypt, but we get the same style of architecture and the same evidence of the use of some technology of which we're completely unaware, 562 00:50:48,000 --> 00:51:01,000 such as Iharman in South Cusco, he's extraordinary, quite extraordinary and vast walls, everything knows about them, 563 00:51:01,000 --> 00:51:08,000 when the Spaniards arrived in 1520, they said to the local Incus, who built these, did you build these? 564 00:51:08,000 --> 00:51:16,000 Because you're very good if you did, and they said we know nothing, nothing to do with us was here when we arrived, and they've been there a few hundred years, 565 00:51:16,000 --> 00:51:28,000 and we see the same little marks that we saw on the blocks outside the valley temple in Egypt, what are these marks, the scoop marks, 566 00:51:28,000 --> 00:51:45,000 and this is where they're practiced, this is, er, there's marks there, these steps don't go anywhere, the kids are local kids use these now for slides, 567 00:51:46,000 --> 00:51:56,000 what have we seen these before, these scoop marks, this is now in Peru, and we're seeing something which is almost identical to what we saw in Egypt, 568 00:51:56,000 --> 00:52:04,000 this is obviously the practice area, this is where the apprentices worked, right, build three steps, build a nice little cavity, 569 00:52:04,000 --> 00:52:10,000 and that's just lying around, and everybody plays an intention to, because nobody knows what it's about, 570 00:52:10,000 --> 00:52:19,000 you go further up the sacred valley to all of the Taitabo, and this amazing wall which appears to have no function whatsoever, 571 00:52:19,000 --> 00:52:33,000 other than to stand there and look quite beautiful, but look at the retrieval, it's six blocks separated by another shot, block in the middle, 572 00:52:33,000 --> 00:52:44,000 they came from quite a long way away, these blocks, and they're twenty foot high, and they're quite a lot, and in part the same complex, you get these protruvences, 573 00:52:44,000 --> 00:52:54,000 and these amazing walls here made of every piece is different shape, different size, they couldn't have been cast, 574 00:52:54,000 --> 00:53:05,000 they had one explanation for the pyramids of some of the sites we see in South America, they were using casting, basically cement, 575 00:53:05,000 --> 00:53:20,000 grinding up rock, mixing it with certain chemicals like lime, we use lime for mortar today, and casting it, but why bother to do every block a different size with that, doesn't make sense? 576 00:53:20,000 --> 00:53:34,000 Moving up from Peru, we go up to Timinarca, and things change up here, it's not that far, Peru is the next country to believe it, 577 00:53:34,000 --> 00:53:50,000 but now instead of the, these are straight, these are angular, these are not curved, it's a different style, and yet this is 12,500 foot high, 12,000 meters, 578 00:53:50,000 --> 00:54:01,000 the Renault trees to roll these things on, they don't grow that high, and yet we're talking in twenty-third of turns here, 579 00:54:01,000 --> 00:54:15,000 these mental representatives of our coach here, the famous guard who came and offered much, and then disappeared promising to return, don't they all, they never come back? 580 00:54:15,000 --> 00:54:32,000 The gateway of the sun, again these frames, angular carvings, and it's the accuracy, this is again in an anti-site South American granite, Puma Puma Puma Bolivia, the weirdest place of the world, 581 00:54:32,000 --> 00:54:46,000 because it looks as if it's been the result of some sort of destruction, could it be an earthquake, could it be anything, but these are big blocks that have been thrown to one side, knocked over, 582 00:54:46,000 --> 00:55:09,000 or you start looking at some of the detail on these blocks, the accuracy of the carving on top right, these eight shapes on the top left, and here bottom right, these six millimeter diameter holes, in and aside, in granite, how do you do that? 583 00:55:09,000 --> 00:55:21,000 You do it with diamond drills, and there are no diamonds available, we're told at that time, maybe another technology was used. 584 00:55:21,000 --> 00:55:32,000 The fort in Bolivia, now this is, this is the, this is what Eric Von Downigan came in, when he said this is possibly a UFO landing site, 585 00:55:32,000 --> 00:55:46,000 and everybody jumped up and down and said, what a stupid thing to say, how can they possibly, he said, only said possibly, but he generated a huge amount of publicity for him, and his book, the famous starting point, chariots of the gods, 586 00:55:46,000 --> 00:56:04,000 he only said possibly, he offered it as, I don't know if it is or no, it doesn't really matter, the point is that everybody got one gear of an exciting, what a stupid man, how could he do that, and he just went all the way to the bank with the millions of pounds and the 40 million books he sold since, good for him, 587 00:56:05,000 --> 00:56:33,000 I don't know what it is, it doesn't actually matter what it is, the fact is it's been carved into the surface, it's been cut here, and it's miles from anywhere, so far a drive from the nearest town to get to this, but people take a while, they do it, and then, the stargate, this is fairly near Lake Titicaca, one of the, 588 00:56:33,000 --> 00:57:02,000 the coast of the South Coast of Lake Titicaca, everything knows what it is, there's also one of the stories about the stargate, and I included for one reason that this is bedrock, this is, and it's not blocks move from somewhere else, this is what exists, how is this shape, carve, or cut, or melting, or how is it done, what is going on, 589 00:57:04,000 --> 00:57:28,000 this is 12,500 foot up, now, could have been somewhere else, a while ago, and as when it was done, maybe you know, who did it, or why, it is respected by the locals, and I looked at this picture, and I've seen something like that somewhere before, something similar to, and I thought, okay, 590 00:57:28,000 --> 00:57:57,000 let's have a look at it, this is the third pyramid of Giza, where you have this cut out, this is the entrance, it's not particularly interesting inside, if you want to go in, that's great, obviously a lot of people want to go in, it's not like the great pyramid, but it was obviously important enough for this entrance area, to be highlighted, no identify, and these blocks are not in regular shape, are they, they're, 591 00:57:58,000 --> 00:58:15,000 it's a bit here, it's been filled in, and they're all at angles, and the protrupants is here, which we've seen all over the world, now, it's as if there is a worldwide civilization, 592 00:58:15,000 --> 00:58:34,000 in a way like culture, connection that has the ability to communicate across vast distances, because of the similarity of the construction techniques, 593 00:58:34,000 --> 00:58:50,000 I have a look at probably the most famous photograph of the lead space race, or not get into that, you can always recognize it by this little triangle of cloud above the Sudan, 594 00:58:50,000 --> 00:59:18,000 especially the only photograph that is used to show the earth, it does show it very well, Saudi Arabia, the Red Sea, don't go this place, they're pirates, Africa, Madagascar, and Antarctica, we'll just keep that there just for a minute, because the couple of points just summarize this whole journey, what we've seen that there is a worldwide similarity of the construction techniques, 595 00:59:20,000 --> 00:59:49,000 the head to a worldwide travel, probably surface, I'm not going the alien route, I'm not going the airplane to the airplane to the airplane, I'm just saying whoever did it, were very clever people, they knew enough to be able to do what we've seen, the evidence exists, but there's a mystery around how a lot of these structures were built, they're not understood by modern engineers, they could not be replicated, 596 00:59:49,000 --> 01:00:00:18,000 they could be replicated by modern equipment, but why would we do it? Of course it's possible to lift a hundred ton block of granite, a hundred and fifty foot into the air, and move it three hundred foot horizontally, it is possible, there are cranes that could do it, Google giant cranes will be amazed at what's available, but it appears for whoever did them to be very easy, 597 01:00:18,000 --> 01:00:37,000 we don't know who they were, we can only guess, and the tools known to have been available, the copper chisels cannot produce the visible results, so there has to be another explanation, I suggested the rocks offening liquid, 598 01:00:37,000 --> 01:00:52,000 if anybody has a better suggestion, I'll be over on the next stand, please come and tell me, I suggested acoustic levitation, it's possible, I'd love to see it demonstrated, 599 01:00:52,000 --> 01:01:13,000 by the way, the rocks offening liquid is known to exist, people traveling in, Cusco, have found some, allegedly, travel is never been analyzed, it is known about by the locals, in Peru, they know about the rocks offening liquid, 600 01:01:13,000 --> 01:01:36,000 so I have one final challenge, anybody traveling to Central or South America, would you please ask everybody you need, what's this rocks offening liquid and where can I buy some, in a meantime, my thanks and acknowledgements of you too, a great group of people, 601 01:01:36,000 --> 01:01:49,000 I'm Danagun who started the journey for me and I suspect possibly for many people, for Graham Hancock, who writes so well, was written for so long, for Christopher Dunn, who did the investigation on the great pyramid, 602 01:01:49,000 --> 01:02:16,000 looking, he tried to back ends in here, they wrote a pyramid, we have his books, the Geese of Power Plant and Technology of H&DJ, or I cripple the title for my tool, David Sileris, who's inspired many people to get up and go and travel and to move, to go to places, he's been to countries who probably never heard of, must stand for example, between Tibet and Nepal, Robert Temple, 603 01:02:16,000 --> 01:02:29,000 and that should earlier have written a great deal about Egypt, his research is really his meticulous and mountain grey for his photography of sacred sites. 604 01:02:29,000 --> 01:02:44,000 In a final word from our sponsor, ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much. 605 01:02:46,000 --> 01:02:53,000 Thank you very much.