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@gautamkrishnan2957 ай бұрын
Thank you for this amazing piece. I can’t even begin to fathom what other ancient Indian knowledge was lost when the 9 million books at the Nalanda library took over 3 months to burn down completely, set on fire by the Islamic invaders in ~1200 CE.
@jk_lol7 ай бұрын
The lost knowledge is beyond unfortunate, and the burning of access to all that knowledge is beyond criminal. My hope is that what goes around, comes around given that we live in a cyclical universe.
@DAB0097 ай бұрын
That remains the greatest loss of Indian civilization along with losing taxilla, vikramshila, odantpuri universities.
@gautamkrishnan2957 ай бұрын
@@DAB009 💯 brother. What a shameful generation to live in where all our ancestral knowledge has been destroyed by invaders, while no one seems to care even today.
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS7 ай бұрын
The Hindi version will be released next week… please help us to spread it 🙏
@TieroneThree-iu3sh7 ай бұрын
That’s very sad
@rossmarshall39066 ай бұрын
I'm now 69. I thought I blew my mind out decades ago. But here it goes again. Film is more than amazing. What's almost equally amazing are the Researchers!!! It's a Wonderful gift of / from God to have these Sweet Minds. :o) Keep looking for more - the Planet is full of them.
@randyrowland67446 ай бұрын
Thank you for giving honor and it's credit where it's due: above. Some of FATHER'S children are extremely gifted in thier minds. Creating works of their hands. But it wasn't an Earth man's hands who created this place.
@hugoh.96944 ай бұрын
The world is indebted to them for simply creating a record of these amazing feats of engineering before they are lost or tampered with the passage of time. Especially as conventional science seemingly would rather NOT talk about the elephant in the room. Now that the record is created in the public domain, we can move on from debating their existence. On to attempting to understand the most profound questions of how/who/when they did this and why. THESE are the things modernday archeology should be seeking to understand, instead of peddling their own agendas and dogmas with half-truths, lies and outright ignoring the existence of these structures.
@IndianOverlander7 ай бұрын
I am astounded. I am a 50 year old Indian. I have had a pretty decent education and graduated with a BA in History (Hon.) Yet this is the FIRST time I've heard about this marvel. 😮 Thank you for this brilliantly researched and superbly presented work. I feel at the end of the documentary you began to get to the reasons why it was constructed. The choice of stone, the symmetry in the architecture, the mirror polish, the precision in geometry were all intentional for a certain frequency sound wave to be created. Maybe used as a healing chamber? The only thing I find improbable is that this was made by humans.
@wilsonov876 ай бұрын
I thought a sound/energy healing chamber as well. But also, there was one with a "just started chamber entrance" inside it which I thought strongly resembles a linga, as if it was cut out of it, which made me wonder if the chambers were used for attempting to consecrate.
@daifunshin6 ай бұрын
Maybe male/female energy rituals and sound ceremonies
I would not exclude humans. If you look ancient traditions and text (mythology or their history) all of it points to the same story and school of thoughts. Nowadays it seems crazy that Mexico, India, and Greece or Iran have the same story telling, but once it was pangea. At at certain point there was a flood and all was lost, this part of the story is also shared. And even after that, until the jewish version of bible, Greeks and what not were sharing the same stories. Some research shows how the bible we got nowdays took those stories and change the female deity to a male God, and decided to refuse chaos and magic, instead of accepting and cohexisting with what is beyond the rational. Jesus Christ is much closer to the ancient traditions than to the new "old Testament" But anyway, everytbing points toward a very advanced civs pre-dating us. I don't understand where the idea that we are the pinnacle of evolution is coming floor. For once, the lack of evidence of something (referring to ancient more advanced civs) doesn't prove the lack of existence of something. Moreover, around the globe is full of incredible buildings and stuff. Ancient Indian writings talk about stuff that are being re-discovered now in science.. We are so advanced that we build concrete that breaks down our kneee and to solve that we need to build shoes.. We create problems just to SELL solutions.. People are happy for synthetic drugs needed bc of bad food instead of staying healthy moving around and using organic food and focusing on better stuff than ego.. We are not advanced maybe, but it is also true that if there is a human tribe who is advanced, they do not think about war. The human tribe who is not advanced, is governed by ego and craves power, and kills the advanced ones..
@WhooliganK6 ай бұрын
Maybe it was made by special needs people who are from Uranus
@faar2faar4 ай бұрын
You have peaked the interest of an archaeologist and heritage manager. You literally avoid the pitfalls of pseudo science by totally avoiding those topics but come to the same conclusions using math, engineering and project management. It's a brilliant fresh take on archaeological investigation.
@chrisjensen83077 ай бұрын
Best Archaelogical Documentary i have seen. Nice to see that it is so scientifical and datadriven. Top Notch work!
@Alarix2463 ай бұрын
@@chrisjensen8307 I absolutely agree. Except for the real professinals would insist that until they give their stamp of divine approval, you must call it “pseudoarchaeological documentary”.
@chrisjensen83073 ай бұрын
@@Alarix246 Sadly that is true. I really wish mainstream professional archaeologists wasnt so narrowminded, and more openminded enthusiastic researchers. But it seems all their old history books and educating system, is keeping them locked in a single cell mindbubble, with no chance for evolving. There is so much fascinating stonework that gets overlooked and brushed away, because it does not fit into the current theory that rules the archaology establishment. We could learn so much more about our past if we was just a tad more openminded and curious. I have always been highly fascinated by our ability to work stone, and some of that knowledge we have lost completely, which just makes the mystery even more exciting. We should strive to understand our past to the fullest in my opinion, and we are almost doing the exact opposite of that. which is just sad to see.
@Alarix2463 ай бұрын
@@chrisjensen8307 cannot comment because I'd be repeating your words. 👍🏼
@chrisjensen83073 ай бұрын
@@Alarix246 Have you heard what they have done at the Gobekli tepe site? They have postponed any excavation for future generations :S Look it up its ridicolous
@allons_y10016 ай бұрын
Beautifully executed documentary! I love seeing the hard sciences and hands-on specialists getting involved in these ancient mysteries, which are so clearly beyond any of the tales being spun out of tenuous circumstantial "evidence" by archeologists! With expert help, maybe the closed minded archeologists will start understanding/acknowledging these truly ancient anomalies that were only inherited many many millenia later by our less advanced ancestors. The extreme precision, curvature and high polish of the Barabar site, reminded me immediately of the stone boxes in the Serapeum of Saqqra in Egypt. It's almost as if in Barabar, the builders opted for these polished stone chambers in lieu of polished stone boxes, for some unknown similar function.
@mikelee98868 ай бұрын
Randomly checked on the BAM page to see if you guys have anything new coming out.... and it's coming out in 8 hours. Looks like I'll have to clear my entire schedule tomorrow lol, because I know what I'm going to be doing now. Can't wait!
@strabe307 ай бұрын
This is such a well put together documentary. The level of editing and quality of research is top notch.
@bug.id93407 ай бұрын
Made in France 👍🏻
@strabe307 ай бұрын
@@bug.id9340 yeah I wish they’d do more. Very well done, and hard to argue all of the evidence because it’s put together so well with so many qualified people.
@stefanschleps87587 ай бұрын
Agreed. Instant sub!
@harrywalker9686 ай бұрын
except, there around 200,000 yrs too young..
@upendaglover25597 ай бұрын
i've watched this documentary 6 times. fell asleep to it 3 times. i am amazed at your work and so appreciative of the extremely detailed analysis. thank you so much. thank you. thank you.
@chrisbastos7 ай бұрын
Those are clearly for meditation and self-knowledge purposes. For mantras, that are generally a single note extended for a long time. A chamber that can extend the note for more than a minute would be the ideal place for it. It resonates with your own body, practically a key to open your mind to what is inside. Fascinating, truly fascinating.
@harrywalker9686 ай бұрын
o.k brainiac.. who ,or what, carved them out of granite, then polished them. there over 100,000 yrs old,,wake up..
@johnweaver45648 ай бұрын
More people should pay attention to this video. A lot of lost history for sure. 👍😊
@harshnaik69894 ай бұрын
Thank you for discovering this, never felt like its an 2 hour long films, its incredible, Iam from a Place called Ambarnath in Mumbai, India, here we have one ancient Shiva Temple and its made with a single stone, a very pretty temple, but unexplored / unknown to many. A place called Hosayla which has Hoysaleswara Temple present in the state of Karnataka has polishing level and precision of that comparable to Barabar caves.
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS4 ай бұрын
Very interesting thanks
@harshnaik69894 ай бұрын
@@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS have you checked, Place, tamilnadu, pudhukkottai District, THIRUMAYAM Rock siva temple. Its similar to barabar cave
@charliesteel87506 ай бұрын
Why can't mainstream archeologists make this kind of content? This is outstanding
@Fido-vm9zi5 ай бұрын
@@charliesteel8750 I'm sure they have. You'd have to know everything created to say they haven't.
@ivayloivanov37445 ай бұрын
There are some interesting documentaries on the Central America and Amazon and how they discovered ton of stuff with LIDAR.
@duaneelliott51945 ай бұрын
@@ivayloivanov3744had they accepted what the native people said, they would've "discovered" those a long time ago.
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS5 ай бұрын
Please Fido give us a link because we didn’t find anything
@ddbt3425 ай бұрын
@@Fido-vm9zi they don't disturb the established narrative of human history, or they lose their jobs/funding.
@zaqwertyfish7 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing. There's so much more to our past than we know. I wonder how ancient these chambers really are...
@neilcreamer82077 ай бұрын
Thank you for taking a disciplined, scientific approach to instigating these wonders. Thank you for resisting the urge to rush to an explanation of them.
@fun-with-purpose14367 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary. You asked all the questions the audience would. Almost seems like the builders wanted people like you to discover the geometries etc. once the human race became curious and smart enough to figure out. Thank you for such high quality work.
@jeffmckinnon58427 ай бұрын
We get to see them like that because we see no practical purpose for them... But why build more than one?
@Vile_Entity_35456 ай бұрын
@@jeffmckinnon5842Maybe there was plenty of food and men just could and did so they could work. There must have been a point to them and that is sadly lost to history. It is sad that the megalithic society hardly left any trace at all.
@Alarix2466 ай бұрын
@@Vile_Entity_3545if it was the way you say, one (or more) of these men would surely make an incorrectible mistake.
@siameaseghost10686 ай бұрын
ัFor me,the whole kingdom of India is the world wonder.Greeting and big thanks from Thailand.
@LeslieKaucotte8 ай бұрын
Formidable!! Mes amis anglophones vont être super contents, après que je leur ai rabattu les oreilles avec le sujet depuis décembre 😂 Merci pour votre travail et que Dieu vous bénisse 🙏🏻💖
@saschadiestelow83688 ай бұрын
These Caves are the craziest Ancient Architectures in my opinion....... This Grade of Skill is absolute mindblowing!!!!!
@murdock64508 ай бұрын
Needed to go more into the acoustics, and hrtz that you get. As these are what can promote changes in your human vibration
@Nachtschicht17 ай бұрын
@@murdock6450 The dome-shaped chamber must have an astonishing acoustic. Have you ever been in a telescope-dome? The ocular is more or less in the focus of the dome, and while it's main purpose is to watch the stars through the telescope, the acoustic there is almost as impressive. You can hear every slightest whisper anywhere in the room.
@murdock64507 ай бұрын
@@Nachtschicht1 Sounds amazing i shall look into this. Thanks.
@TheMookie15907 ай бұрын
@@murdock6450 all the ancients seem to use acoustic tech. wonder if they figured out a way to manipulate geometry with just their voice. chanting being used in ancient times was talked about having power. But quantim effects would let acustics turn into light for exmple. We need to map out the super structres
@longrange19778 ай бұрын
This is giving me the same vibes as UnchartedX's ultra precise, pre-dynastic granite vases, far too many similarities to be a coincidence in my very humble opinion, advanced mathematics, metric values, extreme precision for no real apparent reason, would struggle to replicate today etc.
@Djerekare8 ай бұрын
They are lying to us. There was something in the past.....
@4thorder7 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same while watching this.
@CarsCatAliens7 ай бұрын
One day I was pondering how they (Egypt)could have accomplished the precision, and scale of the structures. I thought about how they possibly could have accomplished these feats with the technology stated by the mainstream,and any other materials we know for sure they had available..I came up with two ideas that I have yet to hear discussed... Water,Wind/air....
@GM-cq6ez7 ай бұрын
You are missing the emphasis on sound.
@jillfarley5207 ай бұрын
@@GM-cq6ezagree, probably the most important of all!
@PolyglotsForPeace6 ай бұрын
Wow, I didn't know about Barabar, and it is such a treasure of our human history! Thanks for this excellent documentary, thanks for your thorough research and considerations of all the "enigmas" of Barabar. Maybe some day the age of the chambers will be dated with some new technology? And I hope more research can be done about the effects of the sound in the chambers to heal the body and raise consciousness.
@Ondar0078 ай бұрын
When I 1st heard the sound from these chambers, I got shivers all over my body. Guys you stumbled upon something really incredible!
@akusav3338 ай бұрын
Did it resonate with Ohm? What did u experience?
@knottytoob7 ай бұрын
@@akusav333 Aum, indeed.
@BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left6 ай бұрын
@@akusav333 Ohm.. Resistance is futile.
@adrianandrews22546 ай бұрын
@@BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left Built by the Borg then ?
@Doxymeister5 ай бұрын
@@BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left 🤣I love Dad-jokes.
@nadiabats55814 ай бұрын
Спасибо огромное за фильм! Я не знала про эти пещеры. Вы очень подробно и наглядно рассказали про них. Они завораживают, как и многие другие древнейшие места Индии и всего мира. Желаю вам удачи и процветания!
@krzysztofzpucka72207 ай бұрын
6:46 Seven caves - Seven Sisters (Pleiades). The layout of the caves mirrors the stars of the Pleiades constellation: Gopika (the largest cave) - Alcyone (the brightest star) Vadathika - Atlas Karan Chopar - Electra Lomas Rishi - Maia Visva Zopri - Merope Sudama - Taygeta Vapiyaka - Pleione
@karan.kunwar5434 ай бұрын
@@krzysztofzpucka7220 this all made by Greeks there is a greek writing inside caves 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
@karan.kunwar5434 ай бұрын
All made by Greeks as Greeks writing is inside the caves
@RG-un2vl4 ай бұрын
@@karan.kunwar543 May be they were stranded there 🙄.Identifying the architect and the patron requires more than writing
@KK-do5bv6 ай бұрын
Been in KZbin since 2007 Commenting for the first time The dedication towards details and scientific rationale of your work is exceptional 🫡 A true sense of exploration. Guessing, Kailash Temple on your list.
@davidtydeman14348 ай бұрын
We should celebrate the amazing skills of the ancient people of this region. Kudos to them for their wonderful work without help from aliens or ignorant KZbinrs.
@singapore55007 ай бұрын
Pls do a video of kailash temple in ellora . Largest rock cut monolithic structure in the world . An underrated wonder
@krzysztofzpucka72208 ай бұрын
6:49 Thus Spoke Enoch: "And thence I went to another place, the mountain of hard rock. And there was in it four hollow places, deep and wide and very smooth. How smooth are the hollow places and deep and dark to look at."
@wout1231008 ай бұрын
thsi has noth9ing to do with it..hwo coem these vids attract so many daft people?
@strangetrip8378 ай бұрын
This has nothing to do with your god!!
@kitkakitteh8 ай бұрын
@@strangetrip837get over yourself. He was simply noting the similarities in an old text.
@coryCuc8 ай бұрын
@@strangetrip837 Man. You have some anger issues dude. Go outside and touch some grass.
@renatolombardi31058 ай бұрын
@@strangetrip837😵💫
@hellthinkhe7 ай бұрын
Great films, absolutely incredible. Thanks!
@scottgarriott38848 ай бұрын
utterly fascinating! A few notes: - I am a bit surprised the stone masons never mentioned the difference in difficulty in cutting precisely measured curves in convex vs concave shapes. - how precise was the N, S, E, W orientation for those caverns cut on that reference? And why might the one cavern have deviated from its otherwise aligned entrance? - sound measurements appear to have been done with open doors. But the doors may have been closed by some material or structure when "used" if sound was a feature. - the apparent involvement of an extremely accurate value for pi and use of the metre unit of measurement (based on earth's circumpherence) is astonishing to me. The earth is not a perfect sphere either, so I wonder what measurement of circumpherence must be used to derive the metre. I could go on ... and I could watch another equally long production on all the details not discussed! Outstanding!
@komakino12347 ай бұрын
I totally agree, each point raised worthy of further investigation!
@jacekpalka557 ай бұрын
Check out Paul Cook - he’s cracked it… they were not cut but poured with an ancient geopolymer technology - this goes for many ancient sites… and they were energy devices, as within the polymers metals & crystals create different effects…. Now when I watch these I’m amazed how we didn’t figure that out before - but once you see it you can’t unsee it… so much false / deliberate falsified history to impoverish us of healing & other technology
@RunsWithScissorsSenior7 ай бұрын
Using hemp coaxial string, a cutting edge could be calculated from a center axil as well as a sphere from a point.
@scottgarriott38847 ай бұрын
@@RunsWithScissorsSenior. Yes, for concave cuts where that center is accessible. But some of the curves had centres located beyond the caverns in solid rock. And a string won't work for the convex cuts.
@RunsWithScissorsSenior7 ай бұрын
@@scottgarriott3884 … imagine a LASER. A tight “string” of light. After all, a LASER was used to generate these “maps” of theses “caves”.
@pa1ful7 ай бұрын
This might be single handedly the best researched and executed documentary I have ever seen. Kudos to the team that work on these awe-inspiring marvels.
@Ondar0078 ай бұрын
Great work guys and Jahannah James for narration! 😁
@violetpalmer17758 ай бұрын
I thought it was her ❤ Brilliant documentary 😍
@Ye4rZero6 ай бұрын
India has such incredible ancient temples
@moreno-diego8 ай бұрын
It seems pretty clear the red thread that connects these overordering structures with some buildings that we find in the plain of Giza; here in Egypt, we say that they gave the best of themselves, although I think somewhere there is still more to discover that brings the same modus operandi. The current historical chronology is simply an abberration. Keep it up, keep tickling the foggy minds that roam this poor Earth, keep creating interest in history, a story that the world still doesn’t know, a story that can revolutionize the world, show the world a different perspective, deep respect and admiration for your work. I’m a little envious, but how I would love to do your job!
@manualteirac98175 ай бұрын
Le travail de l'équipe de BAM et de Patrice Pouillard est phénoménal. Merci de faire découvrir ca au monde.
@mu0nt8937 ай бұрын
J'essaie tant bien que mal de promouvoir votre documentaire sur les différentes plateformes ou le podcast de Joe Rogan est diffusé. Il est difficile de se faire entendre, mais cela en vaut certainement la peine, vous devriez tenter de contacter son équipe. Je suis prêt à parier qu'il sera fasciné par le sujet ainsi que par la qualité de votre travail. Ce serait une pub incroyable pour vous, un coup de pouce phénomenal. Le podcast de Joe Rogan n'étant pas le seul à traiter de sujets historiques, Lex Fridmann, Shawn Ryan etc etc... Le public anglophone sera captivé.
@Slitch-nl15 ай бұрын
Breathtaking... Thank you so much!
@karinac.33786 ай бұрын
Very very nice!! I love it how you all analyse these places not only historically but technically!! Feels new and fulfilling! I didn’t even realise it lasted 2 hours. I hope your videos get millions of views and likes🎉🎉
@hbakke6 ай бұрын
Takk!
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS6 ай бұрын
Takk ! :)
@BootsBoudreau7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much to the Producers of this! Also, thank you to Johanna for the English narration! Someone needs to build a speaker based on these enclosure specs to see what they sound like.
@jeremyturley12767 ай бұрын
I am so glad your team did this documentary. I always recommend BAM to everyone I speak to on this topic. I remember the first time I watched it seeing these caves and thinking two things: 1. How have I never heard of these caves? 2. These caves are significantly important. I’m talking great pyramid level important. Don’t scoff at that notion until you truly consider what it took to accomplish this feat. We live in very interesting times.
@Agapi-dg7th7 ай бұрын
None i see spends any time to question who were theese ancient builders, here i see that theese structures were build using 3D technology, no hand has touched this granite, that was done by 3D machine, human hand can not match this accuracy, it has to be a structure 12.000 years plus ,,, the lost world wide sivilisation,, precataclysmic,,,nothing to do with indians or asians,, or egyptians,,, this is a highly advanced technology,,,to cut granite like butter it had to be laser and only laser,,, nothing else,,,
@jeremyturley12767 ай бұрын
I agree.
@spigwrigs92687 ай бұрын
You are looking at them through our eyes and with our technology, you need to look into alchemy, plasma, ball lightning, frequency and fractal toroidal moments. Bob greenyers o day videos are a theory he has based on real science with repeatable experiments, he then combines this with a lost ancient technology, symbols hieroglyphs and esoteric knowledge that's been passed down and is literally all around us, his theory is literally unbelievable but at the same time believeable. He has a theory on what the great pyramid is and it's the best one I've seen, between himself and malcolm bendell, who is an inventor, it's going to change the world
@novembertango12988 ай бұрын
I appreciate the level of transparency and open minded approach to looking at out of place historical locations and artifacts. Being India seems to be much more willing to allow these explorations than other countries I have a request to have these cave walls put under a microscope. Different polish techniques leave different markers suggesting how they were done. Due to some of the anomalies in the serepium in Egypt I have a feeling it was purely a chemical polish and if that’s the case the microscope would show there are no micro abrasions. And even if there are micro abrasions it would show the size of the polishing tool, if it was oscillating or rotating. Microscopic investigation would add another data point to this investigation that could be suggestive if not ground breaking.
@akusav3338 ай бұрын
Probably that was made already.
@mishmash867 ай бұрын
I second this suggestion, still curious as to who could have made this and at what point. The 'how' would go a long way to shed light on that.
@A7T0434 ай бұрын
Thank you for this brilliant investigative documentary. You've used science to drive your point home and that is excellent. I would posit: (a) These caves existed from long before Ashoka possibly pre-dating him by a long period of time. So long a period that their memory would have dimmed enough for him to have given away these caves. (b) Usage - these caves, definitely built by people having better technology that that extant in the times of Ashoka, were, as you've brought out, so perfectly engineered for just one purpose - the use of the acoustics. (c) In the Hindu philosophical tradition, "Om" is the very foundational sound / vibration of all creation. Chanting "Om" tends to center the channels of the body and help awaken the "Third Eye". (d) The caves should be seen as acoustic healing chambers used by people far advanced for the time - one's who perhaps left or died out. (e) Ashoka would have had a soft spot for the Ajivikas - they were extreme in their negligence of the human body and, their central thought being that this body prevents their soul from attaining Moksha and must be left unnurtured and un-nourished so this life may end. Jainism and Buddhism draw much from this philosophy; the Buddhha was an Ajivika but found their philosophy to be flawed; He therefore left them and gave out the the Path of the Golden Mean - a way to live this life and yet have Dispassion. Again, thank you for this brilliant documentary.
@white94rabbit8 ай бұрын
These caves are on a completely different level than even the other Archeological anomalies in Peru and Egypt. Truly Astounding.
@PrivateSi7 ай бұрын
They are quite simple. Just needs workers with simple tools. Polished using rock and/or sand. Clearly just a quality finish using standard techniques known for 1000s or 10s or 1000s of years of making posh caves for both the living and dead. The inscriptions are a little dubious though. May have been added later by those claiming the caves for their tribe. I don't even think they needed metal tools, but bronze may have helped. Cave architecture and advanced carving are not as sophisticated as building using stone blocks and parts fitted together.
@ChrisWashburn7 ай бұрын
@@PrivateSi Utter satire, or uneducated. For starters, did you even watch the video?
@PrivateSi7 ай бұрын
@@ChrisWashburn .. Yes, and I've researched the site. The unfinished grotto clearly proves I'm correct. Same for all the unfinished versions of amazing, skill, hand-crafted spaces and objects by those with a great eye. Obsidian and Flint cuts granite better than bronze but they do seem to have regular chisel marks so bronze tools were probably used. Which parts do you think were made by Ancient Machines / Aliens or whatever crazy nonsense you believe? They all look well hand-crafted to me. They were using the same tools up until a few hundred years ago all over the world. Check out all the Medieval efforts made in the last 1000 years, let alone Ancient Greek marble etc.
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS7 ай бұрын
@PrivateSi ok, but this not explaining the need for this level of precision, the symmetries, the volumes of the shapes coordinated, and this specific frequency of 34,4 Hz…. And look again the part dedicated to this unfinished cave, there is more to understand
@PrivateSi7 ай бұрын
@@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS .. Nothing that hasn't been seen elsewhere for 1000s of years. Structures we know were not created via machines.. Not to say they didn't have measuring rope, wooden guide rigs, platforms etc.. The basics. -- They may have used a few slightly more advanced hand tools such as bronze stone saws using sand to do most of the actual cutting once the groove has been started. How would a machine be useful here? -- A curved roof just needs a length of wood pivoting left and right along a centre line from front to back of the cave, to act as a guide. Then it's just hand polished. Very little skill required compared to sculpting a human statue out of a solid block. You need decent knowledge just to choose a suitable block that isn't likely to crack.
@redicej58437 ай бұрын
Mindblowing!! We know so little about our past it's even embarrassing really. We can't even replicate such chamber with modern machinery. I'm convinced an ancient more technologically advanced civilization made all the megalithic sites all over earth.
@robertcutts72647 ай бұрын
The 34.4Hz frequency sits just above the threshold of the transition from beta to gamma brainwaves, associated with a shift into a state of peak cognitive performance, heightened awareness, and flow. Key points about the beta to gamma transition: - Beta waves (13-30 Hz) are associated with normal waking consciousness and active thinking. They occur when the brain is aroused and actively engaged in mental activities. - Gamma waves (30-100+ Hz) are the fastest brainwaves and occur when various parts of the brain are highly synchronized. They are associated with higher states of conscious perception, peak concentration, positive mood, and being "in the zone". - The transition from beta to gamma can take 10-15 minutes of intense focus on a task, leading to a flow state marked by effortless high performance. This shift to gamma is evident during complex problem solving, deep learning, strong emotional responses, and vivid memory recall. - Gamma is thought to bind and synchronize neural activity across distant brain regions, enabling higher-order cognitive functions and heightened states of awareness. In contrast, beta represents more localized processing. - The transition may involve changes in excitability of inhibitory neurons that generate gamma rhythms. Specific neurotransmitters like GABA likely play a role in regulating the beta-gamma shift. In summary, the beta-to-gamma transition reflects a significant shift from ordinary waking consciousness to an extraordinary state of heightened perception, insight, learning and performance. Understanding this transition could provide ways to optimize cognition and mental states. However, the search results do not reveal a detailed physiological mechanism for how the brain switches from beta to gamma dominant rhythms.
@Watch-r3w4 ай бұрын
@@robertcutts7264 👍🥰🔥
@Watch-r3w4 ай бұрын
By meditating in such caves a harmonic resonance would perhaps occur?
@jillrector71767 ай бұрын
So glad someone went into this depth on these caves… and well done!
@ramitbudhraja13708 ай бұрын
Amazing video! Hats off to the work done to create and analyse the point clouds. The caves themselves are unbelievably precise. When I visited the caves a few years ago, I asked a local person - who built them. He said “Lord Vishwakarma”. A god in his own right, but more importantly the architect of the Gods and who created the universe.
@bradleywiesner37746 ай бұрын
The focus and concentration it takes to make something like this IS meditation.
@LovepreetSingh-br5it5 ай бұрын
Line that narrator said in the opening of this video " India is unclassifiable Land." Honestly thats the only way you can describe India. Any book or film that claims to contain entire history or geography or culture of India is complete bullshit. India is not just a country, its country within a country within another country. You can't separate one from another. This diversity is the beauty and identity and more than all strength of my country.
@philiphierons54125 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary well done keep up the good work loved it
@welshmanwalking7 ай бұрын
That was absolutely amazing, so good I had to watch it 3 times, and kept pausing to try and get my head around it. Imagine when we finally work out how they did it and for what purpose, it may change humanity and change the way we think. Thank you for doing this.
@Larrylar15 ай бұрын
I just love the woman that narrates all of these she is the best I love her so interesting her voice is strong and to the point I just love this woman
@mayasamsara8 ай бұрын
We are certanly not living in the peak modern age but cycles of time and forgotten history and a septic, decaying world of hedonism. Godspeed to All..
@realistJB8 ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible how this was accomplished. Well presented & researched, well done B.A.M.
@aidanmacdougall92508 ай бұрын
I warched the new release in French 3 months ago even though I've only got very basic French, but the study of these caves is so extraordinary! Glad to be able to fully understand it now in English. 😊
@travelbugse28298 ай бұрын
Mind blowing film. BAM-Jayan is absolutely brilliant at this. Many thanks!
@Adiyogi1947Ай бұрын
One of the best documantery I have seen till date . An after going through the details.. iam mesmerized by the piece they have made.. astonishing.
@VulgarWhiteyАй бұрын
How have I never heard of these caves before!?? Remercier vous de m’avoir fait découvrir ces merveilles antiques ! Love, from New England, USA
@acatrio.8 ай бұрын
This vase also defies the modern notion of ancient granite craftsmanship: UnchartedX Scanning a Predynastic Granite Vase to 1000th of an Inch Changing the Game for Ancient Precision!
@Vlow527 ай бұрын
Yeah, there is also a Russian channel of a girl who repeated the vase using only primitive tools, took her 7 months. Q
@john-ic5pz7 ай бұрын
tbh, the vases aren't nearly as impressive as large spaces like this or the pyramids. lathes aren't that advanced a machine and aren't beyond ancient humans' ability... Neanderthals made needles (requiring a small eye be drilled) from bone afterall and early humans made beads requiring a relatively highspeed drill. spinning the tool vs spinning the piece isn't a huge leap and having lots of time on one's hands leads to a plethora of innovation and clever developments. obtaining 0.001" precision isn't terribly difficult either if precision is the goal (rather than strict functionality, "good enough") for such small pieces compared to large internal chambers. their knowledge of minerals was impressive so I'm sure they knew diamonds make for an excellent cutting tool.
@acatrio.7 ай бұрын
@@john-ic5pz This is not about lathes. precision is not the main goal, but the signature of the masters. the purpose of the product is unknown, only our projections and expectations. comparing this vase to the needles of nyanderthals is like comparing a flint spear to a space x rocket - incorrect and speculative. i suggest you read the mathematical analysis of the vase's construction and think again about your simplifications. --- unsigned io articles 2023_03_17_Abstractions_Set_In_Granite
@chriselliott46216 ай бұрын
@@john-ic5pz underrated comment.
@chriselliott46216 ай бұрын
@@acatrio. That went over your head, and all the puffing and fancy words to sound clever, didn't make it so. Comparing a flint spear to a space x rocket is the biggest exaggeration to rebuttal I've ever heard of, especially regarding needles by your ancestors the Neanderthals, who also gave you that flint-spear to a space rocket lol..what the heck. Those vases even at the ones showing "signature of the masters"; really isnt that hard to master. That's why they were literally manufacturing these like a factory. Cutting into Granite, removing the internal rock to make cavities to actually start shaping (we are talking about f*ing GRANITE here) the cavities into geometric-rooms, and then precisely doing so at a TRUE MASTER CALIBRE level, is comparable to shooting rockets into space...I'm no rocket scientist, but we are manufacturing those globally since the 60s, ain't no one replicating or mass manufacturing what we see in this video and other sites around the world (China, Egypt etc.). Ignorance is bliss.
@martinharris50177 ай бұрын
Instant subscription. This is top tier investigation.
@fritz33887 ай бұрын
The Indian Mahabharata war was not only fought with Indian war machines. Arjuna was brought to the gods and received an education of how to become a good worrior leader, fly a vimana and how to use its advanced high tech weaponry, like the ships invisible making device and rockets with multiple warheads. Most likely these gods called people lived outside the earth circle on a separate continent-island, but inside the world circle of which the earth is part of. Thats why there are reports from the southern rim of people seeing two suns in the heaven at the same time. This world we live in can only be entered with a blanc memory & exited via birth and death from other cosmic realms, thats a speciality of this realm.
@BeccAcCardenas6 ай бұрын
Light woukd be with fire and mirrors to see at night, IMO. I love sci-fi and the ancients. I believe the use of water was WAY more sophisticated than we think. Its like an awesom puzzle, thank you for this!
@Vishal_More047 ай бұрын
Outstanding and hard work you have done so bring out the mystery of these incredibly beautiful and impossibly perfect caves! Again great work done by your team and makers of this film.
@JAYANFILMS_BAMINVESTIGATIONS7 ай бұрын
Thanks
@paresh19557 ай бұрын
Thanks
@Will_Devaughn7 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Never heard of this.. Trapezoid passage just like in Peru, Machu Pichu..
@j.b.91457 ай бұрын
I would like to hear various musical instruments in these structures. Drums and horns especially. Excellent presentation, thank you!
@TheHairlessGibbon8 ай бұрын
12/10 on the depth of application applied on making this documentary. A beautiful correlation of facts like an orchestra of experts in their particular fields coming together to play a symphony that none have heard before.
@williaminman6558 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@uniqdzign27 ай бұрын
I have been interested in such things for many years, and this is the first time I've seen anything about Barabar caves. Fantastic documentary and subscribed because of it. I have held for many years, the opinion that the Chamber in the Great pyramid of Giza with the empty sarcophagus, which is also a 'resonance' chamber, was possibly to 'transport' bodies elsewhere, using sound. Rather like 'beam me up' technology from sci-fi films. Perhaps these structures were the same!? Looking forward now to viewing your other documentaries.
@patricknoveski64097 ай бұрын
There are so many things we do not even give consideration to on our Planet. The egos and arguments keep us from knowing our past. This video is a first step in moving our knowledge forward by seeing how truly smart someone was in the past. Great job exposing the truth! Wonderful presentation & narrations by all. Film making with passion. Thank you all . P.j.- Carpinteria Ca.
@AArata638 ай бұрын
These caves could be 10s of thousands of years old and we would not know it. What we realize is that creating them demanded a level of knowledge that has not existed in known human history, similar to some other sites around the world with their extreme precision. Ancient people were as smart as us but today we can't wrap our heads around how these caves were made. Not even close.
@soilentgreen8 ай бұрын
Shoutout Jahanna! Rewatching this with your narration made my day! This shizz is insane. This is undeniable proof of lost technology.SUPURB WORK BAM TEAM!!! Thank you both for all your hard work!!
@wout1231008 ай бұрын
it is not kzbin.info/www/bejne/pZ-ZiGqmad2Wmsk you people should get some real education.
@AmorMalakain7 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating, why have I not heard of Barabar before? It should be included on lists of world wonders but not due to its simple appearance.
@codynamite696 ай бұрын
I feel like these caves r going to b the key to understanding of many new things
@krzysztofzpucka72207 ай бұрын
45:52 The bigger circle (R=120m) is to the smaller circle (R=2,77m) as the orbit of Neptune is to the orbit of Venus.
@taleandclawrock26067 ай бұрын
How interesting!
@AllistairNeil6 ай бұрын
Random shit that means nothing. What about mars? What about Saturn and Jupiter? And what about the fact that Neptune is invisible to the naked eye? I think you just pulled these numbers outta Uranus!😂
@Alarix2466 ай бұрын
@@AllistairNeilit's not that they were able to see Neptune by naked eye and modeled it on it; it's knowing why these two planets obey the cosmic resonance. They used what works in the Universe for creating these caves, so that you could spit venom to random observers who kindly share with us their findings.
@adrianandrews22546 ай бұрын
@@AllistairNeil Nice one!
@jerseyjeeper15757 ай бұрын
This is one of the, if not the best documentaries on ancient stone work. Please do more sites. Human history needs proper telling.
@geographyofpeace6 ай бұрын
You guys are incredible: the amount of work and passion you put into these documentaries is outstanding! Thank you very, very much to keep sheding lights into our foggy past! Would be a dream to be working with you! ❤❤❤
@vociferous52678 ай бұрын
Such fascinatingly brilliant stuff. I wish I had more money to donate!!!!!!
@geoffbogie38848 ай бұрын
The part on volume ratios just breaks my brain on whoever created these caves and their capabilities.
@katalinpera90097 ай бұрын
az őseim...Szkíták, Magyarok, Hunok...
@noelmwavu7 ай бұрын
Aryans
@katalinpera90097 ай бұрын
@@noelmwavu Not aryans...a delusion
@DouEditz7 ай бұрын
@@noelmwavuracist
@wayofages1848 ай бұрын
You have to get people and as much equipment as possible out of the way when making acoustical measurements. Sound waves will refract and scatter around any object they encounter. Ascetics using these caves would have sat in the acoustical center or along the acoustical axis while chanting.
@northpole56348 ай бұрын
These caves were made for at least designed using a computer program and I can prove it,... I hope those who are researching these caves can see this comment....the cave which is a rectangle w/ round room is where I'm focusing In Design software we have defaults, minimums and tolerance settings for certain reasons I noticed that the round room tolerances are imposing themselves upon the rectangle part, I'll explain... Let's say that the "software" would require a minimum 6 feet of granite to support a domed ceiling It's appears that the designer added the circle room to the rectangle and the minimum 6 feet of granite needed for the ceiling was added back into the design of the rectangle room , by the software...BEFORE the extraction of materials What resulted was an overhang at the exact height of the dome, and they even moved the circle room further out and connected it with a hallway to keep the overhang from imposing too far into the rectangle.... because changing the softwares minimum tolerance would have compromised the structure The ONLY explanation for the shape of that room is if the actual work involved was minimal, or assisted by technology... as paradoxical as it seems, design was not the most important thing to the builders of these caves If this is not the case, the designer could have simply made a rectangle room with a perfect joining circle , but the SOFTWARE wouldn't allow it
@rtroyer89637 ай бұрын
I would love to hear the effect of these granite barrel shaped interiors have on sounds, chanting, bells,. Bowls, instruments? What a great documentary, thanks for all your hard work! Cheers!
@MikePhilbin19666 ай бұрын
These large-scale super-smooth granite volumes remind one of the large rectangular sarcophagi at the Serapeum in Egypt.
@alexp.61457 ай бұрын
It's interesting that the truly ancient construction projects/artifacts are characterized by insane levels of precision but at the same time are utilitarian and understated.
@wayofages1848 ай бұрын
I like David Lean’s interpretation in “A Passage to India”, in which the thinly fictionalized “Marabar Caves” function as echo chambers. This would suggest that the finishing criteria were acoustic rather than spatial. Picture an ascetic inspecting the caves acoustically and saying “a little more polishing over here, leave that spot alone for a while”, etc. This might explain the mirrored imperfections when measured spatially, which might not be so imperfect acoustically.
@JasonMullavey7 ай бұрын
To me the Barabar caves appears to be a creation for sound meditation, as studies have shown that sound meditation can influence brain waves, leading to more profound relaxation and heightened awareness.
@wayofages1847 ай бұрын
@@JasonMullavey Makes sense. To this day, people spend a lot of time and effort on getting good sound.
@sabineb.56167 ай бұрын
@wayofages, David Lean didn't interpret anything. He adapted E.M. Forster's great novel "A Passage To India". The mystery of the Marabar Caves is the spiritual center of the novel. But Forster didn't conceive his caves as echo chambers at all. There was no conventional echo in Forster's caves. No matter what kind of sound was directed into the caves, everything came back as a "boom"! Forster described a very nihilistic and frightening experience - as if the answer to the all-important question of the meaning of life, the universe and everything else wasn't "42" as Douglas Adams has famously told us, but simply a resounding and somewhat menacing "boom". This dispiriting experience led to a complete spiritual breakdown of one of the main characters of the novel, Mrs. Moore.
@wayofages1847 ай бұрын
@@sabineb.5616 Thanks for your insights. I didn’t read the book, so I only have the movie to go on. In the movie, the Brahmin played by Alec Guinness understood every event and every other player as gears in a cosmic machinery working to redeem the young doctor’s career even before it was ruined. The caves and their echoes played a key part of that machinery, which to me made them look spiritual - in a cold, dark way as you noted, but spiritual in the grand scheme of things as revealed to us by the perceptions of the Brahmin.
@sabineb.56167 ай бұрын
@@wayofages184 , thanks for answering 😀 I really like David Lean's movie, and you described Alec Guiness's character as he comes across in the movie, correctly. The book is a bit more complicated, and EM Forster has introduced several characters whose spirituality is important for the novel. But that doesn't imply that they are right! And that might be the reason why Forster choose to leave the mystery of the Marabar Caves unsolved. Forster himself said :"I don't know what happened in the caves." And the forceful but discouraging "boom" effect which Forster described, doesn't provide much of an answer either. I guess that Forster wanted to say that we must continue to search for answers - and it's possible that our search might never end. An aside: isn't it crazy that David Lean cast Alec Guiness twice in "brown-face" roles which would be given to indigenous actors today? In "Lawrence Of Arabia" Alec Guiness played the historical Arab leader Prince Faisal, and in "A Passage To India" he played an Indian Brahmin. While Alec Guiness is always good, I find David Lean's casting decision puzzling as far as "A Passage To India" is concerned. While there might not have been so many accomplished Arab actors at the beginning of the 1960s, APTI was made 20 years later, and there were a plethora of accomplished Indian actors available! Maybe, David Lean felt that he needed a big star in his movie. Anyway, Alec Guiness comes across differently and more rational than EM Forster's character in the novel. It doesn't feel quite right, and it has been criticized. Anyway, I can recommend reading the novel. I have read it more than once - maybe because I always hoped to solve the mystery of the Marabar Caves - but I never did, and at times I was quite mad at Forster! He was the author! He must've known what had happened to Adela Quested in that darn cave! But I remember that Forster supplied a few round-about answers: Forster believed that his protagonist Dr. Aziz was innocent. He probably didn't attack Adela Quested. But Forster also implied that Adela Quested didn't lie deliberately. And since she didn't believe in a supernatural force, she concluded that Dr. Aziz must have been the culprit. But both characters took their real-life problems into that cave - and while there might not have been a conventional echo effect, something might've manifested itself which caused Adela to believe that she had been attacked. While the Barabar Caves might've inspired Forster, his fictional Marabar Caves with their "boom" sound effects are quite different.
@karinkataja18892 ай бұрын
Amazing! And probably the best documentary I have ever seen. You asked so many good questions. And you asked the masons - one thing the archeologists and historians always seem to fail at. Thank you for that especially! Next I would love to see all this data put in front of a group of sci-fi authors and let them fantasize what kind of tools and technology could have achieved at. As we presently don't have the tools to build something like that it would make sense to me to ask the experts in speculating about science and technologies.
@johngalt56027 ай бұрын
Humans are everywhere throughout this galaxy. A colonizer ship landed many thousands of years ago. This is when these polished rooms were made. By a very advanced human civilization that travels the stars.
@hugoh.96944 ай бұрын
A very advanced civilization with knowledge in very basic chemistry that was applicable anywhere in the universe,
@thedolphin54287 ай бұрын
Edit: I wrote this post below at 1:47:00, just before the video got onto this very topic. I was just about to click away out of disinterest at so much stonemasonry repetition and wondering why they had not mentioned any acoustic testing in nearly 2 fkn hours. --------- Sound. The designs and original purposes was all about acoustics. Vedic science and cosmology was all about sound (1500-500BC). King Ashoka was 250BC so he probably had no fkn idea about the original purposes as they would have been secret mystical sites well before his time. All the researchers need to do is generate tone waves in there, and at the dominant resonant frequency, ALL WILL BECOME CLEAR. I built a recording studio once. The 83.5° non vertical, non-parallel side walls (including the trapezoidal entrance corridors) are to attenuate certain frequencies, just as the dome roofs are to amplify certain ones. The glazed walls and roof are clearly intended to be perfect sound reflectors. I once went to a specifically geometrically designed Tibetan Temple tuned to A pitch (440hz). It was made of timber but had polished interior walls, making it VERY LIVE. Once we stopped singing A inside it, the room kept singing A for over 10 minutes. Monks used it for hours of transcendental chanting, just like cathedrals were originally designed to amplify acapella choirs. Indians have tunable drums, which, when used in resonant chambers would create a massive physiological effect on the body, certainly for transcendental trance and maybe for healing. Aside: Cell vibration against cancer is a new and promising field.
@HollyE-yp6sc7 ай бұрын
Thank you for your clear description of the “why” of these chambers. Healing. Vibration.💚
@xXturbo86Xx7 ай бұрын
All this sound thing is just nonsense.
@thedolphin54287 ай бұрын
@@xXturbo86Xx You're welcome to remain ignorant and arogant about things you dont know about, simpleton. Laughing at you.
@BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left6 ай бұрын
@@xXturbo86Xx "All this sound thing is just nonsense." Why do you say that, do you believe they were just "Rain Shelters"? I consider the acoustics to be of primary importance in the design. Chanting has always been a part of religious experience, right up to and including cathedrals.
@pintubhavana3 ай бұрын
@@xXturbo86Xx no, dear it may not be nonsense
@VeronicaThompson-k7t6 ай бұрын
Great pyramid of Giza and ancient granite rectangles found to be astonishing precise and flawless just as these chambers. The Ancient Mysteries rites and testing and then education of initiates about Universal consciousness could have been a significant purpose worthy of the immense effort. But as we don’t know the technology behind the Great Pyramid we can’t figure out yet the exact technology that was used to build these chambers. We’re not dealing with ancient India, ancient Egypt and all the ancient civilizations that were connected at some point in time. Lots to learn about cosmology, etc., from these marvels.
@terrycross68385 ай бұрын
Hi to all. I text this to all, with humanities love. Let me say at the outset. without knowing the totality of the human discomfort and discontent to your documentary, I wish it state to those of whom are brave enough to listen, not just to listen however to hear the history, true history of us, all of us gathered in all of our humanity, without the thought of political persecution and percussion, without humanity’s contemptuous use of corrupting modern thought. Look to the past, to find humanity’s future. Simply, look to the past, look to the heavens, the stars, the sun and the moon. Kind and sincere regards T.
@terrycross68385 ай бұрын
Also PS. Think about, not your technology however past technology, not fire, not the wheel, not modern technology, however technology, lost to time by design, how did they accomplish what we can not in modern times and technology accomplish ??? I post these questions, not to be provocative, however to bring your thoughts of the past, for the betterment of humanity’s future. No more, no less. Look too the past for humanity’s future, however only in humanity’s solidarity we will find, life. We are of this planet. We are of the stares. We are all of what we call humanity, belong to one another.
@13garage._7 ай бұрын
As a person who knows sound , architecture and stonework+machinery - i am absolutely speechless. Moreover - it's appalling, that instead of studying these caves and learning - as humanity we are interested in tiktoks and making everything cheaper simpler and of less quality then before
@analyticequals6 ай бұрын
I dont 486000 views isnt bad
@johnlarsen35086 ай бұрын
*than
@intosound9136 ай бұрын
i concur, the things we are told, don't seem to match what we see. why is main stream archeology so ass backwards? you must defend the time and limitations we have set on humanity, because we said so. even though every dig seems to show they are so wrong about the history of humanity.
@topchief7775 ай бұрын
Because their asleep. They think they have to follow each other & be like each other without any real understanding of what SHARING actually means!
@Accelle-kx8yh5 ай бұрын
That’s what most people do .I guess sometimes they think learning has something to do with work they don’t want to do.But on the other hand we have people like you and me and many more searchers and achievers that would like to learn everything from distant past into our present and may future.And for me I’m absolutely into higher conciseness and civilization and I’ve never believed the stories that the Pyramids are built with slaves and some harder stone or a bronze hammers they should be able to made the big stones so accurate that we are not able to make them,like the big head of Ramses(could be another one)3/5 Meters perfect shape and same thing,we could not build anything like that today.So I said.If we don’t know how and not able to means we are just not so advanced!!!
@mrglasecki8 ай бұрын
* the craftsmanship to make the "caves" is C L E A R L Y not the same as the graffiti artist that wrote the messages
@ThizOne7 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly
@ivayloivanov37445 ай бұрын
Same almost every ancient monument in the world.
@AArata638 ай бұрын
Increased precision is applied only when needed as the cost increases massively with more and more precision. This level of extreme precision, for a massive cost, was needed for something of similarly extreme importance.
@westho73147 ай бұрын
Cost obviously had no relevance in this endeavor, timeless ness along wirh skill , patience and devotion to task.
@AArata637 ай бұрын
@@westho7314 Normally that goes for something grandiose or spectacular or beautiful if some king wanted to impress others or leave a legacy. Then money was no problem. But in none of those cases such extreme precision is required or needed. Not even close. This over the top precision was required for a very important function. What that function was? We don't know yet.
@spiritlevelstudios7 ай бұрын
@@AArata63they are clearly masturbation chambers. Go in, jack off in precise darkness, vacate cave, bake some naan bread.
@Swuori4 ай бұрын
Amazing document, thank you very much!
@shreyanshkashyap57425 күн бұрын
I visited this place while I was in High Scool during my school's trip but never closely observed the caves like this time. Your film & kind of research behind this film is extraordinary like these caves. Lots of love ❤ 🇮🇳
@sereanaduwai83137 ай бұрын
This simply boggles the mind. That people who came before us were building and modelling granite as if they were working with soft and pliable material. What skills and dedication to achieve such perfection that even in modern times the experts are scratching their heads. Hats off to the ancient master builders.
@russloades33287 ай бұрын
Boggles the mind oh yes!
@eddiesanchez50447 ай бұрын
Speechless, not just by the information, which is truly amazing, but by the great graphics, data, specialists' opinions, reporting, etc., that you wonderfully, provided. I am happy to have found your channel and consider myself a new fan. You are the Michael Jordans of your field!!!
@metalextras7 ай бұрын
18:12 That is NOT any industrial slab, that is a granite Surface plate! The mother of all measuring tools! Even now only The swiss, Japanese and Chinese can make that and a 3000+ year old Indian tech made 9x more precise!