Entering the Megalithic Osirion! UnchartedX Stream Highlights #3

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UnchartedXLive

UnchartedXLive

Күн бұрын

Entering the Osirion! UnchartedX Twitch Stream Highlights.
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Пікірлер: 113
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
Check out my longer livestream on UnchartedX on the Osirion here: kzbin.infoBcoAslMFHC0?si=-NYI-O-MQNYvHG-n
@Kitties-of-Doom
@Kitties-of-Doom 10 ай бұрын
I'm a big fan, I have some work dedicated to you, check out Builder reacts to historian part3. There is a really interesting piece I found. it will Kill the debunk camp if you scan it and make a clip on it.
@lander1591
@lander1591 10 ай бұрын
Those holes under the pillar bases look like Rope ways.. I think there may have been an Industrial purpose to it.. possibly part of a water distribution system.
@MichaelRath-t9s
@MichaelRath-t9s 10 ай бұрын
Most defo 😊
@MarvinMonroe
@MarvinMonroe 10 ай бұрын
Its like literally a skyscraper built on top of a spring and we are standing on top of it. When you think about it that way, its up there with the craziest stuff ever
@paulmcneill2666
@paulmcneill2666 10 ай бұрын
It was good to see the places on the map .
@dubselectorr345
@dubselectorr345 8 ай бұрын
Keeping this in mind.
@ekschiz
@ekschiz 10 ай бұрын
He's saying: I am the new big manager/boss and Ben and yousef are the junior managers... something like that
@adee957
@adee957 10 ай бұрын
Great reportage as usual! 👏 Could these wholes, or channels been used for channel water/saltwater? I heard an idea of using saltwater as batteries in the Pyramids. Is there, or was there any indication that supports that theory?
@dantod4142
@dantod4142 10 ай бұрын
Another great episode of ancient Egypt
@catsfive
@catsfive 10 ай бұрын
Ben, the museum in Sharm el Sheikh is easily one of the best museums in all of Egypt. Worth it.
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
yep I've been in there, great museum
@catsfive
@catsfive 10 ай бұрын
Then be a big man and get on the debate stage with him,@@drummerdad80. Contact him, assuming you're capable of anything other than the word salad you just sent here
@Dtansing1
@Dtansing1 10 ай бұрын
So the structures were originally below or above the Nile river levels for generations and were then filled in? Looking forward to you getting to the bottom of this very allusive puzzle. Many more puzzles to come I imagine. Just lucky we are both living in this age where we get to see truth and more fascinating discoveries. Keep up the good work Ben. Hello from Australia. Big fan.
@mariusfridlund55
@mariusfridlund55 10 ай бұрын
nice
@chrisgeocos1814
@chrisgeocos1814 10 ай бұрын
This new format is a great supplement to your more produced work.
@joelhaslemore6326
@joelhaslemore6326 10 ай бұрын
​@drummerdad80 How many times you been to Egypt buddy
@chrisgeocos1814
@chrisgeocos1814 10 ай бұрын
@@drummerdad80 Anyone that’s going out there, taking footage, compiling it together, and making it available to the public is doing a great amount of work, whether you agree with the conclusions or not. That’s my opinion. I’m def grateful to be able to see footage of these sights and hear interesting takes from alternative sources.
@AncienttechArnie
@AncienttechArnie 10 ай бұрын
​@@drummerdad80anyone that even believes and defends this crap is just nothing but gullible... sorry for there luck
@AncienttechArnie
@AncienttechArnie 10 ай бұрын
​@@drummerdad80well let's see if this comment thread gets hidden, we all know ben bailed on ancient presence, that was to funny, and he says he gets censorship, but he is the one who censors anyone with facts to show he's wrong
@AncienttechArnie
@AncienttechArnie 10 ай бұрын
​@@drummerdad80yeah archeologist are just the most power hungry people out there, they are so rich and control the world lol
@marshalbass7098
@marshalbass7098 10 ай бұрын
Need to bring a hydrologist
@GriffMJ
@GriffMJ 10 ай бұрын
Top Tip:- Always carry a torch/flashlight with you to look into tube drill holes .... like an Olight i5R
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
yeah i do have them with me just didn't think i would need one in the osirion as it's usually blazing hot daylight in there, and you can't normally get down to look into that particular hole
@neilhedley6080
@neilhedley6080 10 ай бұрын
Could the hole act as a drain to stop the water level increasing
@MIKESTREED
@MIKESTREED 10 ай бұрын
That was my thought also
@serenitynow66
@serenitynow66 10 ай бұрын
I luv this format Ben. Thank you mate I totally respect your honesty!!
@Bobby-ro7jn
@Bobby-ro7jn 10 ай бұрын
Why are some areas closed off to the public?
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
they're monetizing access, hence 'special permissions.' It would be heaving with tourists otherwise. I'd rather they put hefty price tags on interesting spots rather than make them off limits to everyone.
@robertrose8160
@robertrose8160 10 ай бұрын
Just thinking of the Osirion site in terms of Quaternary Geology. If this temple predates the Temple of Abydos, then how old could it be? For instance if the age is similar to that of the Sphinx, (lets say 12,000 years old) then the ground-water level at the Osirion would inevitably have been much lower. It can't have been otherwise. At that time sea level was much lower, probably at least 60 to 70 metres lower than today. It is clear that in the short-term, the Nile River is under-fit in terms of the width of the river relative to the space it requires. The floodplain is much wider than it needs to be. Next, 12,000 years ago, the floodplain at Abydos was at a much lower altitude relative to the Osirion than it is in the current year. At the time of the last glacial maximum the Nile River likely occupied a narrower "canyon" with the river level probably at least 80 metres lower than it is at the moment. Probably incised into bedrock. Subsequent to the LGM the bed and floodplain of the Nile have been aggrading at about the rate at which sea level has been changing. So, 12,000 years ago it would have been possible to drive a horizontal tunnel from the floodplain of the Nile to the Osirion. At a depth of 40 metres below the Osirion the rock would have been dry(ish). The aquifer that currently supplies ground-water to the Osirion is likely currently at a lower level than the ground-water level under the Nile floodplain. Ultimately the aquifer is probably supplied with water derived from beneath the Nile floodplain. This wouldn't have been the case 12,000 years ago. So, it is odds-on that the aquifer would have been dry(ish) during construction of the temple, if the temple dates from that period. Also, if one was looking for evidence of major human population centers near Abydos dating from 12,000 years ago, these would most likely now be situated more than 40 metres below the modern floodplain of the Nile. Similar reasoning could be applied to the construction of the Sphinx at Giza. Lets say it dates from 12,000 years ago. The settlements occupied by the builders are almost certainly situated deep below the Nile Floodplain. That is where one is most likely to find (buried) evidence of lost ancient technology as well.
@Marspalacios
@Marspalacios 4 ай бұрын
I don’t think that square recessed in the middle is meant to hold a pillar. What evidence exists that that is what it is for? Is it because the other pillars have that recession as well? I don’t think that is enough evidence to conclude that that recession with the tube is meant to hold a pillar. In my opinion, it is meant to be a smaller pool where people can either use the water for healing or drinking or just plain cleaning their feet before they come in or exit the Osirion.
@_Brohan
@_Brohan 10 ай бұрын
so they're just pumping water, from the aquifer, back into the ground to go into the aquifer
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
i don't know, its possible it's going elsewhere, but i believe the aquifer below the osirion is very specific to that spot. they're pumping it somewhere.
@shawnverble2130
@shawnverble2130 10 ай бұрын
Ben, Why do the Egyptian structures never employ a arch or vault in their buildings? Thanks
@ryurc3033
@ryurc3033 10 ай бұрын
Isn't that what some of the other sites are? Big boxes with super heavy lids, that unfortunately got plundered a long long time ago.
@annewitkowski7586
@annewitkowski7586 10 ай бұрын
​@@ryurc3033"vault" in this context is a curved ceiling, an extended arch
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
Some do. The chamber in the 3rd pyramid at Giza and that beneath the Lahun pyramid are both granite rooms with arched ceilings
@Klusterfk10
@Klusterfk10 7 ай бұрын
Am I the only one seeing the "henge" of Gobekli Tepe? Take away the piled stone walls, and what is left? Was it intentionally buried to preserve it's message?
@jamesmorss9940
@jamesmorss9940 10 ай бұрын
This is becoming my Saturday morning thing!
@charliecarpenter2840
@charliecarpenter2840 10 ай бұрын
Endoscope is pretty cheap these days, would be useful I believe. Got one at work, very handy.
@Imtahotep
@Imtahotep 10 ай бұрын
In general, I think you would benefit from Dr. David Rohl's research. Roundly; but especially w/regard to locating the plains of Shinar East of Eden [the Edin]
@billyghostal
@billyghostal 10 ай бұрын
Id like to see Danny MacAskill ride his bike in there
@MrMarvell
@MrMarvell 10 ай бұрын
That snippet from JRE 961 is brilliant, I wonder if Shermer has gone to Egypt since, does anyone know? I dont think he has?
@BeagleBoy-fu4im
@BeagleBoy-fu4im 10 ай бұрын
Nobody cares.
@MrMarvell
@MrMarvell 10 ай бұрын
@@BeagleBoy-fu4im have you been to the Step Pyramid?
@charliecarpenter2840
@charliecarpenter2840 10 ай бұрын
Intro music on point, very nice.
@Stacklightning
@Stacklightning 10 ай бұрын
I was looking at some stone work the other day and thinking about the complexities of the job I was looking at. It had multiple course heights and mortar in between stones, but was very neat masonry and no mean feat to accomplish. The realisation dawned on me that the reason the megalithic builders didn't need mortar was because the placement interface was mortar, the intersection between stones must have been in a liquid phase. Another thing that mystifies me is underground lighting. With all these places being below ground by tens of meters, how could people see where they were going in the dark? Why do you have beautiful artwork in places where you cannot see the art? Electricity must have been available somehow, but that implies circuitry! There is a certain area of overlap between the two topics, mortar and electricity. Is it possible that vibration frequency was used to cause local phase change in the rock face and the same level of understanding provided comprehension of electrical properties and a source of electricity for a battery of some sort? The filament of the bulb is not obviously possible. Notably absent is any evidence of technology and manufacturing. There's no waste site, no landfill area with remains and residues, no pollution after practice associated with ordinary human activity. There was no use of plastics. Whoever these people were, they were highly intelligent and aware. The knowledge base for the construction at Giza is complete. Mathematically, linguistically, spiritually and included unfathomable knowledge of the cosmos apparently. This knowledge base was expressed globally here on Earth! The most breathtaking evidence is the granite vessel work. The absolute comprehension and love for the material, shows veneration for the fact of its existence. The vessels are a language and message in themselves, very similar to the pyramids themselves, a statement of existence! The chrystal chemistry of the rock was fully comprehended. Is it possible we travelled back in time to visit ourselves?!...
@al2207
@al2207 10 ай бұрын
aliens technologies , no pile of debris because the desintegrator cutting tool they are using turn rock into sand , same argument is valid in Aswan quarry
@TheGreatest1974
@TheGreatest1974 10 ай бұрын
Don’t be RIDICULOUS. ‘How did they see in the dark?’ They used OIL LAMPS. my god.
@debradaniels6123
@debradaniels6123 9 ай бұрын
Correction - "....evidenced by..."
@dubselectorr345
@dubselectorr345 8 ай бұрын
​@@TheGreatest1974you would suffocate and the walls would be full of soot. Try again
@echoarcade_nj
@echoarcade_nj 10 ай бұрын
great video... I've been subscribed and if you need any help with music/sound design... hit me up (I don't want to paste all my info on yt.. .. but, an idea I have ..concerning the giant megalithic/obelisks .. in Aswan and pregnant woman ..Lebanon.. I believe both sites to be Greco - Roman period. Again.. no hard evidence, just conjecture, but, both un-excavated stones appear to be the Roman's "attempting to upstage / 1-up previous structures.. only able to carve , but not excavate or move the heavy stones... I do not know.. I've never been to either locations, just read in reference books and internet vids..??? lmk?
@LordJabu-Jabu
@LordJabu-Jabu 10 ай бұрын
Hi Ben
@johnsmith-fr3sx
@johnsmith-fr3sx 10 ай бұрын
Drain conduit drilled into the granite. This implies that there was more rainfall when these structures were built. The present day water level is below this conduit but that was likely not the case then. It seems they hid the drain conduit from view for aesthetic reasons. Then there is the question why they created these basins that collect water. The dating of all these structures is unknown but from the context they predate dynastic Egypt. The Sahara still had lakes 5000 BC. When this structure was new it would not have been buried and would not have filled up with water.
@michaelstiller2282
@michaelstiller2282 10 ай бұрын
If its a drain system. Then there has to be a water management system over the entire site. Otherwise this drain would fail in short time. These systems basically have back up systems, that's aren't utilized until a surge to the system is present. Water management systems are not easy to implement. Modern structures fail all the time, and that's with pumps.
@udonenomee2117
@udonenomee2117 9 ай бұрын
It maintained the water level. Any higher of a waterline and it drained down the hole. The easiest way to keep looters away was to flood something. Maybe they cherished the water in such a way that flooding their offerings was better than having them taken. Or, even today, if concrete sinks or settles they pump hydraulic fluid to raise it. Maybe there was a settling issue, either preemptive/ preventative or made later when the problem arose.
@jeffsmith50001
@jeffsmith50001 10 ай бұрын
Cheers Ben, another 2 pipe problem. Unless you you watch Ancient Architecs.
@hooekoo9307
@hooekoo9307 10 ай бұрын
I watched a video some time ago and I can't remember exactly, but i think the guy was at that temple with a group of scientists and or archaeologist studying the temple and he wondered if there was something special with the water, so they tested it and found that it was drinkable, so they filtered it and started drinking it for a month or so, he wore glasses. and said after drinking the water for some time he didn't need his glasses anymore. wish I could find that video so I could link it here.
@UnchartedX
@UnchartedX 10 ай бұрын
yeah I think it's in Jahannah's video on it
@HugeK
@HugeK 10 ай бұрын
why... why is there no massive archiological dig happening if they hit grannite?
@reefsroost696
@reefsroost696 10 ай бұрын
"They" don't want to know.
@reallife7375
@reallife7375 10 ай бұрын
Yep
@kyledamron
@kyledamron 7 ай бұрын
What do you think the Osireion was originally used for Ben?
@ericwid
@ericwid 10 ай бұрын
The holes sound like a simple drain . Going from high to low it would drain the upper pillar area
@shaunroscoe5617
@shaunroscoe5617 10 ай бұрын
Osirion energy storage facility a giant battery
@cremersalex
@cremersalex 10 ай бұрын
The Osirion ... again?!
@dubselectorr345
@dubselectorr345 10 ай бұрын
Always and forever, will study .
@GODT1TAN
@GODT1TAN 10 ай бұрын
3:07 could the hole have been used to place a horn or digiradoo up to to make it easier to move other blocks ontop of them? Edit: or perhaps to add healing properties to water in those holes 🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️ never know what kinds of things they did back then
@richardharris5200
@richardharris5200 9 ай бұрын
Those gaps are not because they stacked multi ton blocks giggles. If you know about construction you’ll be able to figure out poly formation and so forth
@dudu88xx
@dudu88xx 10 ай бұрын
Oh Dear...
@ShaunDYST
@ShaunDYST 10 ай бұрын
Maybe they stuck rods into those holes to help push or pull them into place. Do those small holes meet line of sight of each other? Sounds silly but maybe they put something in the holes to align them with the other pieces like a puzzle so it was fool proof.
@mikelee9886
@mikelee9886 10 ай бұрын
I know what the nubs are for. It's so simple. Think "legos". Notice that there aren't just nubs, but some blocks have inverted nubs. They are a way to make blocks interlock, so that they can survive earthquakes. When we see them randomly sticking out in some areas like on walls or casing stones, it's because these stones are being re-used, and the way that they fit best just happens to have the nubs facing outward once in awhile. They don't remove them when the building is purely functional, like in the case of a wall, but we do see that in the case of things like casing stones they would be removed along with the "pillowing" section of the blocks. What we're seeing when we see the nubs, are blocks that are being re-used from older buildings, and those nubs would usually be protruding into recesses in other blocks, helping keep them in place with each other.
@billyghostal
@billyghostal 10 ай бұрын
Seriously doubt someone rebuilt Sacsayhuamen but ok.
@johncollins9438
@johncollins9438 10 ай бұрын
for your theory to work, you would also expect to find the inverse. holes or square cut outs in the stones where these *Legos* would interlock.. edit missed where you said inverted nubs..not sure I've seen those
@celebratecrypto3693
@celebratecrypto3693 10 ай бұрын
Go look at the sites in South America on the walls the nuns are purely on the outside of the wall and the way they are shaped they were made to be facing the outside of the wall so that theory can be squashed right now but good try
@joelhaslemore6326
@joelhaslemore6326 10 ай бұрын
Nope not buying it 🐍
@MichaelRath-t9s
@MichaelRath-t9s 10 ай бұрын
No chance they are re used blocks. The effort to move them & rebuild with no damage to edgè ect. NO WAY .😅
@anim8torfiddler871
@anim8torfiddler871 10 ай бұрын
The tube-drilled hole in the Pillar Socket/base may have a bunch of mineral deposits accumulated on the stone faces with the mouth. If I recall, the Ossirion is close to the High Aswan Dam, and Every video I've seen has shown STANDING WATER in those rectangular depressions. The explanation given was that this groundwater at such a high level was a direct result of the Nile being impounded behind the dam, that had been completed in the early 1960s. I'm just guessing that the groundwater seeping upward into the Ossirion, carries a bunch of minerals that had accumulated for a VERY LONG time
@TheRotnflesh
@TheRotnflesh 10 ай бұрын
The secrets of the Osirion lie between ultrasonics and this fact: The pressure required to make water supercritical is 217.7 atmospheres. Imagine what the weight of the Osirion is, pressing down on a water jet beneath each pillar. Imagine how much energy it is trapping in the granite, for example. Energy being generated by opposition to water building to a supercritical state from the pressures. These energies could be converted in a variety of ways into work. I'm willing to bet the areas between the pillars (the deep zones) have outlets from the aquifer to prevent supercritical state, as that would eat right through granite because of its unusual properties).
@DarknessYT2010
@DarknessYT2010 10 ай бұрын
drainage
@DarknessYT2010
@DarknessYT2010 10 ай бұрын
so it dosnt over flow
@MichaelRath-t9s
@MichaelRath-t9s 10 ай бұрын
I always wonder wit was just how many injuries the folks building these structures as u never see any images on walls with folks with eye injuries lost limbs ect.. Think about it
@charleswalker2484
@charleswalker2484 10 ай бұрын
pewl filled with wadah
@gmvs62
@gmvs62 10 ай бұрын
Talk with Geoffery Drumm.
@edgoy9629
@edgoy9629 10 ай бұрын
You should move the screen around more. I almost read something once.
@brendanwood1540
@brendanwood1540 10 ай бұрын
The hole is clearly a drain for the pools. The water level only goes as high as the hole. It would make sense for it to be a drain if it goes down.
@michaelstiller2282
@michaelstiller2282 10 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same. Its a gravity drain, used to maintain the water level in the pit. But that's a rather large hole. Generally the drain is scaled for water volume. And it looks like 4-6 inches wide, so its scaled for a surge, due to weather. So lots of water got into this place. But that water has to go somewhere, where it doesn't become apart of the cycle of water flow. So unless there's a storm drain system in the ground, that goes to daylight i don't see how it works. These sort of systems fail, without back up systems.
@brendanwood1540
@brendanwood1540 10 ай бұрын
@@michaelstiller2282 The scale could also be a limitation of the tooling used. A very long rod would be needed. Plus a certain space to remove the material. The bit itself would need to be robust to handle the torque. There is an interesting aspect to Egyptian culture. They had three seasons; cultivation, harvest, and flood. So flood water surges were a common annual occurrence.
@earthbndmsfit
@earthbndmsfit 10 ай бұрын
Land of chem
@universalvibe72
@universalvibe72 10 ай бұрын
Sub par production. Get a better viewing app have a better slideshow vs an open folder… looks a mature. Like you don’t care
@unchartedxlive
@unchartedxlive 10 ай бұрын
yeah ok speilburg, they're highlights from a livestream, deal with it
@dubselectorr345
@dubselectorr345 10 ай бұрын
This is 100% stream cuts. For full length original footage, quality edits, and films which directly present Ben's work, go to: kzbin.info. Thanks
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