Explore the role of technology in advancing international development goals in the Master of Science in Global Technology and Development. Create solutions by focusing on history, social science concepts, government policies and development projects from around the world. asuonline.asu.edu/online-degree-programs/graduate/master-science-global-technology-development/?ecd22=&
@rajthaparАй бұрын
Shame on SciShow for using a clickbait title
@ThisUserDoesNotExist.Ай бұрын
PLEASE PLEASE STOP MOVING YOUR HEAD AND HANDS SO MUCH. ITS OFF-PUUTING TO OTHERWISE A GOOD VIDEO.
@LogicalThinking-p2sАй бұрын
Designs of the pyramids like a water pump
@kdm_entertainmentАй бұрын
No.
@DigitalhunnyАй бұрын
They were not ever proven to be tombs or temples! The valley of the kings is were the tombs are. The Egyptian's found them, that's why there's nothing about them being built. Someday the Egyptian government will figure out what's under their foundation & then we'll figure out what exactly they were built for.
@nachoijpАй бұрын
When a question is like "why did this ancient civilization did this thing in such a weird way?", the answer is almost always "they didn't", and I love that :p
@alexrogers777Ай бұрын
Yeah the answer to this whole video is super simple, it's just: the river moved
@mischaroweАй бұрын
@@alexrogers777 No the river didn't move it expanded. It literally "branched out".
@filonin2Ай бұрын
@@mischarowe It contracted, actually. It converged into a smaller, more compact version with less branches. The opposite of branching out.
@baleywhite8311Ай бұрын
Wouldnt that still be consodered moving ? @mischarowe
@mischaroweАй бұрын
@@baleywhite8311 Depends if you think branches of rivers are the same thing as the main river itself.
@dreamingwolf8382Ай бұрын
"Why are the pyramids in Egypt?" Silly SciShow. They're there because they're too big to move to th3 british museum ...
@foamslinger2787Ай бұрын
GOTTEM
@AnthonyMorris-e3cАй бұрын
Awesome answer 😂
@StyphonАй бұрын
Caesar: I came, I saw, I conquered British explorers: I came, I saw, I took it home
@joels7605Ай бұрын
You win. That was great.
@lenabreijer1311Ай бұрын
But the French did it first.
@ODISethАй бұрын
That’s wild to think that the Sahara used to be mostly swampland. The Earth ebbs and flows, changes all the time, but it’s a lot harder to remember that our lives are limited to such a small scale. I wonder if there’s like a simulated timelapse that visualizes the transformation, that would be really cool to see
@randall.chamberlainАй бұрын
Yeah that would be awesome
@TheDanEdwardsАй бұрын
"That’s wild to think that the Sahara used to be mostly swampland. "
@scottabc72Ай бұрын
During the time she is talking about when the Sahara was much wetter than now, it was still kind of dry but more like the American Midwest/Great Plains. In areas with large river systems, especially the Nile, there were large swampy areas. There are also traces of large completely dried up rivers and lakes in the interior Sahara as well. This process took many 1000s of years and of course if you go millions of years back, large parts were even the bottom of oceans.
@rainydaylady6596Ай бұрын
@@TheDanEdwardsHey, be cool. It IS wild to think the Sahara was mostly swampland. Why the attitude? We're here to learn. I'm 70 and I get excited by a lot of things on SciShow.
@samstromberg5593Ай бұрын
@@rainydaylady6596 He's not even saying you can't get excited about learning he's just saying that particular piece of information is factually incorrect I would highly recommend AtlasPro's video on it (it used to be a Savanah but not a swampland)
@joshuamitchell2Ай бұрын
Why are the pyramids in Egypt? Because the British couldn't figure how to get them back to England (I'll see myself out)
@kbee225Ай бұрын
Good one.
@MrAdryan1603Ай бұрын
Lol 😄
@tahm22Ай бұрын
😅
@nicanproudАй бұрын
This is probably true 😂
@Dolph-fe2ksАй бұрын
Oh, no ya don't... get your @$$ back in here! We paid for a show! 🤣🤣🤣
@ender22782Ай бұрын
This is the first episode I have seen hosted by Niba, and I think she did a great job - I really like her voice and narration style!
@livingroomsuperstarАй бұрын
smooth voice and pacing and SUPER pretty. Yea, more Niba lol
@paavobergmann4920Ай бұрын
I agree. I am not a native english speaker, and her narration is very easy to follow, very clear, perfect pace, not too fast, but lively enough to be really engaging.
@DrumStrumАй бұрын
Yes. Outstanding job. I came to the comments to make sure someone had said this!
@FairbrookWingatesАй бұрын
Coming from the Midwest USA, we have half-moon shaped lakes scattered everywhere, remnants of previous river channels. Many are turned to stagnant swamps. Some are fully grown over and only satellite imagery or a geologist could tell "this spot" was an old river channel. Still, it was due to this that my first thought on "why seven miles from the river?" was "because the river moved?". Pretty close to correct, much to my amusement. Fascinating discovery and I look forward to what is found by tracing this ancient riverbed!
@jermafitzgerald2368Ай бұрын
Yeah, those are called oxbow lakes. Great thought, you're completely right - meandering, curvy rivers often cut off whole sections like that
@entombedlamb5356Ай бұрын
She said about '7 kilometers' which is in some crazy measuring system. In 'Merica, it's about 1 2/3 trip around the Talladega speedway or 3827 Bald Eagles.
@FairbrookWingatesАй бұрын
@@jermafitzgerald2368 Ah, thank you for the term! I'm so overtired right now I"m lucky I could write coherent sentences.
@FairbrookWingatesАй бұрын
@@entombedlamb5356 Hehe, oops, my paraphrasing skipped a measuring system, please pardon.
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
What other geological or environmental clues can help us understand the historical course of this ancient river?
@RayneTamАй бұрын
Figuring out there was a branch of the Nile there was genius! Love hearing about what geology can teach us.
@sarahleonard7309Ай бұрын
Reading some of the earliest comments on this video makes me really glad that I don't understand the appeal of hate watching. I genuinely don't understand why you would spend your time watching material that you despise just so that you can leave negative comments on it for people to argue with. (Let's be honest, no one actually believes that these negative comments are going to persuade anyone.) Especially because all that does is give more watch time, interaction, and ad revenue to the thing that you hate.
@CynaditeАй бұрын
90% sure they're all bots anyway
@shorgothАй бұрын
@@Cynadite Wouldn't be surprised, authoritarians regimes are poisoning relationships in other countries to weaken us. They really jump at anything mildly controversial to push extreme narratives so we don't react to their land grabs as we are too busy fighting each other.
@BojackHorseman0098Ай бұрын
@@Cynadite bots for what, to sell more gram Hancock books? I think these are mostly just lonely
@CynaditeАй бұрын
@@BojackHorseman0098 do the bots on twitter who say earth is flat have a purpose? do the instagram bots who say everything is animal abuse have a purpose? no, they exist to make people rage and reply for engagement, it's dead internet theory.
@kingofpigs6630Ай бұрын
What kind of comments were they?
@quiestinliterisАй бұрын
Wow, a lot of these comments show a remarkable lack of understanding of how research communication works. Crapping on you citing your sources because it's not YOUR research? Because... NOT citing your sources would be better? 🙄
@Dolph-fe2ksАй бұрын
Right!?? Welcome to 2024... where (& when) one can discredit a lifetime of toiling, struggle, & phenomenal research with one grossly (yet, tragicomically) misused term: Anecdotal. 🤦🏻🤷🏻
@SinSefiaАй бұрын
In fact, while I was trying to avoid politics for a while, I can't help but feel like such idiocracy feels like a preview of USA presidential election results 😞
@Dolph-fe2ksАй бұрын
@@SinSefia One could make a strong case for that view having already transpired with the Reagan administration. That said, President Biff sure did take the baton well.
@Fastlan3Ай бұрын
It has always been this way, it just the internet gave people's ignorance a megaphone and display case.
@jameskim1505Ай бұрын
Trust me bro
@berendharmsenАй бұрын
Anything other than 'there used to be a river there' would have surprised me. But nice that it's confirmed.
@VaradiioАй бұрын
Yea this was my take-away. The first half of the video really doesn't respect the intelligence or imagination of humans.
@australien6611Ай бұрын
Right? Pretty sure this was already a well known fact and has been for some time
@jeffputman3504Ай бұрын
Was it a branch of the Nile River, or was it a canal dug to divert the water to where they wanted it to go? In the 1800s, several canals like this were dug to feed water into the Miami-Erie Canal.
@australien6611Ай бұрын
@@jeffputman3504 apparently the nile used to run alot closer to the pyramids and then canals were dug where needed.
@iBeo01Ай бұрын
It’s also pretty bad to build next to a river due to flooding. So having decent spacing is a must
@HotelPapa100Ай бұрын
Well, they built them on an elevated plateau. So that should have taken care of that.
@TophMaGoatsАй бұрын
Tell that to thousands of civilizations that built near rivers.
@foamslinger2787Ай бұрын
flood plains are why Ancient Egypt existed at all
@davidmcgill1000Ай бұрын
Those flood plains are called farm land. Would be very foolish to waste that space on structures you can't eat.
@lokisg3Ай бұрын
Bro, do you build the pyramids?
@oscar_charlieАй бұрын
Excellent voice and camera presence. She should be in more videos.
@celestial1989Ай бұрын
She is in quite a lot of SciShow episodes. Each member has their specialties. Lots of good episodes including her :D
@ikonic_artworksАй бұрын
shes also soo pretty 😢
@camplethargic8Ай бұрын
I love how each word gets its own nod or hand gesture or body wriggle. Just watching her is exhausting.
@50-50_GrindАй бұрын
And then there's me who wants to do CENSORED CENSORED CENSORED
@aaronthenorm5400Ай бұрын
Ohhhh.... someone has a crush. 😊
@Beanedict_CАй бұрын
Absolutely wild and cool that we can still learn new things that fundamentally change how we think of the literal landscape of such a well known site all these centuries later
@Alex-js5lgАй бұрын
Okay, science is truly incredible sometimes. We sent satellites into space so we could shoot radar waves at the surface of the earth and analyze what the geography likely was thousands of years ago.
@HotelPapa100Ай бұрын
I am surprised they didn't go looking for that branch of the Nile earlier. Knowing what we know about changing waterways this would have been my first hypothesis. I jumped to the conclusion before you started to list the clues that lead to the discovery.
@Meganos999Ай бұрын
the conspiracy theories on EVERYTHING pyramid related are INSANE and seeing it put so so simply and normally is so…relaxing and nice
@MOSMASTERINGАй бұрын
The pyramids are claimed to be just about everything.!. from sound generators to ancient batteries to compasses to astronomy charts.. burial chambers, impossible to build.. anything else?
@LoreTunderinАй бұрын
This is really fascinating stuff. I wonder if LIDAR mapping would show the depression of the old channel, and if we could use that technology to find similar extinct waterways in dry areas of Australia, Jordan, Argentina, etc..
@3nertiaАй бұрын
That would be really neat! It would be really cool if we could track such geological changes over centuries or even millennia!
@AndreaCrispАй бұрын
That would be awesome. LIDAR show how huge the Mayan civilization actually was. There is so much more to discover. Exciting times to be in science!
@AynenMakinoАй бұрын
I imagine they also wouldn't want to give up a significant stretch of precious farmland to turn into a giant construction site.
@RobKaiser_SQuestАй бұрын
@Doug Ford
@hoosierpioneerАй бұрын
Unlike American construction which gobbles up rich farmland to build on😢
@AynenMakinoАй бұрын
@@hoosierpioneer It does? That's gonna be a big problem in the next decade. Food production globally is projected to reduce by half.
@hoosierpioneerАй бұрын
@@AynenMakino exactly. It gets turned into urban sprawl, housing additions, industrial buildings. Those could all be placed on reclaimed city and previous industrial sites, but almost impossible to farm on those sites. I'm dearly hanging on to my piece of land, because they don't make land anymore. And people will always need to eat.
@SamanthaVimesАй бұрын
That was my thought! The lands nearest the river got that lovely mud that brought nutrients from the wetter parts of Africa to make their lands so productive.
@TheRickTurnerАй бұрын
Great topic & video! This needs to be required before the 1st day of class each year for ever.
@singhmastrАй бұрын
Awesome video!!
@22steve5150Ай бұрын
A reminder, the Mississippi has been trying to shift it's course for nearly 100 years (which would ruin New Orleans and disrupt American shipping to a great extent) and a series of dams and canals along with frequent dredging makes it stay it's current course.
@StratelierАй бұрын
A huge part of why this started "only" 100 years ago is because the lesser branch used to be clogged and slow-flowing, despite its shorter distance (and thus steeper slope). It was the work of humans removing the debris from that branch that caused the problem to begin with.
@scheeenfilmiesguckeАй бұрын
So funny that a human with a brain can think that the Mississippi only started meandering 100 years ago
@thexanderthemanderАй бұрын
Last time I was this early sci show didn't run mid-roll ads
@Bluebloods7Ай бұрын
Get rekt. No ads for me. Sucks to suck.
@LizordSwordАй бұрын
@@Bluebloods7 wow you're so cool you totally PWND him bro
@jeffrey0415Ай бұрын
what are ads?
@alyme_rАй бұрын
@@Bluebloods7 roflcopter
@Bluebloods7Ай бұрын
@@LizordSword put that beta in her place
@Its-Just-ZipАй бұрын
Because I've seen the comment a couple of times already, for people who are saying, "I thought the question was how." I would like to point out that that is only a question within the conspiracy theorist communities. For the rest of us, with a halfway working understanding of archaeology, we know how the pyramids were built. A lot of manpower, multiple decades of work, and one of the most fundamental machines known to engineering, the inclined plane.
@ZombieCartmanYTАй бұрын
Slavery is how. Soon the loons will want to tear them down because they are the “ultimate monuments to slavery”.
@lp4514Ай бұрын
That's not entirely accurate either though, we assume that's how they were built because it's the most likely explanation but even inside archeology there are still debates about which construction method it was (big ramp, spiral ramp around/on it etc.), how long it actually took to build. Nothing against archeologists but they aren't experts in construction and I've seen people that are that said it's ridiculous to imagine they would've built that in just 20-30 years as some archeologists claim, especially with the limited tools tools they had (while it is possible to construct with those tools it would've taken extremely long). So sure it wasn't aliens etc. but it's still not all as certain and answered as some claim.
@lp4514Ай бұрын
@@ZombieCartmanYT That's actually an outdated belief, we used to think they were built by slaves but further archeological evidence around the pyramids showed they were built by regular people that build villages nearby, had work contracts and were paid.
@ZombieCartmanYTАй бұрын
@@lp4514 We don't have definitive proof of how they were built or when they were built within a few thousand years, but you want me to believe that archeologists found proof of how the people lived when they were built. What was the average daily wage for a pyramid worker then? What was the currency? Since there is all of this evidence.
@helentee9863Ай бұрын
@@ZombieCartmanYTthere are records on pottery shards that have been found at the sites of the villages that have been now excavated. Hundreds/thousands of them. These records even state things like the days off workers received (to celebrate religious holidays). There are documentary television programmes available to watch that explain all this. Try Googleing Google is our friend ❤
@jupekai6295Ай бұрын
This is a really cool finding and rather exciting!
@SellyeiАй бұрын
My first thought before I watched the video was, that maybe they found out somehow that on that spot the bedrock is closer to the surface, so they could build them there and ground would be able to take the weight of the pyramids. But then actually finding out about the river is so cool and clever, and as she pointed out, now the researchers can focus on a much narrower landscape around the former riverside, that could lead to many more discoveries...so damn cool!
@juliavixen176Ай бұрын
The Giza Plateau is literally a 60ft (20m) tall hill of solid limestone... That _is_ why Kufu and Kafre's pyramid were built there... on the top of the hill... so the pyramids would appear even taller from the river.
@filonin2Ай бұрын
That solid bedrock is the reason that EXACT spot along the river branch was chosen.
@BLNChrisCrossАй бұрын
Sounds great, really Like the small Musical pieces in your Videos, would Love to See more
@_andrewviaАй бұрын
Thank you Niba.
@tauIrrydahАй бұрын
As someone studying hieratic this is super cool to know about!
@BossDrSampleАй бұрын
Crazy how people were called pseudo scientists and conspiracy theorists for saying there used to be running water near giza.
@lyarrastark6254Ай бұрын
Interesting, thank you.
@XSpImmaLionАй бұрын
Very interesting... I imagine this also settles more than a few questions on how they were built, right?
@danieltudor6165Ай бұрын
We know so much, yet we clearly have (literally) barely scraped the surface, kudos to those who discovered this
@chadjones1266Ай бұрын
Thanks again
@crystalweible152Ай бұрын
Learn something new every day, Awesome!🙂
@mgnt232Ай бұрын
This was very interesting thanks 😊
@davetoms1Ай бұрын
Niba is quickly becoming one of my favourite SciShow hosts. Informative, fun, and enthusiastic. Great video!
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
The pyramids were not tombs. There is nothing to indicate that. No decorating. No Mummys. The granite box in the King's Chamber is not a Sarcophagus. Its the same thing as what is in the Serapeum, which itself is enigmatic.
@filonin2Ай бұрын
Source- Trust me bro
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
@@filonin2 The source is common sense. Every tomb has inscriptions and at least had a mummy at one time. The are also intricately decorated. Nothing in the Pyramids. Pharaohs loved to see their name. They even put it on things they found to take credit for their creation. No names. Why would they leave the Grand Gallery open if the chambers were tombs ? They filled the other passages, why not that one ? They needed to have access. What about the Granite boxes. They aren't sarcophagi, they look nothing like them. The ones in the Serapeum, supposedly bull sarcophagi have no animal remains at all, but they do have plant residue. Back in the day, fledgling Egyptologists wanted to classify things, so the called them tombs; only because they couldn't figure out what else they could be. Again , absolutely nothing to indicate that. The idea stuck. As people defended their intellectual turf, it became enshrined.
@galaxyblurАй бұрын
@@filonin2you don’t need a source if you’re not making a claim. Those that say they are tombs ARE making a claim without any evidence to support it
@alexispeyton649Ай бұрын
The accepted theory is that the Giza pyramid was commissioned as Pharoah Khufu's burial temple. There are no indications of this inside of the Pyramid itself. The information comes from papyrus scrolls found and translated. Every other tomb has the name and many depictions of the Pharoah that was buried there, but not Giza.
@IntenseVisualsАй бұрын
About time!
@fabrisseterbrugghe8567Ай бұрын
They built it outside the range of inundation so that those plains could be used for farming. It doesn't surprise me that there was a branch of the Nile. Deltas have lots branching.
@Maphisto86Ай бұрын
It is crazy how far bodies of water can shift over time. Many ancient cities, for example, used to be ported on the coastlines of rivers or seas. Still, over time, silting and other geographic changes, both natural and artificial, led to the port cities becoming farther inland from the sea or the rivers alongside them, shifting course-all in the span of millennia or shorter by centuries.
@catman8965Ай бұрын
OOP SciShow just left out critical information. A harbor (and a boat if I remember correctly) was found at the Sphinx temple leave little doubt there was water way there.
@winterwatson6437Ай бұрын
a six minute video didn’t include everything????
@dinkledankleАй бұрын
I mean, definably conclusive evidence of the waterway itself should leave _zero_ doubt there was a waterway there, dontcha think? A boat could have been brought there, and a harbor could have been a number of any other structures. A riverbed is a riverbed. Please explain how evidence of the actual thing and not evidence of evidence of the actual thing is less critical. What is even your point?
@ZackWolfАй бұрын
Could explain the potential water erosion on the sphinx? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphinx_water_erosion_hypothesis
@LuritsasАй бұрын
@@ZackWolf As far as I know, that hypothesis is not considered likely
@General12thАй бұрын
Hi Niba!
@shunpillayАй бұрын
Wow! So cool.
@johannesofie777Ай бұрын
I saw this thinking that it would be old news about the pyramid building as I often watch documentaries about Egypt and the surrounding area. But you managed to surprise me with something I haven't heard of, yet! Thank you. Even a 48 year old can find something fun in your videos 😀
@mahdedarmoАй бұрын
As an Egyptian who grew up not too far from the Giza pyramids, the only mystery is how our ancestors built magnificent wonders and now ugghhhh
@carocarp5Ай бұрын
I've often thought the same about the accomplishments of the ancient Romans and the Greeks.
@Mike-kw5xvАй бұрын
Who knows what other secrets are buried? Mum-ra, that's what's buried out there!
@eliscanfield3913Ай бұрын
Satellites have been such a boon to archaeology. Which kind of strikes my funny bone, even more than the boon airplanes gave. Space is so much further up, finding things we have to dig down to in order to actually see
@PetrSojnekАй бұрын
But... but... why would aliens require a river there? I mean they just built a pyramid somewhere and flew it over there, right? Talk about overcomplicating things, duh! :D
@Twilink36Ай бұрын
Aliens just love dumping water on Earth. It’s a fact. They have no use for it.
@AreaninetyoneАй бұрын
Does your brain actually function?
@Lizard_RiАй бұрын
Those aren't the aliens silly! They were the giants! They needed the river so they can shower properly!
@samuela-aegisdottirАй бұрын
There are no aliens because the Space doesn't exist because the Earth is flat. Simple. The pyramids are docks for building the Ark.
@rinakatsuki2801Ай бұрын
Due to all these comments talking about the British museum, im terrified of when the British invent shrinking technology. Nothing is safe at that point.
@notajetplaneАй бұрын
Neat.
@y.s.mnails7834Ай бұрын
They like to say the pyramids were tombs but from what I recall no mummy or corpse of any kind has ever been found in the Giza pyramids.
@thearchergravityАй бұрын
Science: We know how the pyramids were built. Ancient Aliens: But what of it was space monsters?
@abj136Ай бұрын
Nobody honestly says we know how. We have hypotheses that are incomplete have not been fully examined.
@AreaninetyoneАй бұрын
Science doe not know how it was built, archeology is a soft science when you get actual engineers involved they'll tell otherwise, science dismisses the fact that you can't cut granite with bronze in the time needed the building of a pyramid has never been illustrated or mentioned by the ancient Egyptians, they purely date it based off of graffiti that was found on the casing stones only nothing inside the pyramid ever had a mummy nor anything showing it was a tomb,There are blocks of granite cut with such precision it's a joke to claim it was made with bronze tools,there are drill holes and circular saw cuts into a lot of Egyptian megalithic works,now I'm gonna assume you don't care about actual facts and just want to troll out of ignorance which is understandable this is the Internet
@filonin2Ай бұрын
@@abj136 They have not been examined by you. Science has been examining them for centuries.
@kts8900Ай бұрын
With knowledge of a new river tributary, does this re-contextualize any texts which discuss sacred or holy waters?
@christopherconkright1317Ай бұрын
Yea the Nile moved we have known this. They did lidar ten years ago if i remember right
@TheSkystriderАй бұрын
Awesome host! Love your expressions, pace, presentation style etc. Really great!
@anotherhappyday93Ай бұрын
Pretty freaking cool!
@judeangione3732Ай бұрын
Love your outfit!
@NeatNitАй бұрын
As an OpenStreetMap geek, I appreciate the proper credit!
@mickeydangerezАй бұрын
Aliens!
@LanyiLaszloАй бұрын
Calculating the age of the 3 Pyramids of Giza - Astro-Geo-Dating method: No one actually knows, when they have been built. There are only indirect methods, to guesstimate. However, if for example in the future after us, if they would be rediscovered and us "cleaned up", but might leave things in there, others could think we have built them, right? I have been reading an article about the Pyramids of Giza, stating that they have found an explanation to the misalignment of 0.067 degrees counterclockwise, which they explained with inaccurate measurement method. I found this funny, as everything is so precise, that I thought I will check what else might have caused this. Thus asked the question: Okay, that the African Plate is moving towards Europe, but is it also turning meanwhile maybe? The answer is yes. Not much surprisingly it is turning counterclockwise. After quite some searching in studies, I have found the rotation speed. It is 0.927 degrees per 1 000 000 years. From this it can be calculated, that the Pyramids of Giza are about 72 276 years old. Not guesstimated, not indirectly suspected, but factually measured and calculated. So maybe we should ask astronomers to see, how did the Belt of the Orion stand 72k years ago. Maybe it can confirm the age by a different measurement. Homo Sapiens Sapiens, so exactly us, we are there since about 160k years ago, so having had a global civilization at about half of this time seems for me completely realistic. Feel free to check the calculations yourself and also to use the Astro-Geo-Dating method on any structure, where there is a misalignment. Wishing you and all constant and indestructible happiness beyond all imaginations!
@jamesschmitt9750Ай бұрын
Every time I see the astronaut in the water shirt out of the corner of my eye, zoned out etc. I think it's Finn the human 😊
@REM-hh4eeАй бұрын
Why don’t they just ask Steve Martin?😂
@Craig_DollАй бұрын
The video should be called we solved A mystery of the Pyramids. The video literally ends with her saying we still have so much to learn about the pyramid.
@zjalapenoАй бұрын
we can’t talk about that 🤫
@mrdeanvincentАй бұрын
You make great videos which we already want to watch, so please don't give them clickbait titles.
@alien9279Ай бұрын
Very interesting:)
@amonynous9041Ай бұрын
You people just don't get it. Osiris came to the place and said "let there be pyramids here, for we shall party hard and keep refreshments inside", then he hit the ground with his magic stick and pyramids came out of the ground, there was no slaves or workers, people were too busy partying in those times.
@blammelaАй бұрын
But…we’ve known this for years that the water used to run right up to the pyramids. We also know that they weren’t ever shown to be tombs so I’m confused by this presentation… ?
@sampaonni7592Ай бұрын
an interesting idea about the placement of the pyramids posits that they re-create the belt of orion, with the nile being the milky way
@LuritsasАй бұрын
So easy to see those patterns when we really want to huh
@disgruntledwookie369Ай бұрын
Hell of an ambitious title given the sheer number of mysteries about the pyramids
@GoalsplusАй бұрын
This has been known for a long time.
@ChainsGoldMaskАй бұрын
bold title
@JoeVanGoghАй бұрын
Hmmmm I don't want to be that guy buttt I don't buy the copper tools😂😂
@michealwestfall8544Ай бұрын
In achreology, the answer is always water.
@Nick-qo7ncАй бұрын
Did not expect this this morning,
@tedtyro2961Ай бұрын
I like your voice, very smooth on the ears.
@djan2307Ай бұрын
Well, I have learn something.
@foamslinger2787Ай бұрын
Joe Rogan fans are still pretty sure it was aliens
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
Joe is in the vanished civilization camp after Graham turned him on. If you doubt the Ancient Alien Hypothesis, read the Book of Enoch. They didn't build the Pyramids, but they have stopped by from time to time to say hi
@foamslinger2787Ай бұрын
No
@vjmabansag5597Ай бұрын
So the question now is what they used to transport those stones?…
@Keepler22bАй бұрын
I have my marijuana plants in a cobber pyramid. Exact replica of the Giza pyramid, align with true North. Ive done one grow with, and one grow without. The grow with pyramid give approximately 15-20% more flowers, and they are more flavour. As go for my aquarium fishes. They are bigger, and the patterns on their body are way more vivid than the fishes in the aquarium without pyramid.
@PrayTellGamingАй бұрын
That's crazy
@lampekartoffelАй бұрын
Is this a rework of an older video? Cause I swear I've watched a SciShow video saying this exact thing before 😅
@johncardamore3612Ай бұрын
I would.
@aircvr4175Ай бұрын
#1: pyramids are too heavy to build on soft swampland #2: pyramids have no hieroglyphics inside (i.e. no prayers to the dead seen in the tombs of Egyptians), so they weren't "tombs" #3: Giza is a giant limestone quarry. Limestone is a great base for something heavy as well as one of the predominat building blocks of the pyramids #4: the Sphinx is the Egyptian hieroglyph for "entrance" and there are tunnels all under Giza
@bradivany7008Ай бұрын
We Solved the Mystery of the Pyramids
@kitzbuhelerАй бұрын
20 seconds in When know this and we know that….. but we don’t know these thing. People believe the know but do they really know ? Hmmm I think not
@jcpmac1Ай бұрын
Why must the SciShow presenters rattle through their presentations as if they’re always rushing to catch the last train home? That’s the great unanswered mystery for me.
@fiveightandtenАй бұрын
An 8M subscriber channel surely uses their analytics to dial their content in to serve their audience. If the speaking is too fast for you, try slowing down the video speed a bit. Click on the video settings for that option.
@leojaksic8372Ай бұрын
Any pyramid experts here? I have some questions regarding pyramids.
@kennethloki7011Ай бұрын
You're on the internet. The largest collection of knowledge in human history. Don't rely on KZbin comments. There is plenty of freely available research from credible sources, just a few clicks away.
@TheDanEdwardsАй бұрын
Dr. Miano has some good videos here on KZbin debunking crazy claims about Egypt and the great pyramids.
@bensoncheung2801Ай бұрын
👍👍👍
@mrparkerdanАй бұрын
the sphinx also has signs of water erosion
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
Hence the debate about its age
@LuritsasАй бұрын
no it doesn't, almost no expert accepts that nonsense. That's for the conspiracy lovers.
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
@@Luritsas ? Both sides on the age debate eccept water erosion . And nobody's claiming there's a conspiracy to mislead. Buzzwords are never a good idea to use in an argument
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
@@Luritsas Robert Schoch has a phd in geology. And many other doctored geologists agree.
@LuritsasАй бұрын
@@terryenglish7132 you missed the almost part
@jeebuskАй бұрын
this is not news, it's well known that these rivers migrated east
@alexispeyton649Ай бұрын
So literally no new information. Gotcha
@mothernatureadventuresАй бұрын
Solved the mystery????? EVERYTHING you said was WRONG??? Wtf this is embarrassing...
@filonin2Ай бұрын
What is embarrassing is you claiming they are wrong but being unable to show they are wrong. That's not how adulting works, kiddo.
@mothernatureadventuresАй бұрын
@@filonin2 .. loser 😂💀
@DanH-u3fАй бұрын
The Nile used to flow closer to the Giza site. There was a massive harbor next to the Giza site to bring all the materials. They didn't drag millions of tons of stone, they used barges to carry the stones to the site. They were a lot more intelligent than today's Egyptologists who can't figure this out.
@alcatraz160Ай бұрын
Some of these comments bring the median average of human race's intellect by couple of numbers.
@3nertiaАй бұрын
Up or down? 😉
@h2woah127Ай бұрын
So, why do they think they built them? I watch the video but still feel like I got the point of the title or whatever lol
@3nertiaАй бұрын
As monuments to the power of a pharaoh, most likely. Most things like this were done as status symbols - similar to how kings would eat their chickens (egg layers) as a symbol of how wealthy they were heh
@imhoteparchitect1787Ай бұрын
It was built with afterlife in their minds, there is passages inside the pyramids connected to the stars guaranteeing the Demi-God King soul a passage to it's final distention consequently the Egyptians will have their God King looking after them.
@VaradiioАй бұрын
There can be (and certainly were) multiple reasons. Politics isn't so new a concept, and converging interests are pretty much necessary for such grandeur. Aside from what was already said, they could have served as government work programs, to avoid the consequences of idle and/or disillusioned citizens. Methods of entertaining an unemployed population obviously pale in comparison to today. Sentiments of conflict with neighbors or an unpopular ruler are not unusual problems to have. Feeding and/or paying people to work outside of productive harvest seasons mitigates this. Where today we can argue that the unemployed have opportunities to seek fulfillment in alternative ways, the societies of 5,000+ years ago predate basically every inspiration for modern culture. Philosophy of any kind that we recognize comes much later, in any case. Many of the world's isolated tribespeople today retain a culture of raiding and warfare between villages, despite robust political maneuvering like arranged marriages. I came across this line about the 13,000-10,000 BCE Sebilian people of Egypt: "It has been hypothesized that the sedentary lifestyle practiced by these grain gatherers led to increased warfare, which was detrimental to sedentary life and brought this period to an end." I don't want to insinuate that ancient Egyptians were more barbaric or warlike than depicted. Rather, there is likely to be a host of dilemmas that a Pharaoh wishes to resolve, and those dilemmas can be very challenging for modern researchers to source or even imagine. For those who want more out of their Great Pyramids mysteries, it's probably better to put them back into their full context. All of the "royal" pyramids are within the Bronze Age, which was around 3,000 to 1,200 BCE. While these Pharaohs seemed to have various motivations to cease their creation prior, the Bronze Age collapse followed not long after. We marvel at the scale of trade and industry of the Bronze Age peoples, but we know so little else. The rare preserved writings are, more often than not, unhelpful. I think the various Bronze Age cultures can share a lot about each other, where we can revive any of it. Even so, we're constantly misled. Consider Homer, or whoever originated the Iliad and Odyssey, perhaps a few centuries after collapse. Some might seek these texts for bridging the gap, telling of the Trojan War at the end of the Bronze Age. We unfortunately today suspect that most of these stories is fabricated or very distorted, including the war itself.
@jamesolelo4406Ай бұрын
Not science. You mis aged it by s few thousand years. It's much older. The spinx was built first and much older
@CoolJosh3kАй бұрын
I thought the “mystery of the pyramids” was how they were built, not where they are located???
@vladdestroyer7002Ай бұрын
clearly aliens could not land on the nile so they had to build far
@angryface01Ай бұрын
I’m confused. Didn’t we already know that the Nile shifted? There’s literally a bunch of drawings showing what the site looked like with the river flow closer. Additionally, wasn’t there evidence that the pyramids may have been built before the world-wide catastrophe, like closer to the end of the last ice-age?
@VaradiioАй бұрын
It's really just the end bit from research that uncovered specific evidence for that waterway. I fundamentally disagree with the attempt to frame the audience as unimaginative morons.
@angryface01Ай бұрын
@@Varadiio I have no idea what you mean. I didn’t understand why this video talks about having solved the mystery ‘recently.’ At no point was I calling anyone any names and especially was not postulating that people I don’t know are “unimaginitive morons.” What are you talking about?
@terryenglish7132Ай бұрын
@@angryface01SciShow, not you
@VaradiioАй бұрын
@@angryface01 I didn't mean to implicate you in the criticism, it was indeed directed at SciShow's presentation. The clickbait "mystery" is not the specific solved mystery from the findings of the old river branch location that they've called "Ahramat". The referenced article that seems to have been the motivation for the video is from Nature's Communications Earth & Environment volume 5, Article 233. 16 May 2024 "The Egyptian pyramid chain was built along the now abandoned Ahramat Nile Branch." While the very specific evidence of the river branch remnants is a seemingly new finding, the video spends little time on this subject. I believe this is cause for a lot of the confusion and frustration. We can very easily find models and drawings for the greener ancient Nile River Delta that have existed for a long time. I might have started such a speech with something like this toward the beginning: "While the scientific community has long suspected that the Nile River region was much greener in the days of the Pharaohs, recent evidence points to a dried-up branch of the river that would have directly serviced the area of the Giza Pyramid Complex." It's not generally good form in speech delivery to spend most of the time harboring some secret that is your entire thesis. I'm not really sure what the real deal here is, other than perhaps trying to appease the clickbait/Adsense overlords of the platform.