The Out-of-Place Artifacts Iceberg | PART 2

  Рет қаралды 387,327

The Pharaoh Nerd

The Pharaoh Nerd

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 696
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Go to piavpn.com/Pharaoh to get 83% off Private Internet Access with 4 months free!
@malanders7305
@malanders7305 6 ай бұрын
Adding non-existent islands was a method cartographers often used to identify who was copying their maps.
@nskachuful
@nskachuful 5 ай бұрын
that's smart
@dancantstand1612
@dancantstand1612 5 ай бұрын
Paper towns
@realWARPIG
@realWARPIG 5 ай бұрын
Where did you hear that?
@dragonslayer6912
@dragonslayer6912 5 ай бұрын
Where did you hear about that, sounds feasible though
@workout4780
@workout4780 4 ай бұрын
​@@dancantstand1612 it's the Algoe new York of times past
@NatetheNerdy
@NatetheNerdy 6 ай бұрын
My favorite detail debunking the Abydos helicopter is the simple fact that shortly after it was carved, Egypt lost some major battles, something that shouldn't happen if they had advanced technology.
@ihatepinecones99
@ihatepinecones99 6 ай бұрын
Unless the other guys had ancient alien anti air guns AAAA guns
@user-gn4vs6pp5e
@user-gn4vs6pp5e 6 ай бұрын
@@ihatepinecones99😂😂😂
@NatetheNerdy
@NatetheNerdy 6 ай бұрын
@@ihatepinecones99 I forgot about Quad-A guns, you're totally right.
@OPEK.
@OPEK. 6 ай бұрын
@@NatetheNerdy it would technically be AAAAA. he forgot to include the word artillery
@weggyocean8691
@weggyocean8691 6 ай бұрын
Who's to say they could have carved it because that's what they were fighting, hence why they lost major battles.
@ScottyKnows54
@ScottyKnows54 6 ай бұрын
The most out of place artifact is this video on KZbin it’s too good
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@andywatts8654
@andywatts8654 3 ай бұрын
Much of the content is supposition though, mixed with some truths.
@Stripedpjs
@Stripedpjs Ай бұрын
​@@andywatts8654 source?
@Freakmenn
@Freakmenn Ай бұрын
@@andywatts8654 Could you give some examples?
@Kizunaut
@Kizunaut 6 ай бұрын
Ah, the Abydos Helicopter. I remember how like 15~ years ago someone was investigating it and sent emails to like 10 egyptologists asking what was the deal with it and most of them were really rude and unhelpful. I think they got like 1-2 actually useful answers. It was really eye-opening. It's no wonder all kinds of weird ideas spread when those who propagate them will gladly spread their intepretations to anyone willing to listen while the academics throw a hissy fit if you ask them about something that's considered "weird".
@friderification
@friderification 5 ай бұрын
Literally I watched graham hancocks thing on Netflix and I didn’t know about pretty much anything he was claiming and I was watching KZbin videos that were counter arguing most made well points volcano tubes grahams high and trippin but when it comes to it I truly believe the theory that the sphinx is older and potentially the pyramids as wel and I got into it with a dude that just kept calling me a troll rather than actually tell me wtf I’m wrong about cause I don’t trust a piece of paper that says we built this anyone could do that and take credit if it’s rain damaged and that much rain hasn’t fallen in 12,000 years then 🤷‍♂️
@acatnamedjoex4688
@acatnamedjoex4688 2 ай бұрын
​@@friderificationtry punctuation, sometime.
@moelester8547
@moelester8547 2 ай бұрын
Yeah egyptologists are the worst. Most obnoxious group of scientists/historians
@epiqur6574
@epiqur6574 6 ай бұрын
I love the new surge in archeology channels on KZbin. It's so great to actually listen to the ancient cultures, and not only warriors and shit (that's also cool, but not all history was Spartans fighting Samurais)
@cyberserk5614
@cyberserk5614 5 ай бұрын
The victims of the Spartan-Japan wars shall not be forgotten.
@Freakmenn
@Freakmenn 5 ай бұрын
i understand the premise of this comment but frankly spartans fighting samurais sounds like the coolest shit ever
@epiqur6574
@epiqur6574 5 ай бұрын
@@Freakmenn hell yeah! Of course!
@kiel6969
@kiel6969 5 ай бұрын
Yeah I agree ​@@Freakmenn that's sick
@devildante9
@devildante9 5 ай бұрын
To learn about this kind of stuff you had to buy academic journals that universities sold (subscriptions could go from 500 dollars to 2000!), unless the news covered a particular article it was impossible to even know about this kind of stuff. While it's usually published in wikipedia, it was also very hard to stumble upon and it was dry as fuck to read. So these kind of channels are a blessing.
@jeppess1423
@jeppess1423 6 ай бұрын
Instead of a "X" or "✓", you could incorporate a slider for each category based on how likely it is whatever the category is. Excellent series!
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Great idea!
@dziku2222
@dziku2222 6 ай бұрын
As for Piri Reis Map - reminds me of how Chinese fleets used to draw maps. I'm not sure how it worked in Ottoman Empire, but in China, there was a tradition of simply ignoring geographical features / continent shape and just draw those pragmatic maps for sailing, focused only on coastline with some easy to identify points of interest, and they often looked like those deformed lines you can see on Reis map.
@TheGahta
@TheGahta 6 ай бұрын
Or the roman road maps, which look more like subway line maps
@dziku2222
@dziku2222 6 ай бұрын
@@TheGahta Hey, that sounds pretty cool. Got any example? I would like to check that out
@HomeGrownDomesticSatirist
@HomeGrownDomesticSatirist 4 ай бұрын
​@dziku2222 look up Tabula Peutingeriana
@michaelpacinus242
@michaelpacinus242 3 ай бұрын
As rarbwebsufking whheghs meltera
@michaelpacinus242
@michaelpacinus242 3 ай бұрын
I hicybeij gahhsuj niehyskj
@theslavichighlander3272
@theslavichighlander3272 6 ай бұрын
best channel to feed my history autism (while I feed myself at 3am)
@oboroth51
@oboroth51 6 ай бұрын
lol I read this at 3 AM
@bcb5696
@bcb5696 6 ай бұрын
Wtf it’s only about to be 8 pm where I am
@TylerSolvestri
@TylerSolvestri 6 ай бұрын
Crazy how many of us Gen z young men have the same culture without even talking or synchronizing about it 💀😹
@raiogelato6921
@raiogelato6921 6 ай бұрын
Its called autism, not being ironic its literally normal behavior in people in the spectrum
@newenglandsolidarity9784
@newenglandsolidarity9784 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for making me feel not alone 🥹
@expugned6987
@expugned6987 6 ай бұрын
I think another problem in the studies that found coke and nicotine in Egyptian mummies is that GCMS doesn't really detect whole molecules, but rather characteristic fragments of those molecules. The Gas Chromatography part is where molecules are separated depending on how fast they move in a gaseous medium, the Mass Spectrometry part is where the molecules are broken down into electrically charged fragments and then accelerated by a magnet. Depending on how far they travel the mass of the fragments can be estimated, and specific molecules show specific fragments and combinations of fragments. Thye didn't strictly detected cocaine but rather molecule fragments with the same mass as the fragments that come off of cocaine, wich could also come from other tropane alkaloids (coke is also one) like atropine or scopolamine and hysociamine present in datura, belladona and mandragora, plants much more familiar to Egyptians. This has happened already with ppl claiming avocado oil contains DiPT, a hallucinogen triptamine.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Excellent point, if I had known that I absolutely would've included that argument in the video
@yr0
@yr0 5 ай бұрын
“various plants other than tobacco are a source of nicotine and two of these, Withania somnifera and Apium graveolens, were known and used by ancient Egyptians” from the wikipedia.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 5 ай бұрын
@@yr0 Yeah I mentioned both, ashwaganda and celery.
@CarlosPEnis
@CarlosPEnis 4 ай бұрын
​@thepharaohnerd7235 so the Egyptians had sketchy head shops too
@Garmin21111
@Garmin21111 6 ай бұрын
I think the coin is real, that area being a real large scale native trading port which the orginal diggers couldn't have known about to me basically garentees it's real. Trade is also something totally overlooked by a lot of people. Trade can move artifact from one area of the world across continents. We know extensive trade routs existed in the new world. Obsidian artifact from yellowstone have made their way to great lakes and ohio that's 1,500 miles of travel. It is very much in the realm of possibility that viking artifacts that were traded with native American and likely in high demand made their way a similar distance but south.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Great point! I had no idea obsidian from Yellowstone made it all the way to Ohio, that's really impressive.
@ParsonDewey
@ParsonDewey 6 ай бұрын
Another example was a Roman coin that was found a couple years ago in a medieval Japanese fort in Okinawa
@N0th1ng-4g41n
@N0th1ng-4g41n 6 ай бұрын
as someone from the region where it was found, i can second this. Passamaquoddy people in this area have long oral histories of trading for non-american goods or with non-americans themselves
@donaldbothe3518
@donaldbothe3518 5 ай бұрын
makes sense that this was a trade good/traded amulet. When it broke, it was likely tossed in the midden because, to them, it wasn't a coin, it was a necklace. When it was no longer a necklace, it was nothing
@JimMilton-ej6zi
@JimMilton-ej6zi 6 ай бұрын
Usually if an archeologist makes a claim like "they used these things i discovered in a sacred ritual" or some other kind of big claim you can always assume its fake until someone else confirms it. The truth is that a lot of those people don't want to believe that their findings were actually just the 500,000th clay pottery shard piece that belonged to someone insignificant and it's a lot more cooler to people outside of that sphere if you just say it was for some ancient religion instead. It's also a really good excuse since humans are naturally superstitious and will do odd rituals to satisfy it, so it doesn't really need to make a lot of sense when someone says it was for a ritual.
@CosmicNomad93
@CosmicNomad93 6 ай бұрын
“'Who controls the past, ran the Party slogan, 'controls the future: who controls the present controls the past. '”
@daltongalloway
@daltongalloway 6 ай бұрын
It doesn’t always mean it’s fake. Plenty of times when stuff is labeled “for sacred rituals” it’s short hand for “we don’t really know what this was used for”.
@MauricioH.
@MauricioH. 6 ай бұрын
OH SNAP I JUST DISCOVERED YOUR CHANNEL AND I WAS WAITING FOR THIS
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Awesome, I'm glad you find my stuff worth waiting for!
@Faedz
@Faedz 6 ай бұрын
SAME
@jorgearguetaface1206
@jorgearguetaface1206 6 ай бұрын
Yeah me too
@rawcco7
@rawcco7 6 ай бұрын
One of us, one of us
@mpb6491
@mpb6491 6 ай бұрын
@@thepharaohnerd7235 I am also new and I'm hungry for your take on the next oop-arts. see you next month :')
@sethsmith3657
@sethsmith3657 6 ай бұрын
I have to say that this is one of my favorite recent channels I found along with the icebergs they’ve been thrilled to listen to while driving and I appreciate it very very much.
@pajamapantsjack5874
@pajamapantsjack5874 6 ай бұрын
I finished part 1 a second ago only to find part 2 up. Good ass day
@DoubleNN
@DoubleNN 6 ай бұрын
Ogham is pronounced "Om" (like Own but with m, the 'gh' in Irish would be pronounced a little bit like "w", only very subtly, so could be a bit like "Oh-whim", where "whi" is so understated it's practically silent, the "G" was probably pronounced hundreds of years ago, given how much Irish changed, a much 'softer' language, as I would put it.) (Ogham is an interesting thing in its own right, most of the examples are little ridges cut into the corners of stones, and a lot of the time natural erosion is mistaken for Ogham, or vice versa. Something like 90% of the examples we have today just say someone's name to mark out territory.)
@aaronzamora4526
@aaronzamora4526 6 ай бұрын
>Finno-Korean Hyper War mentioned Nice meme reference.
@m.i.c.h.o
@m.i.c.h.o 6 ай бұрын
Made me laugh so hard 41:22
@karhu96
@karhu96 2 ай бұрын
Meme?
@NetoKruzer
@NetoKruzer 6 ай бұрын
As a Mexican, i'm sorry for the delusions of an old man....
@emen_98
@emen_98 6 ай бұрын
I had and have always hated this fucking man
@JUL1AN1M0
@JUL1AN1M0 6 ай бұрын
As an alien, i'm so sorry for your delusions
@Atlanti97
@Atlanti97 6 ай бұрын
Guy who claimed that they were llamas debunked his own claim.
@el_archimago
@el_archimago 6 ай бұрын
@@Atlanti97 I mean, never heard of llamas laying eggs lol
@partqfavor
@partqfavor 6 ай бұрын
the peruvian mummy story reminds me a lot of that other story about the atacama mummy. it feels like not only do people want to believe that ancient indigenous people didn't achieve anything, they also want to believe that ancient indigenous people weren't even human.
@rRadixerus
@rRadixerus 6 ай бұрын
Well, people don't want to believe that first thing. It just is kinda true. Rome started out indigenous. Every society does. The Aztecs did very well for themselves, are they considered indigenous?
@Joe-lr9ou
@Joe-lr9ou 6 ай бұрын
​@@rRadixerus please google what indigenous means in a historical context
@ili_711
@ili_711 6 ай бұрын
you can also find mummies on the black market, very profitable endeavour. One was buried with golden armor and a Sun-shaped helmet
@partqfavor
@partqfavor 6 ай бұрын
@@rRadixerus there's a difference between being a group of people that originate from a place than being an indigenous group. indigenous is a specific term related to historical circumstances, especially colonialism. the aztecs are indigenous ppl who were colonized
@robert9016
@robert9016 6 ай бұрын
Just about every Ancient Aliens theory can be boiled down to, “there’s no way AFRICANS could’ve built the pyramids”
@thefunniestfella9366
@thefunniestfella9366 6 ай бұрын
18:05 that subtle ‘oh no’ is a great touch
@simenon5929
@simenon5929 6 ай бұрын
RoachDoggJr
@thefunniestfella9366
@thefunniestfella9366 6 ай бұрын
@@simenon5929 brother...
@thefunniestfella9366
@thefunniestfella9366 6 ай бұрын
@@simenon5929 brother...
@thebowlbster
@thebowlbster 13 күн бұрын
I lived on Monhegan island for a few years, and the neighboring island (right across the harbor) called Manana has a rock with basically chicken scratches that are believed to be viking runes. Monhegan is very significant in early american exploration so that leans into it being significant, but in reality theyre very unlikely to be anywhere near that old. Great video!
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 13 күн бұрын
Thanks! That's pretty interesting - even if they aren't really Viking runes, it's cool that there's still an urban legend like that about them
@warriordynamics5496
@warriordynamics5496 6 ай бұрын
Literally the best channel Im subscribed to. I hope you make this a full time thing man
@jesusivansegundofaustino8118
@jesusivansegundofaustino8118 4 ай бұрын
The whole Peruvian mommies thing is kinda insane to me, I saw the news about the mommies but I never knew what happened after until this video 💀💀💀
@quiksilver10152
@quiksilver10152 2 ай бұрын
@@jesusivansegundofaustino8118 it's not over. There are fake and authentic mummies in the tomb and still being found nearby. The authentic mummies were presented to some Peruvian congressmen this week. This video didn't cut the surface of the issue. There are very interesting genetic and spectroscopic data that fly in the face of the hypothesis provided in this video.
@Vv_JASPER_vV
@Vv_JASPER_vV 2 ай бұрын
@@quiksilver10152 I was looking for someone to comment this. In the past there absolutely have been mummies presented as aliens, which have been thoroughly debunked, but the video maker here is confusing those debunks with more recent revelations--rolling it all into a big ball of fake. It could very well all be fake, but as you stated, the data from recent analysis goes so far beyond "hey look at this weird looking plastered they're calling an alien". Actual independent credentialed scientists are looking at this stuff now--despite the character assassination attempts--and what they are finding and reporting is intriguing to say the least. There's so much more to learn about that area of Peru, whether it has to do with aliens or just the history of human genetics. It certainly deserves more study!
@NazcaMummies
@NazcaMummies 24 күн бұрын
The youtuber didn't really do a deep investigation. Just listen to what the government want him to hear. The bodies are still being research by several universities around the world.
@ayyyyylmao
@ayyyyylmao 6 ай бұрын
I really like this format. The last one with the coin is genuinely historically interesting too, I didn't expect that
@simenon5929
@simenon5929 6 ай бұрын
Dont forget Sponsian Coin if you do a part 3. It might be too recent, but about a year ago every roman history enthusiast talking about the fact that there was numismatic evidence for a roman emperor who disappeared from the history books.
@JubioHDX
@JubioHDX Күн бұрын
Those are almost certainly either in the forgery or misinterpretation categories.Ill ignore the forgery part, since theres decent evidence that the coins are indeed old, but there was definitely never a real *ROMAN* emperor by that name. If Sponsianus was a real figure who declared himself emperor, it wouldve been after dacia was cut off from the empire or more likely after it was formally abandoned, meaning if he was a real leader at all he was at best a king or emperor(by literal name alone and not the head of a true empire) of the region of what they called dacia rather than rome itself. The reason why i say that, is that even though its old, it has way too many inconsistencies with roman coins both from before and afterwards. The latin grammar is wrong, or at least odd, as it gives his name in the genitive case rather than the nomitive, essentially labeling them "Emperor Sponsian's coins" as opposed to the usual which is more along the lines of just stating on the coin the name of the pictured leader as "Emperor Sponsianus". The reverse of the coins are also a blatant forgery of roman coins from centuries earlier, and the coins themselves are far to heavy, having been clearly casted from inferior molds instead of being stamped out of a sheet. There may have been a man named Sponsian/Sponsianus, but he 100% did not ever control the roman empire, and at best usurped their control in the region and copied the style of the rough coins as a way to declare their own independence and give him the credibility to say he is in charge, but without knowing the proper latin or the methods the romans themselves actually used to make them. Theres just no way an actual roman emperor was having these coins be circulated widespread, theyre far more low quality than both the previous and later varieties.
@kiwifest5605
@kiwifest5605 5 ай бұрын
Love the video, maybe mention which level of the iceberg the artifacts are from. The amount of info you have for each artifact is amazing, keep up the great work!
@chaussettes99
@chaussettes99 3 ай бұрын
can you imagine your preserved corpse that was probably cared for and buried by loved ones being dug up 2000 years later and some cretin starts chipping pieces off you and slathing you in plaster to try to pass it off as an alien corpse to make some money.
@m.i.c.h.o
@m.i.c.h.o 5 ай бұрын
I've had this video pinned for so long that ublock says >9k ads blocked lol. I finally finished it. This series is so good, can't wait for the next part.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 5 ай бұрын
Hahaha wow, thank you!
@SourChicken1856
@SourChicken1856 6 ай бұрын
Also something to note, Maussan is CONVINCED that the mummies are real even tho he has been proven wrong with the evidence and often gets in fights with news reporters or tv hosts because of that. He's also kind of a meme here in Mexico because people have trolled him to prove him wrong but he ACTUALLY STILL BELIEVES that shit even when the people tell him "btw this was a joke"
@thecandlemaker1329
@thecandlemaker1329 6 ай бұрын
I don't buy that! He knows that he's dead wrong, but he can't back down and apologise because of dumb machismo that is so prevalent in Mexico.
@bluejames3698
@bluejames3698 6 ай бұрын
Yay another vid :D really looking forward to ancient civs part 5
@thisorthat7746
@thisorthat7746 2 ай бұрын
Kind of unrelated, but your pronounciation of "h" in Ahmad was near flawless! Pointing it out because I thought it was very impressive since I notice many English speakers struggle with it or just omit the sound altogether and pronounce it "Amad".
@marktwain3820
@marktwain3820 6 ай бұрын
Massive drop on a Tuesday evening when I was comically bored after work!!!
@ericgilbertson5785
@ericgilbertson5785 19 күн бұрын
To be fair - the Runestone Museum in Alexandria officially takes no position on whether the Kensington Runestone is authentic, and they cover all the controversies and stories about its discovery in depth and slightly tongue-in-cheek. Minnesota History magazine had an article (probably more than a decade ago) that found an exact match for the runes in 19th century Swedish Freemasonry.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 19 күн бұрын
Oh, I see, I should've looked more into them.
@aligatyy
@aligatyy 4 ай бұрын
Just wanted to comment that while playing Battle Brothers as I listened to this video, I got a potential recruit with the name Hjalmar just as he was talking about the Hjalmar in the video. Such a strange coincidence.
@fryz
@fryz 5 ай бұрын
KZbin finally recommending me people who put in great work, it's shows mate. Thanks for the content!
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 5 ай бұрын
And thank you so much for watching! I'm really glad that you like my work
@braydenbenzien4738
@braydenbenzien4738 6 ай бұрын
Definitely subscribing, love this kind of atuff
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Thank you, I'm really glad that there are people as interested in this stuff as I am
@mr.lavander7145
@mr.lavander7145 6 ай бұрын
Love this stuff. Great stuff to fall asleep too and I love how you don't have a bunch of annoying memes and loud chaos. Just narration and thought-provoking subjects
@thoracis
@thoracis 22 күн бұрын
As an artist and emergency medical provider that is very interested in anatomy, biology, history, taxidermy, and other such topics, I was very saddened and angered by the alien mummies from Peru.
@adamgrogory
@adamgrogory 6 ай бұрын
Incredible video, just as great as the first one. Just want to note at 49:18 that the term "Lapp" is generally considered derogatory and a slur here in Scandinavia for the Sámi people, and so the preferred term is simply "Sámi".
@oxpolitik
@oxpolitik Ай бұрын
Commander is a casual format. Better Commander It's a casual channel. That's why it's my fave. Thanks for great year of content, Brother.
@henriquejambu
@henriquejambu 6 ай бұрын
1:53 it’s so great that I can find my city in the northern Amazon region of Brazil on this map. This is so cool!
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Oh that's awesome! I'm glad that I have Brazilian listeners
@Sh4_4kii
@Sh4_4kii 4 ай бұрын
My theory about the cocaine mummies particularly the part about children 1-6 having it in their system, when kids are teething their gums are super irritated and they experience tons of pain. Natural solutions are used in some places like mothers will chew kava and use their saliva to rub on the gums of teething children. It’s possible that parents would chew a cocoa rich leaf and use their saliva to soothe the children’s gums to stop them from crying
@PeachysMom
@PeachysMom 6 ай бұрын
This is such a good history account. I love your analysis, very common sensical. And so good for sleeping to as well.
@toddbaker6293
@toddbaker6293 22 күн бұрын
I love that you used assassins creed to show Piri Reis. It’s how I (and I’m sure others) first learned about it and got us first interested in history as kids
@artefaerie3285
@artefaerie3285 6 ай бұрын
this is my favorite iceberg series
@datboiTimAltstadt
@datboiTimAltstadt 5 ай бұрын
You mostly objective depictions and extensive research made this video series as great as it is. Subbed!
@nesskeaton
@nesskeaton 2 ай бұрын
Piri Reis just wanted to make some sort of proto tabletop game, and everyone got all excited about it.
@toxicpossum
@toxicpossum 6 ай бұрын
Hell yeah, watched you for the first time last night with part one.
@berkcankoc9805
@berkcankoc9805 6 ай бұрын
for the piri reis map, it seems like the bottom part is not intended as antartica but the bottom part of south america, when you compare them it indeed looks like argentina. because of the fixed space its bent sideways or the first maps that collected the information is since from a different map he maybe was unaware of which angle to connect top and bottom part of south america. i doubt he was aware of antartica but most likely he was aware of bottom part of SA
@ceramicfawn
@ceramicfawn 6 ай бұрын
these videos help me sleep for some reason 😭❤️
@rileypope4208
@rileypope4208 6 ай бұрын
Best series on YT! Thank you!!
@notcris1314
@notcris1314 6 ай бұрын
You’re the best. Your channel is one of the best out there, great vid
@tomgentile4850
@tomgentile4850 6 ай бұрын
This is genuinely my favorite channel. Keep up the great work
@dajh9739
@dajh9739 6 ай бұрын
Really liking your content, keep it up
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 6 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@DragonsAndDragons777
@DragonsAndDragons777 6 ай бұрын
Let's go, part 2! I love these iceberg videos
@adanraymond2100
@adanraymond2100 6 ай бұрын
These videos are amazing! Love it!
@TaeSunWoo
@TaeSunWoo 6 ай бұрын
I love when KZbin Recommend actually recommends
@DoylesDigs
@DoylesDigs 5 ай бұрын
Stoked for this one
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Your channel looks very interesting, and I'm a fellow history enthusiast in BC, so I subscribed!
@DoylesDigs
@DoylesDigs 5 ай бұрын
@@thepharaohnerd7235 Right on! I appreciate the interaction. I've really enjoyed this series, hope to be surprised by a part 3 in the future if possible! Keep up the excellent content 👍🏻
@homborgor
@homborgor 6 ай бұрын
Only just found your channel in the last couple weeks, ive enjoyed binging your videos, cant wait for more
@chasehaskell6490
@chasehaskell6490 6 ай бұрын
ITS HERE!! PART 2!!! Mega hype
@JW-vi1ob
@JW-vi1ob 2 ай бұрын
Although it’s argued that the ancient Egyptians never made it to Australia, some claim that certain gold found in Egypt supposedly traces back to Gympie, Queensland. Additionally, an ancient Egyptian bronze coin, minted during the reign of Ptolemy IV, was unearthed by a settler in north Queensland while installing a fence in 1912.
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 2 ай бұрын
Well that's actually pretty interesting, thank you for telling me about this. I think it's far more plausible that a Ptolemaic ship or people involved with contemporary Indian Ocean trade routes accidentally reached Australia than the same happening in the Pyramid Age.
@aj897
@aj897 2 ай бұрын
The English were in Egypt and Australia at the same time, I’m sure someone who is wealthy had access to many “artifacts”.
@EdgarRodriguez-gi9mw
@EdgarRodriguez-gi9mw 6 ай бұрын
Hell yeah, been waiting for this one
@reznor_prompt2338
@reznor_prompt2338 6 ай бұрын
Iam so happy that there is a part 2 already :D
@darkfent
@darkfent 6 ай бұрын
Seriously you do upload at the most unexpected time of my day
@IIronyy
@IIronyy 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for putting out watchable content
@cadenc.6890
@cadenc.6890 6 ай бұрын
I remember driving past Heavener 3 years ago heading back from a trip to Missouri. They had like a big sign that said “home of the heavener runestone” I was wondering what that was but never bothered googling it so thanks lol.
@ljubisavukovic8153
@ljubisavukovic8153 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for another great video and good luck with the gofundme!
@endlesswanderer1753
@endlesswanderer1753 6 ай бұрын
This is wild. I grew up in Oklahoma, and we were taken to Heavener multiple times through middle and high school. I spent my entire life not questioning those runestones, but I did think it was weird that whenever I'd mention them, people would be surprised. "There are viking runestones in Oklahoma????" "Yeah! You... you never heard about it? They made us watch videos about them and everything."
@beyondcomplex8678
@beyondcomplex8678 4 ай бұрын
Happy i found your channel! Hooked for the rest of the iceberg now ❤️
@weenheehee5211
@weenheehee5211 5 ай бұрын
i love this series sm already, can't wait for the next video!!!!
@JPIngram7
@JPIngram7 6 ай бұрын
Your standard for OOPs is really lax, but I still love this shit. You do a lot of good work
@pizzaman160
@pizzaman160 6 ай бұрын
agreed he spends like ten minutes on blatantly fake shit, which is a shame because his in-depth substantial analysis is spectacular and would be far better spent on genuine pieces.
@aub6120
@aub6120 6 ай бұрын
to explain EXACTLY why the Piri Reis map was a misinterpretation / artful piece of premodern deception, then labelling it an out of place artifact? no, didn't he just say it WASN'T out of place? doesn't it exist for reasons we know? that frustrated me so badly but the video was fun listening besides that.
@JPIngram7
@JPIngram7 6 ай бұрын
@@aub6120 Yup. He's good and interesting to listen to and good at research, but he kinda needs to come down in a more practical way.
@bobblob23vr2
@bobblob23vr2 6 ай бұрын
Who gives a shit, it's all speculative anyway
@JPIngram7
@JPIngram7 6 ай бұрын
@@bobblob23vr2 Conspiracy pilled disinformation maxxer
@MatheusSantos-jn3kz
@MatheusSantos-jn3kz 6 ай бұрын
"Reis" actually means Admiral Rei would be a word for King Admiral is the highest (or one of the highest) patents in navies so it's kind of a play on words.
@thecandlemaker1329
@thecandlemaker1329 6 ай бұрын
Turks did not speak Spanish... "Reis" is a borrowing from Arabic "رَئِيس", which unsurprisingly means "captain".
@sarah69420
@sarah69420 5 ай бұрын
The simplest answer I can think of for cocaine mummies is smuggling. They were used to smuggle drugs.
@Trippins.
@Trippins. 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this
@darkzircon8165
@darkzircon8165 6 ай бұрын
22:48 The accent caught me of guard xD Good video, can't wait for more.
@ProGremlinPlayer
@ProGremlinPlayer 6 ай бұрын
Another day another banger. Looking forward to part 3.
@bogboy7895
@bogboy7895 Ай бұрын
Olof was my something great grandpa. This is funny to see ( no idea if I really believe in the Kensington runestone) but it’s always cool to see it talked about
@thepharaohnerd7235
@thepharaohnerd7235 Ай бұрын
Wow, that's awesome!
@zarkomilicic1204
@zarkomilicic1204 6 ай бұрын
Hey, new to the channel (loving it so far), and you might have done this in the past, I dont know, but can you make a reading iceberg perhaps? Im thinking about Egypt mainly here, but just throw some titles at us in order of how complicated of a subject they cover. Im a historian by trade, but my knowledge of all this is highly superficial (never worked as a researcher really and coming from my country, not a lot of chances to explore Egypt lol) - I can wrap my head around the dynasties thing, but some of the details you mention are so fascinating that I want to hear/read more about them, but I just dont know where to begin. 😅
@johnjackson8709
@johnjackson8709 6 ай бұрын
Just by hearing the names of your patrons, I knew I was in the right place
@DPRK_Ohio
@DPRK_Ohio 6 ай бұрын
We making Out-of-Place with this one
@hatefulgaming1800
@hatefulgaming1800 6 ай бұрын
🫡 I salute you Mr. Kim
@ginger_kat0819
@ginger_kat0819 6 ай бұрын
been waiting for this one
@RetroBacon1
@RetroBacon1 6 ай бұрын
I love these videos
@poughkeepsieblue
@poughkeepsieblue 6 ай бұрын
Nicotine and cocaine are organic compounds, that the human body could have theoretically synthesized in cells, or the digestive tract due to bacteria, kind of like how yeast shits alcohol. This is probably a misinterpretation we dont understand yet.
@fort809
@fort809 5 ай бұрын
There’s another comment explaining how the GCMS tests didn’t necessarily detect cocaine, but molecular fragments similar to cocaine. These molecular fragments are also present in other tropane alkaloids which the Egyptians would have had access to
@awakenedaristocrat
@awakenedaristocrat Ай бұрын
you are absolutely wrong. A body cant produce fking cocaine let alone nicotine where tf do you get that from? Just bc its organic?
@JoshSweetvale
@JoshSweetvale 23 күн бұрын
Or an extict herb variant.
@Thegmodjournalist
@Thegmodjournalist 6 ай бұрын
Just discovered you. Lots of banger videos!
@callumblakeney7935
@callumblakeney7935 6 ай бұрын
I love ur channel thank you for the upload sir
@eldenring_
@eldenring_ 6 ай бұрын
Been waiting for this:)
@antohrs
@antohrs 5 ай бұрын
Really cool, loved the first part and this one is awesome as well! At 5:31, where is that from? It seems like a nicely translated version of the map :o
@bokrugthewaterserpent3012
@bokrugthewaterserpent3012 6 ай бұрын
The trend I keep noticing is that the actual realities of these artifacts is always more interesting than what History Channel would say about them. At this point I think pseudohistory is the government backed distraction to make us stop thinking about real history.
@andywatts8654
@andywatts8654 3 ай бұрын
You know why? It’s because true history doesn’t fit the evolutionary time line. The further you go back the better the standard of masonry
@bokrugthewaterserpent3012
@bokrugthewaterserpent3012 3 ай бұрын
@@andywatts8654 this is unironically true if you only look at the last 100 years, somehow things built at the turn of the century look so good, and stuff built before that looks so much better. This trend really doesn't hold up much beyond that though, because you very quickly start to get things like Notre Dame or Hagia Sophia which eclipse anything the ancient world could have ever made, both in detail and in quality of work. Your theory completely falls off the cliff once you get to prehistory, because pre-historic stonework can hardly be called stonework. Not only is there very little stone carving, but there's a complete lack of concrete or cement to hold things together.
@andywatts8654
@andywatts8654 3 ай бұрын
@@bokrugthewaterserpent3012 The ancients didn't need cement -- they carved the stone so precisely you cant fit a sliver of paper between it and it still stands today. Even a hundred years ago we would not have been able to lift, maneouvre, position and cut the 900 ton stones of Baalbek.
@andywatts8654
@andywatts8654 3 ай бұрын
@@bokrugthewaterserpent3012 The Great pyramid in Giza shows evidence of squaring the circle when we thought we learned how to do it in the 1800s! The Great pyramid is aligned more accurately to true North than when modern man tried to build a museum aligned to true north in the late 1900s.
@andywatts8654
@andywatts8654 3 ай бұрын
@@bokrugthewaterserpent3012 Some ancient structures, instead of putting together 'bricks' with 4 sides they fitted together uneven polygonal stones with 6, 7. maybe ten sides of uneven length -- what we would imagine was the most difficult way of building, but again the stones fit together absolutely perfectly with not a hairs gap inbteween -- see Cusco, Peru
@salvadorfuentes7777
@salvadorfuentes7777 6 ай бұрын
Great video,digging this channel a lot
@EmpanadaDeCaca
@EmpanadaDeCaca 6 ай бұрын
Yaaay i was waiting for part 2
@geckoguy4141
@geckoguy4141 6 ай бұрын
Fascinating video! I hope the Cerutti Mastodon is on this iceberg, it's probably one of the weirdest artifacts in the world
@rRadixerus
@rRadixerus 6 ай бұрын
Literally just saw the first part and see this came out today. Nice.
@kosmas173
@kosmas173 6 ай бұрын
HELL YEA! NEW VIDEO!!!
@makintosh2458
@makintosh2458 6 ай бұрын
it’s finally here!
@G.P.M_7
@G.P.M_7 6 ай бұрын
AWWWW YEAH the second part is finally out!!! Gonna binge watch the SHIT out of it
@evanvandeneinde7095
@evanvandeneinde7095 6 ай бұрын
Love this series. Keep up the great work
@tannerroberts4109
@tannerroberts4109 6 ай бұрын
Top tier channel
@sebastianbritto3916
@sebastianbritto3916 6 ай бұрын
About time 🙏🙏
@scotchedtape
@scotchedtape 6 ай бұрын
Woooooo! Part 2!
@miss.guidedghosts7858
@miss.guidedghosts7858 6 ай бұрын
what's so funny to me about stuff like the Kensington runestone is that it sets out to "legitimize" Norse or Scandinavian presence in the "New World" in like, the 14th century, which, if you believe the norse/scandinavians made it to North America before Columbus (which they did, based on things like the archaeological site of L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, and Norse records like the Vinland sagas), the runestone wayyyy post-dates the period that the "Vikings" are thought to have briefly settled in North America, by at least 300 years (L'Anse aux Meadows dates to around 990-1021 CE based on carbon 14 analysis and archaeological finds, and the Vinland sagas, specifically the Saga of the Greenlanders and the Saga of Erik the Red take place in about 1000 CE, AND ON TOP OF THAT L'Anse aux Meadows is thought to have been inhabited for only about 20 years. Like, they wanted so bad for there to have been Scandinavians in the Midwest that they completely ignored the possibility that maybe, just maybe, the Scandinavians did get to North America and just... didn't like it too much.
The STONEHENGE Iceberg
34:57
The Pharaoh Nerd
Рет қаралды 68 М.
The Out-of-Place Artifacts Iceberg | PART 3
45:43
The Pharaoh Nerd
Рет қаралды 169 М.
Как Ходили родители в ШКОЛУ!
0:49
Family Box
Рет қаралды 2,3 МЛН
Tales of Pre-Columbian Contact
1:48:09
EpicNate
Рет қаралды 268 М.
67 Minutes of Historical Mysteries You Never Heard
1:07:41
EpicNate
Рет қаралды 373 М.
Life's Biggest Paradoxes
1:31:11
Aperture
Рет қаралды 3,6 МЛН
Historical Mysteries That Keep Me Up At Night
43:27
EpicNate
Рет қаралды 654 М.
Time-Slip Artifacts: Modern Objects in the Ancient World - Volume 1
40:26
The Forgotten Ancient Civilizations Iceberg | PART 2
47:14
The Pharaoh Nerd
Рет қаралды 260 М.
The Voynich Manuscript: The World's Most Mysterious Book
1:01:24
Decoding the Unknown
Рет қаралды 778 М.
Every Fallout Vault Explained - Ranked From Least To Most Insane
1:51:28
FranklyGaming
Рет қаралды 4,2 МЛН
The Rarest Signature
38:19
TREY the Explainer
Рет қаралды 245 М.
ALIEN LIFE | UFOs, Extraterrestrials Beings, Civilizations
3:14:00
Lifeder Edu
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН