Paul, I hope you catch this comment if you can still travel to Malta, there are maps of it from the late 1500s that show the old cities and roads at the Library of Congress with the book Theatrvm Orbis Terrarvm. It would be interesting to see if any of them still line up and if you can find something from that far back.
@stevecrabtree76544 күн бұрын
You always find the best locations!
@romanschapter6559Күн бұрын
He really does find the greatest places History is So very intersting
@truelightoutdoors8450Күн бұрын
No I thinks he's actually avoiding the real stuff...
@thisoldsaw5438Күн бұрын
DUDE! What in the actually hell? 13:23 cables??!!!!!! Absolutely outstanding work!
@adamgretzinger963Күн бұрын
I came to this realization two nights ago the forms for all these old poured masses are not iron. The iron was the place of origination of the form though, the forms being sound waves that generate cymatic patterns in a geopolymer slurry. Once the pattern is established and holding itself in a given shape now we wait for the geopolymer to cure. Discontinue amplification of the sound frequency or the "forms". Now you have a cymatic shape in the physical world that is added to, or subtracted from to reach a desired design goal. The frequency ripple, a fractal of the larger frequency, you are looking at in the surface that gives impression of a form board or plate having odd sequencing marks on it that are continuing through face of stone to the next face of stone.
@dangerousgrapeКүн бұрын
Interesting... you seen Praveen Mohan's stuff? There's temples in India where the design on the ceiling is a massive cymatic symbol that we can't currently backtranslate
@deborahsacco186Күн бұрын
You should do some research on the Tartarian Empire. You will get some answers especially how they collected and distributed electrical power. And the fact that it was not long ago. There is an 8 hour film done showing pictures of the actual buildings and much more.
@ismetakrzalichadzic1977Күн бұрын
😊👍
@homoerectus744Күн бұрын
Ok!
@vivavois89662 сағат бұрын
Link please
@nim3186Күн бұрын
I love your exploration of these places! I agree the stones appear to be poured limestone using forms, but I believe that they didn’t use iron forms as it is to costly and heavy. But like what we are seeing is a process of the iron leaching out of the limestone mixture.
@Sibyle79Күн бұрын
More cool info I found: The seafaring Phoenicians of Tyre and Sidon fame colonised Malta roughly around the time of the prophet Isaiah. Isaiah served as a prophet in Jerusalem for about 40 years (approximately 740-701 B.C.)
@Titus950810 сағат бұрын
The bible isn't real, you know.
@DifferentSageКүн бұрын
Thank you Paul! I look forward to your videos! You always amaze me with everything you share!❤❤❤❤
@wesleyborg3008Күн бұрын
Unbelivable is right!
@SB5SimulationsFerroviairesEEP2 минут бұрын
Merci du partage! Effectivement, trouver encore des restes de câbles anciens figés dans deux anciennes saignées, elles mêmes dans un mur si ancien! Ce n'est pas tous les jours! Et c'est très précieux! Nos prédécesseurs, avaient eux aussi de sacrés connaissances techniques! Stéph.
@KID734Күн бұрын
I had a very troubling experience when I holidayed in Malta with my new wife, in the early 80s. We had just arrived in the main foyer of a central hotel, and this large elderly gentleman, just brushed me out of the way, to whisper in my most beautiful wife’s ear. I stared right into this evil man’s eyes, as my wife stood transfixed, for a few seconds. This man, was oozing with an aura of invincibility and as suddenly he tuned away, I asked my wife what he had said. She wouldn’t tell me, but just stared into space. It has taken me forty years to recognise this ‘creature’… He was one of Prince Charles’ confidants. A certain ‘Banking’ Lord. The spawn of the Rothschild Dynasty. That may explain much about Malta.
@nikkiracks485Күн бұрын
Who was it
@crayzmarcКүн бұрын
You still with her? Would be interesting after 40 years if she actually told you who she is.
@KID73422 сағат бұрын
@@nikkiracks485 You want me dead…Evelyn?
@gillescoin237413 сағат бұрын
@@nikkiracks485 Jac. Rot.
@v4panigale2610 сағат бұрын
I’ve thought for a while that we’ve mastered radio waves but an earlier species probably mastered sound waves. And the idea of understanding and mastering gravity is intriguing
@thesaunders2058Күн бұрын
There’s gotta be ways to go deep in this megastructure, or places around this area and find some crazy stuff man… old cables going through a stone that big is insane.
@oupahens92199 сағат бұрын
Interesting to see the keystones. Previous I read that they are made of metal.
@peteduch21518 сағат бұрын
In some countries they where cast metal
@rokdoctor6144Күн бұрын
Great insight to the architecrual evolution of these buildings. Thanks. As a geologist, it appears clear that there are very old deeply weathered shelly limestone blocks at the base of many buildings, which have been built over much later, using much younger limestone blockwork with little weathering. Curious as to what destroyed the older buildings? Likely the age gap between the major base and top building phases could be many thousands of years, guestinated from the pronounced difference in depth of weathering (deep pitting and loss of material as shown by protruding shell fragments that reveal original stone block surface levels). The degree of quarrying and cutting down into the bedrock limestone seems to show an early culture with much vigour to do this. (Else they would just build around and over the topography, is my thought). I seem to recollect that Malta had thick fertile soil way back but it was mostly lost under a major tsunami... possibly from a bollide water impact. (See OzGeology channel for some insights)
@ronweasleydoriaslivesfam8357Күн бұрын
🍄👁️👁️🍄 great content 👍🏾
@kloneoneillmacgowen9966Күн бұрын
Can you go back and get a picture of the coat of arms?
@EricJohnson-nw7diКүн бұрын
Hey how do i donate to u. I love your content!
@willsteele9249Күн бұрын
Looks like it's been under water for some time.... Hints all of the seashells like reef material on the walls imo. Great job as always!
@karenwright91236 сағат бұрын
Preflood people were bigger than us. They had better air,water,everything, Smarter,bigger,lived longer,too. Really good film out on the YT, called the Ark and the Darkness,explains a lot. Not that your videos aren't good. I mean,I'll never get to Malta. Go Tigers!
@JoleeneWhite.19814 күн бұрын
Hello paul how u doing mate.
@rodneymcgough945645 минут бұрын
Wait a minute. I don't know how much you know about architecture, but the taper of the giant walls is a very exceptional type of technical and complicated system of being able to perfectly taper walls on that scale. That entire complex has that particular characteristic. I would like to hear what a professor of ancient architecture would say about very faint taper of those giant walls. That is a highly extraordinary characteristic, and those sharp lines and the top of that first one is reminiscent of ancient Zi garrets.
@HowellingMad4 сағат бұрын
When you're finding braided steel cables embedded into stone, it's telling you one of 2 things. These aren't as old as "experts" claim they are & these "expert" are lying to us, or you've stumbled onto ancient technology that went ignored by previous archeologist. Anyway, good stuff & thank you for sharing. 👍
@Sibyle79Күн бұрын
A few of the times Malta has been damaged and rebuilt: Conflict with the Arabs in the 9th century. Norman Invasion in 1091. Wars during the period of the Knights of St. John (1530-1798), including the Great Siege of Malta in 1565, which was one of the most significant events where Malta was both involved in warfare and suffered considerable damage. World War II with the intense Siege of Malta from 1940-1942, where the island was repeatedly bombed, leading to extensive damage and civilian casualties. So, when was the artifical part of Malta built? It's been around a long time.
@adee957Күн бұрын
Yes, it looks like Pre-flod buildings, which means that the Igigi giants made this! The same race that built Megalithic buildings for the Annunakis!
@phillipbox79577 сағат бұрын
No one poured anything this Is cut limestone
@RonCobb-co6dr3 сағат бұрын
Grab a sample of that ground strap and see what its made of. It doesn't look green so? Copper mixed with? And it was twisted like modern wire rope. The other one was pretty short. I've seen those service chases on your previous shows, definitely done with a machine, big sweeping arcs, rotary cutter.
@Ronstar24u10 сағат бұрын
Nice. I agree.
@MrRodney215Күн бұрын
We were all here and everywhere forever. I can’t wait until we remember that we are all family.
@doc2help14 сағат бұрын
I was in Malta recently and also saw keystone cuts in other places.
@LTPottengerКүн бұрын
Thanks for all this. It's a whole country that is totally out of place. Amazes me how the oddness just goes on and on.
@riverponicsgrowingsystems745021 сағат бұрын
Do you think this was a more modern civilization trying to copy older antiquity of when massive stones were cut from quarry's ? The Yangshan Quarry in China and it's remnants come to mind. Yangshan, where the largest unfinished stones in the world are found. One in particular stone weighs in at 16,000 tons or something crazy like that !!!
@FalkesmedКүн бұрын
-Hemp ropes and elephants theory, is loong wrock oon.. 🥾
@peteduch21518 сағат бұрын
Someone should do a story on the huge acient cities in southafrica
@dangerousgrapeКүн бұрын
I have a theory for you Paul. I don't think these are water pipes. I think they're for electricity but these guys clearly didn't have plastic or rubber to insulate so they had to seal all the cables behind stone to protect people
@RCox-bm1onСағат бұрын
One of the reasons they built tall was they rode horses through.
@seenic0Күн бұрын
new camera?
@rh5563Күн бұрын
Serious $hit brother, if everybody picked pieces off every time they walked by, there wouldn’t be that invaluable wood to date.
@jimiliteКүн бұрын
wow more amazing stuff Champion !!! I love your work Thank you
@johncopeland38267 сағат бұрын
Those cables ..were they an early form of broadband ..har har ?
@christinewilde1107 сағат бұрын
Wow. Does nobody study these geogical anomolies anymore?
@chevyyyyyyyКүн бұрын
The Roman numeral MDCCXXII is 1722 in English numbers. This whole architectural complex is the dourest I have ever seen/felt.
@laradiantrr9357Күн бұрын
Hi Paul🙋🏼, Why did those ladies think you were talking to yourself? Was your camera hiding in those sunglasses?😎 Are you utilizing those virtual reality tech glasses in more than one way?🕵🤖
@ewancarmichael3412Күн бұрын
At 3.42, is that bone mixed into the stone? If it is, maybe it could be carbon dated as I'd guess it was from an animal at the time it was built. Also, the wood that you pointed out at 14.30 could be carbon dated too.
@Attiues10 сағат бұрын
@@ewancarmichael3412 Carbon dating is a load of shit used by Main$tream $cience
@bainsworth8853Күн бұрын
a buck 50 in that stone was milled.
@bobhead6243Күн бұрын
😊👍🙏
@xxPROMETHEUSxx1.Күн бұрын
You mean ANOMOLY, right 😉🤣🤣🤣
@johnnywick6521Күн бұрын
🤙🙏💪
@truelightoutdoors8450Күн бұрын
Your missing everything in the uk history of the world or are you purposely staying away from everything