Are there Underwater Megaliths? And other questions – an UnchartedX Q&A!
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Topics and timestamps:
0:47 Are Megalithic structures earthquake proof?
11:00 Should we be looking for structures 400 feet underwater?
18:40 Where is the ancient civilization’s workshop?
26:12 Where are the tools?
34:32 How advanced was the lost ancient civilization?
39:03 How did people live at Machu Picchu?
41:46 What’s the weather like at Machu Picchu?
45:23 How long does it take you to edit videos?
Links:
The Curious Connection between the Great Pyramid and the Maps of the Ancient Sea-Kings https://youtu.be/rhGQU3m9E34
Evidence of Ancient High Technology – Liquid Polishing at the Serapeum of Saqqara https://youtu.be/-PgvvdIBI8E
Randall Carlson’s channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAPc…
Monty Hall documentary on Yonaguni: https://youtu.be/1UbSQOIpkzI
Alain Hospenthal
vor 1 Sekunde
Hi Ben, there has been a thought crossing my mind about the animals found in South America, on the western part of South America, in the andes to be exact. The Alpaka, the Lama and the Vikunia and the Guanako, belonging the the species of new camels, which don’t seem to have any relatives in any other parts of the world except in Eurasia, where the Camel, the Dromedar and the Bactrian represent members of the species of so called old camels. We both know that there is an obvious connection between Peru and Gizah. I just wonder if we could date the connection by taking into consideration that someone had brought Camels to the altiplano some thousands years ago, which now have evolved into Lamas, Alpakas, Vikunia and Guanako. If it where true, that the Asian camels had migrated through the bering straight into South America, how come that we don’t find a single member of that species north of Ecuador. You would think that they might have found plenty of living space in north America too. Thank you for your great work and kind regards from Switzerland, Alain
Thanks Alain,
Interesting point. I haven’t looked into that, but the origins of the camelids would be an interesting study.
Cheers
Ben
Ben, I really like and appreciate the way you present your ideas and insights. In an area of thinking which is plagued by ill-discipline, you appear balanced and considerate of what can be stated as fact and what is speculation or opinion. That is the basis of being serious in my mind.
I have had the advantage of attending both Oxford and Cambridge Universities and studied Sumerian at the Oriental Studies faculty in Cambridge. As a person bereft of a middle-class accent or manners, I was the subject of much prejudice and have remained so at various times when engaging with academics. Despite this, I have managed to spend the last 30 years studying and researching mythology from the perspective of the ability to mythologise being a necessary psychological facility to produce stability within human consciousness. Yeah, I know, but I am afraid that is the short form title!
I am currently writing my own opus on this life of work. A lifetime which has given me the privelage of seeing the Caves of Lascaux, the real thing, as a special guest of the French Ministry of Culture. Spending three years researching Indigenous Australian relationships with land in Queensland as a Churchill Fellow. Working with native Americans and being invited to speak at conferences and universities on the subject of mythology.
In all of this time what I recognise in your work is the ‘mythology of academia’ and how they will do anything to protect their own work and research from any scrutiny and criticism. I am not sure that I agree with a lot of your insights, and I love that as much as I hate being in the company of people who just agree with me, but what really impacted me was the statues of Rameses and the palm columns. You cannot look at that work and ask for the precision and replication using bronze chisels and stone hammers. To try and support such a proposal has to be the hallmark of idiocy. We don’t need to go anywhere near proposals of advanced technology or tools to realise the irredeemable falsehood of the premise that bronze age tools produced this work.
Once we then look at the proposition that the great pyramid was constructed in under 30 years then we move into an area of comedy script rather than any serious intellectual consideration.
I just wanted to say thank you for your work and that I appreciate it. I am at the stage in my own book where I am gathering evidence for the proposal that a lot of our history is actually a mythology and you have helped me to ice that particular cake. I had quite a lot of supporting evidence already but your clear critique has just closed a chapter of my own book!
Best Wishes
Jack
Hi Ben,
First of all, excellent work on ALL your videos.
I haven’t had enough time to view all of them, including supporting podcast segments with guests, but enough to say…outstanding stuff. Your “campaign” for balanced viewpoints, honest consideration of data, “real” critical thought, without political agendas and dogma, is thorough and eye opening. You and the worldwide “YD Impact” group have been a smallish community, on a bit of an island and “dismissed” the last few years…until the Greenland crater. This is literally, history in the (re)making.
I’m a 63 year old, college educated Canadian, living in Toronto. Forgive me if some of the following questions and/or topics have been covered previously, as well as my use of “layman’s terms” for crater references and other items. I have NOT completed careful and exhaustive research on the following, but rather I have a good, well rounded understanding of the big picture.
Your thoughts, feedback, and questions are warmly welcomed.
Challenging the “Climate Change Movement/Dogma”
or…”The Silence Is Deafening”
This “movement” was/is political from the outset, and drives the entire group of entrenched “academics” against the YD Impact theory, who refuse to consider obvious questions about our so called civilized “origins”. The discovery of the Greenland crater has created shock waves in the scientific community…and crickets. As you pointed out, there are thankfully a rapidly growing number of scientists from all over the world, in agreement with the YD Impact theory.
At stake — Pride…basically, having to admit you were “wrong” in hallowed halls around the globe. Also — Funding. How many academics have their funding connected to Climate Change, now and for the foreseeable future?
The Pyramids and Monolithic Structures
Were the pyramids and other large structures built pre 12,800, to help protect people and “valuables” withstand the coming comet fragment cloud and subsequent devastation they know would come with it? The 4-sided triangular shape is the strongest structure from an architectural standpoint, and when built from solid stone, able to withstand asteroid strikes and tidal waves. The upward leading staircases would avoid inside flooding as well. I don’t believe they were ever envisioned as burial sites, until the 4000BC Egyptians adapted them, 8000+ years later.
The 16 Black Boxes
The precision of stone cutting, particularly perfect 90 degree inside corners, out of solid blocks…must have involved “help from others”. Of course, this is mocked, yet laser cut stone work of this quality is impossible today and there are enough worldwide ancient accounts of massive stone structures “being built by angels in one night” to ignore that option. It’s NOT “Pop Science”.
Why 16…? And is there any connection in ancient Egyptian writings with 16? There were 16 massive pillars near Cairo as well…? Just a coincidence?
The Greenland Crater
Possible the 1km fragment impacted at approx a 45 degree angle, approaching on a north east trajectory. You can see a debris field between the crater and the coast. Many of the smaller and secondary strikes across the globe seem to radiate out from Greenland, including the Carolina ovals and 5 near north California. Also, would the earth have passed through the comet debris cloud every 6 months in it’s orbit..? This would mean multiple strikes over several years, as opposed to all the devastation in one day.
Hope this wasn’t too long. I’ll have more thoughts and questions in the future.
Keep up the fantastic work.
Cheers
Ross
Great comment, thanks Ross. I do think the YD period was most likely a number of different impacts, and I think that, if we looked, we could find evidence for these all over the northern hemisphere, if not the entire earth. Which 16 boxes are you referring to? There are 24 in the Serapeum, but who really knows if that’s actually the total there, as I think it’s possible there are multiple levels to that site, as well as many other subterranean areas in Saqqara.
Hello Ben,
I just watched your August 2019 video “The Story of the Enigmatic and Mysterious Tube Drills of Ancient Egypt” and enjoyed how well it was done. That is the way to do it. To me, there is no question that these very ancient great structures predate ancient Egypt. However, I do wonder why you along with so many others seemingly gag at the thought that there is a Biblical connection here. You can find such mysteries throughout history. In fact, even in the present day. And there is a whole lot more beyond that, that would nauseate any normal person to no end – yet all of this is connected – there is a common denominator to all of it. As for the Bible, when one gets into it, its stunning how incomprehensibly accurate its prophecies are while at the same time, how simple its message is. Of course the Bible won’t tell you when and who built the pyramids, along with many other curious things, but it provides enough useful insight to corroborate certain of your conclusions.
Thanks for the kind words! There are grains of truth in the bible, sure – just as there are in any ancient religion or text. Lots of it is utter nonsense as well, it’s a tricky business trying to get to the actual truth of anything. For example, theres no real proof (outside of the bible) that Jesus ever existed as a person, much less a ‘god.’ Also, this: