Modern Metals in Ancient Egyptian Hard Stone Vase Fragments? Discussing preliminary results!
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Top Comments (10)
I saw a large excavator abandoned near a fishing lake last week. The farmer told me itd been there 20 years. The trees and plants had grown through it, it was rusted beyond recognition. It was so deteriorated in only 20 years. In 5000 years itll be gone. Annoys me when archaeologists say where are the tools. Theyd be long gone. Stones the only thing that lasts
Stream starts at 8:30
some random australian man decides he's fascinated by the wonders of stone work, proceeds to literally be so fascinated that he pushes forward scientific and historical research in new innovative ways, testing both the limits of our ancestors abilities & the limits of our own. Also it's quite fun to see your love for technogy, Always pursing the cutting edge of technology, though I imagine you never could've assumed in pursuing the cutting edge of technology you'd end up looking to our oldest moments of our past. Looking forward to you book, There's a lot of compelling information waiting to be layed out for people to observe To everyone else, Remember when you look at all the advanced tech in this video, its okay to be overwhelmed. Ben didn't jump in and learn all this instantly overnight (though it's certainly likely he's had sleepless nights researching and obsessing over stuff). Ben comes from the computer tech world, explored the world and found interest in the wonders he found. Not having a footing or basis he learned as he could, developing further and more technical understanding over time, yet in walking away from advanced computers towards ancient stones, it hasn't taken him away from the path of technology, instead he keeps getting thrust deeper into technological advancements. He's not using the tech just because he thinks it's cool (though I'm certain he finds it cool), he's using the advanced technology because it's critical to use it to properly measure and understand the relics of our ancestors.
Sent it to a friend of mine, studies history. He responded with "Oh, this guy again." and didn't bother to watch. I suppose the science of archaeology suffers from hubris.
I hope you enjoyed the livestream, or the replay! Please consider supporting UnchartedX work through the value-for-value model, details at https://unchartedx.com/support . If you want to join us in Egypt in March 2025, check out the trip details here: https://unchartedx.com/egypt2025 . I've seen a few comments about the 'long intro.' Understand how livestreams work - they're scheduled, and people have to join the stream. I run an intro to allow people to join on time. In this case, the 8 minute intro started 8 minutes before the scheduled time to start. That gets included in the replay. If you don't like music and cool footage, feel free to skip it forward 8 minutes.
This guy is going to be remembered in history for ages. Very inspiring.
At the company I am working for, we make tempered steel sleeves in diameter up to 1,5m and similar length. cylindrical outside and conical inside with a wall thickness of 50 to 150mm. The curcuferential wall thickness tolerance is 2,5 micron. That is only posible if inside and outside is grinded simultaniusly. Otherwise the material will be pushed off the tool. And every othe parameter is to observe as well, like rpm of the grindstones stiffness of the toolrest and so on. And keep in mind that steel is not bridle...... very impressive......😳
4 tenths of a micron …. To give this perspective, if the vase lip were expanded 8000 times larger from 126 millimeters across to 1 km across, then the difference in measurements would expand from 4 tenths of a micron to 3.2 millimeters or an eighth of an inch.
Once again Ben, fantastic mind blowing stuff, really appreciated 🙏 The only accepted mainstream modern TOOLS are the egyptologists themselves!!!
A fusion reactor, setup in the middle of a marbled floor room with sliding doors to the swimming pool, operators walking around in hawaii shirts and flip flops. Someone is living the dream and not giving a fuck.
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Top Comments (10)
I saw a large excavator abandoned near a fishing lake last week. The farmer told me itd been there 20 years. The trees and plants had grown through it, it was rusted beyond recognition. It was so deteriorated in only 20 years. In 5000 years itll be gone. Annoys me when archaeologists say where are the tools. Theyd be long gone. Stones the only thing that lasts
Stream starts at 8:30
some random australian man decides he's fascinated by the wonders of stone work, proceeds to literally be so fascinated that he pushes forward scientific and historical research in new innovative ways, testing both the limits of our ancestors abilities & the limits of our own. Also it's quite fun to see your love for technogy, Always pursing the cutting edge of technology, though I imagine you never could've assumed in pursuing the cutting edge of technology you'd end up looking to our oldest moments of our past. Looking forward to you book, There's a lot of compelling information waiting to be layed out for people to observe To everyone else, Remember when you look at all the advanced tech in this video, its okay to be overwhelmed. Ben didn't jump in and learn all this instantly overnight (though it's certainly likely he's had sleepless nights researching and obsessing over stuff). Ben comes from the computer tech world, explored the world and found interest in the wonders he found. Not having a footing or basis he learned as he could, developing further and more technical understanding over time, yet in walking away from advanced computers towards ancient stones, it hasn't taken him away from the path of technology, instead he keeps getting thrust deeper into technological advancements. He's not using the tech just because he thinks it's cool (though I'm certain he finds it cool), he's using the advanced technology because it's critical to use it to properly measure and understand the relics of our ancestors.
Sent it to a friend of mine, studies history. He responded with "Oh, this guy again." and didn't bother to watch. I suppose the science of archaeology suffers from hubris.
I hope you enjoyed the livestream, or the replay! Please consider supporting UnchartedX work through the value-for-value model, details at https://unchartedx.com/support . If you want to join us in Egypt in March 2025, check out the trip details here: https://unchartedx.com/egypt2025 . I've seen a few comments about the 'long intro.' Understand how livestreams work - they're scheduled, and people have to join the stream. I run an intro to allow people to join on time. In this case, the 8 minute intro started 8 minutes before the scheduled time to start. That gets included in the replay. If you don't like music and cool footage, feel free to skip it forward 8 minutes.
This guy is going to be remembered in history for ages. Very inspiring.
At the company I am working for, we make tempered steel sleeves in diameter up to 1,5m and similar length. cylindrical outside and conical inside with a wall thickness of 50 to 150mm. The curcuferential wall thickness tolerance is 2,5 micron. That is only posible if inside and outside is grinded simultaniusly. Otherwise the material will be pushed off the tool. And every othe parameter is to observe as well, like rpm of the grindstones stiffness of the toolrest and so on. And keep in mind that steel is not bridle...... very impressive......😳
4 tenths of a micron …. To give this perspective, if the vase lip were expanded 8000 times larger from 126 millimeters across to 1 km across, then the difference in measurements would expand from 4 tenths of a micron to 3.2 millimeters or an eighth of an inch.
Once again Ben, fantastic mind blowing stuff, really appreciated 🙏 The only accepted mainstream modern TOOLS are the egyptologists themselves!!!
A fusion reactor, setup in the middle of a marbled floor room with sliding doors to the swimming pool, operators walking around in hawaii shirts and flip flops. Someone is living the dream and not giving a fuck.