CARVING STONES WITH ANCIENT TECHNOLOGY (Mike Haduck)

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • I give examples of carving stone with ancient techniques,I show how to cut limestone and granite with basic stones and copper. And opinions of old school cutting techniques,
    teespring.com/stores/mike-had...
    Tools - www.amazon.com/shop/mikehaduck
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Battker
    @Battker Před 3 lety +53

    They should teach stuff like this in schools

    • @GamingHelp
      @GamingHelp Před rokem +1

      Of course, that's not the "academic" way, but I agree. Traditional approaches to education are so strange. They strip everything that would pique your interest and truly answer questions for you and instead, repeatedly tell you to take it on faith. Why don't you divide by zero? Because it's undefined. What does that mean? Just do the lesson. Meanwhile, the whole reason why it's undefined is really the fun part. But here's the best example I know of: Modern common core math. They literally spend the first few years now teaching the topics of base/radix, positional notation and placeholders. The entire rudiments of Arabic numerals. BUT, for some reason, the higher ups stripped every single mention of the actual names of those concepts from the curriculum. I've even asked my friends who're currently teaching this stuff. They've never even HEARD of the names of the very concepts they're teaching. And then they wonder why parents are absolutely outraged. It's like teaching reading for hundreds of years by teaching kids to memorize word shapes and never even mentioning the subject of the alphabet. Then, later, trying to fix that by teaching the alphabet and absolutely making certain to NEVER call it by name. :/

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 Před rokem +1

      @@GamingHelp I seriously that 99% of school kids would think that doing that would be utterly boring and what point would it have in their in 2023?

    • @GamingHelp
      @GamingHelp Před rokem +4

      I'm not quite following you here, I suspect you accidentally missed a few words. As for what's the point in teaching it, the point of teaching the rudiments of the math that underlies ALL of modern tech is obvious: So that people understand it instead of being clueless and powerless in a technological world. As to why they decided to strip every possible reference to the name of the subjects on the other hand, only the idiots who'd think it's a good idea could tell you why and that's WHY I find it so frustrating. Lots of academic subjects have all kinds of fun and exciting things in them, but educators always seem to want to strip those out. ESPECIALLY at grade school levels. And then people wonder why students find school boring after we strip out all the fun stuff and leave only the boring stuff structured in boring ways. The fact that people wonder what math is even good for when it's the literal foundation of our entire civilization is just one example of why it's a hard fail.

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 Před rokem

      @@GamingHelp Spot on!

    • @hooverity
      @hooverity Před rokem

      Nooo schools about whoever has enough money to put random trash in history books

  • @TheRogueRockhound
    @TheRogueRockhound Před 3 lety +52

    Oh man Mr. Haduck, you are going to make a ton of ancient alien types angry w/ this video.
    Great work !

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks, mike

    • @nexpro6985
      @nexpro6985 Před 3 lety +2

      No matter how I try I can't convince alien lovers they have it wrong.

    • @curiousbystander9193
      @curiousbystander9193 Před 3 lety +8

      but he didn't prove anything other than making a bunch of limestone dust with copper is inefficient.

    • @K9Clyde
      @K9Clyde Před 3 lety +9

      Mike proved it's not a big deal it can be done.

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 3 lety +6

      Our ancestors were a lot smarter than we'd like to give them credit for. Look at all the medieval fortresses, sometimes with walls miles long, and cathedrals 300 feet tall (and we have records on their building) -- all done with nothing but brains and muscle.

  • @makingmistakeswithgreg
    @makingmistakeswithgreg Před rokem +4

    When labor is plentiful and cheap, and materials are everywhere, it’s amazing what you can do absent of modern tools.

  • @milo8425
    @milo8425 Před 3 lety +24

    Mike, you're the best because you're still curious about the thing you've spent your whole life doing. It's beautiful man.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Milo, mike

    • @willb7392
      @willb7392 Před rokem

      this was great, really liked this. and it only takes a long time because you are doing it by yourself. now take alot more people, taking turns working 24 hours.....using the info in this vid czcams.com/video/E5pZ7uR6v8c/video.html and bam you got yourself alot of cool stuff.

  • @LinuxGalore
    @LinuxGalore Před 3 lety +55

    there was a great TV series way back in the 1990's looking at different engineering mysteries of the ancients. What surprised me was how simple and incredible clever many of the methods used by the ancient engineers where. Too many people look at our ancestors then automatically think they where stupid, the reality is just as we have incredible clever people today our ancestors also had incredible clever people.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +6

      Thanks Richard, I agree, Mike

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 3 lety +14

      I know someone who used to teach ancient history to middle schoolers. They didn't believe that those huge blocks of stone could be moved with just muscle power... so she took her 8th grade class to a construction site and hitched them to a one-ton iron ballast, and off they went. In fact across wet grass (not near as slick as Nile mud) it got away from them and flew into a ditch. They pulled it back out, then the boys rode on it while the girls pulled. Just eight girls had no trouble pulling that 2000 pound weight plus the several boys. Now, consider that Egypt's workers were mostly off-season farmers used to hard work... not so difficult at all. (The Pharaohs weren't dumb, either. Half a million idle young men need something to do besides sit and drink beer during the flood season. Put 'em to work, and save yourself a lot of trouble.)

    • @LinuxGalore
      @LinuxGalore Před 3 lety +7

      @@Reziac I remember one episode of the show where they challenged scientists and engineers to figure out how the Egyptians raised 50 ton obolisks. They could not use winches or any type of crane. None of them figured it out but a engineer in the USA did. All you need is sand, a long rectangular box that you will put the sand in and a long dirt ramp. You place the wooden box vertically at the end of the ramp filled with sand. Slide the obolisk along the ramp and drop it into the top of the vertical box full of sand. What you do now is have two labourers with baskets at the base of the box slowly empty the box of sand via a small door at the wood boxes base . As the sand is removed the obolisk slowly moved into its vertical position. The last step is to tie some ropes to the top of the now slightly tilted obolisk and pull it upright into a true vertical position. So 50 tons of stone over 40 feet high is raised with no winches or machines.

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 3 lety +5

      @@LinuxGalore I remember that! pretty obvious once you think of it. Apparently power equipment rots the brain. ;p

    • @ultrafeel-tv
      @ultrafeel-tv Před 3 lety

      @@Reziac Is there a video of the process, I can't imagine how this could possibly work.

  • @Brian-Burke
    @Brian-Burke Před 3 lety +6

    Great timing, Mike. I'm replacing basement windows in a 1963 house and the block is incredibly hard, but I was reminding myself what you've taught us. No big deal, take my time and it'll give in eventually and break up. Thanks, Mike.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks Brian, that's all, you will get it, mike

  • @jkozak01
    @jkozak01 Před 3 lety +34

    “It just takes time. No big deal.” I love this no nonsense explanation that proves how ancient stone work was done. It definitely took a lot time but that’s exactly what the ancients had lots of. Makes so much more sense then lasers, acoustics, aliens, etc. Great video!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Jason, mike

    • @MichaelEllisYT
      @MichaelEllisYT Před 3 lety +16

      The problem is the explanation doesn't explain so many things. It's doesn't explain the spiral groves of the tube drills into granite. It doesn't explain the circular saw marks in granite. It doesn't explain the high precision polished granite boxes in the serapeum and other locations. Im not saying aliens did it. I'm saying humans with tools that we don't have record of did it. There is information missing and "It just takes time." Doesn't explain so many things.

    • @whydoineedtohaveacct
      @whydoineedtohaveacct Před 3 lety

      @@MichaelEllisYT Yeah, doing helps, this video helps if you aren't doing it also, I like my masonry hammer for starters, Technology 1, soft stone, .3

    • @pitansgmail6792
      @pitansgmail6792 Před 3 lety +6

      @@MichaelEllisYT Nobody have ever proved any "spiral groves" or "circular saw marks". Start with that first. There are "striations" in the tube drill marks. There are marks of pendling weighted drag saws, not circular saws. The Serapeum Sarcofags are far from prefect and the work done on them aren't that difficult to achieve. Certainly not needs "machine tools". It just takes a lot of time and effort and some skills.

    • @rockets4kids
      @rockets4kids Před 3 lety +3

      And here's another thing... The Egyptian workers were well supplied with beer. It's a whole lot more enjoyable to bang rocks together all day long when you've got a good buzz going.

  • @CrplCon
    @CrplCon Před 2 lety +9

    You put a LOT of work into this! I guess I'll have to drop my theory about ancient aliens now. Thanks for this!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety

      Thanks Greg, Mike

    • @BubuH-cq6km
      @BubuH-cq6km Před rokem

      aliens had nothing to do with it but he don't explain the elaborate carving done on vases or the giant boxes that have actual saw blade markings czcams.com/video/K80JebExyEY/video.html

  • @wayneferree5053
    @wayneferree5053 Před 3 lety +7

    Good Job Mike! You produced an intriguing and very informative demonstration on the very real progress that can be acquired with the use of primitive technologies. Extremely entertaining, thanks!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks you Wayne, you were part of it, thanks mike

    • @DANTHETUBEMAN
      @DANTHETUBEMAN Před 2 lety +1

      @@MikeHaduck yeah I think I learned something, a lot can be done be many worker's with primitive tools.

  • @wim0104
    @wim0104 Před 3 lety +12

    "the laziest guy always finds the easiest way" also an important rule for sysadmins. and engineers have KISS, and need to be constantly reminded of it...

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks, very true, mike

    • @christopherlupan9710
      @christopherlupan9710 Před 3 lety

      Keep it simple stupid... oldie but goodie!!

    • @parkergriffin4388
      @parkergriffin4388 Před 3 lety

      i realize I'm kind of off topic but do anybody know a good site to stream newly released series online ?

    • @parkergriffin4388
      @parkergriffin4388 Před 3 lety

      @Xzavier Roman thanks, signed up and it seems to work :D I really appreciate it!

    • @xzavierroman3949
      @xzavierroman3949 Před 3 lety

      @Parker Griffin Happy to help :D

  • @jessebear4740
    @jessebear4740 Před 3 lety +53

    I love this so much. I'm so sick of people discounting the ingenuity of the Egyptians and claiming that they couldn't have done what they did without the help of Aliens.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks Rooster, Mike

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před 2 lety +2

      Its disrespectful of our ancestors.

    • @gregwarwick8655
      @gregwarwick8655 Před rokem +2

      Seen the Egyptians lately?
      It disproves evolution

    • @jessebear4740
      @jessebear4740 Před rokem +3

      @Kst Kst at least this is a tangible, practical demonstration of how the Egyptians could've constructed the pyramids with the tools and resources available to them at the time. The alien theory is abstract and theoretical. I'll take some proof over no proof.

    • @kylekoster3432
      @kylekoster3432 Před rokem +3

      Remind me again how claiming that the ancient Egyptians were actually more advanced than currently recognized equates to discounting their ingenuity

  • @timointrouble
    @timointrouble Před rokem +2

    I used to be a mason, too and I'm telling people the same thing, when these alien theories come up. You did it the neanderthalian way with literally rocks and sticks. The ancient Egyptians had centuries to develop specialized tools and methods. I can totally see them building specialized drill presses, lathes and so on. We are so used to having machines for everything, we can't even imagine anymore how our ancestors lived

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Timo, I agree, Mike

    • @claudemaggard7162
      @claudemaggard7162 Před rokem

      But there is no evidense of any of and ancient tools so they used basic tool just found ways to make them work faster

    • @subtlewolf
      @subtlewolf Před 7 měsíci

      ​​@@claudemaggard7162There's no evidence that has been preserved, found *and* recognized. Which is something entirely different.
      Aside from the obvious issue of whether the materials will last for thousands of years what we find is going to heavily biased towards common junk rather than rare or even unique machinery.
      Think antikythera mechanism rather than amphora. Despite the sturdy materials it's extremely uncommon of a find that took significant effort to reverse engineer.

  • @Suburbanstoneage
    @Suburbanstoneage Před 3 lety +2

    I love your channel. I'm going to feature it on my channel because there is so much useful information you share. I'll be working with granite soon using old methods, and you've shown me how to get it done. Thank you!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks, I checked your channel out, your pretty too, mike

  • @rocca1351
    @rocca1351 Před 3 lety +7

    hee hee dont remember seeing hieroglyphics with a hose bib on them =)
    Thanks for all the videos!
    Keep up the great work!

  • @davemilne2484
    @davemilne2484 Před 3 lety +1

    Great vids. I'm a new Zealand er but used to work for a stone mason in WI. Loved stone and brick and architecture ever since.

  • @kathyl6353
    @kathyl6353 Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting! All of your patch and repair videos have inspired me to "try" to fix my dad's concrete problems. Wish me luck, he might disown me. Thanks for taking your time to do the videos. They're so informative and I appreciate your helpful comments. *Song "Castle" by Mike Haduck - you're a musician, too. Wow!

  • @bryandowdey1779
    @bryandowdey1779 Před 2 lety +4

    Very interesting Mike. This takes some of the mystic out of the ancient stone constructions.
    I wonder why other stone masons have not shown how this could be done.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +3

      Hi Bryan, there are a few out there, but a lot who do it everyday don't care on making videos, thanks Mike

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Bryan, there are a few out there, but a lot who do it everyday don't care on making videos, thanks Mike

    • @bryandowdey1779
      @bryandowdey1779 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MikeHaduck Well I'm glad you do make the videos because they are very informative and clear.

  • @williamkeith8944
    @williamkeith8944 Před 3 lety +5

    Mike, when you are working the granite corner on the bench by pounding it, seems the bench holding the rock is bouncing around. Is that bouncing causing a loss of energy in the blows?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +2

      Hi William, maybe, it was on wheels so I would move it outside to work on it, I just wanted to prove the point, thanks Mike

  • @stevee.7419
    @stevee.7419 Před 2 lety +1

    👋🏼 Hey, thanks for the lesson. And thank you for offering your perspective on the subject of ancient civilizations.

  • @rogerdodger5415
    @rogerdodger5415 Před 3 lety +1

    I like your practical approach to working masonry and concrete and banjo!
    ❤️🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸❤️

  • @ohsk8an
    @ohsk8an Před 3 lety +8

    Can you imagine living next door to the pyramids during construction?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +3

      It would clear up a lot of controversy, lol, mike

    • @Alex-uy7pc
      @Alex-uy7pc Před 3 lety

      Would you rather hear 1,000 small rock hammers or 10 pile drivers?

    • @DANTHETUBEMAN
      @DANTHETUBEMAN Před 2 lety

      I can see asking , what the hell you building all that for? We want to hide a body in there.

  • @MP-jo1qs
    @MP-jo1qs Před 2 lety +3

    "Wayne said they could do it with copper.." as Wayne had just proceeded to use a powered chisel lol

  • @og-Sokaar
    @og-Sokaar Před rokem +1

    I love this video - it inadvertently makes the case stronger that the current explanation for how the pyramids were built doesn't add up while trying so hard to argue the opposite.
    Builds a sphynx head - uses electric tool to carve the detail.
    Builds a notch in a rock, "You can use copper it works" three hammer strikes later the chisel is blunt and bent. Uses flint, breaks flint while taking millimetres off the rock.
    "It can be done" he exclaims but the same can be said about chimps with typewriters writing the complete works of Shakespeare given infinite time and/or chimps.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi, It's only stone, If you made a video showing why it can't be done I would to see it,

    • @garytart
      @garytart Před rokem +1

      ​@@MikeHaduck Mike you already made that video

    • @garytart
      @garytart Před rokem

      I was looking through the comments with people exclaiming how he finally showed anyone who questions the modern explanations and no one was mentioning how he claimed to make a limestone sphinx head with just granite and copper and then he takes it to his friend who uses modern tools! What a crock of shit.
      Mike I suggest you check out UnchartedX's video on the granite pottery found in Saqqara. It will open your eyes to the level of precision found in the oldest parts of ancient Egypt. You're trying to explain away the most primitive parts of Egypt and said we figured it out but that's bunk science you can't ignore the most spectacular evidence found.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      I got to say I been around stone work all my life and all they are saying about how persision they were is nonsense, they had their Michelangelos and leanardos but idont see anything a granite kitchen installer can't do, I got more videos on the way thanks Mike

    • @og-Sokaar
      @og-Sokaar Před rokem

      @@MikeHaduck you've been around stone your entire life and yet you can't do anything as comparable to the work done 4000-9000 years ago, perhaps you should choose another vocation.
      You sound ignorant and at this point it just comes across like you are trolling when you compare the work done on a granite kitchen top with machine tools to work done 4000 years ago without machining tools. You couldn't do comparable work with electric tools and a workshop.

  • @williemills2657
    @williemills2657 Před 3 lety

    I followed your advice and got my old hammers and chisels from flea market and yard sales. Now I'll try this 👍

  • @dopeish7216
    @dopeish7216 Před 2 lety +6

    Hey Mike I'm a Mason myself doing brick block and stone since I was 18 I'm 40 now and the timing of this video was impeccable because I just in the past few weeks been watching all these crazy CZcams videos on that ancient Egyptians and stuff then blowing my mind I've been saying similar things along the way like in your videos but I got to admit the symmetry is something I can't right my mind around and the perfect 90s they look like they were plasma cut you think they sat there and rubbed Stone against Stone to get those joints so perfectly smooth and tight or they didn't even need any motor they're just look like they were melted together or something I seen some nice tight joints nothing like that so uniform all the way around I don't know does take time I understand all that and anything can be done I feel like they would still be there rubbing Stone together if that's how they did it... I don't know ever meet up my mind yet about all of it 20 years in the trade and I still look at some of that stuff and it bothers me to think that I couldn't do it I'll come some masonry too many things I haven't done or couldn't do myself and a few of those things do puzzle me a little still

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Do, you got to put going over there on your bucket list, when you see them.you will know right away how they are not that perfect, only a few areas where they spent time, they are primitive to me , I am a lot more impressed with the cathedrals, but the pyramids are something to see, thanks mike

    • @mattnewby123
      @mattnewby123 Před rokem

      @@MikeHaduck czcams.com/video/Mq2KGQajfAo/video.html&ab_channel=ScientistsAgainstMyths this woman is dedicated...

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +4

      Yes, scientists against myths, great channel, I mention them often, thanks Mike

    • @mattnewby123
      @mattnewby123 Před rokem +1

      @@MikeHaduck I think you need to go on Joe Rogan, calm him and Hancock down a wee bit. lol

    • @xOsKaHH
      @xOsKaHH Před rokem

      @@MikeHaduck hey Mike. Ive seen people measuring some of these stones and there uniformly flat to "20 thousandth of an inch per square foot". That might be abit off my memory is not perfect, but it was flat to the point where it would be far from impossible to see with the human eye and needlessly precise. Could this be weathering uniformly across the slabs/steps? I'm struggling to find a plausible answer to this honestly

  • @SacredGeometryDecoded
    @SacredGeometryDecoded Před 2 lety +4

    Hey Like, I have a playlist of dozens of videos working with granite with simple tools, cutting ad drilling in different types of granite and basalt, beginning from making the abrasives from scratch through to polishing.
    I also have many videos examining the "magical" Serapeum boxes and vases and all those things they keep calling "precision" Hint hint they are not and I show how to tell.
    If you're interested let me know and i can pass on the videos and sources.
    I got sick of replying to each individual comment so made video responses to help set them straight without having to type the same thing over and over.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety

      Thanks SGD, sure send me the links so I can check them out, thanks Mike

    • @SacredGeometryDecoded
      @SacredGeometryDecoded Před 2 lety

      @@MikeHaduck
      first i am sure you'll really like this one
      czcams.com/video/JZXeQkQVs1o/video.html
      here's the playlistof the experiments with granite and "primitive" tools, drilling, cutting a giant circular saw mark with a short copper blade, grinding to a flat surface. I include my first attempts to show how to avoid the mistakes i made and little tricks i picked up along the way to increase speed and quality
      czcams.com/video/XY6SUTPV018/video.html
      Examining the serapeum and not seeing any precision
      czcams.com/video/bEwxMFDRmek/video.html
      I have a bunch on different sites and tech lost high tech stuff but won't bombard you with them for now
      Love your channel by the way, i think i missed my calling by not taking up the stone craft as a young man. Picked it as a hobby now and absolutely love it.

    • @gregwarwick8655
      @gregwarwick8655 Před rokem

      Ignore the mechanical engineer that showed the spiral drill hole with equal mm progression for the entirety of the bore hole.

    • @SacredGeometryDecoded
      @SacredGeometryDecoded Před rokem

      @@gregwarwick8655 Chris Dunn . I have a couple of videos on him. Including busting him on faking experiments.
      Mechanical engineers are not divine angels unable to make mistakes or tell lies.
      Plus a team went to the Petrie museum and properly analysed the core and actually presented their evidence.
      It’s not a spiral and even by Chris Dunn’s own pictures the striations are all over the place.
      Yet people just hear what they want to hear and believe what they want to believe.
      No one even looked at the old pics. They just accepted it because “mechanical engineer”.

    • @gregwarwick8655
      @gregwarwick8655 Před rokem

      You aren't the guy who speculated that the pyramid was built from the inside are you?

  • @littleladyfrog
    @littleladyfrog Před rokem

    Just came across your videos and I absolutely love them. I am now bing watching them! Thank you!

  • @opcode114
    @opcode114 Před 3 lety +1

    Another fantastically informative video. Thanks Mike!

  • @jackrorystaunton4557
    @jackrorystaunton4557 Před 2 lety +22

    It would be nice if you would disclose exactly how many man-hours it took to take out that corner of granite. It would help in estimating constraints on how megalithic sites may have been constructed. Also, it's a shame your friend didn't just use copper and hand tools to carve the face- kinda defeated the purpose that he used modern tools didn't it?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +15

      Hi Jack, it's just stone, anybody who works it gets better and faster and inventive as they go, just like anything else, the pyramids are primitive, as a stone mason, I am far more impressed with the cathedrals, thanks mike

    • @TonyTrupp
      @TonyTrupp Před rokem +8

      The Inca told the spanish chronicler Cieza De Leon in the 1550s that it took 20,000 men to construct sacsayhuaman over the time span of multiple rulers.

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Před rokem +3

      @@TonyTrupp imagine getting to see that construction at its peak.
      Awesome

    • @BIGGIEMURUA1982
      @BIGGIEMURUA1982 Před rokem

      I imagine, they never stopped working. It must taken day n night 24 hrs. a day. Remember, it was slaves building these ancient monuments. I'm guessing 75 years to complete

    • @edfu_text_U_later
      @edfu_text_U_later Před 7 měsíci

      ​@BIGGIEMURUA1982 well slaves didn't build the Egyptian pyramids. No one believes that anymore.

  • @34974custom
    @34974custom Před 3 lety +6

    Mike, by the time you finished the granite you forgot to say you've now been in the business for "60 years." I like how you single handedly destroy all the CZcamsrs who specialize in lost technology theories! #HaduckRules

  • @schmiedepeter3881
    @schmiedepeter3881 Před 3 lety

    This is a very interesting video and the technique you showed made a big impression on me !! Thank you very much.

  • @surfmarine3118
    @surfmarine3118 Před rokem

    Thank you for this straightforward demonstration of how simple methods can create seemingly complex shapes in even the hardest of materials. It only takes human ingenuity, time and effort, not alien intervention.

  • @doc2help
    @doc2help Před rokem +8

    I was in Egypt with Youssef Arywan, also a stone worker and Ben from UnchartedX. Both showed us this kind of work done by the Dynastic Egyptian and described these techniques, so all you ‘hearsayers’ who state otherwise you are wrong.They both agree that much of what we see was possible with the tools discovered. The work not possible by these techniques is extremely old, unaccompanied by glyphs and some of it was so precisely done it would be impossible with such techniques. The Dynastic Egyptians and the Inca were very skilled but the boxes at the Serapeum were not done this way and neither was Ollantaytambo or Sacsayhuaman. Mike, skilled as you, are your technology would never quarry shape or fit some of these massive stones. I appreciate such triumphs of hope over common sense and applaud such extreme efforts to prove an hypothesis! Thank you, Mike.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      Hi U took a good look at all their work and as a stone mason they are not as persice as they say, it's only stone and they had their jewelers etc, that shows their skill from that time, to me it's all primitive, I am much more impressed with the cathedrals, thanks mike

    • @cleanpiecington2319
      @cleanpiecington2319 Před 9 měsíci

      @@MikeHaduckso your telling me you could reproduce khafre enthroned? How exactly would you measure the symmetry to 1000th of an inch? And if you said you had to use laser measurements… how did they do it?

    • @cleanpiecington2319
      @cleanpiecington2319 Před 9 měsíci

      @@MikeHaduckand yes they are are precise as they say lol. They’ve used laser technology… which I’m assuming the ancient Egyptians didn’t have… to really show how precise they were. Your rock pounding video was cute but your either being purposely in genuine or you don’t understand the precision necessary to produce some of these artifacts

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 9 měsíci

      Hi, watch part 2, thanks Mike

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 9 měsíci

      @@cleanpiecington2319 watch part 2, thanks Mike

  • @ismellbullpoop9898
    @ismellbullpoop9898 Před 11 měsíci

    vERY nICE!
    Thanks for your time and Information!

  • @marksherrill9337
    @marksherrill9337 Před rokem

    Well done. I looked up this and other videos specifically to see for myself. Thank you

  • @user-sg5lt9gm9f
    @user-sg5lt9gm9f Před 2 měsíci

    Love it. I literally love the part when you drill the granite and said to yourself "how you did it? I don't know. It was the aliens". I laughed so much.

  • @T.E.P.
    @T.E.P. Před 3 lety +1

    " Hi! I'm Mike Haduck and been a stone mason for over 50 years". and he looks 35 years old. This is a great video Mike!!! always love how you keep educating everyone on the art of masonry

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Thor, I appreciate it, mike

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 3 lety

      Ah, I see the problem. Mike IS one of those ancient aliens. :D

  • @ghefley
    @ghefley Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this... enjoyed it greatly.

  • @GamingHelp
    @GamingHelp Před rokem +1

    I'm not even a minute thirty seconds in and had to smack like. I KNOW this is going to be good just by your intro. Thanks for this. I think this kind of thing is more important than we realize.

  • @guillermojacques6671
    @guillermojacques6671 Před 3 lety +1

    The History Channel needs to give you equal time with the alien crowd. Wayne does great work and makes it look easy. Another great video. Thanks Mike.

  • @saviotoronto358
    @saviotoronto358 Před 3 lety +2

    really enjoy your incite...I hope you have many more vacations

  • @larryswindcatcher
    @larryswindcatcher Před 3 lety +1

    Time and determination. It's no big deal, just get it done! I want your T shirt! Great video.

  • @theoldbigmoose
    @theoldbigmoose Před rokem

    Absolutely fascinating Mike, thank you for teaching us these techniques of ancient times.

  • @65csx83
    @65csx83 Před 2 lety

    You can make pounding rocks together interesting. I liked the part near the end with the guys rolling the stone encased in a wooden frame. Years ago, in a discussion with some coworkers, I was derided when I rendered the opinion that it was how I believed the pyramids were done because it was how I would do it. I'm a DIY'r and at times it takes me longer to figure out a way to do something without help than to actually do the task.

  • @TP-xi7ri
    @TP-xi7ri Před 3 lety

    Another excellent video, Thank You Mike. TP

  • @macmccarrick6165
    @macmccarrick6165 Před 3 lety

    Absolutely!! Mike, you have the most positive mindset that makes my Root cellar so much easier. I'm not by any means good at stonework, and it may not be pretty, it will be strong and best of all it will be buried so no one will see it. Thanks again for taking the Pause out of trying.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Mac, Mike

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 3 lety

      I had a neighbor who dug himself a basement by hand (under his house). Took him about two months with nothing but a shovel and a wheelbarrow. Time and muscle can do a lot.

  • @johnenright4969
    @johnenright4969 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Mike another great informative video! I've been in industrial air compressors almost as long as you have been a mason, what kind of compressor does Wayne have? Bring on more truck videos!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks John, it's a industrial, mike

  • @wayneisanamerican
    @wayneisanamerican Před 3 lety +2

    I would really like to see you debate "Ben" of Uncharted X as he is convinced that everything was done with big machines or something, not sure what, I don't even think he does. They have started a sort of "podcast" discussion but always have like minded people in it so there really is no debate.....I live in an area where a canal was built almost 200 years ago and not only are some of the canals looking almost pristine but show incredible detail and are not out-of-level or line and I know they had no power tools. It is documented in expense reports to the investors....anyway, love your channel and have learned much. Used a star drill and hammer to make a three inch bore through 12 inches of 1930 concrete for a discharge pipe on a sump pump. It used to be a cistern in my parents house. You are right, it takes a long time and I just worked on it an hour a night for a couple of weeks but it worked!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks wayne, I hear you, mike

    • @bermonz
      @bermonz Před 3 lety

      I hate Ben from uncharted x... even Brien forester and jimmy are getting annoying now

  • @williamkeith8944
    @williamkeith8944 Před 3 lety

    Drilling holes in the rock with copper was done with a bow drill scaled to the job. That reciprocating action speeded up the process of friction in cutting. I also think the ancients cut blocks with giant pendulum saws. Big frames over rock had a log suspended on ropes with pegs on the underside of each end of the log where they stretched twine. That twine would rub back and forth on a pre-scored line and wet grit between rock and twine would cut the rock. As the cut got deeper, chisels were used to pound in the rock cut and it would crack apart.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi William, provably so, a lazy guy would always find a easier way, lol, Mike

  • @420JackG
    @420JackG Před 3 lety +2

    Great video as always, Mike. I'd be interested in your thoughts on Gobekli Tepe in Turkey. It's really impressive stonework for being pre-agricultural Neolithic.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +3

      Hi Jack, I would have to physically visit the site to give a honest opinion, thanks mike

  • @Roonnam
    @Roonnam Před 3 lety

    Our ancestors did well.. amazing explanation about the outer casing stones and the way they filled it in.. the drawings made it all understandble.. pleasure beng part of this.. though i don't want to make a big deal out of it.. but i think it is.. :)

  • @mr.bulldops7692
    @mr.bulldops7692 Před 2 lety +1

    I think it's also worth saying that there would be group of people overseen by a master mason. With dozen of years of experience between the group working mostly with the limestone and granite found around the Nile valley with stone and copper tools. They probably had intimate knowledge with understanding how the stone breaks, how to hit the stone for maximum effect, which chips might have the ideal geometry for the particular job, etc. They had generations with these techniques to work out the best/fastest/easiest way to work the stone with these tools.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Bull, true, and when I started before the big saws and modern machinery they were still doing it that way, difference was in the 50s , 60s and 70s they had pneumatic tools, thanks mike

    • @mr.bulldops7692
      @mr.bulldops7692 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MikeHaduck exactly! Stone mason was most likely THE trade to be in the Nile Valley as well. Like many Bronze Age civilizations, the patronage of the house of the pharaohs and the treasury of kingdoms were THE driving force in the Nile valley economy. And the building of a tomb was most likely the largest building project of that person's life. Imagine you learning the trade as an apprentice but knowing that your work is to be used as the eternal resting place for a living god tasked with keeping the entire world from falling into chaos, as well as a living king (or queen) who will be using the tomb as a flex for all future rulers. I'd imagine it would be pretty motivating.

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Před rokem

    Here because of a World of Antiquity video. Great stuff you've got here!
    ❤❤

  • @alexcicoria5863
    @alexcicoria5863 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the videos

  • @ASDPOWER
    @ASDPOWER Před rokem

    Love this been waiting to find someone doing this properly!!!!!!!

  • @2degucitas
    @2degucitas Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks Mike

  • @crudefoyer
    @crudefoyer Před rokem

    Thanks for this!

  • @philais
    @philais Před 3 lety +1

    Love your vid's Mike!!! Whoohoo!

  • @TVPiles
    @TVPiles Před rokem +1

    That thing you point to at 2:30 is called an azde, a steel version of it is still used for all kinds of masonry work all over the Mediterranean.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi TV, now I know what it's called, I have seen carvers using them in the quarries, thanks for the info, Mike

  • @fepeerreview3150
    @fepeerreview3150 Před rokem

    This is great! I've been collecting videos on this subject so that I can share them with people who make "ancient high technology" mistaken claims.

  • @stauffap
    @stauffap Před rokem +1

    Thank you. You should have a lot more views. You're really educating people, who have fallen for this ancient alien nonesense.

  • @creestee08
    @creestee08 Před 3 lety

    Love your sweater. Gonna buy that soon.

  • @michaelmaker8169
    @michaelmaker8169 Před rokem

    Great job 👍.

  • @SmithSmithson1
    @SmithSmithson1 Před rokem

    Excellent demonstration. These techniques work great on a small scale, but clearly take a lot of time. Can you do a demonstration on cutting a 20 tonne block of granite and tell us how this was done for millions of large granite blocks

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Smith, sure I can, no problem, if you get a 20 ton block at a quarry and want to hire some help for me ,pay for the insurances, permits workers comp,and a fee for my time, etc etc ,let me know, with respect, thanks Mike

  • @josephdolderer6113
    @josephdolderer6113 Před rokem +1

    Great video! I read that the copper mined in Egypt was harder that today’s copper - making an even better case that they used copper chisels and tools.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      Hi Joseph, I heard they added other substances to it, thanks mike

    • @woopteedeewoopteedye
      @woopteedeewoopteedye Před rokem

      There must have also been an organised constant supply chain of freshly made or reshaped tools available for each project.
      The Ancient Alienated must think the poor guy had to stop, sharpen his tool for half an hour and keep going and sharpen again and on and on. 😆
      ☀🐫🏝

  • @CharlesLumia
    @CharlesLumia Před 3 lety +2

    Great video Mike! Shows that those huge projects were done over many years of time and with tons of hard labor.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Charles, I agree, mike

    • @CharlesLumia
      @CharlesLumia Před rokem

      @@tilleryinnovations592 ALIENS DID IT!!!!

  • @stevenschaublin9695
    @stevenschaublin9695 Před 3 lety

    i really liked your video on stone carving please make more

  • @user-sy6uo9vz6o
    @user-sy6uo9vz6o Před 3 lety

    This is I always want to know. Thank you.

  • @ScientistsAgainstMyths

    Thank you very much!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks, I plan to mention your channel and all the good things you prove, mikr

  • @stanleytolle416
    @stanleytolle416 Před rokem

    Fire was also used. This will make it easier to do the chipping. This is why you get the scoop marks. Fire, pound it out, fire. The large obelisks were quarried out in 6 to 8 months. When the yearly flood came the ruff obelisks where loaded on to boats and floated down the river to where they were used. I think the finishing work and inscriptions were done where the obelisk were installed.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Stanley, I could agree with a lot of that, thanks Mike

  • @peterwikvist2433
    @peterwikvist2433 Před 2 lety

    Great experiments Mike.

  • @Bigmonkey34mn
    @Bigmonkey34mn Před 2 lety +1

    Mike not sure if you saw the video of the Russian girl recreating vases from Egypt's pre dynastic period? Shes been at it now a couple of years and her technique is improved a lot. Shes now working on a diorite vase showing the ancient lost technology people that yes the pre dynastic Egyptians were capable of making these hollowed out vases with the tools at hand.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Andy, I have, and she is on the right track, thanks Mike

  • @nump4d
    @nump4d Před 11 měsíci

    Get a kick out of these guys online who believe that all intricate masonry was work of the ET's when in reality ancient craftsmen dedicated their WHOLE life to their works, let alone the projects taking years and years to finish. I'm planning on making some limestone pendants and really want to utilize traditional means of stonecutting for the sake of budget and for better replicating an archaic style. Thanks for the video, gained a lot of insight on these old-world methods.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thanks, I also have a playlist " rockfacing and shaping stone" Mike Haduck, I go through all the old school and new school ways of stone work, thanks Mike

  • @Skorrigan
    @Skorrigan Před rokem +1

    You know what was the best part? "I'm pretty sure they colud do that with copper tools but I'm gonna use the steel ones" (switches on an electric chisel).

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Skorrigan, because it faster, thanks Mike

    • @benjaminfroussos7466
      @benjaminfroussos7466 Před rokem

      I don't know how many Things were done because they Look Just too good, symetrical. But this is a Joke. You believe your own Dogma. Just Like the other Side. They Had time. Just keep hitting etc. No. Of course you can Hit 3 month in the same Corner. Of course Material will Go away. But giza is something else. Saqqara. Same. But this Kind of. Look. I Hit the stone only 3 days and 1 Inch is gone. Wow

  • @jimc4731
    @jimc4731 Před 3 lety

    You're doing a good job, Mike!
    JIM

  • @nathanwestfall9412
    @nathanwestfall9412 Před rokem

    I love this! The question is not that they couldnt do it, just that the current sphinx looks smaller than original. and what was their mortar mix!

  • @casualviewing1096
    @casualviewing1096 Před 3 měsíci

    This is brilliant 👏👏👏 well done

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks, I appreciate it, Mike

  • @lefty5595
    @lefty5595 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice job Mike! This video is very informative. I imagine there were a lot of visually impaired stone workers since goggles were scarce during Egyptian pyramid construction era?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Lester,,, Mike

    • @LukeA1223
      @LukeA1223 Před 2 lety +2

      They wrapped cloth around their faces, Egypt had no lack of weaving experts... they had 6000 years to perfect cotton textiles thin enough to see through and resilient enough to keep rock chips out of their eyes.

  • @walkman1984
    @walkman1984 Před 2 lety

    how did they manage to smooth the sides and make it look like it has a gloss finish? anything on that?, thank you!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety

      Hi Walkman, I got a whole playlist on the pyramids, I show different techniques in each pyramid video, thanks Mike

  • @acerodriguez6884
    @acerodriguez6884 Před rokem +1

    Bro NOBODY DOUBTS THEY EASILY CARVED THE SAND STONE, the stuff people are talking about it's the hardest granite the pink and black granites. We want to see you carve that with flawless right angles and perfect sculpting using those same tools and nothing more

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Ace, send the money to my pay pal account and I will get right on it, It will be taking me some time but i could do it, thanks Mike

  • @jessedover6175
    @jessedover6175 Před rokem +1

    People have to realize, that THIS IS ALL THEY HAD TO DO. THIS WAS WHAT LIFE WAS ALL ABOUT. They were proud of themselves.

  • @denirn8725
    @denirn8725 Před 2 lety

    I wonder if the shapes were etched out first little by little, right along the pencil lines it might even go faster. Yep! It sure world take a very long time but it definitely was done and done beautifully by ancient artisans. So interesting.

  • @chasesimmons872
    @chasesimmons872 Před 3 lety +1

    Very interesting loved the video, but how do you explain the machining marks on some of the granite in egypt such as the bore holes and saw cuts?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 3 lety

      Thanks chase, mike

    • @grasse77
      @grasse77 Před 2 lety

      @@MikeHaduck Chase asks an interesting question - how would you explain those bore holes in hard stone? Those have long mystified me. Thanks in advance.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety

      I don't know which ones you are talking about, mike

  • @cloudscript
    @cloudscript Před 2 lety

    sweet! i just remembered you & wondered if you'd weighed in on this topic! score!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks zszs,,,, Mike

    • @cloudscript
      @cloudscript Před 2 lety

      @@MikeHaduck `thank you! i had a feeling that there was a rational take somewhere in the world! ☺️ (& i got to discover your band!)

  • @Roryfan1000
    @Roryfan1000 Před rokem +2

    Thanks, Mike, so interesting, using granite to carve granite, I honestly never thought of that :) Wondering what you mean when you say, "a long time"? Hours, weeks, months? I'd also love to hear your thoughts on how the delicate granite objects, like bowls and vases, etc, were created?

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      Hi, I got a whole playlist " rockfacing and shaping stones" on part 13 the guy from the granite museum shows how it's done by hand, and the channel scientist against myths had a lot of examples, thanks mike

  • @markdearlove8634
    @markdearlove8634 Před 3 lety

    Great stuff

  • @emmetsweeney9236
    @emmetsweeney9236 Před rokem

    No one ever denied that copper and flint can carve limestone; the difficulty comes with carving granite and diorite. Flint chisels CAN carve granite and diorite, but the process is incredibly slow. The Egyptians did have iron, as the metal is mentioned frequently in the Pyramid Texts, and iron artefacts and tools of the Pyramid Age have actually been found. These are rarely mentioned in textbooks because they undermine the whole chronological system beloved by mainstream Egyptologists.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Emmet. I agree, I also got a whole series called " rockfacing and shaping stone" part 13 shows the guy doing demonstration on old school polishing of granite, thanks mike

  • @Roybwatchin
    @Roybwatchin Před rokem +1

    First off, I'm not in the Ancient Alien mindset by any means, but I am in the mindset of those ancients having some type of tooling other than what we have found and what is shown in museums. I was getting excited when that guy was going to carve out the Sphynx face with only hand tools, but was then disappointed once again when he resorted to power chisels and other modern tools to finish it. I still haven't found a video that shows someone actually finishing something of substance such as a thin walled cup or vase or even a statue or granite box. They always do just a little bit to show, yes, you can chip pieces away, but nothing to the same degree that we see with the gigantic statues and boxes made from granite. I will continue to search for a video of an actual finished replica using only chunks of rock and copper tools , but I'm not holding my breath. I'm not trying to be disrespectful, I am just baffled at how they did this 4K years ago.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Roy, it's all basic, they had their movers, quarry guys, masons jewelers etc etc, everybody shows you a little bit because of the time it would take to do a huge piece ,and then what do you do with it, you can go around old quarries and see the abandoned pieces from days gone by, thanks mike

  • @maximiliano2607
    @maximiliano2607 Před měsícem

    Mike I love this video. Thank you so much for imparting wisdom. It is beautiful to see you work, and to see you curious. How can one contact you? I am thinking about writing a paper on the pyramids. Thank you, Max.

  • @Alien-Earth1
    @Alien-Earth1 Před 5 měsíci

    Awesome!

  • @mrzorg
    @mrzorg Před 6 měsíci +1

    Nice job. Add in some water, sand, and it will speed up some of the drilling ;-)

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks mrz, check out part 2, thanks Mike

  •  Před 3 lety +1

    If you want me to believe that pounding balls were used on the unfinished obelisk..... I guess I’ll take your word for it. Lotta pounding. Cheers

  • @rybear5035
    @rybear5035 Před 2 lety

    A+ for effort. F- for showing a final product. F----- for the sculpture.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety

      Thanks RK, I appreciate the A+, for the rest you can go to the history Channel and they can tell you how the aliens did it, maybe they will score higher, thanks Mike

  • @holmavik6756
    @holmavik6756 Před rokem +1

    In Scandinavia we have found amzing granit axes from the stoneage. They are perfectly symmetric and smooth as glass. However, I think the real mystery is not about precision alone, but rather about how the heck they upscaled these techniques to huge objects and at a high production pace.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem

      Hi Holmavik, lot of workers with lots of time, thanks Mike

    • @holmavik6756
      @holmavik6756 Před rokem

      @@MikeHaduck yes of course they had many many workers and lots of time, but that makes it even more mysterious. How did they organise the production lines, the logistics, the planning and scheduling, communication between beween parrallell subprojects? And on top of that, if we strech the time period too long then one may expect some architects and leading engineers to pass away during the process. They obvously did it despite all these challenges, but how??

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      Personally I worked on skyscraper type of buildings it looked like ants building a mountain but they did it, I don't think it took longer to build a pyramid as it did the empire state building, my opinion, thanks Mike

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před rokem

      Why assume a high production rate? Just how many Pharaohs do you think needed granite sarcophagus’s per year? One per year would seem to be on the high side of average.

  • @lordcringe1339
    @lordcringe1339 Před 3 lety

    Great Job

  • @lundsweden
    @lundsweden Před 2 lety +1

    After watching all the navel gazing theories on how ancient mega projects were built, its good to see someone with a bit of horse sense and actual experience explain how you can use simple tools to acheive amazing things!

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks Andy, Mike

    • @cleanpiecington2319
      @cleanpiecington2319 Před 9 měsíci

      @@MikeHaduckwell what he seems to simply ignore is the precision with which some of these artifacts are created… yeah you can pound two rocks together to remove material but how do you make two surfaces several feet apart perfectly parallel in relation to each other… these knuckle dragging stone workers seemed to be able to produce precision pieces that Mike couldn’t even dream of reproducing in his shed

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 9 měsíci

      @@cleanpiecington2319 watch part 2, thanks Mike

  • @jeffwells641
    @jeffwells641 Před rokem

    I don't know how cheesecake is made, therefore all cheesecake must be made by ancient psychic ancestors who were taught the secrets of the universe by aliens.

  • @Grimjack13
    @Grimjack13 Před 3 lety

    Thanks Mike.

  • @jaye1967
    @jaye1967 Před rokem

    One aspect that always seems to amaze the ancient technology guys is the really flat and tight seams between the stones. I would guess they would have basically sanded the faces to gat that level of fit between the stones. They never seem to consider that there were by my guess, thousands of men who worked the stone their whole lives. Like any craftsman, they would be using these skills every day all day long.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před rokem +1

      Hi Jaye ,most of the stones were quarried exactly as they were placed back into place, I will have a part 2 comming out in a couple months explaining it, thanks mike

  • @au-contraire
    @au-contraire Před 4 dny

    2:00 There even seems to be a sturdy stone pulley. However, sadly, I do not see any ancient levitation devices, forklift trucks, helicopters, power plants, light bulbs or batteries... ;-) Instead, I see a stonemason talking about the stonemason's job and showing as he and other stonemasons do it. I am still just as impressed with the craftsmanship though. Many thanks! PS. They used bronze which is harder than clear copper and they could also use arsenical bronze and tinned bronze. Also, teak wood (one of the hardest hardwoods) is grown in Egypt up to this day and back in the day they were supposed to have plenty of wood too. They also used wooden pegs inserted into drilled holes and soaked with water to split big chunks.

    • @MikeHaduck
      @MikeHaduck  Před 4 dny

      Hi, I got 2 videos, "carving stone with ancient technology " part 1 & 2, Mike haduck, that should answer a lot of those questions, thanks mike