AMAZING 11,000-Year-Old Concrete / Artificial Stone at Göbekli Tepe: Ancient Lost Technology

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Terrazzo is a composite material, poured in place or pre-cast, a type of ancient man-made artificial concrete, made with limestone fragments embedded in a lime mortar.
    This 'artificial stone' mixture, what some call a geopolymer, was used between 11,000 to 12,000 years ago, a genuine ancient technology and innovation before humans had even invented pottery and is found at Göbekli Tepe, Çayönü Tepesi and Nevali Çori, and as I show in this video, I believe it was also used at Karahan Tepe.
    Crushed limestone in the mortar gave the floors added strength and also a mottled appearance but the ancient people would have had to manufacture the lime mortar first of all.
    When the terrazzo floor of Çayönü was analysed, the mortar contained burned and slaked limestone, which was produced using extremely high temperatures, around 870 degrees, meaning there must have been kilns to fire the crushed limestone.
    This video is a fascinating and fact-based look at how the Pre-Pottery Neolithic people of ancient Anatolia made amazing stone-like floors in special buildings, many thousands and thousands of years ago.
    All images are taken from the below sources for educational purposes only. Please subscribe to Ancient Architects, Like the video and please leave a comment below. Thank you.
    Sources:
    dergipark.org.tr/en/download/...
    www.pnas.org/doi/pdf/10.1073/...
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/1...
    www.mynet.com/galeri/dunya-uy...
    onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/a...
    #AncientArchitects #GobekliTepe #KarahanTepe

Komentáře • 225

  • @AncientArchitects
    @AncientArchitects  Před 5 dny +78

    An old video - updated - as I work on a brand new 30 minute special, which should be ready early next week! Thanks for being here!

    • @phlezktravels
      @phlezktravels Před 5 dny +2

      Cheers!

    • @floydriebe4755
      @floydriebe4755 Před 5 dny +1

      your welcome, Matt! thank you for your hard work👍😉

    • @bobharris7401
      @bobharris7401 Před 5 dny +2

      Thank you for your efforts.

    • @limolnar
      @limolnar Před 5 dny +2

      It looks like the buttresses and statues were coated with concrete or some other kind of preserving surfacing after much weathering and/or erosion. Given that the weathering would take a very long time it could be that many later generations / centuries passed between initial construction and re-enforcement.

    • @marinoceccotti9155
      @marinoceccotti9155 Před 5 dny +2

      Your channel is really great. The amount of work and dedication is commendable.

  • @Alanoffer
    @Alanoffer Před 4 dny +13

    Main stream archeology will have us believe that Hunter gatherers built this site . I can picture them coming home after a long day hunting and gathering to admire the nice polished terrazzo floor

  • @Apollo1011
    @Apollo1011 Před 5 dny +14

    Far more advanced than we would have ever thought.

    • @justsayin3600
      @justsayin3600 Před 3 dny

      It's too bad the global elite are covering over it with concrete. 😠

  • @pine6163
    @pine6163 Před 5 dny +31

    They made concrete but not pottery ….amazing🤷‍♂️

    • @AncientArchitects
      @AncientArchitects  Před 5 dny +21

      Maybe they just had a better alternative (in their opinion)

    • @roymlemons
      @roymlemons Před 5 dny +4

      Concrete and pottery are made from different materials

    • @rodricbr
      @rodricbr Před 5 dny +8

      maybe they did but the pottery crumbled over time

    • @JonnoPlays
      @JonnoPlays Před 4 dny +5

      ​@@rodricbr good point, maybe baskets or the like.

    • @gottfriedheumesser1994
      @gottfriedheumesser1994 Před 4 dny +3

      @@rodricbr In Austria and Czechia ceramic figures from the Gravettien have been found. The Venus from Dolní Věstonice is in quite good shape.

  • @phoneguy4637
    @phoneguy4637 Před 5 dny +14

    göbekli tepe is one real treasure of the past. can't wait for your video special!

  • @henrymach
    @henrymach Před 4 dny +5

    So, concrete is older than pottery? Mind blown

  • @LunaticAsylum01
    @LunaticAsylum01 Před 5 dny +10

    That actually is AMAZING to me! I could live on a desert island for 5000 years and i wouldnt have even got close to discovering fire 😂

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Před 5 dny +18

    I think I remember terrazzo being mentioned before in a video about another site. I remember commenting something like, "isn't it amazing how our distant ancestors continued developing their home and common surroundings from very early on!" That comment would seem to be appropriate this time as well. I don't understand why some people continue to underestimate the intelligence of our ancestors, or their ability to take an idea or development and run with it Your videos, Matt, have illustrated numerous instances of periodic differentiation, indicative of evolution in methods, materials and preferences.
    This example is too complex to be a first attempt, and it is easy to see that using colored rock or pieces of pottery would be an innovation easily come by for artistically inclined ancestors. Over centuries, by stages, terrazzo had become high art in Greek and Roman floors. Modern versions may seem simpler, relying on metal frames and inlays, but that is a matter of taste. I am accustomed to rooms painted or papered in simple patterns and colors, and find Roman wall painting interesting but not for me, too busy and colorful.
    Of course, some might say that the zigzag pattern at the entrance must have been a Cha cha type line dance taught them by time travelers or Atlanteans. Thanks for keeping things real with rational, data, science and engineering based speculation.

    • @ShortbusMooner
      @ShortbusMooner Před 4 dny +1

      I love terrazzo floors! (Florida still has plenty!)..

    • @Rovinman
      @Rovinman Před 4 dny +1

      "Modern versions may seem simpler, relying on metal frames and inlays, but that is a matter of taste."" ? ?
      The ""Simple"" reason is because of what we see here ! ""Cracking"" !
      Concrete is Great in Compression but Poor in Tension, so to accommodate this problem, we can calculate the necessary size of any area of concrete to be sure of preventing such cracks from occurring !
      Terrazzo is no different, and so we can design, appropriate designs into the Terrazzo, within those bounds !
      Experience { for the Romans }, will lead to the same result !
      More of these floors please Matt !
      Stay grounded and fixed !
      Stu xx

    • @ShortbusMooner
      @ShortbusMooner Před 4 dny

      @@Rovinman - Ha! Hate to tell you, but terrazzo cracks! Very much so! Come to my house, I'll show you plenty of them! 🤣

    • @Rovinman
      @Rovinman Před 4 dny

      @@ShortbusMooner Sorry about that ! Who put it down for you ?

    • @ShortbusMooner
      @ShortbusMooner Před 4 dny +1

      @@Rovinman - Terrazzo was REALLY popular in Florida, back in the 60s & 70s (it is very efficient in keeping homes cooler), so mine is literally decades old, no clue as to the builder. Every home in which I've lived that has terrazzo has had some cracking. Not bad, but some. It can be repaired, but it doesn't bother me- I love terrazzo, so it just adds character! LOL!

  • @user-qo6lk5ec9f
    @user-qo6lk5ec9f Před 4 dny +5

    The evidence you've uncovered here is almost incontrovertible proof that the floor at Gobekli is not limestone bedrock. Hopefully you get recognition for all of the work you're doing here.

  • @dougalexander7204
    @dougalexander7204 Před 4 dny +3

    Figuring out that burnt limestone can be made into mortar must have been an amazing discovery. Ancient man must of had some smarticals.

  • @AdderOSRS
    @AdderOSRS Před 4 dny +6

    When you mentioned the blood crystal at minute 7, has there been done any further studies into this? Would be very cool to know the haplogroup and such, but again it could be hard with such old remains. I have no idea, just curious :)

  • @paulblase3955
    @paulblase3955 Před 5 dny +6

    Need to get an x-ray system in there to inspect those pillars.

  • @Alarix246
    @Alarix246 Před 5 dny +16

    Matt, it's about time some University caught up with your ideas and upon investigation, gave you at least honorary Doctorate title!

    • @db61487
      @db61487 Před 4 dny +2

      Quite agree there. Matt's scholarship and clarity of explanation is something other academics could learn from. Clear communication and excellent video production.

    • @Alarix246
      @Alarix246 Před 2 dny

      @@db61487 I mean, I tip my hat seeing what Matt had read. Over the years that I follow him, it surely exceeds the topics and materials which are in curriculum of an average archaeologist. Lately he seems to steer away from what is considered a "pseudoscience", I secretly think he is actually studying officially and tries to become an orderly anointed archaeologist, which would make sense.
      I personally believe in the lost civilization concept. But there isn't much evidence, and that little what is, can still be discounted, however ridiculous it looks. But we're living in the interesting times and it seems these truths are being slowly revealed, just as we're edging to the nuclear war...

  • @telebubba5527
    @telebubba5527 Před 4 dny +2

    I'm just wondering if you have seen the news about the cave paintings in Sulawesi. They were already determined to be the oldest, even older than those in Europe, but they have now pushed back for another several thousands of years and are now dated more than 50,000 years old. They have used a new technology which gives a much more precies date. It would be great if this could also work on sites like Gobekli Tepe and others and be even more precise in their dates. They do think the technology can be used world wide and is not specific to the area. So I suspect we are going to be surprised by a lot of new dates, specifically where it is very hard to determine.

  • @xodiaq
    @xodiaq Před 5 dny +3

    I love how much really logical evidence you put out there for the possibility of hypocausts at these sites (in other videos, too), and the watertight Terrazzo works in that regard as well!

  • @skeletalbassman1028
    @skeletalbassman1028 Před 4 dny +2

    Are these just giant cisterns? This all looks like water management. It even looks like wooden floors go on top of the pillars. Did anyone even walk on these floors when the structures were in use?

  • @user-iq2yp1dn1q
    @user-iq2yp1dn1q Před 4 dny +3

    Such artificial concrete is more impressive than the carvings, considering the time and planning involved to create concrete (that's granting that they figured it out back then)

  • @SteveHarvey272
    @SteveHarvey272 Před 4 dny +2

    I really enjoy your videos and appreciate when you engage in discussion around 'alternate' theories on these fascinating subjects. It's helpful to hear the primary and alternative theories explained and when necessary, debunked or reinforced. I think it's a testament to how magnificent these structures are that people have come up with some very wide ranging ideas on how it all came to pass.

  • @philoso377
    @philoso377 Před 5 dny +4

    We welcome open minded producer in recognizing artificial stone art, ancient geopolymer concrete.
    How we can tell natural from artificial stone tech? By the air pocket in the artificial stone introduced which is absent in natural stones.

  • @phlezktravels
    @phlezktravels Před 5 dny +7

    How cool! Thanks Matt!

  • @raginald7mars408
    @raginald7mars408 Před 5 dny +4

    ... as a German Biologist -
    there must be so much more to be found
    it takes intense farming
    to sustain a population to accomplish this
    and plant engineering is a tricky patient study over 100´s of years
    there must be settlements in the area
    and other works in the evolution to get there...
    we prefer to waste trillions in self extinction war fare..

    • @TopShelfMontana
      @TopShelfMontana Před 5 dny

      yes but if the academics admit this and investigate it then it blows up their bullshit ideas about the birth of civilization and pushes the timelines way back, which they hate, because it discredits all their published work.

    • @Eyes_Open
      @Eyes_Open Před 5 dny +1

      ​@@TopShelfMontanaYour irrational comment is sure to be better received on the many entertainment channels that cater to your type of fantasist claims.

    • @pcatful
      @pcatful Před 4 dny

      People who have studied the site and have studied archeology in general currently conjecture that proper agriculture was not used by the people there at that time. Certainly it is all theory, but I think we should take their research into account and then find evidence to show agriculture.

    • @TopShelfMontana
      @TopShelfMontana Před 4 dny

      @@pcatful the evidence of agriculture is clear from the massive building scale where divisions of skilled labor are required. You don't support that kind of manpower over generations with hunter gathering for food.
      The "people who have studied" Egypt think the pyramids are tombs as well. So to me the mainstream academics are mostly full of shit, just trying to protect their published theories and unwilling to adjust their thinking when presented with new facts.
      This site is an example. Their reasoning is:
      Agriculture started 5000 BCE. This site is 10,000 BCE. Therefore there was no agriculture.
      Circular logic

  • @erasmuus
    @erasmuus Před 5 dny +2

    Great video as always. Thank you for your continued attention to this location, the pyramids and others, I enjoy watching all the videos you create. Keep up the great work.

  • @claudiaxander
    @claudiaxander Před 5 dny +5

    Always a brain tingling delight, cheers!

  • @eleanorburns8686
    @eleanorburns8686 Před 5 dny +5

    Awe-inspiring stuff. I wonder how many concrete buildings of today will leave such coherent ruins in 10,000 years...

    • @missourimongoose8858
      @missourimongoose8858 Před 4 dny +3

      None if they were made with modern concrete

    • @michaelfritts6249
      @michaelfritts6249 Před 4 dny +2

      Assuming there is collapse of civilisation due to some disaster, and the buildings made of concrete and steel collapse? The remnants may create the impression that we lived in underground parking lots.. 🙃🙂🤣
      Please understand that this theory just popped into my head as a somewhat viable attempt at a joke.. 😉
      Even "stainless" steel will rust away.. eventually.. 🤔

  • @saturno_boom3490
    @saturno_boom3490 Před 4 dny +2

    Hi Matt. If you have the patient to study the chemistry behind the geopolymer theory, you will discover that the ammount of energy (temperature) need to obtain the final product is often less you expect.

  • @barrywalser2384
    @barrywalser2384 Před 4 dny

    Amazingly sophisticated for 10,000+/- years ago. Thanks Matt!

  • @stig
    @stig Před 4 dny +1

    Thank You Matt! This is important. Geopolymer is a tricky topic.

  • @ResortDog
    @ResortDog Před 4 dny +2

    The deeper we dig, the older "the tech" is proven.

  • @JorgeStolfi
    @JorgeStolfi Před 4 dny +3

    I cannot make sense of those enclosures as having been built for ritual or other meeting purposes. But I keep seeing more and more evidence that they were storage tanks for water, from springs and/or rain. Clues like the absence of true entrances or connecting doors, but water passages between adjacent enclosures, the plastered floor, the thick multi-layered walls of the big enclosure (needed to resist water pressure), ...
    The large population of the site could then be explained by the existence of those water works, providing water all year round even in the dry season.
    The three enclosures at Karahan Tepe show a progression between a small tank dug around a spring, a larger tank with bedrock columns to collect the runoff of that tank, and a bigger tank -- a pool perhaps? -- collecting the runoff from that second tank, plus water from other sources.
    But after a millennium or so the spring must have dried up and/or the rain got too scarce to fill all the tanks. The enclosures may *then* have been repurposed for habitation or other communal use, before the site was abandoned for good.
    As you note in another video, the pillars, benches, and some of the walls were probably added, rearranged, or reworked over that time span. And the decoration on the pillars, if not added at a later time, is an idea that would have come naturally to those teams who were hacking the pillars in the quarry. Sculpting a decorated surface takes the same effort as making a flat one.

    • @michalmondek3418
      @michalmondek3418 Před 2 dny

      very interesting theory... because why would people 9000 years ago wanted to have a private hut when living in hunter-gatherer society? Nobody had any precious private property, they needed to cooperate and share to survive. And for sure they noticed that water is running downhill, so they built water tanks on top of it. Second thing is that 9000 years ago, it was not sand desert, sea level and rivers were completely different as well as forests etc.

    • @JorgeStolfi
      @JorgeStolfi Před 2 dny

      @@michalmondek3418 A spring may well occur near the top of a hill; it depends on local geology. Limestone typically has complicated networks of undergound water channels, that change with time. And it could have been a thermal spring: the Famous Göbekli Tepe Spa may make even more sense than the Providential Göbekli Tepe Water Works. And *what* exactly was the climate there 10'000 years ago, and how was it changing?

  • @ShortbusMooner
    @ShortbusMooner Před 4 dny +2

    I have terrazzo floors! I love them..

  • @take5th
    @take5th Před 59 minutami

    This reminded me of something I saw in the 1970s. I was in school and working in the summer for a tile installer. He was Italian, as am I. My grandparents had been stone workers and being in New York area, I saw many stone walls and bridges constructed by immigrants during the depression. While working on a project on the upper floor of a new building, I watched in time lapse fashion, from my comings and goings a few times a day though the lobby, the pouring of a terrazzo floor. I was no tile mechanic, just a laborer, but I thought they were going to lay down some base layer for a top surface of some sort but instead they laid down some strips of metal into large squares, and poured an odd color liquid into the prepared cavity to the top level of the metal strips. This was done by pouring and by floating across the surface to produce something that appeared to retain some surface tension, as it was much less viscous than any cement or screed I had seen in my short tile career. By then end of the week they were guiding huge diameter polishing machines around the floor with great precision and artistry. There were odors of muriatic acids. And they were done; gleaming slabs of dark gray terrazzo? With what I perceived to be expansion joints with the compatibly compressible metal alloy strip embedded within, that I had always just taken for granted when walking across one in a bank or hotel of the time. A lot of the stone working arts have gone by the wayside these days, in any great number or volume compared to just a few decades ago. But they sure had some run there. And from the nature of things, seem like they are bound to be rediscovered and renewed when such a need arises once again.

  • @AJjames0317
    @AJjames0317 Před 4 dny +1

    Can't wait for the next one, great video!

  • @alden1132
    @alden1132 Před 5 dny +1

    I wonder if they noticed that limestone powder and chips generated by carving the limestone blocks self-aggregated when exposed to water? I imagine a fair amount building up around a block they were carving, then being soaked by rainwater, and setting like cement in that form. It would be just the kind of accidental discovery that could change their lives. Sort of like noticing molten copper flowing out of a cookfire built in a ring of copper-rich rocks/ore.

  • @thormidthagahast8914
    @thormidthagahast8914 Před 5 dny +5

    So much better. The work this man has done on his speach problems is ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE. I can now concentrate on the subject matter.

  • @watcherspirit2351
    @watcherspirit2351 Před 4 dny +1

    Great documentary video! Thank you for the (new to me) old information. :-)

  • @lostpony4885
    @lostpony4885 Před 5 dny +1

    Having learned how to make wood ash concrete i find it impossible not to discover the permant set qualities of concrete within a few generations of using fire to cook. Of course people 9 thousand years ago knew how to make concrete of some sort. Probably erectus knew too, probably at least a million years ago. Eventually some evidence will emerge, until then what a gorgous example we havw in Gobekli Tepes tarasso.

  • @base99498
    @base99498 Před 4 dny +3

    I think this place was used for
    blood-sport. The relief of a cowering man being charged by two leopards is proof enough. Now there’s blood? Plot thickens

  • @drewharrison6433
    @drewharrison6433 Před 4 dny +1

    I love how you qualify when you're not and and sah wben you don't know something for sure. We need more content creators willing to do this!

  • @toddincabo
    @toddincabo Před 4 dny +1

    👍 A lot of people picture the inhabitants walking around on dirt and mud, this just shows that they did have brooms and nice floors to keep clean.

    • @nomadscavenger
      @nomadscavenger Před 4 dny

      Yeah, but human sacrifice might have been the norm in that room but no blood on the floor? And how many "floors" below the one we are looking at? Do we know yet? I'm suspecting the floors are layered one on top of another.

    • @toddincabo
      @toddincabo Před 4 dny

      @@nomadscavenger Too small for a body.. a nice pot of thigh stew however..

  • @Vusha100
    @Vusha100 Před 3 dny +1

    The place bear the signs of having been built over the existing structure of an even older civilization than the one who built Gobekli Tepe.

  • @paulblase3955
    @paulblase3955 Před 5 dny +7

    It's interest to think about the processes of discovery here. Somebody notices that limestone cracks and changes properties when baked, so they start slaking it in kilns for mortar. Then somebody notices that wet clay bakes hard in the kilns and starts the pottery revolution. Then somebody notices that certain rocks melt and yield metals.

  • @LB-lv6vw
    @LB-lv6vw Před 4 dny +1

    Love from Leicestershire, been watching you for years, hope you do a meet up event one day

  • @windfoil1000
    @windfoil1000 Před 4 dny +1

    It's hard to fathom what the 'Pillared enclosure' AB is designed for. It would appear to serve a specific purpose given it's peculiar design. It suggests to me something of a manufacturing process, though I don't have a clue of what that might be.

  • @pitfisch1
    @pitfisch1 Před 4 dny +1

    As some lad said:
    Things keep getting older.

  • @wpherigo1
    @wpherigo1 Před 4 dny +1

    Very interesting, yet I think it would be better to come to such hypotheses after you have actually been there. Hope you get the chance!

  • @l.f.p.8305
    @l.f.p.8305 Před 4 dny +1

    Very interesting !

  • @Akimos
    @Akimos Před 4 dny +1

    Interesting. TY.

  • @DreadWaaaghGaming
    @DreadWaaaghGaming Před 5 dny +3

    With the lines, polished floor and uniform shape it seems like a sports centre/court of some description maybe?

    • @cblair1353
      @cblair1353 Před 5 dny +1

      Yeah, those lines definitely seem like they would have had a function; ridiculous how everything is labeled art without a better explanation.

    • @nomadscavenger
      @nomadscavenger Před 4 dny

      ​@@cblair1353where were the blood "crystals"located in that room? A great floor, but covering up what exactly? There could be layers of flooring using terrazzo. The white lines could have a sinister purpose, and added each time the floor was done over?

  • @derekhughes9274
    @derekhughes9274 Před 4 dny +1

    Always interesting, thankyou.

  • @chaoticpuppet1
    @chaoticpuppet1 Před 2 dny

    0:44 the handbag mystery is soo mysterious. For the amount of of different cultures that portray them. Their usage and importance must have been massive. Thanks and algo's

  • @user-nx8ii4ef7f
    @user-nx8ii4ef7f Před 4 dny

    Certainly a good concept that packed floors would lead to the discovery of concretes and their making and usage!

  • @18Macallan
    @18Macallan Před 4 dny +1

    Thank you sir!👍

  • @davidshelley6598
    @davidshelley6598 Před 4 dny +1

    Fascinating!

  • @RyanSpringer1984
    @RyanSpringer1984 Před 4 dny +1

    Nice. I was just hoping to find something new on ancient civilizations and saw this and read your pinned comment. I will sub and see what you have on offer.

  • @yodbod
    @yodbod Před 5 dny +2

    Ancient leaders were picked for their strength and ability to hunt and fight.
    There must have been also a class or branch of artists and thinkers.
    This class i believe became the power behind the throne and later were treated as gods.
    Thus sites like Gobekli Tepi would have a permanent settlement of elites who used and were fed by hunter gatherers .

    • @Nic00016
      @Nic00016 Před 5 dny +1

      Lol

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 Před 3 dny

      Lol...neanderthals grew food...

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 Před 3 dny

      Neanderthals grew food it's been recognised now...any human with a modern brain would off observed seeds sprouting and plants growing and worked it out in no time...its possible the heards off animals were so available that it wasn't so much hunting more more just hitting one over the head n eating it there could been huge amounts off lizards n insects n birds n berries but the idea humans only noticed how trees grow only such a short time ago....trees and plants would off absolutely fascinated all humans since forever we would off observed seeds growing since forever

    • @yodbod
      @yodbod Před 3 dny

      @@jshaw4757 And it took intelligence to achieve .
      Perhaps one or two individuals .
      These people didn't have modern brains . 😁

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 Před 3 dny

      @@yodbod Every life form is intelligent you got no idea how much so...people only conceptualise intelligence with technology but that was a path we took and will destroy us probably in the not too distant future and without our tech we are babies n lambs too the slaughter meanwhile every other living thing invested in its natural abilitys n instincts and will be just fine n carry on as usual whilst we go through another dumb cycle again from our own hand because we are so intelligent off course ✌

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Před 3 dny

    Thanks 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @Foster-hm2sh
    @Foster-hm2sh Před 4 dny +1

    Nice observation. 😊

  • @efdangotu
    @efdangotu Před 4 dny +1

    I live where we can mine what I call glacial cement. Heavy with limestone jumble crush, natural clay sand substrate, dries into hard pack. Just add quick lime.

  • @84Rabbitz
    @84Rabbitz Před 4 dny +1

    Seems like a dance floor.

  • @daxtonbrown
    @daxtonbrown Před 4 dny +2

    I'm into geopolymer technology. The terrazo would be high tech, more interesting than the carvings.

    • @pcatful
      @pcatful Před 4 dny

      Where does one study this technology?

  • @marcv2648
    @marcv2648 Před 4 dny +1

    What I find interesting and fascinating is that so many things were invented before pottery. Terrazzo before pottery almost seems counterintuitive. Why was pottery invented so comparatively late? I would really like to understand. Does anyone have any idea? When we think of great inventions, we think of the wheel. It seems like pottery was one of the greatest inventions, and it was not at all obvious to relatively sophisticated societies.

    • @Wolffjord
      @Wolffjord Před 4 dny

      Not always. In Japan we have the oldest pottery and was invented before other stuff

  • @sitindogmas
    @sitindogmas Před 5 dny +1

    mabey a silly question, but could the T shaped pillars have been made of a poured concrete?

  • @WestOfEarth
    @WestOfEarth Před 4 dny +1

    Was the process for making this concrete then lost to time at some point until the Romans supposedly 'invented' concrete thousands of years later?

  • @mexicanpepe4life
    @mexicanpepe4life Před 5 dny +1

    it's so obvious that the smaller low quality rocks were placed there way after the megalithic high tech ones attempting to rebuild the already ancient construction. the original megalithic construction is probably millions of years old.

    • @pcatful
      @pcatful Před 4 dny +1

      Probably not.

    • @nomadscavenger
      @nomadscavenger Před 4 dny

      ​@@pcatfulI think they meant 1,000s of years earlier, because we really don't know yet what was there originally, do we? There's stuff still buried in that floor, right?

  • @lafelong
    @lafelong Před 3 dny

    "the whole concept would be more complicated and involve more energy than simply cutting and moving stone blocks"
    Well... the jury is still out on this, but creating blocks of "geopolymer" would not require much more than buckets to carry the material and a string/rope to cut them. The more I'm learning about this, the more convincing it's getting. I was VERY skeptical when I assumed that massive timber forms/molds would be required, but this may not be the case.

  • @Kiyoone
    @Kiyoone Před 4 dny +1

    I can bet that they will eventually find a piece of pottery there.

    • @cesiumalloy
      @cesiumalloy Před dnem

      They appear to have stopped looking.

  • @nathanrust4908
    @nathanrust4908 Před 4 dny

    Lime plaster requires fiber to provide tensile strength. It doesn't take much effort or any special testing to identify it. If the pillars were coated in plaster, it would be obvious to anyone studying them. Without fiber the plaster cracks and flakes off while curing.

  • @marcv2648
    @marcv2648 Před 4 dny

    Yes, that spalling of the outer layer of pillars does look like it might be a cement applied to them.

  • @stephengent9974
    @stephengent9974 Před 4 dny +1

    If these people produced pottery then they could produce lime. It is not difficult.

  • @richardastley1168
    @richardastley1168 Před 4 dny +1

    It's obviously a basketball court.

  • @maeveobyrne9590
    @maeveobyrne9590 Před 4 dny

    It's no wonder to me that the lithic peoples knew their stone-work. That was their medium and they mastered it. I remember seeing an archaeological experiment at Skara Brae where they wanted to move a huge stone. There were lots of people pulling it with ropes without too much progress. Then a local came by and suggested that they use seaweed under the stone and it just slid along. We have so much more to learn, it's very exciting.

  • @RichardHobbs-sv5wg
    @RichardHobbs-sv5wg Před 3 dny

    Love to hear your thoughts on zernaki tepe

  • @RichardHobbs-sv5wg
    @RichardHobbs-sv5wg Před 3 dny

    Or cavis tepe, ayanis tepe. By the way zernaki tepe always gets confused with new ruins of Bolivia, but they are actually in lake van area of Turkey.
    I'd love for you to do a podcast on these ruins as I'd like to learn more.👍💯☮️

  • @rickdunn7585
    @rickdunn7585 Před 4 dny

    The technique used to cut the pillars most likely made the concrete that they used for the floors and resurfacing

  • @chippysteve4524
    @chippysteve4524 Před dnem

    Fascinating subject.Intriguing video as well.
    It is exhilarating for us to be looking at something so ancient for the first time before all the dogma and orthodoxy kills the discussion.
    Let us hope that the Turkish authorities will show an enlightened approach to research into our ancestry and allow further research unlike a certain myopic country I won't mention!

  • @thomasnewcomb2079
    @thomasnewcomb2079 Před 3 dny

    I still think enclosure AB had a stone and terrazzo floor resting on top of the pillars so the area above could be filled with water and heated from underneath.

  • @robertevans8126
    @robertevans8126 Před 5 dny +1

    Sharing

  • @DJTheTrainmanWalker
    @DJTheTrainmanWalker Před 4 dny +1

    Seems a reasonable hypothesis.
    Is there a distinction to be made on the different kinds of spaces at each site. Is one space more likely to be 'sacred' than another? Do different sites have kinds of spaces in common?
    Or put another way: what makes these buildings with Terrazzo floors distinct from other spaces of the 'community' they serve?

    • @nomadscavenger
      @nomadscavenger Před 4 dny

      Maybe they needed to be covered over every so often? Because of the type of "activity" going on there? Especially if it had something to do with sacrifices? Humans, and probably the Neanderthals were into it long before any kind of religion came into being...and it's still an important, if just symbolic, part of accepted religions today.

  • @classic_sci_fi
    @classic_sci_fi Před 4 dny +1

    Seems odd no one can tell the difference between natural limestone and terrazzo. What's the beef between archaeologists and the rest of science -- especially geologists?

  • @toomanyradsin2019
    @toomanyradsin2019 Před 4 dny

    Hi Matt. I would be very interested to hear your take on what the purpose or cause of the many dimples on the top of the T pillars. Shown at the 4.55 minute mark. I have not heard of these being mentioned before.
    Great video once again. Thanks

  • @SugarDog2006
    @SugarDog2006 Před 4 dny

    The difference between stone and concrete, concrete can be moved in smaller quantities at one time. A 1 ton block would require the entire weight be moved at once. A concrete "stone" is of 1 ton can be moved and in quantities and shapes that a single man could do.

  • @carl4889
    @carl4889 Před 3 dny

    Lime kilns are very old technology. Liming of soil was, along with slashing & burning and irrigation, the only means of improving agricultural output available during the neolithic.
    I've long wondered whether it was pottery kilns that lead to the development of lime kilns, or whether it was lime kilns that led to the development of pottery kilns.

  • @kalrandom7387
    @kalrandom7387 Před 4 dny +1

    Yep

  • @LaraCroft2169
    @LaraCroft2169 Před 3 dny

    This goes to show how advanced this culture was! Definitely these were settlements and not just ceremonial centers. Kids are still being taught that Sumer is the earliest civilization! Why are we hiding the truth? It has to do with the destruction of civilization by repeated disasters

  • @googlesmostwantedfrog147

    I had a vague suspicion that this site was a fake and this video confirms that
    As a 59 year old who always had an interest in the ancient world the fact that I had never heard of this place before was suspicious
    Concrete Forms = modern construction
    Period

  • @janbaer3241
    @janbaer3241 Před 3 dny

    Huge cauldron carved into the floor, with crystallized, dried human blood. What were the people there doing?

  • @braddbradd5671
    @braddbradd5671 Před 4 dny +1

    Theyv discovered the concept of mixing minerals with water heating rocks to make lime to make cement there doing things the Romans did that not even Brits knew about ,but your telling me no one at the time messed about with clay and find out when it drys its tough and water proof and even better when your heat it up ?

  • @jacquelineloveselvis
    @jacquelineloveselvis Před 5 dny

    👍😃👍

  • @kennymichaud5366
    @kennymichaud5366 Před 4 dny +1

    Was it the same concrete like mix in Egypt

  • @Salty-TX-Assholy-io
    @Salty-TX-Assholy-io Před 4 dny

    Seems a little odd we could construct something like this before we figured out how to make pottery

  • @vickonstark7365
    @vickonstark7365 Před 4 dny +1

    👍🏼

  • @m.x.
    @m.x. Před 4 dny +1

    Early stages of geopolymer technology?

  • @sergeyt2947
    @sergeyt2947 Před 4 dny +1

    smth bad was going on there 12k years ago..

  • @kevinfoster1138
    @kevinfoster1138 Před 4 dny

    There are so many factors I just don't know there can be many reasons one site is eroding faster than the other.

  • @maryjones5710
    @maryjones5710 Před 4 dny +1

    Human blood crystals, yikes. There must have been a lot of blood for it to have crystalized, a cut hand while constructing wouldn't do it.

  • @chilledwalrus
    @chilledwalrus Před 4 dny

    The white stripes were explained in a video by Dr Haydu Moranuci. They were instrumental in the ceremonies of the day which involved the two sexes facing off against each other within the limits of those lines. Someone would beat a drum and then they would all step forward and make vocalizations similar to an owl. They did this three times a day before heading out in parties of 5 people to hunt and gather. Upon their return they would do the same to celebrate and propitiate their entities of veneration, believed to be their ancestors.

  • @chevyyyyyyy
    @chevyyyyyyy Před 3 dny

    No, the low relief sculpture of animals and stuff on the T pillars is clearly not made with “high precision.” But others are also repeating his fallacy.

  • @StopProject2025
    @StopProject2025 Před 14 hodinami

    Could you add subtitles?

  • @mariz2361
    @mariz2361 Před 3 dny

    Sorry... I couldn't help but think 'Chorizo'... And then your explanation of how it was mixed... Yep!!! Chorizo...(???)!!!

  • @macdmacd7896
    @macdmacd7896 Před dnem

    it must be beautiful and colorful nack then. having BBQ at the temples, drinks in wooden cup and passing of dope pipe.