Nikola Tesla and Graham Hancock believe the Great Pyramid in Egypt contains a forgotten advanced technology that was harnessed by an ancient lost civilisation. But who built the pyramids? Joe Kirby from Off the Kirb Ministries investigates the various options proposed by Joe Rogan, Elon Musk and Ron Wyatt whilst ending with his thoughts on who designed the Egyptian pyramids in Giza.
20 Amazing Discoveries in Egypt That Scare Scientists
Amazing discoveries in Egypt! Here are some of most intriguing discoveries made in Egypt that can potentially allow scientists and archaeologists to pin point where and how the human race began.
Joe Rogan React to Lost City in the Amazon
In today’s video let us see what Joe Rogan and Forrest Galante have to say about the technology that is unearthing the ancient civilizations hidden beneath the green tropical blankets of the Amazon.
Looking around the Amazon rainforest today, it's hard to imagine it filled with people. But in recent decades, archaeologists have started to find evidence that before Columbus' arrival, the region was dotted with towns and perhaps even cities.
Laser Reveals Ancient Civilization
In the following video we will be talking about how laser reveals an ancient civilization and secrets under the Machu Piccu. Enjoy!
What They Discovered in this Pond Has Left People Speechless
Have you ever dropped something into a pond, only to lose it in the water forever? Hopefully you’ll feel better knowing that it’s happened to the best of us, from trains to planes and even a huge crucifix! You’d be surprised at what these small pools can hold, so here are the 20 Strangest Things Recently Discovered In Ponds!
How to Survive Snake Island
Snakes on your left. Snakes on your right. Giant cockroaches behind you. And in front of you, the open sea. It's difficult to get to this island in the first place. But it's almost impossible to get out alive. How deadly is a golden lancehead's venom? What other creatures are on the island? And why could pirates be a problem too?
Scientists Have Just Found An Untouched Civilization On Top Of A Mountain In The Amazon Jungle
In this video we will be exploring how on top of a mountain in the Amazonian jungle, researchers have recently discovered an unexplored civilisation. Enjoy!
100 Historical Photos You Need To See
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12 Most Incredible Treasures Found Recently
Archaeologists have found so much buried treasure in the world already, and yet there’s always more to be found! We rarely see a week go by without something remarkable being found somewhere in the world, and recent times have not been an exception to that rule. In this video we will be exploring the biggest and best recent treasures found.
This Bird Was A Dinosaur In The Past
For decades, dinosaurs were thought to be gigantic, slow-moving, cold-blooded reptiles. The movie Jurassic Park however popularized the idea of dinosaurs as quick, smart, and birdlike. It has since been discovered that modern birds did in fact descend from two-legged dinosaurs known as theropods––a group that included feathered velociraptors and tyrannosaurs. Pretty much all modern-day birds can be traced back to prehistoric creatures, but some more than others retain the features and traits of the roaring dinosaurs they once evolved from. If you’re ready to see which birds we’re talking about, then prepare yourself, as we count down 9 Birds That Secretly Look Like The Dinosaurs They Are. Make sure you stick around for number 1 to discover which terrifying dinosaur your backyard chicken is related to.
Strange Archaeological Discoveries
In the following video we will be exploring some strange archaeological discoveries. Watch the video to find out more!
Most Mysterious Discoveries Ever Made
From an ancientraptor to fossils from a prehistoric rainforest, in this video we will be exploring the most mysterious discoveries ever made. Enjoy!
12 Most Amazing And Unexpected Finds
Going out on the search for something and finding exactly what you're looking for is a rewarding experience, but in some ways, it's even better when you find something incredible by accident. You get all the satisfaction of discovering something amazing, and all the joy of the surprise that comes along with it! Everything you're about to see in this video has two things in common; it's a fantastic discovery, and it also came as a shock to the person or people who found it. Enjoy!
Inside The TERRIFYING Truth Of The Barbary Slave Trade
When we talk about the slave trade, the African slave trade that took place between the 16th and 19th centuries is the talk of the table. However, more horrific slave trade was in action in the Mediterranean area at the same time, where more than 1.25 million Europeans were being brutally traded at the hands of the pirates. Their lives were sometimes even more pitiful than the slaves being traded in African regions. History marks this era as the Barbary Slave Era, where blacks and whites were being traded like the bodies of stones.
The history of slavery hasn’t started with Africans or Barbarians. It is much older than that. The code of Hammurabi in Babylon from the 18th century recorded the seedling of slavery when people were enslaved based on religion, civilization, culture, and status. Every period of slavery has been highlighted somewhere in history. Still, a slave trade carried out by pirates along the Barbary coast, including areas like Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya, was never highlighted nor reported. So, today when we open the book of the Barbary slave trade and see how cruel humans can be to each other.
Egypt's Great Pyramid: How it was Constructed - The Inset Ramp
In the following video we will be talking about the concept for how the Great Pyramid was constructed using inset ramps. Enjoy!
Timeline of the Roman and Byzantine Emperors
Rome. The state that turned from tiny settlements around the Palatine Hill in central Italy into a vast empire that ruled most of western europe and mediteranean for centuries and formed the framework for todays states.
Let us get into a journey through time, from Augustus, the first emperor of Rome, to the final ruler of the Byzantine Empire. Along the way, we'll encounter both great and terrible emperors, and witness golden and tumultuous ages.
What Love and Marriage was Like for Native Americans
Have you ever wondered what Love and Marriage in Native American Societies was like? How the ceremonies were? Who had the pants on in the relationship? Native American Societies had distinct cultures, rituals, and customs. And a lot of the most interesting revolved around love and marriage. From women making the rules, to playing sports to win hearts, to famous historical figures and their lost or found loves, here’s what love and marriage was like for Native Americans.
Possibly a new species, a 100-million-year-old fossil was discovered in the Australian outback
A fossil discovered in the Australian outback that is 100 million years old could be a new species.
Queensland Museum Network palaeontologists with the remains of an elasmosaur / Credit: Queensland Museum Network
In western Queensland, Australian paleontologists have discovered the first elasmosaur fossil discovered on the continent.
Three fossil aficionados often comb the ranges of their privately-owned outback station in search of prehistoric remains, and they recently discovered the 100-million-year-old head and body bones of a marine reptile.
In their earlier explorations, they discovered the remains of ichthyosaurs, fish, turtles, and kronosaurus.
The Queensland Museum has compared the simultaneous recovery of the elasmosaur's body and head fossils to discovering the Rosetta Stone of marine palaeontology. This discovery represents a new milestone.
Contrary to common opinion, not all huge prehistoric reptiles are of the dinosauria grouping. Elasmosaurs are a form of plesiosaur, a long-necked marine reptile, that coexisted alongside dinosaurs during the cretaceous period.
"We have never found a body and a head together, and this could hold the key to future research in this field," says Dr. Espen Knutsen, senior scientist and curator of palaeontology at Queensland Museum.
Water is a passion for Queenslanders, and this was especially true during the Cretaceous period
Finding the remnants of a long-necked aquatic reptile in the middle of Australia's arid outback may not seem like the most logical thing in the world.
But that is how time moves on.
Dr Espen Knutsen with the fossilised head of an ancient elasmosaur / Credit: Queensland Museum Network
Much of the territory that is now linked with Queensland was buried beneath a shallow sea and situated at latitudes much closer to the Earth's south pole during the Cretaceous period (146-65 million years ago), when elasmosaurs sailed the Earth.
The region is still the site of frequent discoveries of marine reptile fossils because of the existence of this land-covering sea. Queensland is regarded by palaeontologists as one of the world's most productive areas for discovering dinosaur remains.
The Queensland Museum already has a growing collection of specimens from this taxonomic group, including the most complete elasmosaur skeleton known as "Dave the Plesiosaur," which was discovered in 1999. The discovery of the head and body is a first for an Australian institution.
Unfortunately, Dave has the same issue that many of his sort do: he has lost his mind.
This is due to the fact that after an animal died, the head frequently separated from the rest of the skeleton due to its weight.
But with this recent discovery, it isn't the case, and finding a body and a head together might reveal a new species.
In order to provide more precise information on the animal's biology, Knutsen's team will bring the specimen into the lab for CT scanning and 3D modeling.
The discovery will at the very least improve the museum's comprehension of the variety of plesiosaurs that existed in Australia hundreds of millions of years ago.
"It's going to tell us a lot about the taxonomy, or the species diversity - how many of these were around at the time," claims Knutsen.
The species that swam in this ancient inland sea 100 million years ago are still mostly unknown to us, despite the fact that humans have been collecting fossils from outback Queensland for roughly 150 years or so.
"It's a lovely specimen to display to the public, but it's crucial to understanding what we're doing to advance knowledge of these creatures. It's a wonderful time."
Fisherman in Omaha finds a 90 million-year-old fossil
Andy Moore was hurrying to make the perfect throw while aiming right into a weedy region near a rocky bluff on the Missouri River. He had just attached a swim jig to his line.
Andy Moore found a 90 million-year-old fossil of a Xiphactinus vertebrae. The Xiphactinus was a bony fish that swam in the shallow ocean waters that once covered Nebraska.
His line snagged on a big boulder upstream after missing the bushes.
The Omaha guy pulled, turned, and twisted to free his lure. Even after making several attempts to cut his line, he was unable to resume his search for the tournament's winning bass. He was instead compelled to paddle his kayak to what he initially believed to be nothing more than a fragment of the cliff that had fallen.
When Moore arrived, he discovered that he had caught more than just a rock; he had caught something even better than the largemouth bass he had been looking for all morning.
Andy Moore
Moore, 52, who has been fishing since he was 2 years old, has just landed the largest catch of his life: a fossilized Xiphactinus vertebra from 90 million years ago. Xiphactinus was a bony fish that lived at the time of the dinosaurs and swam in the shallow ocean waters that covered Nebraska.
"This is better than any of my accomplishments, or truly anything in life. It's strange," stated Moore. It is simply insane. the discovery that a fish caught today by a fisherman 90 million years ago is prehistoric in origin.
Moore took a brief photo of the fossil for a Facebook post and left it there since he initially believed it to be a catfish skeleton or another recent fossil. Soon after, friends started leaving comments on his post to let him know that he had discovered something far larger than he had first imagined.
Moore began investigating the region around Lewis and Clark Lake, where he found the fossil, and learned that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is in charge of the river. A retired science teacher with authorization to excavate in the area was recommended to him by Corps personnel.
Andy Moore found a 90 million-year-old fossil of a Xiphactinus vertebrae. The Xiphactinus was a bony fish that swam in the shallow ocean waters that once covered Nebraska.
The two returned to the location with the aid of a GPS pin on the picture.
The fossil will be on display and available for future research at the Lewis and Clark Lake Visitor Center.
According to Shane Tucker, the condition of Nebraska's highway paleontologist, timing had a significant role in both the fossil's recovery and condition of preservation.
The river may have fluctuated and buried the fossil under water if it had been discovered any later or earlier in the day, but it stuck out exactly as it was. Furthermore, if Moore hadn't discovered it that day, the old vertebrae might have been completely washed away by the river.
Tucker claimed that everything depended solely on luck and chance.
"It's a good thing he found it when he did, reported it, and it's going somewhere where it's going to be taken care of and used for an exhibit," he added. "Ice would have been freezing on the river's edge if it had been winter. The individual vertebrae would have most certainly sustained some damage as a result. Or if there was a flood, it would be hidden by sand and no one would know about it.
According to Tucker, Nebraska has produced other such fossil discoveries of ancient aquatic creatures, including a gigantic extinct lizard called a Mosasaurus. In terms of species type, the Xiphactinus fossil wasn't particularly uncommon, but it was nevertheless a once-in-a-lifetime find.
Shane Tucker, highway paleontologist for the State of Nebraska, said that if the fossil had been found any later or earlier in the day, the Missouri River may have fluctuated and hidden the fossil under its rough waters, but it stuck out perfectly.
The majority of important discoveries are typically made by accident, according to Tucker. "For him to catch his hook on a rock and it just so happened to have a fish in it, that's really unique and probably the only time that'll probably ever happen."
Moore said he won't start fossil hunting, but he would always keep a look out for another significant discovery.
Although it is different, I don't believe it will prevent me from continuing to do what I love, which is fishing.
Babylon: A History of the City
We've all heard the name "Babylon," but few of us really know what it means or what it is (perhaps "was" is a better word). This video goes into the history of the ancient city and why even thousands of years later, we still remember and are fascinated with it.
