Good, he'll probably save people billions in fuel and construction costs if even one of these methods is usable. Long may he continue thinking outside the box.
I worked in a coal mine for many years and all lifting involved levers and muscle power. Everything this man shows you makes absolute sense. Well done mate, really impressive.
@@tomthx5804 You are right and that alien's name was Archimedes from the planet Greece. In his obscure alien language the phrase goes like this: _"ΔΩΣ ΜΟΙ ΠΑ ΣΤΩ ΚΑΙ ΤΑ ΓΑΝ ΚΙΝΑΣΩ"_ (δῶς μοι πᾶ στῶ καὶ τὰν γᾶν κινάσω) or "Dos mi pa sto ke tan gan kinaso".
@@toolguyslayer1 I don't know about that but ancient Greeks had commerce connections with lots of Mediterranean locations including Alexandria in Egypt so, who knows? But in the end, who cares, nothing is new under the sun, everyone stood on the shoulders of their predecessors although there were specific people who made the giant leaps of thought required to truly revolutionize our understanding of reality like: Plato, Aristotle, Archimedes, Hippocrates, Hypatia, Pythagoras, Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, Einstein etc.
Does it explain how the great pyramid of Giza was built? With all those granit inner cameras? Was Baalbek stone moved the same way? How those blocks were carved and transported, Sacsayhuyaman etc
this video only explains MAYBE just the foundations but not how they continued to go up u would have to build another system just like this on every row...thus making it impossible after the 2nd row
@@antoniocerutti265 yes actually. It's been known for some time. They would use timber rollers and crushed stones (along with some water - although not necessary, just makes process easier) to transport them over long distances inland. And yes, despite being super heavy, the use of these techniques act as multipliers. For example, those simple swivel techniques allowed a 90kg man to move a 1000kg block with relative ease. Now imagine dozens if not hundreds of people (there was no short supply there) moving even larger blocks. It all comes down to just understanding physics, and what's the minimumal force required to move an object.
The camera must have been fine, considering any news outlet would want to maintain their appearance as a proper media outlet and would have used the best equipment available. The quality issue stems from compression for storage and sharing purposes, which makes it look garbled.
Two observations: 1) How did he get the very first plank under the stone slab? 2) The technique of spinning large stones on little stones requires a flat stone surface underneath. It wouldn't work on sand or earth as the small stones would just be ground into the dirt.
On larger stone platform part of big block could be over sand and so after removing some sand a leverage system could easily build under and away from big block. Once one side lifts the center could have had th first block under it.
I wonder if you could dig out below the giant stone but leave the center and have that be the base of your see-saw set up. It would be sketch but I'm guessing the Pharos were not known for their OSHA compliance lol. Perhaps you could also utilize wedges and some elbow grease.
It's just 1 technique of being able to move something really big and heavy showing it can be done. Back when stone henge was built people weren't sat around watching TV or waiting for deliveroo so they had much more time to figure things out and try various techniques
actually he is, he just does obviously not write that nonsense down and just applies it directly in the praxis but still he uses mathematic and science in its purest nature form.
The trouble is when so called modern experts try to solve the problem, they have no hands on knowledge... this guys worked his whole life solving problems like this... so I say hard-hats off to him, I'm impressed.
ancient people were not usually formally taught either in our modern sense of schooling, more so they watched experts to learn. now imagine all of this gentleman’s knowledge built up and passed down for thousands of years. we are talking about a completely different class of builders.
Kudos to him for his curiosity, perseverance and ingenuity. It’s great that his grandkids got the day off from school to see their grandad do something they’ll always remember, but really, the whole school should have been brought out to see this.
Absolutely brilliant! Hundreds of academics for decades could never figure this out and ascribed it to everything but the pure ingenuity shown by thus great man.
Smart and clever but not the final answer. This will only work under certain circumstances. 90% of the work at Giza for instance could not have been done this way for dozens of reasons
@@TheMrRatzz Yeah I know that's their theory. One thing I will say is don't just believe things because certain people have a degree from a college and don't do the deduction thing were you weight up who to believe- i.e. the person with the degree from the archeology society or the person with no degree. That's a very common bias.
I don’t know if this guy has a degree in mechanical/civil engineering or applied physics, but this is exactly the passion, drive, and natural curiosity that made great historical inventions of genius possible. 😊
@@zp944 Of course and he probably only read the front and back cover of 1 book. This is not the point, it’s the passion, energy, drive, belief and commitment to do stuff that 99% people including myself wouldn’t care diddly squat about and assume that it’s already done and dusted, even if offered a lucrative contract to do it.
You do not need a degree to have common sense, I know some people who are completely illiterate and mastered a job better than someone who has a degree relevant to the job.
It's from the Brexiteers to show that Britain doesn't need aliens because we can do it all ourselves. ...except when they built Stonehenge they didn't have to consider the effect on the financial system.
His pursuit is progressing our understanding of historic construction techniques; this will help archaeologists determine a great deal of information about how and why things had been constructed in specific way. He is a scientist. And deserves recognition for this study.
@@tprime2702 that’s all fine and good, but I remember learning this type of weight maneuvering in the 80’s. Not to take credit from this guy by any means, but it’s also not exactly new tech.
I've been convinced for a long time that ancient people had far more ingenuity than we have now when it comes to basic mechanical engineering. We're used to doing everything quickly because we have advanced machinery. The people that built these amazing structures thousands of years ago spent DECADES doing it. This guy showed just how easy it is if you're willing to take the time and use fundamental concepts to do it. He's doing all of this and not even breaking a sweat.
There were gaints working along side man in those days applying those techniques and built monoliths in just a few days or a week or so. Large pyramids just a little long.
@@whysoserious7014 okay bud, and Cthulhu was there helping as well. If giants were a thing (besides those 8 feet tall people who are that tall because their pituitary gland wouldn't stop them from growing) then there be skeletons. Giants don't exist forever and then suddenly go away when technology becomes a thing.
Absolutely impressive and fascinating that someone can come up with low tech ways to make these things happen. Brute force is surprisingly not necessary if you’re using your intelligence and creativity and using the force of nature. Absolutely fantastic, Wally!
It was referred to as a lever. A stick would have to be wood. That said, I just used an 8 foot long 2x4 to pry a cement anchored mailbox post out of the ground.
@@hairtoss7975 yeah, but you can overcome those problems either by making a flat surface first, or just with manpower. While he proved you could do this with one man, they've proved you wouldn't need hundreds to move the blocks for the pyramids. just a few dozen, and that's not using any advanced techniques or beast of burden, just manpower. By proving it capable for one man, he proves no magic was used in the past when they had more men to use. just a little ingenuity and leverage.
Modern mankind has lost the knowledge of how our forebears did amazing things with logic and ingenuity that was passed from generation to generation. The secret is always in the little details that do not survive as archeological evidence. If you are not a student of ancient history, much of this cleverness will be lost on you. I love the way this man's mind works! He is a very deep thinker.
That is why passing are knowledge on is key. It seems like society is just getting dumber and dumber by relying on computers to do the work. Once they do everything for us. We will be useless.
@@yeahbutontheotherhand Library of Alexandria contained primarily philosophy, nothing on this subject. Also, there is little evidence it burned (although some small areas may have). The loss of most books was due to time and lack of upkeep on the books.
Loved the phrase “he’s not a scientist,” guess what, “scientist” have not always existed. Way back when people just had to figure sh!t out for themselves. Great job sir!
And if you figure out a lot of sh!t for yourself, find a calling in figuring sh!t out, and get into it enough to learn about what others figured out because you've realized that you can't do it alone, then eventually you'll figure out enough sh!t to be called a scientist. And as everyone knows, there's nothing special about scientists and in fact, they're really kind of stupid, unlike _regular_ people. But it's important for the video to get that mass appeal for not being one of the stupid people who figured out a lot. _Brilliant._ In other news, scientists have existed for a lot longer than you think.
Awesome. Mad respect bro. As a construction guy myself I've lifted my share of stone and I hope people realize that a stone the size of a large wedding cake cannot be moved a hair without some kind of lever or hoist. The barn was magnificent. Bravo.
@@covakoma1064 I've lifted heavy stuff before by first digging a little lol. Seriously though, I start by digging out for the first plank, then dig out that side of the stone; creating a depression for that end to fall into. Then begin the stair stepping. EDIT: And I just now realized..... I never needed to dig that first plank.... just under the end of the stone. Well, now I know. Lol
@@therealdannymullen yea i was thinking of that when I wrote comment. But what if you are in stone mine ? You have to dig in rock??? Anyway great example of moving stone!
@@therealdannymullen He's doing it on a concrete slab so none of those blocks were initially raised by "digging." The only digging demonstrated in the video was the hole used to tilt the slab into...off the concrete. Not shown: how he got any of the large blocks onto the concrete or how he initially raised any of the blocks to place smaller stones or a plank.
If anyone reading this should ever find themselves in the Miami, FL area, go visit the "Coral Castle", in Homestead. One man, Edward Leedskalnin, built it over a 28 year period. He was a Latvian immigrant who only had a 4th grade education, and was definitely NOT an engineer. Everything is made from limestone quarried from the site itself. When Edward bought the property, it was 'out in the boonies', and he had his share of privacy. Edward often worked late at night, never allowed anyone to watch him at work, and never told anyone how he built it or moved the stones around. The average weight of the various pieces is 14 tons each, the heaviest weighs in at over 30 tons. The construct includes various structures, including a 2-story "castle", an obelisk, various tables, chairs, the sun, planets, a 9 foot tall, 8-ton gate which is balanced so perfectly, a child can swing it open, a throne, and a 30-ton, 2 story slab which is part of a polar telescope. All hand-carved out of limestone and the stones all fit together so perfectly, no light passes between them. . To this day, nobody knows how he built the thing. Truly amazing. .
There are some good UA-cam documentaries about “how” it is surmised that he built it. He also documented much of it in bulletins or manuscripts w photographs of his approach which essentially relied on leverage using a series of taller and taller A-frames made of timber for hoisting. The cutting was done using large metal planks, moved back and forth, slowly but continuously, using improvised reciprocating motors, driven by a house generator, with multiple stations operated in parallel. At least, thats what we think he did based on all the electrical artifacts he left behind
I was there right after Hurricane Andrew, helping with relief efforts. That hurricane's result was like a 40 mile wide lawn mower ran across FL. The Coral Castle gave it the finger. Amazing accomplishment.
Great presentation, thanks, I’m a retired builder and I’ve used similar principles to move heavy beams etc but nothing on this level, your video is excellent and could be useful as an educational tool
But if you think about it back whenever Stonehenge was built that was the then version of our greatest technological architectural designs. So it was their most advanced structures (imo to show how advanced they were to anyone and everyone). Cool shit imo.
@@chodeoriki4113 ancient Egypt pyramids is one of the most impressive being perfectly aligned north and considering that if one block is a degree of then the whole pyramid is off. Also considering they moved these blocks from a 12 hour car drive away. But this video is a cool start but defiantly not the method the ancients used.
I've worked in a Limestone mill for 17 years,moved all sorts of blocks in different ways but I've never seen anything like this. Its nothing short of amazing. I take my hat off to you Sir!
Kamijo Touma Most in my country working construction have lots of common sense. Most don't have college degrees, but nonetheless quite intelligent. Maybe it's different where you live. good luck.
Do you think he could move the blocks without the concrete base? If that was on ground the rocks would just sink into the dirt with the intense weight - even if the rocks were alot larger there would be many issues. I could really pick this whole video apart for real world conditions.
biokemical That's a fair point, but only under the asumption that the druids who allegedly built stonehenge didnt have access to a large, flat rock in order to use as a base for the pivot.
Could easily replace the concrete foundation by stones of similar sizes moved into a makeshift foundation before lifting/tilting anything up. I've seen foundations and slabs made out of nothing but loose rocks that support buildings for off the grid projects.
This man is doing some really great things. He has a way of thinking that do to machinery we have lost. I live in the country and have heard stories of old timers using rocks to pivot barns and could move them around to wherever they wanted them kind of like this. But this is the first time I have seen someone raise a stone column like this. Pretty cool.
This is what happens when someone is retired* Doesn't change his amazing feat, but thinking outside the box got us Cranes, free time and a goal to remind everyone that simple engineering and leverage are under appreciated shined*
@@MAGAMAN No different than a 19,200lb concrete slab falling on some workers. Maybe not completely the same, but it shows that your "con" for cranes isn't something exclusive to the crane. If anything is a detractor for a crane its the materials and manpower needed to build and operate the machine. If you consider what it took to make the crane usable though, you have to do the same for the man in the video. The wooden planks and boards production, rope manufacturing, water irrigation system, whatever he dug the giant hole with (they glossed over the fact that he didn't dig the pit himself) etc etc. My point is that a crane falling over isn't the smoking gun against cranes.
Nah! This is just silly. Everyone knows that Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids and every ancient monument etc etc were built by "Ancient Aliens" using laser beams and Anti-gravity generators! ✨👽👾👽🛸👾✨ 🤣😂🤣 (I MARRIED A) MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE The milky way she walks around All feet firmly off the ground Two worlds collide, two worlds collide Here comes the future bride Gimme a lift to the lunar base I wanna marry a monster from outer space I fell in love with an alien being Whose skin was jelly - whose teeth were green She had the big bug eyes and the death-ray glare Feet like water wings - purple hair I was over the moon - I asked her back to my place Then I married the monster - from outer space The days were numbered - the nights were spent In a rent free furnished oxygen tent When a cyborg chef served up moon beams Done super rapid on a laser beam I needed nutrition to keep up the pace When I married the monster from outer space We walked out - tentacle in hand You could sense that the earthlings would not understand They’d go.. nudge nudge …when we got off the bus Saying it’s extra-terrestrial - not like us And it’s bad enough with another race But, f**k me!… a monster…from outer space! In a cybernetic fit of rage She pissed off to another age She lives in 1999 With her new boyfriend - a blob of slime Each time I see her translucent face I remember the monster from outer space (I MARRIED A) MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE By Dr John Cooper Clarke (best when recited live by JCC. *without any music)
My first impulse was that this guy is a nut. After watching it through, I've gotta give him a lot of respect. He is someone who is willing to TRY out his ideas. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't, but either way there's progress. His scientific mind impresses me. I say more power to him.
Physics is nutty ?! If you thought he was a nut at first then you are unintelligent… scientists do the same thing everyday… if you feel more intelligence is nutty then you’re not smart, you couldn’t handle NASA then !
Archimedes - 'Give me a place to stand, a lever long enough and a fulcrum. and I can move the Earth' surprising no one quoted this yet, dude was in 200 BC, really does puts things into perspective
I think people think we are so much smarter today than we were 1000 or 2000 years ago, because of technology. I believe technology is crowding our full potential, and we were smarter back then. They did not write everything down that they accomplished. like how they built the pyramids. Maybe they thought it was so obvious we would keep the techniques they invented or used. I love the internet and computers, dont get me wrong. Just sayin.
There is a lot to using a block and tackle and getting leverage to move a large load. Should be a required subject in high school. Hats off to this guy.
@@kjpayne105 Nope! Its an ancient old Technic, with man instead of buckets you could do it way faster, brought my 22' feet long 18 by 6 inch beams up height with no help the same way, learned it from my grandpa!
Thats what i imagine they say the pyramids were not built by slaves but i imagine that skilled crafts men had them do the manual labor while they set up tracks and what ever else necessary to move the material. They didnt build it they just moved the stuff there “”. I mean if they could just make a drill or lathe and power it with human hamster wheels that would be massive.
Maybe. But I’m sure there were people even smarter than him who were better with the tools they had at the time. I don’t know why we automatically assume people in ancient times were dumb savages.
I believe in the third wave. Theory. Where. Men have been on the planet and had tech better than we have now..we are the aliens .and did come from different planet..but men none the less..I know who Brian is..and childress. and Graham Hancock. And so on..etc. I believe in high tech..but lost..due to war and greed and religion. as the cookie crumbles today as well..good and evil.
@@marionamewontwork2681 brightside is a spam channel that steals content from actual creators and then adds in their own special brand of false info. If you take a moment to look it up, you'd find half of what they publish was made by someone else before they did it (often with the exact same title) or it is just lame stuff from around the internet that has been debunked over and over.
I saw this about 20 years ago for the fist time. This guy really helps explain how the the ancients could have done the things they did. Creative ways to let gravity and a fulcrum do the work for you.
For lack of better terms... it's almost like "unlearning" certain things. We're so used to machines and heavy lifters, brute force... you almost forget about a simple fulcrum. With one finger I can lift 3000 lbs... as long as there's 2,999 pounds on the side i'm pushing down on. (plus they probably had ropes and also many men. I don't think it's that much of a mystery)
@@urwholefamilydied we didn’t unlearn anything, the world resets after a bit and a new age of man is born once again. History is forgotten and rebuilt.
I teach my 5 year old daughter basic engineering everyday. So proud of her. Already reading at a 5th grade level and does lego sets by herself meant for 12yrs and up. It just takes a little bit of time and patience of my time daily but I believe it will payoff for her in the long run.
Nit only did he prove that it’s possible to move 20k pounds without any type of machinery or tool , excluding his homemade tools , but he didn’t do it with a team of 3000 people . He did it all by himself . Very impressive
Yes. But this is kinda the inverse: With enough repetitions even a regular-sized lever is enough to move the world. I am impressed, for sure. But from a quibbler's (and "what's the next test" perspective, he used dressed, as opposed to raw forms. Rocking stuff that is neither square nor straight is much harder. Issues arise, such as the pebbles migrating towards hollows in the members.
@@RichardLewisCaldwell The ancients tended to rough work stone before moving it, as seen in Egypt where they would carve obelisks from the earth in their rough shape before pulling them, likely to reduce the work down the road, working a stone that doesn't move is much easier. Stone henge was also probably pretty square once, but its old as shit and old shit doesn't stay square for millenia. Also a fun fact, it is likely the quarry workers dug under the silcrete layer to pull the sarsen stones from the ground because cutting silcrete from silcrete would be hard as shit.
Only problem that isn't explained is how ancient civilizations move these blocks long distance on grass, sand and soil? All he did was show us how it can be done with a concrete base.
I imagine back when they built Stonehenge, they had more than one person working, making this whole system go a lot faster and allowing for quick placement and rotation.
Dummy, this this clearly just ripped off of a VCR. Of course locally the cameras filmed in higher quality but when it went over TV and the VCR the quality greatly diminished.
@@RandyRandersonthefamous Fam you can make houses tornado-proof and fireproof real easy, just pour them out of concrete and anchor them to the ground. We don't do that because it's expensive. Not because it's difficult.
@@RandyRandersonthefamous Not particularly. We're at the point where we understand what the theoretical limitations of material strength are, and how to make that happen. You can even look it up on Wikipedia. It's just outrageously expensive, or very slow. Pretty much all the remaining mysteries are "how do we make machines to do this" or just trying as many combinations as possible until we get the right one.
Now move it 10's of kilometere's from where it's quarried and raised hundreds of feet in the air like they did thousands of years ago instead of just spinning it around in a circle or moving it a few feet.
So you are saying scientists who invented clever machines, discovered different planets, found the cure to many deadly diseases and saved countless lives are AFRAID OF WORK?
Seriously impressive, especially the gradual lifting of a huge block by rocking it backwards and forwards and also moving huge blocks by reducing the friction simply by putting them on a couple of stones. These simple techniques really do offer an explanation for how Stonehenge was built, especially as he lifted that huge block all on his own. Imagine a group of people working together! It would be simple using these approaches. It’s weird how nobody else has suggested this but as always, the simplest solutions are often both the best but the hardest to come up with. I honestly think that Wally Wallington should be widely recognised and rewarded for his undoubted achievements, not least for potentially putting an end to the quest to understand how Stonehenge was built, which has patently defeated a lot of thinkers before this man’s achievements. In the absence of anything better, the ivory towered academics should now accept Wally Wallington’s suggestions as working hypotheses and as leading theory, if not bettered very soon! Great achievement Wally!
John Bates - Definitely a smart man, but the problem i see with the moving of big blocks by spinning it on pebbles, is that he's able to do this cause he's on a concrete slab, try doing that straight off the ground.
I think we underestimate the intelligence of our ancestors. With things like this they probably sat around thinking about for years. As what else could they do? Unlike today where we have machines for all our needs, along with an endless amount of distractions. There's no need for many of us to have this type of problem solving mindset. But like this guy, If you dedicate enough time to trying to solve something. You likely will in the end, and back in ancient times, time was something people had plenty of.
TheJollyGamerJoe exactly, and if one man who probably still has alot of distractions in his life can achieve this can you imagine what 1000s of people without distractions could achieve.... Pyramids, stone henge etc.
Exactly. Have you seen the aqueducts that the Romans built? Those were insane, especially for the level of tech they had at the time. Taking water from the mountains to a town something like 50 miles away. And having the whole thing at an exact angle so the water flowed at the proper rate. Amazing.
Our technology devolved in many ways. Buildings made of stone last forever, unlike our houses of today that give us many problems. No hurricane, tsunami or other disaster can destroy a house made of giant stones.
The ancients didn't have concrete pads to maneuver the blocks, they didn't have water hoses under pressure, they had to carve these massive stones themselves and move them for miles. sorry not the way they did it.
Intuitively, this is how every single guy works when moving a fridge, etc by himself- he walks it across two balance points and away it goes..step, step, step. Been working solo for so long you just know this. It's when you rely on machinery that you lose skills.
@@finallyfriday. You must be a boomer cuz the only thing they know is crying about millenials. This guy is relying on machines. They're called simple machines. When you rely on machines you don't loose skill, you acquire other skills. You're old enough to know these simple facts.
@@mechanomics2649 they raised the millennials. Every generation is a product of the previous generation. So if they don't like the current generation. They should blame themselves.
I gotta feel for him. He's a carpenter, a construction worker, he spent his whole life learning the trade, and he is able to learn so much because of the efforts of those countless souls that learned to create wonders before his time. And then, because of a few weak people that had never once tried his craft, all of those efforts were chalked up to "it must have been aliens!!!" I would, and in some ways do, feel personally offended. There are numerous ways ancient civilizations could have been built, ways we can still use today, it just takes us too long for our "instant" reality. But they always say, "it couldn't have been done". Damn the disbelievers lmao
I read a comment the other day under a video where the person said that "they've proven" humans could not have constructed the pyramids, and that it "had to have been" aliens. Maybe within the context of a big Hollywood blockbuster. But after the popcorn's all gone, here's this guy, still stacking sticks and washing out sand, moving things the weight of 2 bulldozers by himself! Well done, sir!!
He could not have built the Pyramid this way, maybe first couple rows but cmon, ya seen how tall pyramid is? would have taken more wood than was available and then some, not to mention with the precision. Aliens? well I will not say it is impossible but more likely a much better method was employed with a technology unknown or hidden from us. Ancient humans were much smarter than given credit and who knows. Maybe even Giants were involved, people scoff at giants being real but they are talked about in the bible and many other places around the world throughout history.
@@pjj9491 Then again, he wasn't demonstrating all that. He was just showing how heavy objects can be moved with primitive technology, without needing to hypothesize more outlandish explanations, like extraterrestrials.
but there is a difference between moving stuff on the ground and moving stuff up a steep hill. the pyramids in egypt have an angle of 51 degrees seen from the ground. So lifting those rocks to such heights is a totally different story. and then not even talking about cutting them. and also the astrology involved, cause many pyramids around the world form a line, even tho those civilizations didnt knew each other. and the pyramids also point to certain things in space (but i cant remember which ones)
@@Satori-Automotive Lifting rocks up a 51 degree incline _is_ a different story, and no doubt used different rollers, pulleys, sand, etc. He demonstrated moving a heavy object with primitive technology. He conquered the weight, so now the incline's the sticking point? Also, just because the ancient Egyptians were not medieval Europeans, doesn't mean they didn't know stone-cutting, how to do maths, or were unable to predict the movements of the heavenly bodies. They gazed at them all the time. They even worshiped some of them. Are we to believe they couldn't line up a temple to point out the path of one? Now THAT would really strain credulity! Anyway you cut it, we don't need E.T. to explain the pyramids. We may want him, but we do not need him....
Wow. This is remarkable. So ingenious. Rotating on a stone! Using the blocks own weight to sink it into wet earth! This is pure brilliance in its simplicity, yet it is pure genius. Amazing. Thanks for sharing this with all us dummies. : )
This may be a stupid question, but way back when they constructed Stonehenge and the Pyramids, what would they have been using to support two rocks that's holding up the XX-ton boulder. I'm imagining the weight sinking it all. This guy was pivating it all on top concrete. Thanks.
@@TravisButler95 you are just ignorant, we've been doing these kinds of things since I was young. Sticks and stones can lift hundreds of tons of stuff. So just shut up. This man has a video but a lot of men have been doing this in the province. Ask the loggers, the carpenters, the farmers, everyday they're doing this.
@@TravisButler95 actually there some theories as to how they did that look up the video they basically got a group of people tied ropes to the top and wiggled it back and forth it actually looks pretty accurate and doesnt require too much people
Yeah, but that is a seriously flawed form of structure. And the people who build it cheat for one, for two they don't work together the way that they should. Not to mention that everything we build is shitty.
Very smart, but get back to me when you've lifted and placed 2.3 million stones like these up to 450 ft high to form a perfect pyramid with blocks of varying dimensions
Yeah my grandfather was the same. He replaced the concrete stairs he made 30-40 years earlier and moulded a perfect homemade concrete staircace that about 7-10 of my cousins and uncles lifted and it fell exactly into place. The error for mistakes were 0 millimeters. I couldn't believe it. Granted he did build the house and made every brick by hand. He moulded and made 2 or three bricks per day after work and installed them in the Sunday which was his day off. The house still stands super strong but it goes to show how these miracles are possible when somebody knows exactly what they're doing. I applaud you for the demonstration!!! 👏👏👏
I think I may have a bit of your grandpas spirit... I've been digging out my crawl space, making bricks from the clay, may eventually have a full basement lol
Ha Ha I knew a Bloke on Building Site Brought his Lunch Box in Everyday: When he left to go home he put 2 Bricks in it Every Night: Eventually he had enough Bricks to Build a Garage 😃😃😃😃
People thought thousands of workers built Stonehenge. Turns out it was one bored man and some sticks.
that guy must be more crazy than this one (in vid). who knows may be he spend entire 30 yrs over this.
Good, he'll probably save people billions in fuel and construction costs if even one of these methods is usable. Long may he continue thinking outside the box.
Maybe someone was training, or religious purposes, or etc, As im sure it'd take strength, patience, and a lot of time to do it.
actually people that threaten fuel and big corporations pockets get paid off or buried.
Archimedes once stated: Give me a Lever long enough and a Fulcrum large enough, and I can lift the Earth, and so can this guy!
I worked in a coal mine for many years and all lifting involved levers and muscle power. Everything this man shows you makes absolute sense. Well done mate, really impressive.
A long time ago some alien said, "Give me a long enough lever and a place to stand, and I will move the world". He knew what he was talking about.
@@tomthx5804
You are right and that alien's name was Archimedes from the planet Greece. In his obscure alien language the phrase goes like this:
_"ΔΩΣ ΜΟΙ ΠΑ ΣΤΩ ΚΑΙ ΤΑ ΓΑΝ ΚΙΝΑΣΩ"_ (δῶς μοι πᾶ στῶ καὶ τὰν γᾶν κινάσω) or "Dos mi pa sto ke tan gan kinaso".
@@makismakiavelis5718 Archimedes got his knowledge from Africa
slayer 1 yea from Africa where they throw cow shit on lattice and call it a house.
@@toolguyslayer1 I don't know about that but ancient Greeks had commerce connections with lots of Mediterranean locations including Alexandria in Egypt so, who knows? But in the end, who cares, nothing is new under the sun, everyone stood on the shoulders of their predecessors although there were specific people who made the giant leaps of thought required to truly revolutionize our understanding of reality like: Plato, Aristotle, Archimedes, Hippocrates, Hypatia, Pythagoras, Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, Einstein etc.
As an engineer I say: Respect. This is outstanding. You prooved how big stone blocks could be moved without advanced technology.
Does it explain how the great pyramid of Giza was built? With all those granit inner cameras? Was Baalbek stone moved the same way? How those blocks were carved and transported, Sacsayhuyaman etc
@@antoniocerutti265 Yep, I was coming on here to see if anyone had mentioned Baalbek and those massive 1000 ton monoliths.
this video only explains MAYBE just the foundations but not how they continued to go up u would have to build another system just like this on every row...thus making it impossible after the 2nd row
@@moirateges8943 Thats not even mentioning this dude is moving concrete.... show me how to cut those from solid stone.
@@antoniocerutti265 yes actually. It's been known for some time. They would use timber rollers and crushed stones (along with some water - although not necessary, just makes process easier) to transport them over long distances inland.
And yes, despite being super heavy, the use of these techniques act as multipliers. For example, those simple swivel techniques allowed a 90kg man to move a 1000kg block with relative ease.
Now imagine dozens if not hundreds of people (there was no short supply there) moving even larger blocks. It all comes down to just understanding physics, and what's the minimumal force required to move an object.
That's insane!😮🤯
I also loved that his family took time off to support him with this. So sweet of them.
Well yeah, he built the pyramids. They are rich
A joke !
How to do it when you have miles to go on a non plane area with millions of blocks ???
😂
I appriciate the extra effort the production team put in by using a camera from the relevant time period.
😂 damn you
And by camera you reference the potato this was filmed with?
The camera must have been fine, considering any news outlet would want to maintain their appearance as a proper media outlet and would have used the best equipment available. The quality issue stems from compression for storage and sharing purposes, which makes it look garbled.
😂😂😂😂😂
@@thatrecord5313 Not to mention stretched to 16:9. so the guy look short and squat!
1 pixel less and it would be a radio
😂😂😂😂😂
Diego Cebrián Podvarcu actually it would be 479p
Xaxaxxaxa
This was the funniest comment on UA-cam 😂
@@clydecraft5642 if that's 480 it's the worst i've ever seen
MAN FINDS A WAY TO LIFT 20 TON BLOCKS BY HIMSELF! CRANE COMPANIES HATE HIM!
Crane operators hate him! See how he moved a 20,000 pound stone with this weird trick!
LOL
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*Alert from Melanie .59 miles away* * Would you allow her to share her private photos with you*
Man finds a way to build stonehenge in his backyard. Aliens hate him!
Two observations: 1) How did he get the very first plank under the stone slab? 2) The technique of spinning large stones on little stones requires a flat stone surface underneath. It wouldn't work on sand or earth as the small stones would just be ground into the dirt.
You'll need a couple of slabs to rest the small stones on.
On larger stone platform part of big block could be over sand and so after removing some sand a leverage system could easily build under and away from big block. Once one side lifts the center could have had th first block under it.
I wonder if you could dig out below the giant stone but leave the center and have that be the base of your see-saw set up. It would be sketch but I'm guessing the Pharos were not known for their OSHA compliance lol. Perhaps you could also utilize wedges and some elbow grease.
He used it to transport that 30x40 pole barn 300ft across soft land.
It's just 1 technique of being able to move something really big and heavy showing it can be done. Back when stone henge was built people weren't sat around watching TV or waiting for deliveroo so they had much more time to figure things out and try various techniques
We often don’t give a lot of credit to human ingenuity and he just reminded us it still exists. Well done.
wives around this world discourage this behavior
@@o.5523And they just have to deal with it
Pharaoh architect is proud of this secrets works
Morpheus?
He prolly has pharaoh bloodline....
Finally, here’s the guy who first said, “Hold my beer.”
Amongst the top 5 most underrated UA-cam comments of all time 😀
@@mariehelena2364 When OHRaceFan goes to comment, it's like "hold my beer"
😂😂😂
🤣🥬
Pentagon released video of craft that defied all laws of physics known to man. "Ufo craft" released by pentagon. Time to wake up.. New day an age baby
Can this guy help me move my neighbors house onto a different street?
or maybe move an ex-wife into one of those holes. ?
Nope your on your own with that one ! ..( home alone get it? ) . god I'm gonna hang myself ! 😢
I can help you moving to your neighbors house
LOL
Karl Wood: 🤔🤔🤔😒😒😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I fully understand and appreciate how he got the block 3 feet in the air. What about the first few inches????
Uneven ground perhaps.
dig out left and right
How'd he get the block there in the first place?
@@vampirerabbit4049Using the spinnibg method
@@vampirerabbit4049 Aliens
Absolutely brilliant. Did he say he's neither a scientist nor a mathematician just man with simple logic and perseverance. Double WOW !!
actually he is, he just does obviously not write that nonsense down and just applies it directly in the praxis but still he uses mathematic and science in its purest nature form.
@@TheClearSight If his biggest friend for this is gravity, he is directly applying physics.
@@BlackStarEOP that is more or less what i said
That's cool and all but how does he lift a block that's hundreds of tons to put wood under
@@Aryzo idk, dig dirt on the sides and then balance it back and forth like on vid?
The trouble is when so called modern experts try to solve the problem, they have no hands on knowledge... this guys worked his whole life solving problems like this... so I say hard-hats off to him, I'm impressed.
Hey keep the hard hat on we need safety in the workplace
ancient people were not usually formally taught either in our modern sense of schooling, more so they watched experts to learn. now imagine all of this gentleman’s knowledge built up and passed down for thousands of years. we are talking about a completely different class of builders.
The difference between theory and practice.
The rocks for Stonehenge moved hundreds of miles, not a few hundred feet
@@goopguy548 And your point is?
Maybe the Egyptians just deadlifted that shit.
LMAO
Insomnia Poltergeist lmfao. Thats the funniest shit ive read in weeks. Well done.
U made my day bro
Insomnia Poltergeist
You’re probably right. 500 slaves at the end of a pharaoh’s whip can get a lot done.
Insomnia Poltergeist Stone Henge is in the UK
How did he put the stone underneath the block in the firstplace?
Easy.
probably using a wedge
Could use a wedge, could dig out one or both ends, tip one side and wala
Kudos to him for his curiosity, perseverance and ingenuity. It’s great that his grandkids got the day off from school to see their grandad do something they’ll always remember, but really, the whole school should have been brought out to see this.
This is to educating the school is more into harming your child not teaching them that’s just America anymore
agree. instead of learning nonsense this could spark a young genius' imagination
@@PaPi0141r/ihadastroke
No joke man
Actually learn something practical at school? What a concept!!!
Absolutely brilliant! Hundreds of academics for decades could never figure this out and ascribed it to everything but the pure ingenuity shown by thus great man.
Can I add quickly that Stone Henge is made from rock a huge distance away - not local.
Can we now see him put a full size stone henge arch on?
Smart and clever but not the final answer. This will only work under certain circumstances. 90% of the work at Giza for instance could not have been done this way for dozens of reasons
@@cantsay8894: Perhaps. But given more time, I am betting he could figure out a lot more secrets.
@@TheMrRatzz They made the rocks on site. Same thing happened in ancient Egypt. ua-cam.com/video/znQk_yBHre4/v-deo.html
@@TheMrRatzz Yeah I know that's their theory. One thing I will say is don't just believe things because certain people have a degree from a college and don't do the deduction thing were you weight up who to believe- i.e. the person with the degree from the archeology society or the person with no degree. That's a very common bias.
I don’t know if this guy has a degree in mechanical/civil engineering or applied physics, but this is exactly the passion, drive, and natural curiosity that made great historical inventions of genius possible. 😊
He read a history book. Suring boxes were used for thousands of years. They're well documented
@@zp944 Of course and he probably only read the front and back cover of 1 book. This is not the point, it’s the passion, energy, drive, belief and commitment to do stuff that 99% people including myself wouldn’t care diddly squat about and assume that it’s already done and dusted, even if offered a lucrative contract to do it.
Nope, just a dumb construction worker.
You don't need a degree to observe, test and learn. Just curiousity
You do not need a degree to have common sense, I know some people who are completely illiterate and mastered a job better than someone who has a degree relevant to the job.
This is what happens when an unstoppable force meet a movable object
I can't believe this wasn't click bait.
It's from the Brexiteers to show that Britain doesn't need aliens because we can do it all ourselves. ...except when they built Stonehenge they didn't have to consider the effect on the financial system.
It’s been in my recommended video for months and I thought I was click bait too lol
@@Community-Action Haha mind boggling. I liked this video it was very simple and quite dramatic
I agree, it was pretty good
@@Community-Action fuck youtube
23 years ago...and we're still amazed on what this man did. Excellent video.
It was pretty cool. I’d love to have one in my yard to just marvel at
Wonder if he still moving big ass blocks in his yard
Stonehenge was 5000 years ago, but yeah I guess this guy is interesting
@ninthheretic2498 I have no idea what you're rambling about 😂 I'm just saying Stonehenge is more impressive than this guy
if hes right we are amazed by things way older than that man
This is the most complicated “need to get away from my wife” hobby
Way to much😅
Haha!
Lol
His pursuit is progressing our understanding of historic construction techniques; this will help archaeologists determine a great deal of information about how and why things had been constructed in specific way.
He is a scientist. And deserves recognition for this study.
@@tprime2702 that’s all fine and good, but I remember learning this type of weight maneuvering in the 80’s. Not to take credit from this guy by any means, but it’s also not exactly new tech.
WOW!! You’re amazing. People have been trying to figure out this technique for centuries and you cracked the case. Well done.
A joke !
How to do it when you have miles to go on a non plane area with millions of blocks ???
😂
Yeah and you have less than 30 years to do it...
This proof nothing about the construction of Pyramids..
I've been convinced for a long time that ancient people had far more ingenuity than we have now when it comes to basic mechanical engineering. We're used to doing everything quickly because we have advanced machinery. The people that built these amazing structures thousands of years ago spent DECADES doing it. This guy showed just how easy it is if you're willing to take the time and use fundamental concepts to do it. He's doing all of this and not even breaking a sweat.
true
Going by the hieroglyphics I would say they had some help ;)
Yeah turns out aliens have better things to do lol
I agree , also with new technologies we are becoming more stupid
We are becoming back as human species, maybe at the end we become a monkey again 😂, involution
Modern people: "How did they move these huge monoliths? Did aliens come and do it for us???"
This guy: "Gimme two rocks and I'll move your barn."
There were gaints working along side man in those days applying those techniques and built monoliths in just a few days or a week or so. Large pyramids just a little long.
@@whysoserious7014 sure buddy 😬
@@whysoserious7014 okay bud, and Cthulhu was there helping as well. If giants were a thing (besides those 8 feet tall people who are that tall because their pituitary gland wouldn't stop them from growing) then there be skeletons. Giants don't exist forever and then suddenly go away when technology becomes a thing.
@@whysoserious7014 you eat paint chips as a kid?
wow imagine being this arrogant and naive hahaha holy smokes kid
Absolutely impressive and fascinating that someone can come up with low tech ways to make these things happen. Brute force is surprisingly not necessary if you’re using your intelligence and creativity and using the force of nature. Absolutely fantastic, Wally!
Like a wise man once said, "with a big enough stone and a long enough stick I can move the world"
Profound respect 👍
Archimedes
@@శతకహేమముఆటవెలఁది thanks for the assistance. I couldn't recall the name at the time.
@@kennyjuengel2488 certainly; not a problem. I happened to recall.🙏
A powerful mind can build an empire with someone elses hands
It was referred to as a lever. A stick would have to be wood. That said, I just used an 8 foot long 2x4 to pry a cement anchored mailbox post out of the ground.
I don't care if thats not how they did it - this is an amazing demonstration of ingenuity and brain power over large problems. Chapeau sir!
Its probably pretty close
@@lastword8783 They probably used more logs and less squared timber. But the principles are the same. Leverage, gravity and brainjuice!
Hard and flat surface. Do it on dirt and add even a tiny bit of inclination and the thing will not work.
@@hairtoss7975 yeah, but you can overcome those problems either by making a flat surface first, or just with manpower. While he proved you could do this with one man, they've proved you wouldn't need hundreds to move the blocks for the pyramids. just a few dozen, and that's not using any advanced techniques or beast of burden, just manpower. By proving it capable for one man, he proves no magic was used in the past when they had more men to use. just a little ingenuity and leverage.
@@arizona_anime_fan The quarries are tens or hundreds of miles away. Are you suggesting that they flattened hills/mountains to move the blocks?
Modern mankind has lost the knowledge of how our forebears did amazing things with logic and ingenuity that was passed from generation to generation. The secret is always in the little details that do not survive as archeological evidence. If you are not a student of ancient history, much of this cleverness will be lost on you. I love the way this man's mind works! He is a very deep thinker.
Well the great library of Alexandria did burn down. No wonder that ancient knowledge did disappear
, yeah until it was passed to that particular generation that was lazy and cut their hair short… and just plan forgot about it.. lol
@@johnbattista9519 what ?
That is why passing are knowledge on is key. It seems like society is just getting dumber and dumber by relying on computers to do the work. Once they do everything for us. We will be useless.
@@yeahbutontheotherhand Library of Alexandria contained primarily philosophy, nothing on this subject. Also, there is little evidence it burned (although some small areas may have). The loss of most books was due to time and lack of upkeep on the books.
This man deserves credit for bringing ideas and solutions that archeologists working decades have yet to sort out.
who cares about blocks, I'm more intrigued by how he moved a fucking BARN
Aliens.
Tim Gehrsitz bruh the big blocks wight is probly 2 times as much as the barn
It less about the weight of the barn and more about how large and awkward it is compared to the concrete
with the same technique he used to move block dumbass
Tim Gehrsitz same
Loved the phrase “he’s not a scientist,” guess what, “scientist” have not always existed. Way back when people just had to figure sh!t out for themselves. Great job sir!
And if you figure out a lot of sh!t for yourself, find a calling in figuring sh!t out, and get into it enough to learn about what others figured out because you've realized that you can't do it alone, then eventually you'll figure out enough sh!t to be called a scientist. And as everyone knows, there's nothing special about scientists and in fact, they're really kind of stupid, unlike _regular_ people. But it's important for the video to get that mass appeal for not being one of the stupid people who figured out a lot.
_Brilliant._
In other news, scientists have existed for a lot longer than you think.
"the only difference between fucking around and science is writing it down"
I think scientist applies to anyone who processes trial and error....
An engineer?
Scientists back 2000 plus years ago were called philosophers.
I wonder if this technique could get get my ass out of bed so I stop watching UA-cam videos.
That would definitely require either a very large machine or alien technology - or both...
😀
Lol it might
Sure, but it'll take 25 levers and 1 hour.
No
Awesome. Mad respect bro. As a construction guy myself I've lifted my share of stone and I hope people realize that a stone the size of a large wedding cake cannot be moved a hair without some kind of lever or hoist. The barn was magnificent. Bravo.
My question is how he lift it off the ground and put first plank ?
@@covakoma1064 I've lifted heavy stuff before by first digging a little lol. Seriously though, I start by digging out for the first plank, then dig out that side of the stone; creating a depression for that end to fall into. Then begin the stair stepping.
EDIT: And I just now realized..... I never needed to dig that first plank.... just under the end of the stone. Well, now I know. Lol
@@therealdannymullen yea i was thinking of that when I wrote comment. But what if you are in stone mine ? You have to dig in rock??? Anyway great example of moving stone!
@@covakoma1064
@@therealdannymullen He's doing it on a concrete slab so none of those blocks were initially raised by "digging." The only digging demonstrated in the video was the hole used to tilt the slab into...off the concrete. Not shown: how he got any of the large blocks onto the concrete or how he initially raised any of the blocks to place smaller stones or a plank.
To bad they recorded this with a camera from Stonehenge days.
retro
2003 technology i guess
Too *
Lol so good
There were no limits to how bad the quality could be with Hi8 video cameras.
If anyone reading this should ever find themselves in the Miami, FL area, go visit the "Coral Castle", in Homestead. One man, Edward Leedskalnin, built it over a 28 year period. He was a Latvian immigrant who only had a 4th grade education, and was definitely NOT an engineer. Everything is made from limestone quarried from the site itself. When Edward bought the property, it was 'out in the boonies', and he had his share of privacy. Edward often worked late at night, never allowed anyone to watch him at work, and never told anyone how he built it or moved the stones around. The average weight of the various pieces is 14 tons each, the heaviest weighs in at over 30 tons. The construct includes various structures, including a 2-story "castle", an obelisk, various tables, chairs, the sun, planets, a 9 foot tall, 8-ton gate which is balanced so perfectly, a child can swing it open, a throne, and a 30-ton, 2 story slab which is part of a polar telescope. All hand-carved out of limestone and the stones all fit together so perfectly, no light passes between them.
.
To this day, nobody knows how he built the thing. Truly amazing.
.
There are some good UA-cam documentaries about “how” it is surmised that he built it. He also documented much of it in bulletins or manuscripts w photographs of his approach which essentially relied on leverage using a series of taller and taller A-frames made of timber for hoisting. The cutting was done using large metal planks, moved back and forth, slowly but continuously, using improvised reciprocating motors, driven by a house generator, with multiple stations operated in parallel. At least, thats what we think he did based on all the electrical artifacts he left behind
I was there right after Hurricane Andrew, helping with relief efforts. That hurricane's result was like a 40 mile wide lawn mower ran across FL. The Coral Castle gave it the finger.
Amazing accomplishment.
He might not have been an engineer by training or education, but he was an instinctive one!
Your comment got me to look him up. Thanks!
Amazing ! Thank You ! Its entirely plausible humans did in fact build all these ancient structures
He was using Jinns.
Great presentation, thanks, I’m a retired builder and I’ve used similar principles to move heavy beams etc but nothing on this level, your video is excellent and could be useful as an educational tool
Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world. - Archimedes
this is really that old.
Nice: Very apt.
They used the same ancient method to film this.
Ben Cooper 😂😂😂
Ben Cooper that got me :D
🌝
Each frame is oil on canvas, show some appreciation.
Ben Cooper I watched this video on lost Technology , A green screen computer with dial-up modem 😱
Never underestimate the ingenuity of ancient man to pile one rock on top of another.
But if you think about it back whenever Stonehenge was built that was the then version of our greatest technological architectural designs. So it was their most advanced structures (imo to show how advanced they were to anyone and everyone). Cool shit imo.
My sentiments exactly!
It was literally a place where they Sacrifice animals and humans why do we Glorify these Satanic ritual grounds ?
@@chodeoriki4113 ancient Egypt pyramids is one of the most impressive being perfectly aligned north and considering that if one block is a degree of then the whole pyramid is off. Also considering they moved these blocks from a 12 hour car drive away. But this video is a cool start but defiantly not the method the ancients used.
But he's a modern man.. ??
The world needs more people like this! Bravo:)
They edited out the part where he flies back to his home galaxy.
200th like
lol
www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/ufo-pentagon-statement-findings-vehicle-research-a9636481.html
Damn sure did
Or the stone tipped over and got him.
This is the beauty of UA-cam, never would have seen this without it. This man is a genius.
I've worked in a Limestone mill for 17 years,moved all sorts of blocks in different ways but I've never seen anything like this. Its nothing short of amazing. I take my hat off to you Sir!
If only we could get more people in construction with common sense or that wanted to use equipment we'd have less broken backs in the world.
Kamijo Touma Most in my country working construction have lots of common sense. Most don't have college degrees, but nonetheless quite intelligent.
Maybe it's different where you live. good luck.
Do you think he could move the blocks without the concrete base? If that was on ground the rocks would just sink into the dirt with the intense weight - even if the rocks were alot larger there would be many issues. I could really pick this whole video apart for real world conditions.
biokemical That's a fair point, but only under the asumption that the druids who allegedly built stonehenge didnt have access to a large, flat rock in order to use as a base for the pivot.
Could easily replace the concrete foundation by stones of similar sizes moved into a makeshift foundation before lifting/tilting anything up. I've seen foundations and slabs made out of nothing but loose rocks that support buildings for off the grid projects.
This man is doing some really great things. He has a way of thinking that do to machinery we have lost. I live in the country and have heard stories of old timers using rocks to pivot barns and could move them around to wherever they wanted them kind of like this. But this is the first time I have seen someone raise a stone column like this. Pretty cool.
This is what happens when someone doesn't do what everyone else does and thinks & works outside the box 👍 Well Done
This is what happens when someone is retired*
Doesn't change his amazing feat, but thinking outside the box got us Cranes, free time and a goal to remind everyone that simple engineering and leverage are under appreciated shined*
That's right this proves the theory of *think for yourself*.
@@DaveFromChicago1 Don't forget all the dead people it gets us when the crane collapses.
@@MAGAMAN how about when a 20 ton rock falls? Accidents happen no matter what
@@MAGAMAN No different than a 19,200lb concrete slab falling on some workers. Maybe not completely the same, but it shows that your "con" for cranes isn't something exclusive to the crane. If anything is a detractor for a crane its the materials and manpower needed to build and operate the machine. If you consider what it took to make the crane usable though, you have to do the same for the man in the video. The wooden planks and boards production, rope manufacturing, water irrigation system, whatever he dug the giant hole with (they glossed over the fact that he didn't dig the pit himself) etc etc. My point is that a crane falling over isn't the smoking gun against cranes.
This man is freaking amazing!!! This is the type of stuff we should see more often on UA-cam!
I agree with you 100%
Nah! This is just silly. Everyone knows that Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids and every ancient monument etc etc were built by "Ancient Aliens" using laser beams and Anti-gravity generators!
✨👽👾👽🛸👾✨ 🤣😂🤣
(I MARRIED A) MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE
The milky way she walks around
All feet firmly off the ground
Two worlds collide, two worlds collide
Here comes the future bride
Gimme a lift to the lunar base
I wanna marry a monster from outer space
I fell in love with an alien being
Whose skin was jelly - whose teeth were green
She had the big bug eyes and the death-ray glare
Feet like water wings - purple hair
I was over the moon - I asked her back to my place
Then I married the monster - from outer space
The days were numbered - the nights were spent
In a rent free furnished oxygen tent
When a cyborg chef served up moon beams
Done super rapid on a laser beam
I needed nutrition to keep up the pace
When I married the monster from outer space
We walked out - tentacle in hand
You could sense that the earthlings would not understand
They’d go.. nudge nudge …when we got off the bus
Saying it’s extra-terrestrial - not like us
And it’s bad enough with another race
But, f**k me!… a monster…from outer space!
In a cybernetic fit of rage
She pissed off to another age
She lives in 1999
With her new boyfriend - a blob of slime
Each time I see her translucent face
I remember the monster from outer space
(I MARRIED A) MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE By Dr John Cooper Clarke
(best when recited live by JCC. *without any music)
Totally agree... Instead we have whores breastfeeding fake babies
Agreed.
UA-cam on e had many great things. Now it's for indoctrination and distracted fools to gaze all day
My first impulse was that this guy is a nut. After watching it through, I've gotta give him a lot of respect. He is someone who is willing to TRY out his ideas. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't, but either way there's progress. His scientific mind impresses me. I say more power to him.
Absolutely this! No matter how dumb the idea, give it a shot.
Physics is nutty ?! If you thought he was a nut at first then you are unintelligent… scientists do the same thing everyday… if you feel more intelligence is nutty then you’re not smart, you couldn’t handle NASA then !
Sticks and stones will break your bones but not in the garden of this man’s home. Dude, you are brilliant👏👏
Archimedes - 'Give me a place to stand, a lever long enough and a fulcrum. and I can move the Earth'
surprising no one quoted this yet, dude was in 200 BC, really does puts things into perspective
I think people think we are so much smarter today than we were 1000 or 2000 years ago, because of technology. I believe technology is crowding our full potential, and we were smarter back then. They did not write everything down that they accomplished. like how they built the pyramids. Maybe they thought it was so obvious we would keep the techniques they invented or used. I love the internet and computers, dont get me wrong. Just sayin.
the important detail missing from that archimedes quote: what is the lever _made_ out of?
@@rumfordc tetrus type lever . Interlinking bricks . Walk like an egyptiannnn ....
@@chrisclark7212 that would be a very weak lever lol
@@rumfordc have you seen the joints im talking about . Shaped like z ! Very strong .
There is a lot to using a block and tackle and getting leverage to move a large load. Should be a required subject in high school. Hats off to this guy.
Used to be...
High school is too busy "teaching" kids to believe they are chosen ones here to conquer evil ...
Archimedes quote about having enough leverage you can move the world.
I moved a lot of large loads in high school.
No it doesn’t. What are they gonna use it for? Move their cubicles? Doing taxes should be. This knowledge isn’t necessary in our current world.
you must admit this is incredible just for being able to move all that weight by on man
Admitted.
I admit it too.
Absolutely
@@kjpayne105 Nope! Its an ancient old Technic, with man instead of buckets you could do it way faster, brought my 22' feet long 18 by 6 inch beams up height with no help the same way, learned it from my grandpa!
In theory, you can lift the entire earth. An ancient trick.
Remarkable engineering. One man figured out how to get a huge stone block to maneuver it where he wants it to go. Very good job.
This guy would easily be a head architect in ancient times. Imagine how fast he could work with a large team
Thats what i imagine they say the pyramids were not built by slaves but i imagine that skilled crafts men had them do the manual labor while they set up tracks and what ever else necessary to move the material. They didnt build it they just moved the stuff there “”. I mean if they could just make a drill or lathe and power it with human hamster wheels that would be massive.
@@fajile5109 Just because there were some skilled craftsmen doesn't mean there weren't slaves though.
I bet the ancient Egyptians had midwestern accents too
They wouldn’t need him, they had tens of thousands of men trained in these techniques and more.
Maybe. But I’m sure there were people even smarter than him who were better with the tools they had at the time. I don’t know why we automatically assume people in ancient times were dumb savages.
This man deserves way more credit that he gets . His solution is best. No more alien theory
I believe in the third wave. Theory. Where. Men have been on the planet and had tech better than we have now..we are the aliens .and did come from different planet..but men none the less..I know who Brian is..and childress. and Graham Hancock. And so on..etc. I believe in high tech..but lost..due to war and greed and religion. as the cookie crumbles today as well..good and evil.
While what this guy did is amazing, it fails in comparison to some of the ancient stuff laying around. Check out brightside
This is one man alone..imagine he teaches thousands and the techniques evolve. Say over hundred year span..or two..
Check out a good stone mason. 1 hammer , 10 pegs and a massive block. Cuts almost perfect straight lines.
@@marionamewontwork2681 brightside is a spam channel that steals content from actual creators and then adds in their own special brand of false info. If you take a moment to look it up, you'd find half of what they publish was made by someone else before they did it (often with the exact same title) or it is just lame stuff from around the internet that has been debunked over and over.
This really raises more questions than it answers- like how did this man travel back in time to tell the ancient aliens how to do this??
Underrated comment 🤣
He borrowed the DeLorean from the barn.
That's what I came here to say lol@@caswelljohnstone200
Also, they were doing it at a rate of a stone every 25 minutes or so. They didn't take days for one stone.
@@EliteAmmunition they all so had hundreds of thousands of men
I saw this about 20 years ago for the fist time. This guy really helps explain how the the ancients could have done the things they did. Creative ways to let gravity and a fulcrum do the work for you.
For lack of better terms... it's almost like "unlearning" certain things. We're so used to machines and heavy lifters, brute force... you almost forget about a simple fulcrum. With one finger I can lift 3000 lbs... as long as there's 2,999 pounds on the side i'm pushing down on. (plus they probably had ropes and also many men. I don't think it's that much of a mystery)
Not really
@@urwholefamilydied we didn’t unlearn anything, the world resets after a bit and a new age of man is born once again. History is forgotten and rebuilt.
I think the guy is nuts, and we need an awful lot more like him. Keep it up!
Mechanical advantage should be one of the first math classes taught to school children.
It's actually Physics
I remember learning about the 6 Simple Machines in elementary school.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_machine
I teach my 5 year old daughter basic engineering everyday. So proud of her. Already reading at a 5th grade level and does lego sets by herself meant for 12yrs and up. It just takes a little bit of time and patience of my time daily but I believe it will payoff for her in the long run.
That would be useful knowledge.. they can't give our children that..only indoctrination is given in schools
Richard Kilmer rare to find parents like this who dont just get mad at kids who get bad grades but dont make an effort to actually teach them anything
Nit only did he prove that it’s possible to move 20k pounds without any type of machinery or tool , excluding his homemade tools , but he didn’t do it with a team of 3000 people . He did it all by himself . Very impressive
Yes, extremely impressive
this partially explain how ancient megastructure built, but ofcourse ancient alien is more interesting theory 😁
Now imagine having 3000 helping
Yes, for Stone henge, maybe but not even close for the great pyramids of gize
Now lets see him excavate and quarry the blocks without advanced tools and with a smooth finish please
The old say "If a man had a big enough lever he could move the world" comes to mind. What this man is doing is absolutely amazing.
Yes. But this is kinda the inverse: With enough repetitions even a regular-sized lever is enough to move the world.
I am impressed, for sure. But from a quibbler's (and "what's the next test" perspective, he used dressed, as opposed to raw forms. Rocking stuff that is neither square nor straight is much harder. Issues arise, such as the pebbles migrating towards hollows in the members.
@@RichardLewisCaldwellgo make a sandwich bro
@@RichardLewisCaldwell The ancients tended to rough work stone before moving it, as seen in Egypt where they would carve obelisks from the earth in their rough shape before pulling them, likely to reduce the work down the road, working a stone that doesn't move is much easier. Stone henge was also probably pretty square once, but its old as shit and old shit doesn't stay square for millenia.
Also a fun fact, it is likely the quarry workers dug under the silcrete layer to pull the sarsen stones from the ground because cutting silcrete from silcrete would be hard as shit.
actually its "give me a place to stand and I can move the earth"
einstein said that
Only problem that isn't explained is how ancient civilizations move these blocks long distance on grass, sand and soil?
All he did was show us how it can be done with a concrete base.
I imagine back when they built Stonehenge, they had more than one person working, making this whole system go a lot faster and allowing for quick placement and rotation.
20 guys and a crate of beer made it in 1 night.
@@TheLiamis more like 1 guy and 20 crates of beer
You could theoretically walk stones up steppes hills with this method they might break if done wrong but totally do able
@@TheLiamis I mean, you are joking.... but looking at this guy go, you might just be right....
They also was more than one thinking. And a lot of time figuring it out.
144p undercover as 1080p
Sicilian12345 underrated comment
Aliens, man...
Dummy, this this clearly just ripped off of a VCR. Of course locally the cameras filmed in higher quality but when it went over TV and the VCR the quality greatly diminished.
You don’t understand, if you play at 1080p you get a clearer view of all the 144 pixels
Misho Pruidze lol
Now, thanks to this man's dedication, we now know how the aliens built Stonehenge.
Well, no one else got your joke. It’s really funny. Congrats.
🤣
Cute, very cute!
Yes. Aliens. Like the Chinese immigrants or the Mexicans south of the US border.
@@noelrossbridge2514 Irrelevant. It makes things easier, but is not required.
Wow, this is very impressive! Very well done to him!
I'm off to get 2 pebbles and a piece of wood to move my mate's house down the road while he's asleep in it.
😂 need a hand?
TAKING MY FREIND'S HOUSE ON A WALK WHILE HE IS ASLEEP (GONE WRONG(POLICE CALLED))
@@butlazgazempropan-butan11k87 "PUT DOWN THE HOUSE AND PUT YOUR HANDS IN THE AIR!"
As a stone mason myself I find this quite remarkable. Good job!
Jdneufj, and I cant stop coughing and snotting all oveer the, and I cant stop coughing and snotting all oveer the,
As a fetus I find this quite remarkable
What in the hell is this world coming to?
If everyone was like this guy, we’d already be an interstellar species.
It's more likely we'd still be in the stone age.
@@Defx10 but our houses would be tornado proof, fire proof, and tens of thousands of years not decades.
@@RandyRandersonthefamous Fam you can make houses tornado-proof and fireproof real easy, just pour them out of concrete and anchor them to the ground.
We don't do that because it's expensive. Not because it's difficult.
@@louisvaught2495 You are correct, but I guarantee you that's bullshit. If we properly applies modern science we could come up with a cheap composite.
@@RandyRandersonthefamous Not particularly. We're at the point where we understand what the theoretical limitations of material strength are, and how to make that happen.
You can even look it up on Wikipedia.
It's just outrageously expensive, or very slow. Pretty much all the remaining mysteries are "how do we make machines to do this" or just trying as many combinations as possible until we get the right one.
Now move it 10's of kilometere's from where it's quarried and raised hundreds of feet in the air like they did thousands of years ago instead of just spinning it around in a circle or moving it a few feet.
The difference between this guy and the sciencetist trying to figure out how the pyramid s is this guy isn't afraid of work
you realize we know how these things could be built right?
Now he need to make perfect hole in the stone
All explained by simple ppl like him, holes duldings, rollind ,cutting, everything is so complicated simple.....and from simple men with orthologic
Yup real man
So you are saying scientists who invented clever machines, discovered different planets, found the cure to many deadly diseases and saved countless lives are AFRAID OF WORK?
Why would anyone, let alone 11k people dislike this video? This is truly awesome. Intelligent guy!
Because they can't move blocks
With 10,000,000 views certainly at least 11,000 are dummy’s
Ryan Schwinghammer I know right
Probably because it's been compressed so far you literally can't see anything.
Jealous non-americans and flat earthers
Seriously impressive, especially the gradual lifting of a huge block by rocking it backwards and forwards and also moving huge blocks by reducing the friction simply by putting them on a couple of stones. These simple techniques really do offer an explanation for how Stonehenge was built, especially as he lifted that huge block all on his own. Imagine a group of people working together! It would be simple using these approaches. It’s weird how nobody else has suggested this but as always, the simplest solutions are often both the best but the hardest to come up with. I honestly think that Wally Wallington should be widely recognised and rewarded for his undoubted achievements, not least for potentially putting an end to the quest to understand how Stonehenge was built, which has patently defeated a lot of thinkers before this man’s achievements. In the absence of anything better, the ivory towered academics should now accept Wally Wallington’s suggestions as working hypotheses and as leading theory, if not bettered very soon! Great achievement Wally!
Spoken like an engineer
John Bates - Definitely a smart man, but the problem i see with the moving of big blocks by spinning it on pebbles, is that he's able to do this cause he's on a concrete slab, try doing that straight off the ground.
He is definitely not the first to come up with this. He is however the only person who does this for fun probably
Lono Kahiwa I thought the same thing, and also that the stones probably weren’t perfect rectangles or squares.
Damn, I almost ready your essay. But then I didn’t
This guy is an unsung genius. Why haven’t we all heard of him before?
Just a friendly reminder that ordinary people can do extraordinary things!
Antman Jones Jr ummm him doing this proves he’s no ordinary person
Dumb comment from an ordinary person
Ordinary people were thinking that hes crazy ....
Extraordinary things as in clickbait.
Y’all trippin 😂 him doing this proves common sense is not common!
The whole school should have got the day off to see this man in action.
I think we underestimate the intelligence of our ancestors. With things like this they probably sat around thinking about for years. As what else could they do? Unlike today where we have machines for all our needs, along with an endless amount of distractions. There's no need for many of us to have this type of problem solving mindset. But like this guy, If you dedicate enough time to trying to solve something. You likely will in the end, and back in ancient times, time was something people had plenty of.
TheJollyGamerJoe exactly, and if one man who probably still has alot of distractions in his life can achieve this can you imagine what 1000s of people without distractions could achieve.... Pyramids, stone henge etc.
There was intelligence in the design of the structures they built. I believe our technology is what stands in our way sometimes nowadays.
Exactly. Have you seen the aqueducts that the Romans built? Those were insane, especially for the level of tech they had at the time. Taking water from the mountains to a town something like 50 miles away. And having the whole thing at an exact angle so the water flowed at the proper rate. Amazing.
TheJollyGamerJoe I agree
Our technology devolved in many ways. Buildings made of stone last forever, unlike our houses of today that give us many problems. No hurricane, tsunami or other disaster can destroy a house made of giant stones.
The ancients didn't have concrete pads to maneuver the blocks, they didn't have water hoses under pressure, they had to carve these massive stones themselves and move them for miles. sorry not the way they did it.
Intuitively, this is how every single guy works when moving a fridge, etc by himself- he walks it across two balance points and away it goes..step, step, step. Been working solo for so long you just know this. It's when you rely on machinery that you lose skills.
Amen, brother!
@@harpintn you must not be a millenial cuz the only equipment they know has a screen. The decline of America.
@@finallyfriday. You must be a boomer cuz the only thing they know is crying about millenials.
This guy is relying on machines. They're called simple machines. When you rely on machines you don't loose skill, you acquire other skills. You're old enough to know these simple facts.
@@mechanomics2649 Sad twist on.my words and intent. Looking to insult? Nice.
@@mechanomics2649 they raised the millennials. Every generation is a product of the previous generation. So if they don't like the current generation. They should blame themselves.
I've seen this video
Several times over the years and I enjoy it every time. Amazing work by this man.
What's that man's name? I'd like to see more about it.
Don’t tell History Channel. They’ll go bankrupt.
That’s funny!!! 😃😎
I can hardly lift my bum off the sofa
History channel, perpetrators of fraud.
They'd have to go back to actual historic content.
Too funny ..but so true
Wow,, amazing, I am totally impressed. Revolutionary and needs to get out to more people. Well done my friend
And most people today can’t count change back at the register or solve simple math problems without a calculator. We need more guys like this.
i love when i give the cashier a five and nickel if the item is say 4.03 and they are like you don’t need the nickel you already gave me a five smh
This man is trying to solve life's mysteries using pure knowledge of his craft
The craft of barn moving ?
I gotta feel for him. He's a carpenter, a construction worker, he spent his whole life learning the trade, and he is able to learn so much because of the efforts of those countless souls that learned to create wonders before his time.
And then, because of a few weak people that had never once tried his craft, all of those efforts were chalked up to "it must have been aliens!!!"
I would, and in some ways do, feel personally offended. There are numerous ways ancient civilizations could have been built, ways we can still use today, it just takes us too long for our "instant" reality.
But they always say, "it couldn't have been done". Damn the disbelievers lmao
@@willd0g everything !
But it doesn't really work.
You think this is how the millions of the stones were fit into place? 😂😂😂
What amazing gentleman, and humble too. People like him were pivotal in advancing technical knowledge since the dawn of time.
@Fly Kites High ha ha...no! but I see it now "pivotal".
Thanks dude. I sincerely appreciate your comment.
Wally's ingenuity is just amazing! A few mishaps and missteps, but he's still here.
Incredible stuff, Wally.
I read a comment the other day under a video where the person said that "they've proven" humans could not have constructed the pyramids, and that it "had to have been" aliens. Maybe within the context of a big Hollywood blockbuster. But after the popcorn's all gone, here's this guy, still stacking sticks and washing out sand, moving things the weight of 2 bulldozers by himself! Well done, sir!!
He could not have built the Pyramid this way, maybe first couple rows but cmon, ya seen how tall pyramid is? would have taken more wood than was available and then some, not to mention with the precision.
Aliens? well I will not say it is impossible but more likely a much better method was employed with a technology unknown or hidden from us. Ancient humans were much smarter than given credit and who knows. Maybe even Giants were involved, people scoff at giants being real but they are talked about in the bible and many other places around the world throughout history.
Pretty sure one man can't duplicate the astronomical and mathematical variants that the Pyramids possess...micro mea surements😮😢😂...
@@pjj9491 Then again, he wasn't demonstrating all that. He was just showing how heavy objects can be moved with primitive technology, without needing to hypothesize more outlandish explanations, like extraterrestrials.
but there is a difference between moving stuff on the ground and moving stuff up a steep hill.
the pyramids in egypt have an angle of 51 degrees seen from the ground.
So lifting those rocks to such heights is a totally different story.
and then not even talking about cutting them.
and also the astrology involved, cause many pyramids around the world form a line, even tho those civilizations didnt knew each other.
and the pyramids also point to certain things in space (but i cant remember which ones)
@@Satori-Automotive Lifting rocks up a 51 degree incline _is_ a different story, and no doubt used different rollers, pulleys, sand, etc. He demonstrated moving a heavy object with primitive technology. He conquered the weight, so now the incline's the sticking point?
Also, just because the ancient Egyptians were not medieval Europeans, doesn't mean they didn't know stone-cutting, how to do maths, or were unable to predict the movements of the heavenly bodies. They gazed at them all the time. They even worshiped some of them. Are we to believe they couldn't line up a temple to point out the path of one? Now THAT would really strain credulity!
Anyway you cut it, we don't need E.T. to explain the pyramids. We may want him, but we do not need him....
1000 years from now people will see this in his back yard and think aliens did it.
But it was just Wally Wallington!
Well it would be dated to this time and since we have insane machinery this wouldnt be hard to do in this era haha
Lol right?
You're on to something 😞
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Best recommended video ever.
If you have Nystagmus,
Sarcastically speaking.
Was looking for the recommended video squad
Hi
@@gartt5617 I'd recommend this.
People Power at its finest! And a fellow Michiganian too boot! Well done Sir, well done.
Wow. This is remarkable. So ingenious. Rotating on a stone! Using the blocks own weight to sink it into wet earth! This is pure brilliance in its simplicity, yet it is pure genius. Amazing. Thanks for sharing this with all us dummies. : )
This may be a stupid question, but way back when they constructed Stonehenge and the Pyramids, what would they have been using to support two rocks that's holding up the XX-ton boulder. I'm imagining the weight sinking it all. This guy was pivating it all on top concrete. Thanks.
@@TravisButler95 you are just ignorant, we've been doing these kinds of things since I was young. Sticks and stones can lift hundreds of tons of stuff. So just shut up. This man has a video but a lot of men have been doing this in the province. Ask the loggers, the carpenters, the farmers, everyday they're doing this.
@@TravisButler95 actually there some theories as to how they did that look up the video they basically got a group of people tied ropes to the top and wiggled it back and forth it actually looks pretty accurate and doesnt require too much people
this is one man... imagine what a crew or even an army of people can do with these techniques and a strong motivation
I guess we don't have to imagine... There are many tangible examples. And the ancient cultures had saws and things too.
Pyramids, Stonehenge, leaning tower of Piza, Roman Colosseum, the list goes on and on.
If only people worked together like that today, other than In factories.
@@ecstaticpenguin768 It's not like we have skyscrapers or anything...
Yeah, but that is a seriously flawed form of structure. And the people who build it cheat for one, for two they don't work together the way that they should. Not to mention that everything we build is shitty.
That was great! I couldn’t be happier for the man figuring out how to do something so incredible and yet did it so simply! Your brilliant!
Very smart, but get back to me when you've lifted and placed 2.3 million stones like these up to 450 ft high to form a perfect pyramid with blocks of varying dimensions
Wally's Wife: "Wally where is the house?"
Wally: "Coming!"
“Funny story...”
“Well see what happened was...”
But honey... I thought you said you wanted it over at the other end of the property........
Moved it to Palm Springs for you honey.
Archimedes: give me a fulcrum large enough and a lever long enough and I shall move the earth. Point taken.
Yeah my grandfather was the same. He replaced the concrete stairs he made 30-40 years earlier and moulded a perfect homemade concrete staircace that about 7-10 of my cousins and uncles lifted and it fell exactly into place. The error for mistakes were 0 millimeters. I couldn't believe it.
Granted he did build the house and made every brick by hand. He moulded and made 2 or three bricks per day after work and installed them in the Sunday which was his day off. The house still stands super strong but it goes to show how these miracles are possible when somebody knows exactly what they're doing. I applaud you for the demonstration!!! 👏👏👏
Thanks for sharing! Such a cool story
make a youtube video about it hello
I think I may have a bit of your grandpas spirit...
I've been digging out my crawl space, making bricks from the clay, may eventually have a full basement lol
Ha Ha I knew a Bloke on Building Site Brought his Lunch Box in Everyday: When he left to go home he put 2 Bricks in it Every Night: Eventually he had enough Bricks to Build a Garage 😃😃😃😃
Liar
Smart, intelligence it's all we need to build.
1000 years from now humans will think only aliens built this. 👽
Tampatec no they will go on youtube and find this fucking video
Lifting one block is different than lifting thousands for a a construction such as a pyramid you dipsht.
Or maybe he is an alien 👽😂
False, this man had a brilliant identical theory, of how that archaic monument was build.
already people think right now alien built us, so that means they believe everything,