Sunday, March 2, 2025

The Tiny Ancient Artifacts Changing History! Ancient Egyptian Hard Stone Vases - Huge Updates (UnchartedX)


It's time to revisit the ancient Egyptian Vase Scan Project - a lot has happened in 2024, and even more is planned for 2025. These tiny, ancient, amazing artifacts are changing history. Scans and analysis has shown some of them to be incredibly precise, meticulously, elegantly and mathematically designed, with that design being immaculately executed in ridiculously hard types of igneous rock.

My initial vase scan videos and the project has generated considerable response, and this video is meant to be a comprehensive overview of the project and topic so far, a response to some of the main criticisms of the work, and an update on what happened in 2024 - which included getting into museums to scan artifacts with impeccable provenance (spoiler, they're precise too!).

Many thanks to my patrons and supporters, as well as to the dedicated people working as part of the Vase Scan Team. Particular thanks to Adam Young and his newly created nonprofit Artifact Foundation (https://artifactfoundation.org/) that is driving a lot of this work going forward. Check out the links to all the articles and videos mentioned, as well as the chapters, timestamps, below.

*Note: The figures of the modern, granite made vase vs the ancient vase (timestamp ~ 1:43:53 have been updated by a better analysis (more accurate centering). I will publish the new data on my website, but cliff notes, the ancient example is still multiple times more precise, if not quite an order of magnitude.




The vases are obviously machine made, and this is a huge problem for our orthodox view of history. 

Best comment from You Tube:

@suhridsarkar2541

When we draw a circle using a compass, imperfections still arise from slight misalignments or setup imprecisions. In practical terms, an accurately drawn circle with a compass might show deviations between 1–5% from an ideal circle. However, an exact average precision value is hard to pin down because it varies with individual skill, the quality of the tool, and the drawing conditions. Very few talented artists can even draw with a deviation of 0.7%, which is exceptionally rare. However, those predynastic Egyptian vases have an error rate of 0.01% to 0.1%. Which is simply astonishing. It is not possible by hand, not even with the help of something like a compass, as Mr Flint (I should call him Mr Buffoon) suggests., Alas, the world is full of so-called archeologists who do not even understand the imprecision of a hand-drawn circle using a compass.


[Posted at the SpookyWeather2 blog, March 2, 2025.]

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