Monday, 27 April 2026

Filippo Biondi, and Corrado Malanga: Khufu's Pyramid is Full of Holes and May Have Been a Giant Vibro-Massager



Filippo Biondi, and Corrado Malanga have produced a text showing their unpatented Synthetic Aperture Radar technique  works (Biondi, F.; Malanga, C. Synthetic Aperture Radar Doppler Tomography Reveals Details of Undiscovered High-Resolution Internal Structure of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Remote Sens. 2022, 14, 5231. https://doi.org/10.3390/ rs14205231)

This text describes "an imaging method based on the analysis of micro-movements on the Khnum-Khufu Pyramid", which they claim has achieved high-resolution full three-dimensional tomographic imaging of the pyramid’s interior and subsurface by processing series of SAR images from the second-generation Italian COSMO-SkyMed satellite system. According to them, the pyramid "becomes transparent when observed in the micro-movement domain". Based on their interpretations, they claim to have "completely reconstructed internal objects, observing and measuring structures that have never been discovered before". "The technique proposed in this article, unlike the classical SAR tomography developed in [52,64,65], has penetration properties orders of magnitude greater because what is proposed uses the vibrations (the phonons) and not the photonic information". The Pyramid they depict is full of voids, corridors and chambers. It also involved excavating huge masses of bedrock and dumping the rubble somewhere as yet undetected. 


But what was it all for? Here's what they say about the functioning of this structure on pp 39-40/44 Note, this text was accepted by the journal's Academic Editors [Rosa Lasaponara, Ilaria Catapano, Luca Piroddi, Sebastiano D’Amico, Marilena Cozzolino, Nasser Abu Zeid, Patrizia Capizzi and Sergio Vincenzo Calcina].

The original is written as one massive-long paragraph, here split for clarity. In-text hyperlinks are my additions, the references to corridors and rooms arre toi both the existing nomenclature and their own ideas of where undiscovered ones exist]:
"In the case of the pyramid of Khnum-Khufu, which we have analyzed in depth, it can be assumed, in analogy with other authors [5,25,76], that it was surrounded by an enormous basin full of water, which allowed the circulation of some boats. These boats were used by some attendants with the task of bringing the water to about 90 m high, pouring it into the south shaft by using many rotating stones probably similar to the Sabu diorite stone [28].

The SAR tec[h]nique allows us to provide evidence that the shape of this monument does not resemble a perfect pyramidic form because of the presence of a double changing in slope: the first of which is 14.5 ca. degrees at approximately 20 m high, while the second one is 6 degrees ca. at approximately 100 m high. The Nile River’s water should have filled the basin up to the height of the first change of slope of the pyramid, thus allowing the Egyptian boats not to get stuck with the keel on the side of the pyramid itself. "
On the side of the Great Pyramid towards the river, the base is (acc. to Google Earth) 59 m a.s.l. The Nile is some distance aqway today., but the water level at the Cairo Kayak club in Giza is 16 m a.s.l. and the islands nearby have a height 16, 17, 18 m a.s.l. Yet the Italians claim [and this journal's academic editors accepted without challenge] that it once flowed at about +79 m a.s.l. (!). This is completre nonsense, it would have flooded  sites on islands in the lower Nile valley (including Memphis) and ALL of the pyramid fields and their associated mastaba tombs (Hawara, Kahun, Meidum, Dashur, Zawiyet, Sakkara, Abusir etc). Completely stupid and utterly unfounded (and indefensible) idea. As for the nonsense about "boats" (eh?) and attendants clinging to the side of the pyramid (whatever its slope) using fragile early-dynastic siltstone vessels to lift Nile water up 90m to pour it down some shafts... it does make one wonder....

Anyway this farrago goes on:

"The water would have invaded the King’s chamber, but having reached the height of the granite basin inside the chamber (often referred to as the sarcophagus), it would not have exceeded that level in height and would have instead risen in the north shaft, whose entrance is placed at the same height as the basin, creating an air seal that effectively airlocked the room. Having the King’s chamber in fact hermetically sealed would have caused excess water to rise up the north shaft.

The Queen’s chamber would also be filled with water, up to the height of the shafts, by means of two connections to the shafts of the King’s chamber, which were probably located in rooms 19 and 11, building a closed circuit, which is called Quincke’s tube [26].

As also proposed by other authors [77], the pyramid, with its megalithic structure, was placed in vibration by the wind and the low frequencies thus developed, which acted as a low-pass filter allowing only low frequencies to bounce back on the roof of the Zed toward the King’s chamber [16].

Such a room would behave like an air-filled bottle of Helmholtz [29], in which the granite basin acted as a bottleneck. The walls of the basin, vibrating at low and precise frequencies, linked to the internal and external measurements of the basin itself, proportional to multiples of π and the Golden Ratio φ [16], would have caused the water contained in the Quincke’s circuit to vibrate. These frequencies, traveling through the closed circuit of Quincke’s tube, at about 1400 m/s (speed of sound in the water), reached the Queen’s chamber, where the height of the water could not exceed the height of shafts from the floor. A particular frequency could be developed, which was suitably amplified by the correct dimensions of the niche present in the west wall, which acted as a sound box for a musical instrument, releasing into the air a sound frequency that was able to interact with a cylindrical container placed on the floor of the room, the traces of which are still visible [14]. This cylindrical container, probably made of wood, was put into resonance by the obtained low frequency.

Two individuals were placed both in the basin of the King’s chamber and in the cylindrical container, in the Queen’s chamber and appropriately treated with this low sound frequency for curative and religious purposes [21]."

So the Pyramid is a healing machine? Healing by wind-driven vibrations (!). I suspect that if this were the case, siting it in a massive cemetery, surrounded by graves and other memento mori might not have been the best marketing decision. The same goes for all the other 4th dynasty pyramidal-vibro-spas.  

Quite apart from proving being  in a vibro-bath actually is a medicinal technique applied by ancient Egyptians (or anybody outside today's wellness-industry alongside healing crystals), the "brilliant" Italians seem not to have considered how those "individuals" would get INTO (or out of) both chambers if the entrances (and by implication the entire Grand Gallery) were filled with water. Duh. Such scientific rigour.

Heedless of such practicalities they blunder on: 

How to get in if the whole lot is filled with water? 
"At the end of the procedure, the King’s chamber was emptied by letting the water out of the Great Gallery and conveying it toward the room called “Grotto” toward the “Unfinished” chamber which brought the water back through a path in the floor, now occluded by debris, to the Nile.
Subsequently, the Queen’s chamber was emptied in two steps: first, a granite “plug” in the corridor leading to the room was removed: (this passage actually has a slight hydraulic slope toward the Great Gallery) and the water was made to flow out, at the floor of the Great Gallery, where it was conveyed toward the “Grotto”. Subsequently, a plug placed in the floor was removed to finish the emptying of the room. The water thus conveyed through the hole in the floor, highlighted in a book published in 1877 [14], allowed the liquid to enter the room which, in our 3D reconstruction, corresponds to the number 14, eventually reaching the “Unfinished” room and returning to the Nile. The “Grotto” and room 14 are, in our opinion, necessary to stop the fall of water by slowing down its speed, with a mechanism similar to a common water jet pump used in laboratories to create vacuum in equipment, which is called Venturi’s tube.

The evident traces of erosion due to water inside the pyramid rooms are in support of our interpretative hypothesis. The three boulders that today are wedged at the beginning of the oblique corridor leading to the Great Gallery would have been used as “plugs” to block the access of water to the exit of the pyramid or from the Queen’s chamber by making them flow in different positions as needed.

The existence of passage 18 seems to be related to a little open room, which has never been described by anyone but is well tracked by photographic evidence, that appears located at the top of the entrance of the Great Gallery and was probably employed as security exit. 
             Dont ignore the Upper Mortuary Temple 

The entire system of the ramps highlighted by the SAR could be interpreted as a gigantic resonant structure, having the purpose of equalizing any differences in vibration between the north and south part of the pyramid
, with the aim of making the square structure reach number 10, placed around the Zed, an equalized vibrational signal. Similarly, the complex structure number 9 identified immediately below the plane on which the pyramid rests has a shape similar to structures used to absorb the effects of mechanical vibrations that are transmitted through the ground [30].

So in that reading, I guess the structure we call the mortuary temple, joined by its roofed corrodor to the riverside part of the complex (which by Biondi and Malanger's reading would have been under 20 m of water) was used for undressing so the "indivudual" could enter the water-filled pyramid, swim up the dark Grand Gallery to the airlocks in either of the chambers, after just flipping aside the sets of granite plugs holding the water in.

Pinterest

Saturday, 25 April 2026

Who are the self-appointed "Guardians of the Ark" "Noahs Ark Scans"?

My social media feeds are being swamped by incessant posts of a group calling themselves "Noahs Ark Scans" who claim to be "Guardians of the Ark".

It seems these irritating people belong to "Noah's Ark Scans", an independent, collaborative research organization dedicated to promoting the Durupınar site in ****** in eastern Turkey, which they believe is the final resting place of the biblical Noah's Ark. Often referred to in media as an American-Turkish research team, apart from maintining a media presence, they claim to be using technology like Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) and soil analysis to map potential man-made structures buried at the site. The group operates the official Noah's Ark Scans website and the popular Discovered Media YouTube channel. Their headquarters is next to the "Line-it-up" Barber shop in at 440 N Barranca Ave #3132, Covina, CA 91723, USA, some ugly urban sprawl on the northern outskirts of Los Angeles.

According to their media material, the group consists of a mix of independent researchers, technical experts, and university-affiliated scientists. Andrew Jones (Project Lead): An independent archaeological researcher (described as "archaeological", but no credentials cited) who has worked for years to bring global attention to the site. He is credited with leading the GPR studies that identified subterranean "corridors" and "rooms" consistent with a large vessel.

Dr. Salih Bayraktutan: A prominent Turkish geologist and professor who has collaborated on studies at the Durupınar site for decades. His team from Ataturk University has been instrumental in gathering and analyzing soil and rock samples from the formation.

William Crabtree: A member of the group identified as a soil scientist. He analyzes potassium levels, organic matter, and pH at the site to find evidence of decaying organic material (such as ancient wood).

Assist. Prof. Dr. Fethi Yuksel: A geophysical engineer from Istanbul University who joined the group's surveys to provide technical expertise in subsurface mapping.

Reportedly, the team partners with academics from Ağrı İbrahim Çeçen University and other Turkish universities to ensure their work meets scientific standards before moving toward potential excavation.

What They Have "Found" Their primary research centers on 3D GPR scans of the 515-foot-long boat-shaped mound. They claim these scans reveal:
"Three distinct levels, matching the biblical description of the Ark's decks".
Internal angular structures and a central cavity referred to as the "atrium".
Organic material in soil samples, which they interpret as potential remains of ancient petrified or rotted wood.
While their findings have been featured by major outlets like the New York Post and CBN News, the broader scientific community remains skeptical, it is quite obvious that "the Durupınar formation" is just part of a natural geological structure created by complex folding and faulting.

Monday, 20 April 2026

Megalomaniac Boast and What'd be a Basis for Such Claims

 

Big news from the guy now calling himself "Giza Prof"....
" Filippo Biondi @Filippobiondi_1
In Matt Beall’s podcast I estimated an 80% probability of a second Sphinx at Giza. Today I raise it to 100%: we have located it exactly where declared and now hold the high-resolution acoustic image. The second Sfinx in off course there!! The head is visibly different from the known and first Sphinx. Full details at Nicole Ciccolo’s conference on June 21 in Bologna (Centro Congressi Artemide) with me and Corrado Malanga.“Veritas vos liberabit” — The truth will set you free.#SecondSphinx #GizaProf. Filippo Biondi 6:19 PM · Apr 18, 2026
· 341.1K Views"
From what he writes, it really does seem to me very likely that Filippo Biondi has some kind of serious mental health issues. AFAIK, there is no such discipline as an archaeo-psychiatrist able to diagnose something from listening to such claims, but it really seems to me it's needed here.



This is what a "100%" would look like, the thing identified, located exactly where declared with a high-resolution acoustic image showing the buried sculpture, its associated trench, temples and forecourt to the latter.

If it is anything like what he's previously offered as "data", what he's actually going to present is wozzy colourful interference patterns like this. 



Biondi needs to PUBLISH the data and describe and submit to peer review the precise method of analysis applied BEFORE he goes public with his interpretations to show they are not just fantasy. 

For its enclosure and temple forecourt to have a floor at 59m a.s.l. (on analogy with the height of the Great Sphinx), there would have to be a socking big rock-cut trench 36m across and 365 (!) m long and up to 16 m deep going to the cliffs - where is it (and rubble from it)? 



And somebody please tell us the "palaeostronomic" alignment [before and after precession and all that gumpf], I am dying to know what it is allegedly "facing" and why. 

Come on Filippo Biondi, Nicole Ciccolo, do your stuff, show us what you've got!


Monday, 13 April 2026

How to Write a Best Seller?

John Hoopes @KUHoopes on Twitter: " A book that needs writing"....

credit: John Hoopes

I love this. John left it there, quite a stunning piece of AI image creation in its own way. I decided to see what would happen if I asked popular AI chatbot ChatGPT (based on Large Language Models (LLMs) developed by OpenAI) about this and I thought the answer was pretty revealing*:
"If you treat that tweet as a kind of genre prompt, you can actually make a fairly grounded prediction—because pseudoarchaeology is remarkably conservative in how it updates itself. It rarely invents new structures; it recombines a stable set of tropes in response to shifting audience tastes.

What’s changed recently (roughly post-2015) [Fingerprints of the Gods PMB] is less the content than the framing.
1. From “ancient astronauts” → “lost advanced civilization”
The classic model associated with Erich von Däniken or Zecharia Sitchin—aliens directly building pyramids—hasn’t disappeared, but it’s no longer the most respectable version of the genre. Instead, a book like the hypothetical “Bullshit of the Gods” would probably pivot to something closer to Graham Hancock’s model:
- A lost Ice Age super-civilization (often Atlantis-adjacent)
- Destroyed by a catastrophe (e.g. Younger Dryas impact)
- Survivors spread knowledge worldwide
- Myths of “gods” are distorted memories of these survivors.
This shift matters because it sounds less ridiculous than aliens while still preserving the same explanatory function.

2. “The gods were real—but misunderstood”
Given the title, a central thesis would likely be:

 - Ancient gods were not supernatural beings but misunderstood advanced humans (or possibly non-human intelligences).

Variants might include:
- “Gods = elite survivors of lost civilization”
- “Gods = altered humans / forgotten technology users”
Residual alien hints (soft, not central)

This preserves the older “aliens = gods” structure, but dilutes it into something more ambiguous and defensible.

3. Anti-academic populism as a core narrative
Modern pseudoarchaeology is as much about who to distrust as what to believe.
Expect recurring claims like:
- Archaeologists are “gatekeepers” hiding the truth
- Academia suppresses evidence out of arrogance or ideology
- “Independent researchers” are the real truth-seekers.

This anti-elite framing is now central to the genre’s appeal and helps explain its spread on social media.

4. Diffusionism rebooted (but rebranded)
A key structural feature would be updated hyper-diffusionism:
- Similar monuments worldwide = evidence of a single source
- Cultural parallels = proof of global transmission
- Independent invention is summarily dismissed as implausible.

This is a core pseudoarchaeological pattern. The “twist” today is that the source is no longer aliens, but:
- Atlantis,
- Ice Age civilization,
- A forgotten global network.

5. Strategic use of ambiguity and “just asking questions”
Unlike older, more dogmatic texts, the tone would probably be less “[I believe/ can show PMB] this is true”, more: “why won’t they explain this?”.

Typical rhetorical moves:
- Cherry-picked anomalies (megaliths, maps, myths),
- Scientific-sounding language without method,
- Suggestive questions instead of falsifiable claims.

These are well-documented features of pseudoarchaeological argumentation.

6. Moral subtext: reclaiming wonder (against “soulless science”)

A contemporary addition is a quasi-spiritual or civilizational message:
- Modern society has “forgotten its origins”,
- Ancient knowledge was superior or more holistic,
- Science is reductionist; myth preserves truth.
This aligns the book with broader “alternative knowledge” ecosystems (New Age, conspiracy culture, etc.).

7. [...]

8. Tone: ironic, provocative, but market-savvy
The fake author name (“von Dancock”) is telling—because modern pseudoarchaeology often leans into edginess / irreverence, uses humour or mockery of experts, positions itself as rebellious, outsider knowledge. That’s very much in line with how the genre survives in meme culture while still selling books.

Bottom line: Such a book would not be a simple rehash of "ancient astronauts". Instead, it would: replace aliens with a lost advanced human (or quasi-human) civilization, frame myths as distorted history, attack academic authority, use suggestive, evidence-light argumentation and embed everything in a populist “they’re hiding the truth” narrative.

In other words: structurally identical to older pseudoarchaeology—but rhetorically updated for a post-“Ancient Aliens” audience. If you want, I can go one step further and actually write a convincing back-cover blurb or sample passage in that style—it’s surprisingly formulaic once you see the pattern. "
Meanwhile, while I think the above is a nice encapsulation of the main characteristics of the genre, I am less enthusiastic about the AI-suggested chapter structure, and I think it has missed one important element of Hancockism, the books are written as a travelogue, framing Hancock (and always the beloved wifey) as intrepid explorers - and so in effect taking the reader too on an ersatz "exploration", which is part of the appeal. Anyway here's what Chat GPT initially offered:
7. Likely chapter structure (very predictable)
You could almost sketch the table of contents:
“The Problem with History” (attack on academia),
- “Forbidden Evidence” (Göbekli Tepe, pyramids, etc.),
- “Myths That Tell the Truth” (global flood, culture heroes),
- “The Lost Civilization” (core thesis),
- “Survivors and Teachers” (diffusion narrative),
- “What They Don’t Want You to Know” (conspiracy framing),
- “Rewriting Human History” (grand conclusion)."
Incredibly boring. Interestingly revealing of how, in fact, cleverly are constructed Hancock's own staging of the argument. 

                              * * *                                 
Also I wondered what one could do with John's original title, while there IS (still!) a popular TV series about the ancient astronuats theme [more through inertia than actually keeping up with the cutting-edge of modern pseudoarchaeogy], I felt this was not something that would sell books in the current climate. I also am a bit dubious about the word "bullshit" on the cover of a commercial book. So, I fed ChaptGPT its own chapter divination and asked for a better title.** The LLM came up with 18 titles, some of which had no relation to the material that it said would be n the book, all of them were rubbish. Here is prompt #3 explaining why: "Sorry, but these are all very pedestrian, descriptive rather than literary. These sound like they will be step-by-step academic presentations (which you suggested above the readers of such stuff are NOT looking for). What could you suggest that would attract eyes on a bookstall at the station or an airport?". The AI-thingy had another go, prefacing it with some remarks
"those earlier titles do sit too close to the respectable nonfiction shelf. Airport-bookstall pseudoarchaeology tends to work more like thriller branding: short, evocative, slightly ominous, and suggestive rather than explanatory. It should feel like a secret you’re about to step into, not a lecture you’re about to attend. Given your chapter arc (hidden past → myth as memory → lost civilization → suppression → revelation), here are titles that lean into that tone:..."
The resultant list was only marginally more tempting. I'm including it below for reference:
"High-impact, commercial, “pick-it-up” titles ( Before the Fall, The First Age, Echoes Before History, The World We Forgot, Ashes of the First World) ["they work because they imply a story already in motion—something lost, not something to be explained"];

Slightly darker / conspiratorial edge (They Buried the First World, The Age They Erased, What Lies Beneath History, The Silence Before Civilization, A History That Was Taken) ["These connect directly to the “What They Don’t Want You to Know” chapter without spelling it out"];
Mythic + evocative, very on-trend right now (When the Gods Were Mortal, The Last Days of the First World, The Memory of Fire, The Children of the Flood, After the Deluge) ["These titles resonate strongly with the “myths are distorted history” angle—especially flood narratives"];
Sharp, minimal, almost thriller-like (FIRST WORLD, ERASED, BEFORE US, THE FIRST MEMORY, ORIGINS: LOST) ["These are extremely marketable—bold typography, immediate intrigue, zero exposition"].
The one it suggested as "one that really fits your structure" was useless too.



* Prompt#1: "If this were a real proposition for a book [...], going on current trends in pseudoarchaeology (so "ancient astronauts" are not so prominent as they were, but this title seems to refer to it in some way) ... can you make a reasonable prediction of what its populist-pseudoarchaeological contents would be?"

** Prompt#2: "I'd like to ask you to FORGET the original title [that IMO refers too strongly to the old "ancient astronauts" theories]. Let's take the chapter organization you proposed and independently of the original title and maybe playing down that 'ancient visitors from outer space' element, think up a new and snappier (commercially attractive) title:. Here are your chapter outlines: " ..."


Friday, 10 April 2026

Bigging up Hancock's Göbekli


Luke Caverns and History with Kayleigh (Kayleigh During): "There’s a Big Problem with Göbekli Tepe's "Simple" Hunter-Gatherers", they begin with Caverns intoning the mantra that is the basis of the hyperbole of the whole rediscovering-the-wheel video:
So, I have a problem with the way that people view and talk about the people of Gobecley and the Taş [he pronounces it "tars"] Tepeler world. They weren't simple hunter gatherers like is (sic) often said and actually in my opinion whether or not they hunted or gathered is honestly irrelevant and should have nothing to do with the value or the weight that we place on that culture or their incredible achievements.
Yet they cite absolutely no reference to a source of the statement that "people" (that's like the "people-say" of one of Donald Trump's retarded "sir-stories") view and talk dismissively about the people of Göbekli as "simple hunter gatherers". He goes on dramatically
"the people who built Göbekli and the greater Taş Tepeler world leaped out of the primordial world that had existed since the dawn of mankind. Simply the idea of erecting megalithic stone monuments and building structures with walls and roofs, these are literally some of the foundations of civilization. The very conception of these ideas would ultimately separate humanity from the animal food chain".
          Decorated hunter-gatherer megaxylons (Alaska c. 1910)         
Who'd have thought keeping out of the rain and putting a hunk of wood or stone on one end were such a leap eh?

What is disturbing is that these two clearly have not been anywhere near a library, or even looked up online the vast amount of literature on the Pre-Pottery Neolithic and related Natufian where discussions of these themes have been pretty much staple since the sites concerned were first discovered (and Natufian we're talking about Dorothy Garrod's work of the end of the 1920s and later discussions). I include a(n old) map of PPN sites with botanical sampling in the Middle East to ask the question, just how thoroughly these two content creators have familiarised themselves with the archaeological literature on each of them before pontificating on camera about [map from Michael Wallace et al.  2019, ‘Re-analysis of archaeobotanical remains from pre- and early agricultural sites provides no evidence for a narrowing of the wild plant food spectrum during the origins of agriculture in southwest Asia’, Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 28. 10.1007/s00334-018-0702-y.] . Let's just list those sites, because YouTubers like these need to be called-out on producing superficial statements as some form of "knowledge" on their part.

IT'S MORE THAN JUST "GOBEKJLI TEPE" !!!



Fig. 1  Map of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic sites in southwest Asiawith archaeobotanical remains included in the database. Black symbols indicate sites for which sample-level data was available; white symbols indicate sites for which sample-level data was unavailable. Central Anatolian sites — 1: Hacılar, 2: Erbaba, 3: Çatalhöyük East, 4: Can Hasan III and 5: Aşikli Höyük. Cypriot sites—6: Mylouthkia, 7: Ais Yiorkis and 8: Kastros. Southern Levantine sites—9: Hayonim Cave, 10: Yiftahel, 11: Nahal Oren, 12: Kebara Cave, 13: Atlit Yam, 14: Gilgal, 15: Netiv Hagdud, 16: Jericho, 17: Nahal Hemar, 18: Wadi Faynan 16, 19: Shkarat Msaied, 20: Beidha, 21: Ayn Abu Nukhayla, 22: Tell Ramad, 23: Gesher Benot Yaaqov, 24: Ohalo II, 25: Gesher, 26: Wadi al-Hammeh 27, 27: Iraq ed-Dubb, 28: Ain Ghazal, 29: Wadi el-Jilat 13, 30: Wadi el-Jilat 6 & 7, 31: Zahrat adh Dhra 2, 32: el-Hemmeh, 33: Wadi Fidan A, 34: Wadi Fidan C, 35: Basta I, 36: Tell Ghoraifé, 37: Tell Aswad, 38: Dhuweilla and 39: Azraq 31. Northern Levantine sites—40: Tell Ain el-Kerkh, 41: Tell Ras Shamra, 42: Tell Qaramel, 43: Tell Abr, 44: Dj’ade, 45: Halula, 46: Jerf el Ahmar, 47: Mureybet, 48: Abu Hureyra, 49: Douara Cave, 50: Cafer Höyük, 51: Gritille, 52: Nevali Çori, 53: Göbekli Tepe, 54: Tell Sabi Abyad II, 55: El Kowm I & II, 56: Çayönü and 57: Tell Bouqras. Sites of the eastern Fertile Crescent—58: Hallan Çemi, 59: Demirkoy, 60: Kortik Tepe, 61: Tell Maghzaliyeh, 62: Qermez Dere, 63: Yarym Tepe, 64: Nemrik 9, 65: Mlefaat, 66: Jarmo, 67: Chogha Golan, 68: Sheikh-e Abad, 69: Chia Sabz, 70: Tepe Ali Kosh, 71: Ganj Dareh Tepe, 72: Tepe Abdul Hosein and 73: Chogha Bonut.

Amateur Attemps to Redate Gobekli Tepe.


            The beer glasses don't move                  

The weedy man-bunned Hungarian podcaster Károly Póka with the immobile Guiness-glass affectation sat down with Kyle Allen from the ‪@BrothersOfTheSerpent‬ Youtube channel (that he runs with his brother Russell, exploring ancient mysteries, megalithic sites, and the deep history of our civilization). In the episode "Göbekli Tepe: Older Than We’re Told? (Kyle Allen – Ancient Technology Podcast)", Allen pontificates for hours over "what the T-shaped pillars actually tell us, how reliable the current dating of the site really is, who the people behind these megaliths might have been, and why Göbekli Tepe continues to challenge the mainstream timeline of human history". The latter is a red flag, as in the specialist literature in several languages for 26 years Gobekli Tepe and the other Tas Tepeler sites have been writing the mainstream vies of the Natufian/Pre-potter Neolithic A transition and all that relates to that.

In the discussion of Göbekli Tepe, Allen presents a loosely assembled case for pushing the site’s origins further back in time than the dates established by archaeologists, but his argument ultimately rests less on evidence than on a generalized distrust of the field itself. Although the site has been excavated and studied intensively for over two decades following its identification by Klaus Schmidt, and dated to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period, roughly the tenth millennium BCE, Allen suggests that the monumental T-shaped pillars may be older than the materials used to date them. He arrives at this conclusion despite openly acknowledging that he has not properly engaged with the archaeological literature and, at points, struggling to articulate basic concepts drawn from the small portion he has encountered.

His reasoning begins with the observation that the stratigraphy of the site appears complex and, in places, disturbed. From this he infers that the layering cannot be trusted, proposing that natural processes such as slope collapse or seismic activity repeatedly buried and re-exposed the structures, thereby scrambling the sequence of deposits. He extends this line of thought by referring to studies of earthquake damage, noting that some pillars fractured while partially buried, which he takes as evidence that they must predate the layers surrounding them. He also argues that the enclosing stone walls must be later additions because they obscure parts of the carved pillars and, in his view, represent an inferior structural design, leading him to conclude that the megaliths belong to an earlier, separate phase of construction. Further doubt is cast, in his account, on radiocarbon dating itself, which he treats as unreliable due to contamination, mixing of materials, or chemical alteration, suggesting that the dates obtained may reflect later activity rather than the original building phase. Finally, he points to the large accumulation of midden deposits as evidence for long-term, repeated use, including episodes of burial and re-excavation, from which he infers that the initial construction could be significantly older than currently believed.

Taken together, these claims amount to a speculative reinterpretation of the site that substitutes suspicion for method. The difficulties he highlights (disturbed stratigraphy, site formation processes, reuse of structures, and challenges in dating) are not overlooked problems but precisely the kinds of issues that archaeologists working at Göbekli Tepe have spent years documenting, analysing, and incorporating into a coherent chronological framework. The consistency of radiocarbon dates from secure contexts, the typology of stone tools, and the broader regional comparisons all converge on the same timeframe. Allen’s argument does not meaningfully engage with this body of evidence; instead, it relies on partial understanding, selective emphasis, and an underlying assumption that the specialists who have studied the site in detail are fundamentally mistaken. In that sense, his position is not an alternative interpretation grounded in new data, but a rejection of established conclusions without the methodological or evidentiary basis required to support it. Bits of it, he just invents, and persists in shieling his coneptions from question by claiming he "can't remember the details".

Thursday, 9 April 2026

Debating the Flat Earth

Jeremy (@ManaByte 6h) a content creator who writes on " pop culture, space, tech, video games" explains about debating conspiracy:
" There is a reason people do not debate Flat Earthers or Moon landing deniers. It is not because the evidence is weak. It is because the conversation is rigged from the start. You can bring measurements, physics, engineering, independent tracking, international verification, and experiments they can do in their own backyard, and none of it matters. The moment the facts show up, they shout fake, edited, CGI, conspiracy, or “that’s just your belief.”

You cannot debate someone who treats every piece of evidence as invalid by default. You cannot debate someone who demands proof and then rejects the proof the second it appears. You cannot debate someone who thinks their personal disbelief outranks measurable reality.

A debate requires both sides to accept evidence. Flat Earth and Moon landing denial collapse the moment evidence enters the room, so the only move left is to deny the room exists.

That is why people do not debate them. Not because the globe is fragile, but because the argument they bring is. You cannot have a real discussion with someone who decided ahead of time that nothing you show them will ever count."