(2/3) Bizarre Man Made Canals Discovered in the Sahara Connecting the Eye of Africa & Ancient Sites

by | Feb 4, 2023 | Silver IRA | 38 comments

(2/3) Bizarre Man Made Canals Discovered in the Sahara Connecting the Eye of Africa & Ancient Sites




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I had a chance to sit down with David Stig Hansen after his second time exploring around the Richat Structure in Mauritania where he showed how to get there and new discoveries from water canals of Plato legend to ancient quarries. This imagery and geography gets better the deeper he headed into the desert.

(Part 1) Bizarre Man Made Canals Discovered in the Sahara Connecting the Eye of Africa to the Sea

David Stig Hansen Sahara exploration
Secrets of Prehistoric Activity at the Richat Structure www.facebook.com/wasthisatlantis

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The Sahara Desert is one of the most mysterious and inhospitable places on Earth, and yet it holds a secret that has only recently been discovered – a series of man-made canals that connect the Eye of Africa to ancient sites.

The canals, which date back to at least the 4th century BC, were first discovered in the 1990s by a French archaeologist. They form a network of waterways that span hundreds of miles across the desert, connecting the Eye of Africa (a mysterious rock formation located in the northern part of the Sahara) to a number of ancient sites, including the ancient city of Timbuktu.

The canals are believed to have been constructed by the ancient Berber people, who used them to transport goods and people across the desert. This would explain why the canals are so well-preserved despite their age.

The canals are also believed to have been used to irrigate the desert, allowing the Berbers to grow crops in the otherwise inhospitable environment. This would explain why the canals are so well-preserved despite their age.

The discovery of the canals has been hailed as an incredible archaeological find, as it sheds light on the lives of the ancient Berbers and their sophisticated engineering skills. The canals also provide a fascinating insight into the history of the Sahara, and the people who lived there thousands of years ago.

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The canals remain a mystery, and their true purpose is still unknown. However, one thing is clear – the canals are a testament to the ingenuity and resilience of the ancient Berbers, and are a reminder of the rich history of the Sahara Desert.

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38 Comments

  1. NZ

    I worked for SNIM in 1998 through to 2001. SNIM is the Govt owned Iron Ore mine at Zourate, near Faderic, mentioned in the video. I travelled the mineral train to and from Nouadhibou many times. Certainly an amazing country and culture. Peoples ability to live with very little.

  2. Erik Nielsen

    Take a litle longer time diving into the difrent things this jumps all over way to quickly. But interesting especialy becourse I live near.

  3. Hat Hatley

    Great subject, rare to find, wish you guys would quit interrupting each other though, that was annoying.

  4. rvnmedic1968

    Good stuff but you kept interrupting the guest as he was trying to explain what we were seeing. I'm a subber of yours but this is annoying as hell..

  5. Ry No

    Earth is flat space is fake and g a why

  6. Not Anna Jones

    Geeze David, you keep cutting off your guest. Shhhhhhhhh.

  7. American Minutemen

    The original locks on the Panama Canal were made 110 feet wide, apparently. The lake passages are far wider.

  8. Goat Moag

    Love GIS. Not an expert, but can hold my own.

  9. Paula Raegram

    While this was very interesting, listening to both of you talking over each other and at the same time, essentially destroyed the entire experience for me. I had to turn it off and will NOT watch the 3rd video. Not being able to hear either one of you, and the fact that you just WOULD NOT allow the guest to speak without running him over with your mouth, actually constantly, was entirely annoying. It would be FAR better if you were to each do the same video, but separately, so we can hear both of the voice-overs without needing to suppress the urge to slap someone into silence! For HEAVEN'S sake!

  10. finleyscotland

    That canal is a tear duct from the dragons eye. There are salt deposits too. The dark areas are leftover dragon scales.

  11. One-0-Eight

    Fascinating stuff, would have been even better if David had stfu for a minute and let his guest get a word in edgeways. C' mon Maan!

  12. Naomi Trevelyan

    Wow this was really hard to listen to
    I love you David but you need to let your interviewees speak and not talk over them.

  13. RunsWithScissors

    Fossilization of stromatolites when Oxygen was a poison gas in the atmosphere.

  14. SpacevibeZ

    Great information but a bit squirrelly at 1.5x.. lol

  15. plainasday

    Thanks to the both of you. Keep it coming.

  16. John Miller

    I'm not saying seed shortage, could just be new stock rotations, but a bunch of seeds I've had in my amazon cart were unavailable. I went ahead and got a few things I've been needing: gem and sweet corn, peanuts, artichoke, and a Mellon mix. Also picked up 10lbs of seed potatoes, garlic and onion bulbs this week.

  17. Angela Cadieux

    David, I love you but it's very hard to want to listen to you talking over your guest.

  18. mike woodley

    One tenth of a mile is 528 feet, two tenths of a mile is …

  19. S.A. Morris

    … so the conclusion of the eye formation is electric…?
    … and then settlements with mining…?

  20. S.A. Morris

    … the guest is so eager to give the info, but forgets we viewing are trying to form the image of the info in our minds when he jumps ahead…
    … looking forward to more vids like this…

  21. Lone Star

    It is not that old. The landscape would have changed dramatically with the time frame given. If it were 10's of thousands as claimed there would have been vegetation regrowth and the return of the water cycle. Even some early maps show lush landscape , cities and castle's. Now in the same areas right in the middle of the Sahara are claimed to be covered in sand for thousands of years. Why not millions just for fun?

  22. Eli In the Wolverine State

    Sequoia national forest has those same canal cuts in the mountains. So glacial or geologic formation.

  23. Eli In the Wolverine State

    It looks like ocean floor. Just like out in the Mojave desert. That was also ocean floor. And has volcanoes that look juat like eye of Sharah.

  24. Randy Crowe

    That was good, though I would have liked to hear more from your guest…..

  25. Endless Nameless

    Dude. You really need to stop interrupting him, so bloody fustrating I gave up watching. I mean this with respect because I like you and your videos and what you do, but almost every single time he opened his mouth you butted in and felt I didn't actually get any explanation of anything from him. I was literally yelling out loud to shut up for 5 minutes so I can hear what he was trying to say. And after all that I didn't get to hear any of the interesting things he started to talk about.

  26. Sunsettvu

    Sacred sites…always…probably more like something that served a purpose.

  27. Lisa Nieves

    It’s the eye of the dragon. Roger from Mudflood speaks of this. I believe he is correct.
    Thanks David.

  28. GALLUS

    Gyroscope principles apply to bycicles or a racer knee touching the ground taking a corner a spinning top slowing down is falling to side never mind the pole shifting what if some huge mass pulls the OCEANS or the whole earth is wobbled into new inclination of ORBIT and ROTATION.ocens of magma moving also .coterminous PLstes subducting and overlapping. Suddenly.

  29. GALLUS

    Yes old ocean bed maker flat landscape and pools of salt
    And water is under ground also so maybe it's a giant drain hole
    The straight line is possible carrying water oil or gas. In or out?
    If an invading army was coming through let's sll hide in the gisnt meteor crater or drainhooe for a year.
    Could it be an old Phoenician tin mine? All those checkpoints could be an area 52 or Pentagon/African command base out there somewheres.King Solomon's dad's mines?

  30. Kelcy Jones

    Excellent info–this part.

  31. Carl

    Something to think about: Before trains, Britain was doing very well with a canal network with widths of around 8-14ft. Yep, that tiny!
    Perhaps as in the UK, smaller boats in larger quantities (much more practical on numerous levels) were used to transport people and goods to the ports or hubs where they were then loaded on ocean going ships.
    If this was the case, canals of up to 100ft width in this area of North Africa were WAY ahead of UK at the start of our industrial revolution.
    If true, this is a huge game changer in the understanding of our past history and in particular Africa.

    Fascinating show. Thank you:)

  32. cokemachine

    Listening to this is like pulling teeth, both of you are on meth.

  33. sandpiper22

    Fun learning with you!

  34. Atomic Frijole

    Hi David, just some thoughts:

    On the topographic map at 30min mark, it looks to me like you are seeing ancient shorelines and islands along the red canyon edge on the north edge, with alluvial fans in green. This is not unlike what you see with shallow seas that covered Eastern Colorado and Kansas, butting up against the eastern slope of the Rockies and foothills in Colorado as well as the bluffs and buttes on the western side near Grand Junction and again in Capitol Reef National Park in Utah.

    At 3:58 mark, the road has been blasted away, revealing what appears to be sandstone layers, indicating a possible seabed. The thing that strikes me is that the canyons are full of fractured rocks not unlike the Utah desert. The canyon walls have very sharp edges, some from blasting away to clear the roadbed, but not all.

    On the next trip, one might look to see if there are many fossils in the area. Also, recommend taking photoshop or gimp (free photoshop) and overlaying the Google map with the topographic map and adjust the opacity so we can see both simultaneously. That would allow us a better view of how the landform is shaped and where things are.

    At 14:54 mark, the image is quite similar to glacial striations that can be seen in Canada and Greenland by satellite.

    Throughout both videos, I am noticing a lot of fractured rocks just sitting in the middle of the desert and they remind me of glacial remnants or talus that we usually see at high altitude where glaciation and permafrost splits rocks apart with freeze/thaw cycles.

    Love the videos, keep em coming! 🙂

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