Egypt scans reveal massive underground structure
On my recent trip to Egypt, I was shown some of the most unusual underground scans I have ever seen.
The scans appear to show a massive buried complex in the Minya region of Egypt, with large walls, unusual internal patterns, and a layout that almost looks machine-like in structure. I am still working to verify the scanning technology and the source of the data, but I also visited the actual location connected to these scans. A site where large limestone blocks were discovered beneath agricultural land. The scans in the video are the actual scans, they have not been re-created or altered in any way.
In this video, I compare what was found in Minya with other megalithic stonework I have seen in Egypt, including the restricted excavation areas near the Labyrinth of Hawara. I also explore a major question: how could an architectural site become buried beneath as much as 50 feet, or 15 meters, of sediment?
Could this be the result of ordinary Nile flooding? Or would we need to look much farther back in time. Perhaps to extreme high-Nile events, the African Humid Period, or even the Late Pleistocene to explain burial on this scale?
This video is not a final conclusion. It is an open investigation. I am sharing the scans, the field footage, and the questions so researchers, archaeologists, geologists, remote-sensing experts, and viewers can examine the evidence together.
If you recognize the type of scanning technology shown in this video, or if you have insight into how a site like this could become buried so deeply, please leave a comment below.
*Evidence vs. Reconstruction Note: The field footage shown in this video was filmed and captured on location in Egypt, and the scan imagery shown is the actual scan material being discussed in this documentary. Some graphic scenes and historical/environmental visuals are AI-assisted reconstructions created only to help viewers visualize possible ancient conditions, flooding scenarios, buried architecture, and research concepts.
