Description:
For the first time ever, researcher and author Geoffrey Drumm lays out his entire theory behind ancient stone structures in a single, comprehensive 9-hour documentary series.
In Part 1 of 3, Drumm takes us deep into the origins of his groundbreaking work The Land of Chem, exploring how ancient civilizations may have used lightning, telluric currents, and Earth’s natural electrical systems as part of a vast, planet-wide infrastructure.
This episode connects Avebury, the Giza Plateau, Neolithic stone circles, and early pyramid construction under one unifying framework—arguing these were not tombs or temples, but functional systems designed to harness natural forces for agriculture, chemistry, and large-scale civilization rebuilding after the last Ice Age.
You’ll hear Geoffrey explain:
• Why stone circles may have been designed to attract lightning
• How telluric currents flow through Earth and ancient sites
• The role of lightning, rain, and atmospheric nitrates in early agriculture
• Why the Giza Plateau itself may be a massive electrical system
• How pyramids fit into a broader chemical and energetic network
• Why this knowledge appears globally, from Egypt to Europe to Japan
This is not speculation—it’s a methodical walkthrough of Geoffrey Drumm’s complete hypothesis, presented start-to-finish for the first time on camera.
If you’ve ever questioned what ancient monuments were really for—this series is essential viewing.
• Why stone circles may have been designed to attract lightning
• How telluric currents flow through Earth and ancient sites
• The role of lightning, rain, and atmospheric nitrates in early agriculture
• Why the Giza Plateau itself may be a massive electrical system
• How pyramids fit into a broader chemical and energetic network
• Why this knowledge appears globally, from Egypt to Europe to Japan
This is not speculation—it’s a methodical walkthrough of Geoffrey Drumm’s complete hypothesis, presented start-to-finish for the first time on camera.
If you’ve ever questioned what ancient monuments were really for—this series is essential viewing.