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Home » The Joe Rogan Experience #2417: Ben van Kerkwyk on Ancient Egypt’s Lost Labyrinth (Transcript)

The Joe Rogan Experience #2417: Ben van Kerkwyk on Ancient Egypt’s Lost Labyrinth (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of UnchartedX’s creator Ben van Kerkwyk’s interview on The Joe Rogan Experience #2417, November 25, 2025.

The Mysterious 40-Meter Metallic Object

JOE ROGAN: Ben, see again, last time you were on, we barely scratched the surface of all the things that we wanted to talk about. So immediately we’re like, we got to do another one quick because you want to talk about the Sphinx.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: The Sphinx, yes. Yeah, we were on. We got into the labyrinth, which was kind of the big thing.

JOE ROGAN: Labyrinth is nuts. I still haven’t been able to get over it. So the 40-meter metallic shape, tic tac shape thing.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Yeah.

JOE ROGAN: That’s in the ground. Like, what is that?

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Well, I hope we’ll find out. I mean, I don’t know. The wheels do turn a little slowly, but the point of that was to try and drive some awareness. Maybe we’ll get some sort of angel investor in there to go and look at it and solve the problem. Do something.

JOE ROGAN: Someone needs to talk to Elon.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Yeah, I’m not the guy.

JOE ROGAN: As much as it is, he’s too busy. But someone who can solve problems. Yeah, someone, or maybe Bezos would like to be the first guy to get in there. Someone has to get in there. You have to figure out what that thing is. That’s crazy. This might be one of the biggest mysteries in the entire human civilization record.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Yeah. Who’s the guy, who’s the director that went to the bottom of the ocean?

JOE ROGAN: Oh, Cameron.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Cameron. I mean, he likes going places that nobody’s gone before. They drill a hole, get there.

JOE ROGAN: Maybe someone should do it. I don’t think enough people know. A lot of people know that we’re listening to this podcast, but not enough people that would do something, that can do something. You know what I mean? It’s like we reach a lot of knuckleheads with a wide variety of people, but the percentage of people that have the resources to make something happen, they have to work something out with the Egyptian government. Right? So they have to do something with those dams.

BEN VAN KERKWYK: Yes. Well, I don’t think it takes the dams. You would have to remediate the water on the site at least, somehow box it out. Right. You got to drain. You’d have to drain this massive area, or at least if you were targeted enough, you might be able to drain a smaller area to then excavate in that area.

JOE ROGAN: We should probably explain to people that didn’t listen to the last podcast, just a real quick synopsis.

The Great Lost Labyrinth of Ancient Egypt

BEN VAN KERKWYK: So the labyrinth we’re talking about is the great lost labyrinth of ancient Egypt, which was described by figures like Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus, Pliny the Elder, figures from antiquity. These authors described it as being greater in magnificence than the pyramids. They had these just mind-bending descriptions of what this site was like. Multiple levels, 3,000 rooms. You would get lost in it. It had giant courtyards with pillars all made from, I mean, one guy, I think it was Strabo, described the roof as being a single piece of stone, which I don’t think it was, but it’s describing those perfect joins that you see in the real megalithic work from Egypt.

So it’s this giant mystery. We know it’s there and it was kind of lost to time until we found it again. Basically it was discovered. It was always known about because there were clues about its location. It was always theorized to have been at this place called Hawara, which is near the Fayum in Egypt. Petrie went there and dug it up, Flinders Petrie in the late 1800s, early 1900s, and he found massive stone slabs. He thought he was standing on its foundation, like it’s been quarried and taken away.

Rather than that though, it turns out he was most likely standing on the roof of the top layer. It was 10 meters below. The ground is so nuts. He never got quite in. But then the Matahar expedition happened, I think in 2017 or 2015. There was an expedition run by a guy named Louis de Cordier in partnership with the Egyptian government. They used ground penetrating radar, sonic techniques, well-established subsurface techniques. And they found it. They found these massive cyclopean walls that were meters thick. It was a labyrinthian structure. It’s well verified.

It’s below the water table level of what’s on that site now. So you have water table about 5 meters below the surface. The labyrinth starts at 9, 10 meters. There’s some controversy around that report because it was buried. So he found it. They never published the report. It was squashed by Zahi Hawass. This is according to Louis de Cordier. He threatened him and his team with national security sanctions if they talked about it. It just was put away.

He waited a few years. He finally released the report. It’s like, holy s*, we found the labyrinth. And then this spurred some other companies to use some of these new space-based scanning techniques. There’s been at least two that have been done, very different techniques. But they found the same thing. They found that there is in fact a massive underground structure at this place called Hawara. It goes deeper than what you could reach with those ground penetrating radar and those established techniques, 60, 70 meters below the ground. There’s multiple levels, three or four levels, and they correlate.

So one scans a statistical model. Another one uses high-frequency photography along with I think seismic data, very similar to the Doppler tomography work that’s being done by the Italians at places like the Giza plateau now. And they both correlate. Yes, there’s a big structure.