Forbidden History - The Search for King Solomon’s Mines
Episode Date: July 18, 2024The location of King Solomon’s Mines has been the objective of treasure hunters and archaeologists for hundreds of years. But now new evidence has led to an amazing discovery. And the clues come fro...m a very unlikely thing… Cast List: Hugh Newman: Author & Researcher Lynn Picknett: Historian and researcher specialising in exposing historical conspiracies. She is also the co-author of several notable works Dr. Peggy Brunache: Historian, archaeologist and lecturer at University of Glasgow Dominic Selwood: Historian, barrister, bestselling author, novelist and frequent contributor to national newspapers including The Independent, The Spectator and The Daily Telegraph Bena Mantel: Archaeologist Tony McMahon: Former BBC news producer, author, print journalist and historian Professor Erez Ben-Yosef: Archaeologist Dr Andrew Boakye: Lecturer in Religions & Theology at the University of Manchester Dr. Karen Bellinger: Anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian Fergus Milton: Prehistoric Metalworking Demonstrator at Butser Ancient Farm Dr. Ellena Lyell: University of Exeter Eric Meyers: Narrator Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Forbidden History Podcast.
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It contains mature adult themes.
Listener discretion is advised.
In a remote desert of southern Israel lies a labyrinth of ancient tunnels.
Unlikely discoveries have unearthed evidence that they may have belonged to the richest man who ever lived.
Solomon's wealth was absolutely out of this world.
He had gold, silver, precious jewels, monkeys, peacocks.
This was an incredibly wealthy man.
According to legend, mining made the biblical King Solomon
unimaginably wealthy.
A single season of mining brings him around $800 million.
Today, archaeologists are scouring the region for these mines.
What is the truth?
How did King Solomon get his incredible wealth
And could these tunnels really be the answer?
It's one of the greatest treasure hunts of all time, the hunt for King Solomon's mines.
Timna National Park, Southern Israel, home to a labyrinth of sandstone tunnels, which could be the historical remains of King Solomon's mines.
If this is correct, in the 10th century BC, they would have been a hive of activity, mining precious metals that
made Solomon one of the wealthiest men who ever lived.
If we compare King Solomon's wealth to today,
then he would probably be the richest man in the world, by far.
We're talking like a trillionaire.
King Solomon and his great wealth
has been the subject of many books and blockbuster films.
Yet the truth of how the king became so rich is a mystery.
One of the great intriguing questions has to
be what happened to the source of Solomon's wealth.
As archaeologists aim to uncover the truth, they're faced with a problem.
Jerusalem, which was the heart of Solomon's empire, has been reconstructed many times over the centuries.
As an archaeologist, it is plausible that treasures associated with King Solomon is still out there.
For many, the key to finding the source of Solomon's wealth is understanding that,
the truth behind the man himself.
Biblical texts tell us he was the son of King David,
who had united the tribes of Israel under one religion.
Yet according to the Bible,
it was Solomon who built the first temple on earth
to the Old Testament God.
King Solomon's temple is very important in Judaism,
in Christianity, and Islam.
King Solomon appears right at the start of the life of Israel as a nation.
But why was Solomon chosen to build the first temple instead of his all-conquering Father David?
Getting to the roots of the legend, Benamantel is in Jerusalem.
So the Bible is very clear to us and telling us why is it Solomon who gets to build the temple and not David.
And the Bible says that David is unworthy of building a house for God because of the blood that's on his hands.
King Solomon, however, the son of King of King,
King David already inherited this full-blown kingdom.
He never had to shed blood over it,
and therefore he could be the one to build a house for God.
If the story is to be believed, Solomon made his temple one of the most lavish buildings ever constructed,
with two bronze pillars welcoming worshippers inside the gold-laden building.
Solomon's temple would have been very impressive and would have been constructed using the finest masons at the time.
And so no doubt it would have been an architectural wonder.
To some who were going into this temple, it would have been literally like entering paradise.
I mean, we're talking about something with huge columns and gold and jewels and everything painted richly and ornately.
While the stories of grandeur make for a wonderful tale,
today the archaeological evidence for this great temple is non-existent.
Solomon Temple in Jerusalem is a big riddle.
We know very little about it.
We don't have any archaeological remains, of course.
It's not possible to dig in the place where the temple was built.
Today, it's a very important and holy place for Islam.
With a lack of hard evidence,
the Holy Scriptures offer the best clues to how Solomon became so wealthy.
They say that during a dream, the king was visited by God.
So we have a wonderful story about
Solomon praying to God and then God essentially appearing before Solomon and asking him,
what does he want?
Typically in these kind of stories, kings ask for power, money, domination, this kind of thing.
But what Solomon asked for was wisdom.
The Bible claims God grants the young king his desire.
And in the 3,000 years since his reign, Solomon has become synonymous with wisdom.
And there's a classic story, and it's two women who come to the king with a baby,
and both are claiming ownership of this baby.
The way Solomon chose to resolve the issue was to say he was going to cut the child in half,
and they can have half each.
Now, one of the women says, yeah, all right, I'll take my half.
The other one says, no, keep the baby whole, give it to her.
And Solomon realizes that must be the mother, because what mother would want to see such
a terrible thing happened to her child.
But according to legend, wisdom wasn't the only thing God gave Solomon.
God is so pleased that he tells him not only I will give you wisdom,
but I will give you the wealth and all the other things to go along with it.
If the Bible is to be believed,
it was from this point that Solomon became one of the richest men who ever lived.
Solomon's wealth, it's been estimated, is the equivalent today of something
like $2 trillion.
He had everything a man could possibly want.
Despite the Bible claiming Solomon's wealth was a gift from God,
today scholars are hunting for a more tangible source.
There wasn't much being written about where his wealth really came from.
It's opened up this possibility of mines.
But where are these minds?
In the time of Solomon, 1,000 years before Christ,
kings became powerful by controlling natural resources.
Many believe that precious metals dug from ancient mines
were the source of Solomon's wealth.
Yet, if this is the case, it's a mystery why they are not mentioned in the Bible.
When you go to the Bible, we don't hear about King Solomon's minds.
There are actually no minds in the text.
Strangely, the idea of these minds didn't enter public consciousness,
until the late 19th century.
There's no mention in any ancient source of King Solomon's Mines.
In fact, they were only invented in the Victorian period
by an English author H. Ryder Haggard,
who wrote a rip-roaring Victorian adventure story
and called it King Solomon's Minds.
While Haggard's best-selling book was fiction,
some scholars argue that the tale it tells
could be based in reality.
Well, I think like a lot of Victorian colonial authors
He was probably a man who'd gone and done service in the empire.
He heard local myths, local folklore.
He will have heard something that excited his interest
and that he turned into a best-selling novel.
Ever since the release of the book,
treasure hunters and archaeologists alike
have been dreaming of finding King Solomon's minds.
With many believing, if you find the mines,
you may find the source of Solomon's treasures within.
So if we are wandering to herself where Solomon's minds, well, I would have to look to the nearest, most likely place.
And the nearest place would be the desert.
The Timna Valley, Southern Israel.
Many 20th century scholars have dismissed any connection between this place and King Solomon.
But one archaeologist, Professor Erez-Bin-Josef, believes they're wrong.
He spent over a decade trying to unearth its secrets.
This is the Timnavalu.
This is where I think we found evidence for King Solomon's mines.
Legend has it that the Old Testament King had a number of gold mines,
which were the source of his great riches.
We are inside one of the mines.
The entire sandstone is full of tunnels and shafts.
After nearly a decade of research, Erres is convinced
that around the year 1000 BC,
these were the source of King Solomon's wealth.
You can see also the chiesel marks.
There are thousands of mines like that all over the Timna Valley.
The work here was extremely challenging.
It's barely one person that can go inside.
In some places we believe it was only children.
It's fair to say that life for a miner in the Timna mines
mines would have been horrendous, utilizing very simple tools to extract these ores.
We know they had to dig down as much as 60 feet, and then they're crawling around in these
underground tunnels, zero ventilation, very little water. It would have been absolutely horrible.
Stretching over 27 square miles, for Erez, these mines are on a scale large enough to have
generated King Solomon's fabled riches.
It's incredibly exciting to think that the mines at Timna could have been owned by King Solomon.
This is something that wouldn't have been glamorous, but it certainly would have been impressive.
It would have been industry on a scale that we don't think of existing in the ancient world.
Incredibly, there is still evidence of what Solomon's miners could have been digging for.
Copper would have been incredibly important in the time of the time of the time of the miners.
important in the time of Solomon, since his reign was during the Bronze Age.
Given the centrality of copper to the ability to produce wealth in the Bronze Age, it's absolutely
possible that King Solomon's wealth properly should be measured in copper.
During the time of Solomon, most tools and weapons were made of bronze, which is a metal
alloy made using copper.
These mines must have been incredibly lucrative.
Copper was essential to making bronze, and you need bronze for weapons.
So this could very well be King Solomon's mines.
Don't fixate on gold, fixate on copper instead.
You cannot exaggerate the importance of copper at the time of King Solomon.
Whoever had control over this metal had the source of power.
But if these mines were the source of King Solomon's wealth,
an industrial-sized process of turning oil.
ore into metal would have been required.
Investigating the smelting process,
historic metal worker Fergus Milton
has spent the last 20 years researching ancient metallurgy.
For copper smelting, you would start with raw materials,
rocks that we call ores that are dug from the ground.
This particular ore is called malachite.
This is an oxidized ore that would normally be found closer to the surface.
And at Timna, they would
They would have exploited these, but then they would have had to follow the copper underground.
Fergus is processing the copper ore, using the same techniques that were employed in the Bronze Age.
For the smelting process to work, we need a lot of heat.
By pushing air into the burning charcoal, we can get it above 1,600 Fahrenheit,
which is the temperature we need to start changing the copper ore into copper metal.
The flames are weak purple, and that tells me there's a couple.
carbon monoxide gas being produced.
The carbon monoxide just helps to break down the chemical bonds in the rock
so that we can separate out the components and be left with the metal that we're actually after.
After 20 minutes of purple flames, all of the green ore should have turned into copper,
with the other chemicals burning off as gas.
We can cast it to make axes, knives, arrowheads, anything we want.
Or we can combine it with other.
metals like tin to make bronze.
For these mines to have been the source of Solomon's wealth,
industrial scale smelting would have happened here,
and Erez may have found the remains of just that.
This is the largest smelting site in Timna.
This is the center of copper production.
This is a pile of slag.
This means that some of furnaces were here in this location.
Slag is the byproduct of smelting.
byproduct of smelting.
And there's an abundance of this ancient remnant at this site.
Erez believes that during the time of Solomon,
this hill would have had dozens of smelting furnaces,
operated by over a hundred people.
Yet despite the name Slaves Hill,
he believes that these people were anything but slaves.
We excavate these lag mountains and find fantastic stuff
that tells us that the metal world
were part of the elite of the society, maybe even priests.
During Solomon's reign, the process of smelting copper would have been seen as divine magic to the common worker.
Therefore, because of their connection to God, priests would have led the copper production,
making it a ritualistic process, and making King Solomon one of the wealthiest men to ever live.
But the Timna Mines have long been controversial.
One mainstream archaeological dig carried out at the site in the 20th century
dated these mines much earlier than the era of King Solomon.
What's kind of interesting about the Timna mine specifically
is that there's a great deal of evidence that the Egyptians were implicated in this mining.
Over the past 50 years, many archaeologists have claimed these mines
were under the control of the ancient Egyptians during the 19th and 20th dynasties,
hundreds of years before the time of Solomon.
Like the biblical king, copper would have been crucial to the Egyptian pharaohs.
But Erez is sticking to his new theory.
For years, people believed that these were Egyptian mines.
And this is why we have Egyptian statues here.
And I believe that the park now should change these figures, the King Solomon.
Although Eras is sure that these mines belong to the Old Testament king,
half a century of archaeological research says otherwise.
The Timna Copper mines are in an area of the ancient Middle East that was actually
associated with the Egyptian Empire, with the pharaohs.
Ancient Egyptian records show that the pharaohs ruled the region 300 years before
the time of Solomon.
And archaeological evidence found in 1969
supports this theory.
This is the famous Egyptian temple of Timna,
which was found by Ben of Rotenberg.
And this was a major discovery
because they didn't know what they are excavating.
And then they started digging
and artifacts came from the ground
telling the story of Egypt.
The Egyptian temple was dedicated to the god
the goddess Hathor, the goddess of the sky, women, and love.
And the date of this temple was around about 1300 BC,
so that's about 300 years older than King Solomon.
For the archaeologist who found this temple, Ben O Rothenberg,
its discovery was only the tip of the iceberg
that proved that the Timna Mines were part of the ancient Egyptian Empire.
By Ben-Rotenberg found almost 10,000 artists
It was beautiful stuff with inscriptions telling the story of the Egyptian expeditions to Timna.
About 150 years of Egyptian activity in the mines.
For many archaeologists, this evidence was overwhelming.
The minds of Timna predated Solomon by centuries.
But Eris made a bizarre discovery that he thinks proves these mines
could still have been the source of King Solomon's wealth.
The secret lies in something that is found all over the site.
Donkey droppings.
So first we thought maybe some Bedouins were here 50 years ago,
but this is dated by radiocarbon to the times of King Solomon.
This three millennia old dung is safe to handle
and proves that centuries after the Egyptian pharaohs,
during King Solomon's reign, these mines were active.
It is historically extraordinary that that donkey excrement has survived the present day,
but the sand and atmospheric conditions at Timna are so unique that they preserved it.
Erez has found so much ancient dung dating to the time of Solomon
that he is sure the mine's heyday was during the biblical king's reign.
The archaeological evidence suggests that 300 years after the Egyptians mined the site
During the time of Solomon, it was expanded into an industrial powerhouse.
So what's become obvious through excavation and analysis is that when the Egyptian temple was built,
the Timna mines were functioning at a very small scale.
But within just a couple hundred years, it grew into this vast operation,
an industrial operation during King Solomon's era.
But geographically, the mines fall on the outskirts of Solomon's empire, 150 miles from his capital Jerusalem.
That has many questioning if they actually belonged to the king.
Yet, intriguingly, Eris believes he's found something inside the donkey droppings that connects them directly to Solomon.
And within this dung, we find interesting material.
material. This is a grape peep. It's a grape seed. So we have hundreds of grape seeds
within this dung, and we didn't understand it at first what it was doing here.
Although grape seeds may seem like a trivial find, they reveal something unexpected. Grapes are
not grown in this area. The nearest grape-growing region is on the Mediterranean coast near
Jerusalem, the heart of Solomon's kingdom.
Fundamentally, the donkey extrament is a link, a link between the mines at Timna and King Solomon,
because what it shows is that foodstuffs were being brought from the heart of King Solomon's
kingdom on the Mediterranean all the way into the desert to the mines at Timna.
If Erez is correct, this donkey dung is a surprising link to King Solomon's minds,
and therefore his fabled wealth.
But while skeptics questioned if this is enough to conclusively say
that these minds belong to the biblical king, Erz has made another discovery which could prove the connection.
So in this location, this is where we found the purple fabric.
These were three tiny fragments, and we took them from here to the lab.
In the Old Testament era, purple was the color of gods and royalty.
Therefore, the discovery of purple fabric at the Timna Mines suggests that a great king once visited.
Could these fragments have been left at the site by King Solomon?
So this is the smoking gun that connects the mines in Timna to King Solomon, to Jerusalem.
These three small scraps of material, they matter because they're dyed purple,
which was the most expensive dye in the ancient world,
only used by the wealthiest people.
The color, it was the most expensive dye in antiquity.
It's made out of sea snails that are endemic to the Mediterranean.
These sea snails are hard to harvest, and the dying technology was made.
dyeing technology was very sophisticated.
Only produced in the ancient city of Tyre, which today is located in Lebanon, this purple
color was made from the dehydrated mucus glands of Murek sea snails, which can grow up to nearly
four inches long.
It would take tens of thousands of snails to produce enough dye to make a small strip of
purple fabric, which is why it was only accessible to the very rich.
The Bible says Israel and Tyre had a close trading relationship, so this dye would have been
within reach of Solomon.
The purple cloth that was found at Timna is an extremely fascinating discovery, and this is because
it tells us that somebody of elite prestige would have visited Timna.
This matches the description that we have of King Solomon as the wealthiest man.
It is highly likely that Solomon wore purple clothes.
The Bible even says that he bought purple dyed material.
It's very much possible that King Solomon himself wore a purple garment like that, exactly like that.
Could Solomon have come to Timna to inspect the mines that provided him with his wealth and power?
These fragments of cloth are as close as archaeologists will ever get to confirming that the Timna mines
belong to the king.
However, could the copper mines at Timna really have been Solomon's only source of wealth?
While today many scholars do believe the copper from Timna would have heavily contributed to the
king's treasury, the Bible claims that at least a portion of it came from gold.
The Bible seems to be quite clear that Solomon's wealth came from gold.
There is a mention of this place, Ophir,
Ophir is a mysterious place that allegedly sent a tribute of gold, silver, pearls and ivory to Solomon every three years,
but where it is remains something of a mystery.
Among all the treasures said to have come from Ophir, it is most famous for its gold.
According to the Bible, Solomon received a cargo of the precious metal from the biblical land every three years.
While to some the frequency of the shipments may seem low, the volume of gold received demonstrates
the significance of Ophir as a source of wealth for the king.
Solomon comes back with about 14 tons of gold from a single trip to Ophir.
If you want to do the math, in today's terms, a kilo of gold currently is somewhere in the
neighborhood of $56,500,000 to multiply that, and now you're already making somewhere in the
neighborhood of about $800 million. To have generated such quantities of gold, some scholars
believe Ophir must have held gold mines. So the Bible tells us that Solomon went to Ophir.
Now, why would Solomon himself go to Ophir if it was just another trading center? I'm
I think that Ophir must have been a mining land.
So in my opinion, Ophir is definitely a gold mine.
I don't know exactly the nature of mining that was conducted there,
that they physically had to go into the ground itself or was water involved.
But without a doubt at all, Ophir is a name of a place where a gold is being mined.
Yet modern day scholars are at a loss to identify where Ophir was located.
One of the biggest mysteries is the location of Ophir, which we know was a real place and clearly a place of significance.
But yet we really have no clue where it was.
Is Ophir the key to King Solomon's wealth?
And if it is, where could this golden land be?
The Holy Book describes the king receiving gold in huge quantities from a place called Ophir.
Today, all records of its location are lost.
Traditionally, Ophir was key to all of Solomon's operations where his treasure was concerned.
The problem is, where is it today?
In biblical references, there are many theories as to where Ophir is located.
Some believe it lies along the Red Sea, East Africa, Southern Africa, even as far as Spain.
In the late 19th century, one of the theories as to where Ophir was located,
was Great Zimbabwe in Zimbabwe.
What's interesting about this part of Africa
is that all over that area,
there's hundreds of ancient mines
where they were mining gold.
Great Zimbabwe is an absolutely fantastic ruin
in Southern Africa, which provides evidence
for an incredible civilization that existed once,
and it's flummox people of what civilization this was.
And it's not surprising that some people have thought,
Maybe King Solomon had forged links all the way down to southern Africa to the kingdom of Great Zimbabwe.
First investigated by Europeans in the 19th century, Great Zimbabwe is a stone city spanning nearly three square miles.
Thinking it was too complex to have been built by the indigenous people, white explorers assumed the site was ancient,
which led some to suspect it was Ophir.
Yet modern archaeology has proved this is not the case.
So Great Zimbabwe does tick many boxes regarding it being the location of Ophir.
However, in recent times with carbon dating, it's only been dated to like a few hundred years old,
so it's well out of the time range of King Solomon.
Even though Great Zimbabwe has been proven not to be Ophir, nor the source of Solomon's gold,
many other possibilities still exist,
like the gold mines of South Africa,
which inspired writer Haggard to write his book,
King Solomon's Mines.
Dr. Ellen O'Lyle has spent nearly a decade
researching the Old Testament,
trying to unlock its secrets.
So one of the key clues as to the location of Ophir
is the fact that Solomon himself traveled there.
The Bible says that he went there to get God,
It had to be easily accessible.
In the time of Solomon, journeys by sea were long and arduous.
Therefore, Elena believes it's likely that Solomon traveled over land by camel caravan.
So the location of Ophir must have been closer to Jerusalem.
So I think Ophir is located along the Arabian Peninsula, which is modern day Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
And this is because of Ophir's account.
occurrence in Genesis 10.
The 10th chapter of Genesis contains a list of the descendants of Noah and describes three
brothers with kingdoms named after them in the time of Solomon.
A fear in Genesis 10 is the son of Yachtan and he has brothers, Sheba and Havela.
By the time of Solomon, both Sheba and Havela are also the names of kingdoms on the
Arabian Peninsula.
Scholars tend to think that Havela and Shiba are located along the Arabian Peninsula.
I think the land of Ophir has to be around Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
Elena believes these kingdoms were connected in some way with perhaps Ophir being a region
of Shiba.
The Bible tells of Solomon receiving a wealthy visitor from one of these lands, which could
suggest a trade connection.
The Queen of Sheba in One Kings 10 comes to test Solomon.
She hears of his infamous wisdom and she wants to experience it for herself.
So she comes to test him.
She asks him riddles and really hard questions and he answers them correctly.
She then gifts him gold.
Now if we are to assume that the land of Ophir is part of the land of Sheba, it makes sense
for their ruler the Queen of Sheba to go herself to visit King Solomon.
For some, Eleanor's theory that Ophir was connected to Shiba on the Arabian Peninsula
supports the idea of it being Solomon's gold mine.
If Ophir was in South West Arabia, where we think Shiba was,
there were also mines down there, gold mines that apparently had nuggets,
the size of walnuts, according to the ancients.
So this could be not just Ophir, but King Solomon's mines.
One of the most likely countries on the Arabian Peninsula to be the location of Ophir is Yemen,
which today is stricken by civil war, making archaeology almost impossible.
Yet until someone finds solid evidence, Ophir's whereabouts will remain a mystery.
But where is Solomon's wealth hidden today?
Is there any trace of it left?
Some believe that the Copper Scroll could be a map to the location of King Solomon's fabled wealth.
Some scholars hope that an archaeological discovery made in the 20th century might shed some light on this biblical treasure hunt.
One of the most important discoveries made in recent times is the Dead Sea Scrolls in the area of Qumran.
The Dead Sea Scrolls are a set of ancient religious manuscripts dating from around
the time of Christ. While this is about a thousand years after King Solomon's reign,
some believe one may hold the key to finding his treasure. What was found was what's
called the Copper Scroll. This is really interesting because it's completely
different to the other scrolls. Unlike the other scrolls which are made of animal
skin or papyrus, this scroll is made of copper and it contains a detailed list of
someone's treasure.
The copper scroll is enormously detailed, great lists of all sorts of treasure,
of weights of gold, weights of silver.
In the years since its discovery in 1952, no one has successfully identified the owner of the treasure
described in the copper scroll.
But some believe it might have belonged to the man said to be the richest in the ancient world.
King Solomon.
One of the interesting things that I find about the Copper Scroll is the fact that it may indicate where King Solomon's treasure is.
Because no one knows exactly who wrote the Copper Scrolls when it was written and when it was buried and hidden.
It's entirely understandable that people have sought to associate the Copper Scroll and the treasures of King Solomon.
And that's because the treasures that the Copper Scroll enumerates,
are astonishing.
It is estimated that the wealth described in the Copper Scroll would today be worth over
$1 billion.
Many believe these riches were hidden when the Second Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 AD.
The Copper Scroll, it's a list of treasures, treasures from the Temple at Jerusalem, which
was about to be destroyed by the Romans.
And many of those treasures would have been the treasures that King Solomon put in the temple
all those centuries before.
Where do all those riches lie now?
So nothing has actually been found using the Copper Scroll as a treasure map.
Nothing has actually been discovered.
It never says anywhere on a Copper Scroll we are talking about Solomon's treasure.
But there's a lot of could-haves in this story.
There's no solid answers.
According to the Bible, 3,000 years ago, King Solomon walked among us.
Some believe that the source of his fortune was in these copper mines in southern Israel.
Well, now we have evidence that shows that this might have been the source of King Solomon's
wealth.
Copper was the most important material at that time.
It was used for agriculture and weapons and the temple in Jerusalem, and this might be the
reason why King Solomon became the richest men alive at the time.
Yet others believe this is not the full story.
And Solomon's riches came from many sources.
So while many theories suggest numerous locations for Ophir, numerous ideas as to where
Solomon's wealth came from, the sad truth is, we will never know unless some kind of
archaeological dig happens.
Whatever the truth, the hunt for these treasures is still on.
King Solomon's mines and the treasure, none of it has been discovered.
None of it has been found by anybody, so where could it be?
The jury's out, we really don't know where it is.
But considering he had a value of $2 trillion, it does suggest there's much to be discovered.
I don't think it's at all unreasonable to say, hey, if King Solomon
had this great treasure and if it's out there,
that it still remains to be found.
It's by no means assumed that we would have found it already.
We don't actually have a map leading to it.
If the treasure of King Solomon really was on the scale
that the Bible suggests,
then we could be looking at a future discovery
that would be on a scale of several Tutankhamun tombs,
with huge amounts of gold, silver, and jewels
that will be yielded at some point.
from the earth.
