A group of explorers set on solving the mystery of a long lost pyramid hidden deep in the Guatemala jungle rumoured to be larger than the Great Pyramid of Giza, received the treat of their lives.
Thomas Brag, Ammar Kandil and Matt Dajer trekked for four days on foot through the Guatemala jungle, alongside seven other creators to fulfil Mr Kandilâs dream to climb a pyramid.
Documenting every step of their experience, they released âFinding the Lost Largest Pyramid in the Worldâ on their website and later on YouTube on September 15, 2019.
First uncovering the colossal structure, Mr Dajer exclaimed: âWeâve just arrived at the very, very bottom base of a pyramid.
âYou would never guess just walking through here, but this entire thing is limestone underneath and this is part of the pyramid.

âYou canât even grasp fully in your mind how huge this must have looked when it was for real.â The group then began making the monumental 50-minute-long journey up thousands of steps.
Mr Brag told the camera: âSo these are the steps to the second platform and this entire thing that we are on is a man built.
âSo once they started digging up the soil from whatâs been layered up on top of this over thousands of years, theyâre actually discovering the giant construction and the insane labour that it was to build this.
âThis is just the steps up, I canât even see the top from here.
âThis is way bigger than I expected, it is insane.â
Eventually, they made it to the top, and the whole crew were left taken back.

Drone footage shows the pyramid-like never seen before.
An emotional Mr Kandil reflected during the film: âThis is all to do with a dream I had.
âEverything about Yes Theory is saying âyesâ to those dreams that you think are so far-fetched.
âItâs being constantly in the pursuit to go after those dreams, to go after the things that matter the most to you in life.
âAs youâre in the pursuit to do something you love and to do something that you dream of, you never who that inspires or what that ends up contributing to your life.
âSometimes we end up achieving the dreams we never even knew we had.â
There are roughly 35 âtriadicâ structures in El Mirador, consisting of large artificial platforms topped with a set of three summit pyramids. The most notable of such structures are the two huge complexes explored in the documentary, one is nicknamed âEl Tigreâ, with a height of 55 metres, while the other is called âLa Dantaâ.

The La Danta temple measures approximately 72 metres (236 ft) tall from the forest floor and considering its total volume (2,800,000 cubic meters) is considered the largest in the world by many archaeologists.
For comparison, the Great Pyramid of Giza is 139 metres tall, but 2,583,283 cubic metres in volume. That has not stopped one of the Seven Wonder of the Ancient World from making headlines too, though.