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The never ending question, the Giza pyramids
#11
(06-05-2025, 09:50 AM)quintessentone Wrote: Not if one believes they all used leverage and sledging as the means of building these structures. Otherwise, carry on with make believe theories.

The larger stones were most likely transported long distances on boats of of some sort. However there is a site in South America where massive granite blocks were quarried off one mountain, somehow brought down intact, and transported up another mountain. Then fit precisely together to form a wall structure. For what purpose is unknown, but it was obviously an incredible engineering feat.
#12
(06-05-2025, 10:56 AM)SurferSoul Wrote: The larger stones were most likely transported long distances on boats of of some sort. However there is a site in South America where massive granite blocks were quarried off one mountain, somehow brought down intact, and transported up another mountain. Then fit precisely together to form a wall structure. For what purpose is unknown, but it was obviously an incredible engineering feat.

Just observing nature and how rocks tumble/slide down mountainsides during rainforest rainstorms would have given them the idea to perhaps just slide them down - in a controlled manner - perhaps with wet mud to start, then drier materials to slow it down before reaching the bottom (?)
"The only journey is the one within."
#13
I see your thinking but first they would have to clear a path in rocky extremely steep terrain, a huge undertaking in itself. Or build a ramp/slide to get them down, another massive undertaking. Non of which there is any evidence of. Then we have the matter of getting them UP the other mountain. It boggles the mind it really does.
#14
(06-05-2025, 09:50 AM)quintessentone Wrote: Not if one believes they all used leverage and sledging as the means of building these structures. Otherwise, carry on with make believe theories.

There are legends on literally every continent that say this is exactly how they did it. Just because you can't wrap your head around it, doesn't mean it didn't happen. As Graham Hancock says 'We are a species with amnesia.' Not sure why it's so hard to understand that the Watcher's and the Nephelim, had technology that we simply can't comprehend.
#15
(06-05-2025, 11:05 AM)SurferSoul Wrote: I see your thinking but first they would have to clear a path in rocky extremely steep terrain, a huge undertaking in itself. Or build a ramp/slide to get them down, another massive undertaking. Non of which there is any evidence of. Then we have the matter of getting them UP the other mountain. It boggles the mind it really does.

How do we know they had to get boulders up and didn't just use all the boulders at the top and slide them down? The rocky terrain would suggest massive amounts of rocks/boulders, would it not?
"The only journey is the one within."
#16
(06-05-2025, 11:33 AM)KKLoco Wrote: There are legends on literally every continent that say this is exactly how they did it. Just because you can't wrap your head around it, doesn't mean it didn't happen. As Graham Hancock says 'We are a species with amnesia.' Not sure why it's so hard to understand that the Watcher's and the Nephelim, had technology that we simply can't comprehend.

If so, their technology was pretty damn basic - using stones and boulders.
"The only journey is the one within."
#17
(06-05-2025, 07:47 AM)SurferSoul Wrote: What other cultures do you speak of going back 40,000 years in the Nile Valley? I would like to learn more about these? 
 
  • Late Paleolithic, from 40th millennium BC
  • Neolithic, from 11th millennium BC
    • c. 10,500 BC: Wild grain harvesting along the Nile, grain-grinding culture creates world's earliest stone sickle blades[sup][6][/sup] roughly at end of Pleistocene
    • c. 8000 BC: Migration of peoples to the Nile, developing a more centralized society and settled agricultural economy
    • c. 7500 BC: Importing animals from Asia to Sahara
    • c. 7000 BC: Agriculture—animal and cereal—in East Sahara
    • c. 7000 BC: in Nabta Playa deep year-round water wells dug, and large organized settlements designed in planned arrangements
    • c. 6000 BC: Rudimentary ships (rowed, single-sailed) depicted in Egyptian rock art
    • c. 5500 BC: Stone-roofed subterranean chambers and other subterranean complexes in Nabta Playa containing buried sacrificed cattle
    • c. 5000 BC: Alleged archaeoastronomical stone megalith in Nabta Playa.
    • c. 5000 BC: Badarian: furniture, tableware, models of rectangular houses, pots, dishes, cups, bowls, vases, figurines, combs
    • c. 4400 BC: finely-woven linen fragment
  • From 4th millennium BC, inventing has become prevalent
#18
(06-05-2025, 10:56 AM)SurferSoul Wrote: The larger stones were most likely transported long distances on boats of of some sort. However there is a site in South America where massive granite blocks were quarried off one mountain, somehow brought down intact, and transported up another mountain. Then fit precisely together to form a wall structure. For what purpose is unknown, but it was obviously an incredible engineering feat.


Are you referring to Ollantaytambo? I was there recently. Here is photograph of the quarry from the unfinished sun temple https://i.imgur.com/W2eD1HB.jpg. I walked the route, mostly down hill to the river then crossing that then up a hill. Modern construction disrupts the path after the river. Hard work but the ground is mainly rock so the Inca method of dragging rocks without sled would have worked
#19
(06-05-2025, 11:33 AM)KKLoco Wrote: There are legends on literally every continent that say this is exactly how they did it. Just because you can't wrap your head around it, doesn't mean it didn't happen. As Graham Hancock says 'We are a species with amnesia.' Not sure why it's so hard to understand that the Watcher's and the Nephelim, had technology that we simply can't comprehend.

But we do have archaeology and those folks and their alleged technology don't show up anywhere. Whereas the real technology shows up all over the place. "Amnesia", no we only usually remember remember stuff that is important. I'm pretty sure you don't know your 1,000 direct line mother's name was? Nor even the 100th, maybe the 10th do you have amnesia? I can track family names back to 1684 but after that nothing.
#20
IIRC from one of my books, one argument against the manual rope dragging all of these multi hundreds of ton blocks uphill to the site at Ollyontetombo sic is that the turns are too sharp and the cliff too steep too allow enough people with ropes enough space to even stand and work there, let alone have the force to drag them up a mountain.    The people wouldn't fit. 
Furthermore the friction involved would have left markings on the stones which we do not see.



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