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Tiompan wrote:Skiessa wrote:
from what i read the taphonomy researches the degradation of the organic matter, which is not equal to the amount of material lost to environmental factors.
Skiessa wrote:
"Taphonomic logic does take into account material that has disappeared for any number of reasons and therefore can't be taken into account"
do you have any information about this that would define the way it's being taken into account? this statement in itself can mean anything from "yea, yea we know" to actual deep statistical analysis of the material lost and it's application on the dating of archaeological sites.
circumspice wrote:
"a duplicate of the Great Pyramid COULD indeed be built today & in a similar time frame, if not an even shorter one" calculate the amount of minutes in 20 years and divide it with the amount of stones used - this gives us less than 5 minutes to work with with each stone, from quarry to the placement - less than 5 minutes if we work 24 hours in a day. we could not do this even with all the modern technology. if we assume the modern technology to be the best technology the man has ever invented and even with it we could not build the pyramids in the time given, then it's only logical to assume that the people who worked with a fraction of the technology we have now could not do it either.
You are still operating under the assumption that only one stone can be worked with at a time. Recalculate... Try 10 stones, then 25 stones, then 50 stones. Factor in maybe 10 hours of daylight. And that's only for placing the stones during the inundation when corvee labor was used & it was possible to bring in supplies by boat via the canal that was built specifically for that purpose. Remember that the quarries could be worked year round by skilled masons. Remember that there was a village built nearby specifically to house both a temporary workforce & a semi-permanent workforce. People lived & worked there year round. People died there & were buried there. That village was occupied continuously until all the pyramids on the Giza Plateau were completed or abandoned, then the village itself was abandoned. These are all demonstrable facts, supported by archaeological evidence found during recent excavations. Why do you contend that it was impossible for the ancient Egyptians to plan the project, set up the infrastructure, implement a supply chain, levy a tax for the number of corvee laborers needed for the project & then commence with the project? Also,
who is to say that Khufu didn't begin preparations for his pyramid before he ascended the throne? He wasn't the crown prince. He had one or more brothers in line for the throne ahead of him. When it became obvious that he would be next in line, he could very well have begun the planning phase while his father, the current ruler, still lived.
And again, I ask you, why wouldn't the quarries be operating on a year round basis? It just doesn't make sense to cut, shape, transport & then place one stone at a time. That edifice is huge. I think it would have looked like a gigantic ant hill with hundreds of workers swarming all over it doing their various jobs simultaneously. A 2 ton stone isn't huge. The base of the Great Pyramid is 756 feet on all sides. That's roughly 11 acres or 4.5 hectares. There would be plenty of room for numerous worker gangs to be going about the business of setting each stone in their designated work area into place on the course for that level.
Note: Houdin has a theory about internal ramps being used to bring the stones up to the current level. He speculates that if modern people followed that theory they would be able to build an exact duplicate of the Great Pyramid in 4 years, at a cost of USD $4 billion.
Skiessa wrote:the use of granite and the accuracy it has been used has also been mentioned here, but not answered by anyone.
Tiompan wrote:Skiessa wrote:the use of granite and the accuracy it has been used has also been mentioned here, but not answered by anyone.
You commented " nothing of what i know from the ancient human history can explain the astounding accuracy towards the true north, ."
Someone did answer .btw the link works .
We don't know for sure how they did it but it wasn't that difficult using the tech of the time . See Glenn dash , Kate Spence etc .
https://www.academia.edu/4035001/How_th ... True_North
You are still operating under the assumption that only one stone can be worked with at a time.
circumspice wrote:Jean-Pierre Houdin & his internal ramp theory... Look it up. Until a theory is proven, there are several theories that may help explain how the Great Pyramid was built.
By the way, you haven't yet posted a link that supports your negative opinion of all the various theories that have been linked for you... You just say 'no, not possible' & give vague statements that 'many experts say'... say this or say that... Please post links that support your negative statements.
circumspice wrote:@min: What I'm saying is that once they leveled the platform to above the level of the bedrock mound that is an integral, documented part of the pyramid, it is a vast flat expanse of rock that is measured in acres... That would have given them room for many work gangs to labor on the pyramid within their designated work areas. The base of the pyramid measures out to roughly 11 acres. They could have built a town there. It wouldn't have gotten crowded until roughly at the 2/3 level.
All I'm saying is that with intelligent planning, a decent supply chain, ample supplies, a very large workforce, vast sums of money to throw at it, a shit-ton of luck & a resolve to get it done, it could be done in the 20+ year time frame. Khufu had a minimum of 23 years in which to get it built to completion. Judging by some of the graffiti left behind by the workers, they seem to have taken a great deal of pride in their part of such a monumental effort. It's not like the pyramids on the Giza Plateau were built in a vacuum. There were people there that left records of their part in the building of those pyramids. Why is that so hard to believe?
Tiompan wrote:[quote="Skiessa"
the sad thing when looking in to archaeology is that it's very hard to tell who's trolling and who is just really too stupid to see the obvious holes in the story he believes in "
I thought of you when I read that ,and "nothing of what i know from the ancient human history can explain the astounding accuracy towards the true north, "
I tried the link again and it worked again .I also mentioned a couple of names in relation to demonstrating that it wasn't as difficult as you might believe .
Try searching Glenn Dash true north pyramid and Kate Spence .
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