Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Solved! How Ancient Egyptians Moved Massive Pyramid Stones

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Solved! How Ancient Egyptians Moved Massive Pyramid Stones

    The ancient Egyptians who built the pyramids may have been able to move massive stone blocks across the desert by wetting the sand in front of a contraption built to pull the heavy objects, according to a new study.

    Physicists at the University of Amsterdam investigated the forces needed to pull weighty objects on a giant sled over desert sand, and discovered that dampening the sand in front of the primitive device reduces friction on the sled, making it easier to operate. The findings help answer one of the most enduring historical mysteries: how the Egyptians were able to accomplish the seemingly impossible task of constructing the famous pyramids.

    To make their discovery, the researchers picked up on clues from the ancient Egyptians themselves. A wall painting discovered in the ancient tomb of Djehutihotep, which dates back to about 1900 B.C., depicts 172 men hauling an immense statue using ropes attached to a sledge. In the drawing, a person can be seen standing on the front of the sledge, pouring water over the sand, said study lead author Daniel Bonn, a physics professor at the University of Amsterdam.

    "Egyptologists thought it was a purely ceremonial act," Bonn told Live Science. "The question was: Why did they do it?"

    Bonn and his colleagues constructed miniature sleds and experimented with pulling heavy objects through trays of sand.

    When the researchers dragged the sleds over dry sand, they noticed clumps would build up in front of the contraptions, requiring more force to pull them across.

    Adding water to the sand, however, increased its stiffness, and the sleds were able to glide more easily across the surface. This is because droplets of water create bridges between the grains of sand, which helps them stick together, the scientists said. It is also the same reason why using wet sand to build a sandcastle is easier than using dry sand, Bonn said.

    But, there is a delicate balance, the researchers found.

    "If you use dry sand, it won't work as well, but if the sand is too wet, it won't work either," Bonn said. "There's an optimum stiffness."

    The amount of water necessary depends on the type of sand, he added, but typically the optimal amount falls between 2 percent and 5 percent of the volume of sand.

    "It turns out that wetting Egyptian deserts and can reduce the friction by quite a bit, which implies you need only half of the people to pull a sledge on wet sand, compared to dry sand," Bonn said.

    The study, published April 29 in the journal Physical Review Letters, may explain how the ancient Egyptians constructed the pyramids, but the research also has modern-day applications, the scientists said. The findings could help researchers understand the behavior of other granular materials, such as asphalt, concrete or coal, which could lead to more efficient ways to transport these resources.
    https://ph.news.yahoo.com/solved-anc...194231772.html

  • #2
    I thought they used The Nile River to move the blocks. They showed it exactly how it was and they even reenacted it with smaller figures using their theory and it worked.

    One thing is for sure, humans would have been much more technologically advanced by now if it wasn't for Egypt getting conquered all the god damn time. Egyptians basically had to start all over, they were stripped of their literacy and knowledge from all the wars and invasions. Rome too, destroyed by barbarians.

    Comment


    • #3
      Good article , I find myself thinking on things like this for no apparent reason sometimes. One thing that dawned on me while I was thinking about it was how they got all the blocks to fit so perfectly togethar that you couldnt fit a playing card in between two of them.
      Then it dawned on me. I likened it to show how a 5000 piece puzzle is made.
      They don't cut each piece individually for a 5000 piece puzzle , they have the picture in front of them and they use a press to cut all the pieces at once.Hence they all fit together perfectly.
      Well, when the Egyptians were in the rock quarries , they didn't just cut each block to size and see if it fit later, they actually cut each block in order of where they were going to be set.
      So if on the pyramid , block A was next to block B, they actually cut block A , then the next block to be cut was block B , this insured that it would be a perfect fit.

      For example -
      The next five blocks are going to be A, B ,C ,D ,and E.
      It doesn't matter the angles you cut any of the blocks becaus the next block will be a mirror of the block before it if you cut it all from the same stone in the quarry.
      Cut block A with an 85 degree angle , Block B will have a 95 degree angle already, all you need to do is remove it from the quarry.
      Block C gets a 90degree angle , even if they mess up a tiny micro hair on the angle , the block next to it will have the same imperfection and wind up being placed right next to it anyway.
      Perfect fit not matter what.

      heres a link to some Incan blocks that are cut in all sorts of shapes and sizes but fit togethar perfectly.

      http://stufftoo.blogspot.com/2010/07...-of-tipon.html
      Last edited by Croyd; 05-01-2014, 10:41 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by -Kev- View Post
        I thought they used The Nile River to move the blocks. They showed it exactly how it was and they even reenacted it with smaller figures using their theory and it worked.

        One thing is for sure, humans would have been much more technologically advanced by now if it wasn't for Egypt getting conquered all the god damn time. Egyptians basically had to start all over, they were stripped of their literacy and knowledge from all the wars and invasions. Rome too, destroyed by barbarians.


        they'd definitely use the nile to transport quarried stone. you'd fill a barge with sand until it touches bottom. you drop a stone in there, and then remove the sand. once the b#Tch floats, you steer it down the river.

        this is a well documented process elsewhere, and i'm almost positive that it's documented in egypt.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by -Kev- View Post
          I thought they used The Nile River to move the blocks. They showed it exactly how it was and they even reenacted it with smaller figures using their theory and it worked.

          One thing is for sure, humans would have been much more technologically advanced by now if it wasn't for Egypt getting conquered all the god damn time. Egyptians basically had to start all over, they were stripped of their literacy and knowledge from all the wars and invasions. Rome too, destroyed by barbarians.
          Rome fell because of corruption. The liberals took over the senate and then they were sacked

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Mannie Phresh View Post
            Rome fell because of corruption. The liberals took over the senate and then they were sacked

            Comment


            • #7
              This is absolute bull****.

              We all know (because Alex Jones told us) that the BLACK Egyptians didn't build anything. It was Jesus Christ and aliens from Alpha Centauri that came down and helped build those pyramids.

              Humans can't make those things because even though we have mountains of evidence, we don't know how it was done.

              Comment


              • #8

                Comment


                • #9
                  [IMG]http://cdn.*****************/instances/500x/49321134.jpg[/IMG]

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    There's evidence that ancient Egyptians had electricity

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X
                    TOP