Im sorry but you are missing the point
No, you.
Yes, they lacked such advanced technological concepts and innovations like "guy pull block" and even "guy push block" that modern experimental archaeologists have now gained access to and used to move stuff.
i.e. physics or havent you progressed that far in school yet? We cant keep moving at your pace, we will have to step it up soon.
Most children don't need physics to know how to push a block. (but if you were a late bloomer, I understand.)
But they probably know nothing about leverage, or the mathematics required, the astronomy necesarry to build the things in the first place. You misunderstand me, the people that built these things were far more advanced and had far more knowledge than people today, that is why they cant be reproduced. Many many attempts have been made to emulate the great pyramid. ALL HAVE FAILED.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes
Or was he an alien?
Im sorry but you are missing the point
No, you.
i was the one making the point, try to keep up.
indeed. You can try as you like but your childs comments really are futile unless boring me to death is your objective.
indeed. You can try as you like but your childs comments really are futile unless boring me to death is your objective.
What did you think my objective was?
anyones guess, to show the world your mushroom impression is my punt as it is all you are likely to achieve.
anyones guess, to show the world your mushroom impression is my punt as it is all you are likely to achieve.
I'm sorry, but this post made no sense. Please try again.
Oh it meant made plenty of sense, just not to you, still its in keeping with the rest of your life huh. I feed on shit and live in the dark, i am oinquarki, i am a mushroom. Try to keep up.
You need to get your ass kicked again.
Again? any time you fancy little man.
whats your address bex? i love a road trip and an kickin your ass would just be the cherry on top of the banana split. :)
anyones guess, to show the world your mushroom impression is my punt as it is all you are likely to achieve.
I'm sorry, but this post made no sense. Please try again.
drunk stupid people are even more fun to fuck with. hows your mom doin bex? ;)
Oh it meant made plenty of sense, just not to you, still its in keeping with the rest of your life huh. I feed on shit and live in the dark, i am oinquarki, i am a mushroom. Try to keep up.
I guess it's a case of selective interpretation like the psychologists say - you get out of information what's already in your head; When read the word "mushroom", I think of mushrooms, not of **** in the dark.
the aliens showed me the secret passage :) oh and thats not your address. come on pussy, i mean englishman
Oh it meant made plenty of sense, just not to you, still its in keeping with the rest of your life huh. I feed on shit and live in the dark, i am oinquarki, i am a mushroom. Try to keep up.
I guess it's a case of selective interpretation like the psychologists say - you get out of information what's already in your head; When read the word "mushroom", I think of mushrooms, not of **** in the dark.
Then i will also fry and eat you to help you with your fungus act, this is called a metaphor, ask your teacher.
Well here's a list of the experiments where people have actually tried it. Amazing to me they did so well with so little practice. Imagine what they could have accomplished if it was their day job.
For additional details of most experiments see related pages.
In 1997 Julian Richards teamed up with Mark Witby and Roger Hopkins to conduct several experiments to replicate the construction at Stonehenge for NOVA's "Secrets of Lost Empires" mini series. They initially failed to tow a 40 ton monolith with 130 men but after adding additional men towing as well as some men using levers to prod the megalith forward they succeeded in inching it forward a small distance.[70] Josh Bernstein and Julian Richards organized an effort to pull a 2 ton stone on wooden tracks with a group of about 16 men. Approximately 8 men pulled each ton.[71] Thor Heyerdahl organized an effort to pull a 10 ton Moai on a sledge with a group of 180 men. Approximately 18 men pulled each ton.[72][73][74] Mark Lehner and NOVA organized an experiment to tow stones and to build a pyramid 9 meters wide by 9 meters deep by 6 meters high. They were able to tow a 2 ton block on a sledge across wood tracks with 12 to 20 men. Approximately 6 to 10 men pulled each ton. The pyramid was 54 cubic meters total estimated weight 135 tons. It was built out of 186 stones. The average weight of each stone was almost 1,500 lb (680 kg). (.75 tons) They found that 4 or 5 men could use levers to flip stones less than a ton and roll them to transport them. 44 men took 22 days to complete the pyramid including the carving of the stones. They used iron to carve the stones that wasn't available to the ancient Egyptians. Egyptians had to use copper. They also used a modern front end loader to accelerate the work on the lower courses. They were unable to use the front end loader to install the capstone since it was too high and had to use levers to raise it to 20 feet (6.1 m).[75] Henri Chevrier organized an effort to pull a 6 ton block on a sledge with a group of 6 men. Approximately 1 man pulled each ton.[76] other reports claim that Chevier's experiment required 3 men to pull each ton.[77] Marinos Carburis, lieutenant-colonel in the Russian Army, organized the move of an enormous boulder called the Thunder Stone (Russian, Камень-Гром) from the Gulf of Finland in 1768 to Saint Petersburg, Russia for the purpose of using it as a pedestal for the Bronze Horseman statue. Based on the density of granite, the mass of the Thunder Stone has been estimated to be around 1500 tonnes. This was done by rolling it on bronze ball bearings on a track. It took an estimated 400 men 9 months to move it.[78] Giovanni Battista Belzoni organized an effort to pull a 7.5 ton fragment of a statue of Ramses on rollers with a group of 130 men in 1815. This statue was towed to the river and loaded on a barge where it was sent to London. Progress increased with practice as they went along. Approximately 17 or 18 men pulled each ton.[79] Austen Henry Layard organized an effort to transport 2 10 ton colossal Statues of a winged Lion and a winged Bull with a group of 300 men in 1847. He loaded them on a wheeled cart and towed them from Nimrud to the river and loaded on a barge where it was sent to London. Approximately 30 men pulled each ton.[80] Paul Emile Botta and Victor Place attempted to move 2 additional 30 ton colossi to Paris from Khorsabad in 1853. In order to facilitate their shipment to Paris they were sawed in pieces and they still ran into problems. One of them fell into the Tigris river never to be retrieved. The other made it to Paris.[80] In a 2001 exercise in experimental archaeology, an attempt was made to transport a large stone along a land and sea route from Wales to Stonehenge. Volunteers pulled it for some miles (with great difficulty) on a wooden sledge over land, using modern roads and low-friction netting to assist sliding, but once transferred to a replica prehistoric boat, the stone sank in Milford Haven, before it even reached the rough seas of the Bristol Channel.[81] Charles Love experimented with a 10-ton replica of a Moai on Easter Island. His first experiment found rocking the statue to walk it was too unstable over more than a few hundred yards. He then found that placing the statue upright on two sled runners atop log rollers, 25 men were able to move the statue 150 feet (46 m) in two minutes. Approximately 2.5 men pulled each ton.[82] Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehner teamed up with a NOVA crew to conduct an Obelisk erecting experiment, they successfully erected a 25 ton obelisk in late summer of 1999. They also managed to tow it a short distance.[83][84][85] Roger Hopkins and Vince Lee both theorized about how the megalithic stones were moved at Baalbek, these theories involved either towing them or flipping them.[86] Vince Lee participated in experiments to test his theories about how the walls of Sacsayhuamán were built.[86]All this does is serve to show how difficult it is for men today, bear in minde deal that we arent dealing with one 40 ton stone we are dealing with probably hundreds of monuments all over the world built with millions of these kind of stones and this was all thousands of years ago. You would think with civilisation just getting started they would take it easy to begin with huh? Imagine if these men were able to transport enough of these stones, not just one with huge difficulty, to the desired site, would they have the know how to put them together with absolute precision? without mortar so that you couldnt get a blade in between. Man is shoddy and the job would have been bodged. I`ll say it again, these places were not built by man or even for man, consider the bigger picture not just how the stones got there.
No, one would think if they did it every day as part of their job, they would get better and better at it, and strong from the physical labor.
Whereas the people doing most of these experiments were likely out of shape weekend volunteers.
So no, your argument does not pass the test of basic logic.
And you all should really be nicer to each other. As quarki, a kid wiser than his years, said:
Im sorry but you are missing the point, and i am sorry because i truly have respect for you, as for quarki who is wiser than his years, what is he 6?