King of the Americas
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2001
- Messages
- 6,513
I found a nice link to a paper on metallurgy in precolumbian south america...
Thank you for the link, AND telling me which page to address.
Did you read page 24?
I found a nice link to a paper on metallurgy in precolumbian south america...
Thank you for the link, AND telling me which page to address.
Did you read page 24?
Yes, actually I did. If you're planning on pointing out something from it, I'll know you're quoting out of context. Given that that page is mostly a compare/contrast between how tin-bronze smelting evolved in Asia, with one set of ores, versus how it evolved in the Andes, with a different set of ores, it neither supports nor contradicts your claim, as the tiwanuku smelters used arsenical bronze.
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As for the stone carving, we're left with your argument from ignorance. You don't know how to do it and can't do it even with modern tools, so you believe that no one knows how to do it, even in the face of plenty of people, including myself, stating that we do know how. Dunning Kruger much?
I have said I don't know what was used to do the work, and with modern tools it would take 'me' years to duplicate. I postulate that the period tools were not up to the take...UNTIL SOMEONE CAN PROVE OTHERWISE.
Except that this is your claim. Why should be burden on proof be on someone else?
Why should the originators of the claim that this work was done with ONLY known period tools and techniques not be required to prove this assertion?
I'm going to ignore your opinions on it, then. For someone who pretends to be interested in the subject, you've shown a remarkable lack of willingness to actually LEARN anything. Besides, scientific papers are written very precisely, and are VERY information-dense; skimming a few pages is worse than not reading the paper.KotA said:I only skimmed a few pages.
They ARE required to provide evidence. And they do--entire fields of study worth. You're simply too lazy to actually figure out what they've found, what evidence they do have (see above). And you're arrogant enough to believe that your willful refusal to learn what people have spent (and, at times, GIVEN) their lives to learn grants you the right to demand that we take your inane babbling seriously.Why should the originators of the claim that this work was done with ONLY known period tools and techniques not be required to prove this assertion?
Because science is not a series of facts floating in isolation; it's a series of facts floating in a framework of other facts, theories, and hypotheses. You want an isolated datum, but in order to UNDERSTAND that datum you need to read the entire book.Rather than say here's a book, the information you seek is in there somewhere, why not say here's the information found on page 256.
That's usually the way citations work...
For Pete's sake! CUTTING and CARVING are two different things, as are HARDNESS and BRITTLENESS. As I've stated before, sand, sandstone, and quartzite are all a hardness of 7. Obviously there's more involved. Furthermore, you collect quartzite by hitting it with a steel hammer. Steel, incidently, has a hardness of between 5 and 5.5, depending on the alloy. Which is much, much softer than quartz. (For those who actually care about science, I learned a neat trick: My wedding ring is stainless steel, and a quick way to tell if I'm dealing with quartz or calcite [not always the easiest thing in the world] is to pick it up with my left hand. If my ring damages it, it's limestone; otherwise, it's a silicate rock). How, exactly, does one carve sandstone, with a hardness of 7, if the chissels all have a hardness of 5.5 at best?Q: Will this metal cut or carve the hardest stone at PP?
There is already enough evidence to support that claim. Examples of such evidence has already been posted in this thread.
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Postulations are not evidence.
Using period tools to replicate the work WOULD BE.
No such replication has occurred, something I am working to get the Mythubsters to fix.
Help me HELP YOU 'prove me wrong'...
Help me HELP YOU 'prove me wrong'...
Because that's all there is, postulations.
Yes, but even if we haven't done that it does not automatically mean that it isn't possible and some "lost technology" did it.
Because the Mythbusters are the pinnacle of scientific research.
Why? You haven't provided any actual evidence to suggest that you are right. All we've had is you arguing from incredulity. You're doing a pretty good job at proving yourself wrong.
Please feel free to correct my observation, I only skimmed a few pages.
I'm going to ignore your opinions on it, then. For someone who pretends to be interested in the subject, you've shown a remarkable lack of willingness to actually LEARN anything. Besides, scientific papers are written very precisely, and are VERY information-dense; skimming a few pages is worse than not reading the paper.
...
For Pete's sake! CUTTING and CARVING are two different things, as are HARDNESS and BRITTLENESS. As I've stated before, sand, sandstone, and quartzite are all a hardness of 7. Obviously there's more involved. Furthermore, you collect quartzite by hitting it with a steel hammer. Steel, incidently, has a hardness of between 5 and 5.5, depending on the alloy. Which is much, much softer than quartz. (For those who actually care about science, I learned a neat trick: My wedding ring is stainless steel, and a quick way to tell if I'm dealing with quartz or calcite [not always the easiest thing in the world] is to pick it up with my left hand. If my ring damages it, it's limestone; otherwise, it's a silicate rock). How, exactly, does one carve sandstone, with a hardness of 7, if the chissels all have a hardness of 5.5 at best?![]()
Until then, we DON'T know how it was done, period.
The technology that did the work at PP is "lost", right now.
I don't know where else to turn to, in order to test this myth.
There is nothing for me to be 'right' about... I am arguing that there is NO EVIDENCE that these stones were carved with traditional/known techniques using known period tools. I am not the one claiming I KNOW how these works were created, so the burden isn't or shouldn't be on me to prove anything.
There is already enough evidence to support that claim. Examples of such evidence has already been posted in this thread.
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So did you read the link?
So WILL this metal alloy will cut OR carve the PP stones, or not?
'I' don't know how to carve descending inlayed squares into hard stone with 'soft' metal...if YOU do please feel free to share your technique(s). I'd be interested in seeing the work done.
I must have missed it.
Where are these evidentiary examples?
I don't need to. Here is your argument:KotA said:So did you read the link?
So WILL this metal alloy will cut OR carve the PP stones, or not?
'I' don't know how to carve descending inlayed squares into hard stone with 'soft' metal...if YOU do please feel free to share your technique(s). I'd be interested in seeing the work done.
In the peer-reviewed literature, which has been cited numerous times in this thread and which you steadfastly refuse to read. (And no, skimming a few pages does not equal reading the reports.)I must have missed it.
Where are these evidentiary examples?
As I have stated, many times in this thread: You have not read the peer-reviewed literature and therefore you are too ignorant to make this statement.The technology that did the work at PP is "lost", right now.
As I have stated, many times before: The peer-reviewed archeological literature. Any library should be able to help you. Should take a good afternoon's worth of work.I don't know where else to turn to, in order to test this myth.
And I'm arguing that by your own admissions you are too ignorant of the current state of knowledge to make such a claim.There is nothing for me to be 'right' about... I am arguing that there is NO EVIDENCE that these stones were carved with traditional/known techniques using known period tools.
You ARE demanding, however, that we perform your experiments for you, despite your complete lack of knowledge about the archeological record. You don't even know if this has been done before. You don't know what's been found at the site, beyond a few isolated "facts" from fringe websites and TV.I am not the one claiming I KNOW how these works were created, so the burden isn't or shouldn't be on me to prove anything.
No. YOU don't know. You also don't have any clue what scientists know, because you haven't bothered to look.Until then, we DON'T know how it was done, period.
As anyone who's ever collected a hand sample can tell you, shaping stone doesn't require materials harder than the stone--otherwise we'd never be able to use rock hammers to collect quartzite or basalt hand samples. King of the Americas has latched on to one concept, ignoring all the rest of the concepts involved in stone carving, and demands that we do the same. In reality, KotA should learn about stone--concepts such as cleavage, fracture, cementation, grain size, etc., and their affects on the stress/strain relationships in the stone. It shows an amateur's perspective, and a bad amateur at that (the good ones learn everything they can).Andrew Wiggin said:Short answer; the chisels are hard enough to do what they did. It's your technique that's lacking when you fail with better tools.
You have a real thing about bandwagons, don't you?Postulations are not evidence.
Using period tools to replicate the work WOULD BE.
No such replication has occurred, something I am working to get the Mythubsters to fix.
I'd like to urge ALL of you to support a test by the Mythbusters and post your support here:
http://community.discovery.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9551919888/m/50319156501/p/1
Help me HELP YOU 'prove me wrong'...