aggle-rithm
Ardent Formulist
I don't believe in aliens...
Amen! We're all brothers under the semi-permeable membrane.
I don't believe in aliens...
The work is an indication of advanced technology.
WHAT that technology actually was will be told when we find it.
Until then, all that we know is that we DON'T know what was used, that the technology used to accomplish these work is "lost".
Ah, I see... Generic, vague "advanced" as in "them", "ascended"...
But hey, if you can't find any single piece of the advanced hardware, then... Note you can not even find a bit of stainless steel, plastic, copper wire, glass, anything related to modern machinery at the sites you claim to have been built with these modern tool.
Now, besides this fact KotA, you are aware that each tool leaves its tell-tale mark on its product? So, where are the marks left by these advanced tools? Why there are no published study showing these marks?
And why are you ignoring the links we posted where experimental archeology folks say -and show- how the carvings could be made even with stone tools? Same is valid for the documentary on the building of Macchu Picchu?
Maybe because they do not fit with your "feelings"?
And the logical assumption would be that this technology, in whatever form, was developed by known entities, not fanciful hobgoblins.
I agree completely with the Stargate angle except for one minor quibble; Stargate's Ancients came from another galaxy.
KotA's "gods of the heavens" come from a garbled mess of explanations that equate to "aliens" in every sense but the simple fact that he doesn't want to call them that.
Either way; aliens, I say.
So you've never heard of Hero of Alexandria.
I have two chisels, one is carbide tipped, and the other is forged steel. I don't use the steel one on anything but limestone, and concrete patio stones. Granite dulls it fast. The granite dulls the carbide tip too, but you can get 'some' stone moved, (about- 6-8 grams), with an 1/8 inch lettering chisel, before it is dull.
Gold & copper alloys would be softer than my forged steel chisel...
Those stones weren't chiseled into those shapes.
Is this and argument from incompetence?
It is a hammer, chisel, and stone. The pointy end of the chisel goes on the stone, then you hit the other end with the hammer. The heavier the hammer or harder the swing, the more stone your chisel will remove until it is dull.
One's competence rises, when you learn how hard to strike which part of the stone to achieve a desired result.
A mechanical hammer knows nothing, but moves stone fast.
A master mason knows when, where, and how to remove the right amount of stone, in a precise manner.
Your repeated attacks on my experience while you have none whatsoever is sad.
So, are hammer and chisel the only possible stoneworking instruments? Just curious, because that seems to be the basis of your argument.
TODAY we use air hammers, water jets, sandblasters, diamond tipped saws, and carbide tipped chisels.
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE ANCIENTS USED, but they didn't do this work with simple alloyed chisels...
The basis of my argument is that there is too much mastery level work to do with subpar tools. This work was done by an unknown advanced technology...
The basis of your argument is false.
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE ANCIENTS USED, but they didn't do this work with simple alloyed chisels...
The basis of my argument is that there is too much mastery level work to do with subpar tools. This work was done by an unknown advanced technology...
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE ANCIENTS USED, [...]
This work was done by an unknown advanced technology...
Only if you ignore the amount of mastery level work.
Which link did I miss?
I've never mentioned hobgoblins either...
All of them, and particularly this
[qimg]http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a178/belmarduk/pumapunka14.jpg[/qimg]
which shows drill marks made by a native drill on a puma punku block, the same type used to make holes in beads, like these
[qimg]http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a178/belmarduk/history_jewelry_aztec_jadite_beads.jpg[/qimg]
these are made of Jadeite which is harder than andesite
so what KotA is saying here, is that native beads can only be made with advanced technology
woop de woop
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One of my favorite stories is that of Easter Island, where western visitors puzzled over the giant statues found there. There were many competing theories about how they were crafted, from fairly reasonable explanations to the intervention of aliens or supernatural beings.
Then some clever soul got the bright idea to actually ASK THE PEOPLE THAT LIVED THERE how the statues were built...and they, of course, knew exactly how it was done.
