View Full Version : Were Ancient Builders Trying To Tell Us Something?
Skywizard
2nd September 2012, 23:41
When I see some of the ancient structures of stone buildings and walls I am amazed at the complexity of how some of them were built. Even more bewildering is the sheer size and weight of many of those stones. These enormous pieces of stone, like the ones below, have been made to perfectly fit, not just in a stacked uniform fashion, but in what appears to be a completely random manner. This seems like this would have involved placing then removing and trimming each stone (probably many times over) until they fit together. But if you stop and think, they could cut, move (sometimes miles) and stack stones weighing 100s of tons, so this might not have been that difficult for them to do.
Sometimes I feel as if they may have known their technology would have been lost to future civilizations and their message in their building was to tell us “yes we were smart… we were very, very smart!” :lol:
18071
This truly is extraordinary.
DeDukshyn
2nd September 2012, 23:54
According to the locals' legend - the "original" site of Machu Picchu (it has been built over a few times like most very ancient structures in the world - especially in the Americas), who's stone work looks uncannily exactly the same as what you posted in the pic, was built by a man who came from a box from the ocean (Noah's Ark parallel?), and they say he did not build it with his hands, but "from a dream while he slept". Supposedly the stones cut and fitted themselves from either a "man" in a deep meditative state, or via the dream state or ethereal and converted (tuned) to our "frequency".
So even greater than "smart" they may have been incredibly spiritually advanced enough to manipulate the creation matrix with their minds alone.
These types of stonework - as you pictured are incredibly fascinating for one main reason -- if you want to build a wall - you don't try to do it in the must difficult way possible -- you do it in the easiest way that gets the job done. The picture above shows a nearly impossible feat of stone architecture - who would cut their stones like that and why? It was either 1) easy for them to do, or 2) there was another purpose which evades our ability to understand.
WhiteFeather
3rd September 2012, 00:21
Heres another spin. Have a gander.
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?35579-Were-Stones-Softened-To-Build-Peru-s-Ancient-Structures
DeDukshyn
3rd September 2012, 00:34
Heres another spin. Have a gander.
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?35579-Were-Stones-Softened-To-Build-Peru-s-Ancient-Structures
Good stuff Whitefeather! But wouldn't it still be easier to make the "bricks" the same size and shape? Again, why choose a more difficult and slower method?
Has this method been reproduced? (sorry I skimmed really quickly - it may have been in there and I missed it)
ThePythonicCow
3rd September 2012, 03:24
Good stuff Whitefeather! But wouldn't it still be easier to make the "bricks" the same size and shape? Again, why choose a more difficult and slower method?
More earthquake resistant? Longer lasting for other such reasons?
onawah
3rd September 2012, 03:29
I don't remember which documentary it was, but I saw one about sacred sites with stonework like this, and the explanation was that when stones are fitted in that seemingly random pattern, they are much more resistant to earthquakes.
Lightworker87
3rd September 2012, 03:33
ive seen similar things while travelling in ecuador and peru. :)
WhiteFeather
3rd September 2012, 16:38
Good stuff Whitefeather! But wouldn't it still be easier to make the "bricks" the same size and shape? Again, why choose a more difficult and slower method?
More earthquake resistant? Longer lasting for other such reasons?
Good Point Paul.
DeDukshyn
3rd September 2012, 16:49
Good stuff Whitefeather! But wouldn't it still be easier to make the "bricks" the same size and shape? Again, why choose a more difficult and slower method?
More earthquake resistant? Longer lasting for other such reasons?
Yes, this may be plausible, if they expected or needed it to last for 1000s of years.
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