They also had to do a ton of repairs around the whole area.View attachment 588615
The top is Chichen Itza in 1892. Just to show how much the jungle had overtaken it.
I see statements like this all the time. Could you explain what exactly that means?The manufacturing tolerances of the Pyramid's construction surpass the tolerances of any modern skyscraper or building. Which was the initial spark for this guy to begin researching it.
I see statements like this all the time. Could you explain what exactly that means?
The obvious provocative reason for people saying things like that is to indicate that the ancient builders were somehow superior to those of today, but that's such a vague statement that no one ever really quantifies it. Do you mean stone blocks are fitted together within n tolerance, or the entire room is within an RCH of perfect, or what? Because today we use shit like grout so it doesn't have to be within a thousandth of an inch...but if it has to be, like in a lot of high tech fabrication plants, it sure the fuck is. Just because a skyscraper has tolerances doesn't mean we aren't capable of incredible precision, but a statement like the one quoted above just completely ignores that as if to say that they were somehow better back then than we are right now.
Sure, for their time they were pretty precise, I'm not arguing that. But unless you have something specific, I'm pressing X to doubt that their tolerances are better than what we are capable of. Maybe a modern skyscraper doesn't need to be that tight because we build it in a way that has flexibility and leeway, instead of building the entire fucking thing out of stone blocks, but that doesn't mean we couldn't do it. But I see that same type of statement constantly, and it just isn't true. Fucking Jose with a laser level can get a wall just as tight as anything in the pyramids if there is a bottle of cerveza at the end of it.
Unless I'm misinterpretating what you and countless others are saying with statements like that, so I'm open to being proven wrong.
Diorite was apparently available. I'm not sure about different variations, but I know in general it is second in hardness only to diamond. It could be used to work the granite.Please keep in mind I am just an enjoyer here and I am not a machinist or anything. But I understand his argument like this.
If you build something that is within the tolerance of 0.010 of an inch such as much of the Great Pyramid and numerous other artifacts in the region. You must have had a reason for doing so. As the greater the tolerance the greater level of effort to require it. Furthering this is that this level of precision is beyond reckoning of the human senses. Meaning a system of measurement had to have been designed to measure things down to this level as well as measurement tools to use.
Academia looks at this and just goes "it must have been for religious reasons, whatever." But the guy pointing this out is a machinist. He is not an academic. For practical reasons you wouldn't do something 100x more complicated if you didn't have to. So why did you have to? He points out other things like the Egyptians clearly made efforts to not bother with fine finishing where nobody would ever see it in other places so why is there precision where absolutely nobody would have ever seen it at all?
As the civilization was supposed to have nothing but stone and copper tools to accomplish all of this.
I don't disagree with what you said here in general, but you answered a different question than what I asked. Basically, you are saying that the people that built the pyramid seemed to have better tools and methods than we expected them to, and that they achieved more precision than might have been necessary. Cool, not gonna argue that. I'm not knowledgeable enough nor do I care enough to debate that.Please keep in mind I am just an enjoyer here and I am not a machinist or anything. But I understand his argument like this.
If you build something that is within the tolerance of 0.010 of an inch such as much of the Great Pyramid and numerous other artifacts in the region. You must have had a reason for doing so. As the greater the tolerance the greater level of effort to require it. Furthering this is that this level of precision is beyond reckoning of the human senses. Meaning a system of measurement had to have been designed to measure things down to this level as well as measurement tools to use.
Academia looks at this and just goes "it must have been for religious reasons, whatever." But the guy pointing this out is a machinist. He is not an academic. For practical reasons you wouldn't do something 100x more complicated if you didn't have to. So why did you have to? He points out other things like the Egyptians clearly made efforts to not bother with fine finishing where nobody would ever see it in other places so why is there precision where absolutely nobody would have ever seen it at all?
As the civilization was supposed to have nothing but stone and copper tools to accomplish all of this.