Re: Information & Power /Alexandria library

From: Dwayne (dwayne@pobox.com)
Date: Fri May 07 1999 - 01:50:56 MDT


Billy Brown wrote:

> Dwayne wrote:
> > The lower courses of the Temple of Jupiter at Baalbeck are, according to
> the
> > quotes I have seen, too massive to be moved using currently available
> > technology. Now, these may be quotes from engineers who have vested
> > interests, or they might be correct.
>
> There is no particular limit to how big an object can be moved with current
> technology. Once you get bigger than a few hundred tons you'll want to
> build custom equipment for the job, but that's mostly a matter of
> convenience - its more efficient than setting up large teams of comercial
> bulldozers & such. You can scale up to tens of thousands of tons before
> things even start to get tricky, which is far larger than anything that the
> ancients ever moved.

Are you sure of this? That we can move single objects over ground weighing
thousands of tons?

> It might be usefull to point out here that we usually think in terms of
> moving something a few thousand miles in a matter of days or weeks. The
> ancients, OTOH, were usually moving things a few dozen miles over the course
> of months or years. If you think like the ancients, those amazing feats
> suddenly start seeming a lot more doable.

"think like the ancients" means "have a casual disregard for human life and the
ability to command tens of thousands of people to do whatever the hell you
want" :-)

> > I have also seen footage of engineers saying that it is technically
> > impossible to align a site as large as the Great Pyramid at Giza with
> > the accuracy the pyramid displays. There's more to it than just moving
> > rocks about.
>
> Again, we're pretty sure we know how they did it. You just need a good
> knowledge of naked-eye astronomy, and lots of patience and attention to
> detail.

Um, please read my reply to Michael Lorry. I mean the foundations are extremely
square, edges and corners all line up, etc., to a very tiny degree of error.

> BTW - Surely you realize that in the modern world we can align a building to
> essentially infinite precision? (i.e. our instruments permit such high
> precision that the thermal flexing of the building & ground will produce
> much larger errors than an imprecision of our measurements)

Do we? I know we can, but do we? Has anyone done this in practice? The engineer
I saw quoted said that he builds very large buildings and it would be impossible
to align an object as large as the Great Pyramid to the degree it is. Um, I
mean, make sure it is square etc. when I say align. Gah.

> > The vitrified forts in ireland?
>
> Never heard of them. Do you have a link?

Nup, have a look. Large forts with walls made of rock heated until it fused into
a single block of glass.

Dwayne

--
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