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Using AI to further debunk ancient Egyptians used technologies to drill granite far beyond the current level.

sjastro

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I was referring to your lack of basic science and engineering knowledge in failing to see Dunn’s inconsistencies.

It is laughable I need to provide you with an example of your nonsensical concept of evidence which is based on personal opinion when you concluded your post that Dunn’s resume somehow makes him an authority on ancient Egyptian work practices and this constitutes evidence; I rest my case.

Since you bring up the subject again of Petrie’s sample which was addressed in my previous response and I want you to explain the copper oxidation found in the drill hole of the granite block.
 
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Warden_of_the_Storm

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You need to learn to stop rambling.

My question was in simple black and white, plain to read English: have you ever actually contacted any actual Egyptologists about this subject, or are you content on riding on what you think to be the coattails of one dead for a century?

But if you struggle with it, allow me to parse it down simply for you: have you contacted any modern and professional Egyptologists about your claims and ideas to get their thoughts on the matter, or is the work of a man who's been dead for 80 years and has no current bearing on the field since new findings and evidence have been found since he died the only thing that matters to you? Have you actually engaged with anyone professional Egyptologist, aka anyone who's actual job is to study the history of ancient Egypt in its myriad facets, or are you simply content to ramble around on forums with people who aren't experts?
 
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SelfSim

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You have misattributed the first three quotes resulting in your above responses directed at me.

I never made the comments to which to have responded.

Please make corrections.

I believe it was @sjastro who made them .. not me.
 
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sjastro

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Occasionally I communicate with the Egyptologist Chris Naunton who has been extremely helpful in the past but I would never waste his time in addressing the nonsense presented in this and in other threads.
 
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Warden_of_the_Storm

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Occasionally I communicate with the Egyptologist Chris Naunton who has been extremely helpful in the past but I would never waste his time in addressing the nonsense presented in this and in other threads.

Oh, the irony!
"Christopher Hugh Naunton is a British Egyptologist, a writer and a broadcaster, and an expert on the life of Flinders Petrie."
 
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SelfSim

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See this recent study:

On the possible use of hydraulic force to assist with building the step pyramid of saqqara

The use of hydraulics for erection of these massive objects is considered feasible (by the authors) when nearby water sources were available:
Note that this is a preprint paper only. It is an hypothesis and there is no agreement yet across Egyptologists or archaeologists about the concept.
 
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Hans Blaster

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"stupid" and "comprehension problem" are NOT THE SAME THING. There are many reasons a reader would have difficulty understanding a written work. "Stupidity" is one of them. Unfamiliarity with the terms used in the material being read is another. Reading faster than you can comprehend is another. A learning disability that affects reading or writing could as well.

Given how much "content" you hurl at us, what ever the underlying issues are it seems clear to me that you are trying to read too much (and write it back) too quickly. Take smaller bites and slow down and this should help you a lot and make you posts easier for us to comprehend as well.

This topic doesn't seem that controversial. Your interlocutors have referenced discussing the techniques that your sources claim are so mysterious. I've seen no evidence of controversy within the professional communities from anything any of you have posted on these topics.
You assume people like me have not already done this and they are blindly going along. In fact I would say the smaller % of those who genuinely question and are open to all possibilities are the true scientists.
You have demonstrated no familiarity with the primary or secondary literature on these topics. Everything you present to us comes through the frame of the outsiders, pseudoscholars, and hyper-"skeptics". That you would claim the mantle of "true scientists" for them is an insult to all of those working, publishing scientists.
This is a very common refrain I hear from the broad "science resistant" community on a wide variety of topics.
Yes of course. But the charge is Petrie was sloppy with his observations and measurements. Petrie was the pioneer of the methods of observation and measurements which still stand today.
Who has charged Petrie with being sloppy? If they have, address them about it not me.
They don't learn about pre-modern tools and techniques. That is the point.
I don't know who these "good scientists" think are being discredited are. The primary scientist mentioned on this thread is Petrie, but I don't see the criticism of him
I thought Dunn specialized in the machining of aircraft parts.
Yes and Dunn has stone masons on his team. Perhaps one of the best in Yousef Awyan whose father Abdel Hakim Awyan
is one of Egypts moist famous stone masons.
And yet this is the first I recall hearing of him. All of you posts have been about Dunn and Petrie.
If you ask most of the Egyptian stone masons they say that these ancient works are beyond what stone masons can do.
Perhaps that is because there is little market for stones cut by hand saws, etc.
If you claim that the work *couldn't* be done by versions of the tools the ancient Egyptians are known to have had, then you *are* saying something about how they were made.
Vase engineering? I think you've mistook craftsmanship for engineering.
My example was about the nature of biased sources where opinion of the source is dominating the claim. This is quite relevant to many of the sources you reference.
Oh good grief. Some of us would prefer to stand on solid information, evidence, and scholarship and not wander out on to the soft mud of wild speculation. None of this is about insulting the capabilities of ancient cultures, far from it.
So does Einstein know anything. Does hios theory still stand.
"Einstein" is a brain in a vat these days. I doubt he knows anything anymore.
OK, then it isn't that relevant to our "dispute".
I was referring to using non-powered tools, not earlier powered tools
I already replied to the technique issues in the other reply in this thread. I leave it there.
Oh my. I searched for electrodes in the Queen's Chamber and other than actual science papers describing the electrode the researchers used in the measurements, all I get are pseudoarcheology pages. Nothing credible.
Still means nothing to me. Never heard of "sacred geometry".
Ah so anything out of the oridinary is Hancocks fault. Isn't that a stereotypical fallacy and massive assumption. Plus I think its a fallacy that Hancock is being cast in this light and has nothing worth saying.
I didn't say it was Hancock's fault, only that "UnchartedX" seems to be a bit of a Hancock fan. (Hancock is the Oprah of pseudohistory. )
I agree.

He's not a hobbiest as I have shown. He has decades of experience and tech knowhow on Egyptology. His findings have scientific support from varying scientific disciplines. To call him such is a gross fallacy.
Amateur, hobbyist, either way, not a professional.
 
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Hans Blaster

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Having your cut diverge with a tool is not about failing to measure. I didn't say anything about cutting the wrong length.
That's not what source is. You posted a bunch of images with out labeling them as where you got them. Other than they look like human altered stone, I have *ZERO* information to go on about where they are from or why they are important because you failed to provide it. That's what providing a source is all about.
You're basing this "precision machine tools" claim for the cutting on *one* bad cut which absolutely could be some sort of incompetence or mismanagement. Examples of non-bad, but abandoned cuts likely only represent a change in plan (or some other issue not related to the cutting itself.) No need to assume a power tool was used because the cut was incomplete.
Imhotep was the architect under Djsor who made the Pyramid of Djoser and the step pyramid at Saqqara built during the 3rd Dynasty. He was made into a Pharoah because of his great craftmanship.
And it is because we know the history of the building of the pyramids and can see how the techiniques developed, who built them, and *WHY*. They were tombs.
And yet with all of this reading what you present here is by fringe amateurs who's claims don't just fill gaps, but challenge well established research. You seem to be reading bad sources and coming out with bad understandings.
 
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sjastro

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Very interesting this is consistent with the Egyptian pyramids being built along a lost branch of the Nile that eventually dried up.


The powerful 4th dynasty pharaohs built a harbour at Giza for the construction of the pyramids there.
Long-lost branch of the Nile was 'indispensable for building the pyramids,' research shows

Its remarkable what these dumb Egyptians could achieve but couldn't drill a hole in granite without super advanced technology.
 
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SelfSim

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The paper reads quite well, is well referenced and contains quite a lot of details for the proposed mechanism.
The idea of using hydraulic pressure to lift the massive stones would also surely call for precision joints between the shaft components having to withstand the tremendous pressures involved, (otherwise the whole lifting structure would burst).
In other words, the motivation for undertaking precision joints/engineering/surface finishing of the stone, would have been a more practical one, with very clear objectives. (Certainly not religious beliefs).
.. That is, if one prefers this hypothesis as a way of progressing understanding of the engineering thinking of the period(?) ...
 
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sjastro

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While the hypothesis does come across as far fetched, it did remind me of a program I saw on TV of a hypothesis which was eventually supported by discovery, the pyramid builders at Giza relied on water transport for building the pyramids.

Today the Nile is a fair distance from Giza but when the dried up Ahramat branch of the Nile was found leading to the discovery of a major harbour complex near the pyramids which served as a hub in transporting limestone and granite needed for the construction of the pyramids as well as trade and logistics to support the large workforce involved.

Sneferu who was the founder of the 4th dynasty used the population as beta testers who were required to build the first true pyramid as an evolution from the step pyramid until they got it right.

It took three attempts.


The first attempt was an engineering disaster as the pyramid collapsed, the second they got the math wrong and ended up with a weird bent shape and finally got it right with the Red pyramid which became the blueprint for the Giza pyramids.
 
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Hans Blaster

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An interesting hypothesis.
Note that this is a preprint paper only. It is an hypothesis and there is no agreement yet across Egyptologists or archaeologists about the concept.
a link to the final PDF from PLOS One was on that Researchgate site. (That site is a mess. I'm so glad we have better tools.)


[I don't see the need to "preprint shame". None of my stuff had changed significantly after posting a preprint to the arXiv.]
 
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SelfSim

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Yes .. I'm re-reading it and (FWIW), I'm quite impressed.
It certainly demonstrates how to support a 'far fetched' hypothesis, (my using @sjastro's term there).
I'd be interested to see how its treated by the Egyptology and Archaeology communities.

I had the thought that the whole pyramid and hydrologic system concept could also look (from my probably, cynical and definitely untrained archeo-eyes), like a big gold panning/refining operation facility(?) (Just kidding ..).
 
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stevevw

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This doesn’t even make any sense, I have never linked anything to Stocks, (I assume you mean Stokes)
Yes Stokes, the experiment you linked where you said this proves that Petries findings were wrong. The same experiment thats completely different to your Russian video results. So which one is the true and correct result because they are all different.
and are you so inept
There it is again the personal jibe. You can't discuss anything without resorting to personal jibes trying to make out that anyone who disagrees is stupid.
you can’t even recognize a close up image of the Russian experiment sample which I posted previously.


I did recognize the core and I showed you that it wasn't produce by a flywheel drill as you claim but a machine with a split copper pipe.

That core was produced by Nikolay Vasyutin the same ones that actually do use a flywheel and the results are completely different to your pic and Petries core. I mean you are calling me inept and stupid for not recognising things and yet you cannot recognise that your own core undermines your whole arguement

Once again here is the core from the same Russian scientist using the flywheel.










They look completely different. The core you linked was made by a machine drill and a split copper pipe which caused the light uniform and horizontal (not spiral) lines. Its a completely different method and result which is bad science.
What a nonsensical hand wave,
There it is again, this extreme mocking of different views like they are stupid. You now begin all you posts with such language and many times I end up showing you were mistaken.
you don’t get to make up stories that Dunn’s super technological drilling equipment doesn’t need to achieve the same precision of a modern day drill machine which is patently ridiculous and a complete copout.
Ah Petrie also said the same and Dunn was just confirming this. So we have two people coming to the same conclusion. What do you mean by Dunns drilling equipment. Dunn did not do any drilling. He was confirming Petrie's findings that due to the spirals it could be estimated that the drilling of core 7 had a fast feed rate.

The spiral shows the drill cut into the granite 1 inch for every 60 inches of spiral thread. Thats how they estimated the feed rate.
The inconvenient facts are pitch variations in Petrie’s sample are nowhere near the standards of modern drilling equipment but easily explained with tools we know the Egyptians used.
Like I said 10 times now its not the pitch that is determining the feed rate but that the grooves spiral down. Each spiral lands lower on the core than a horizontal striration. So each rotation is cutting in deeper than a horizontal line. The pitch may vary slightly between the two but its the spiralling of the pitch that is what is measured as to the feed rate because the spiral shows a deeper cut into the granite than a horizontal pitch.

So 10 horizontal pitches will not go down the core as low as 10 spiral pitches regardless of the variations in the pitch because the spiral cuts and landing lower down the core each turn. I have explained this several times now.

The most startling feature of the granite core Petrie describes is the spiral groove around the core indicating a feed rate of 0.100 inches per revolution of the drill.
And you wonder why I question your comprehension skills when this post rubbish like this.
Your doing it again calling me stupid and what I point is rubbish before you even prove your point and most of the time your wrong.
So your having a go at me for pointing out bad science. You cannot provide results to prove your case from tests that may use completely different methods or equipement to the Egyptians. Thats bad science.

Your also not acknowledging that a machine did this and not a flywheel which is another inconsistency with method. So far you have posted the Russian experiments and Stokes experiments all using different methods and equipment ie machine, bow drill and flywheel drill and split and unsplit copper pipes. Thats not good science.

You claim the split copper pipe doesn't cause the nicks and yet logic tells us that an open cut has edges on both sides which will nick the sides when it wobbles. Otherwise please provide evidence that the split will not cause the nicks. You make unsubstanciated claims.

You are also very quite about the machine that was used and not a flywheel and that the results from the actual flywheel show a completely different result to your pic.
The Egyptians took advantage of this property as during the drilling process corundom particles embedded into the copper to form a temporary fixed abrasive.
Ah so now your appealing to fixed point cutting just like Petrie and Dunn said. Yet you were attacking them as whackos. The abrasion of Corrundum will not stay fixed for continious spiral cuts and will quickly be ground into pulp.

If corrundum did cause the deep cuts then why do other tests with corrundum not produce the same horizontal lines as your pic.

Here are cores using corrundum as the abrasive that have not left lines like your core.


Expedition Magazine | Ancient Egyptian Stone-Drilling


Click to magnify and you will see not lines like your example and this is from the same scientists using the flywheel method and corrundum abrasive. If you look at the corrundum abrasive its like a paste and the grains are tiny and cannot cut deep grooves up to 1/100th to 1/500th of an inch.

Anyway regardless of what rationalisation you want to use the proof in the results which show its completely different to your example and there are very few lines on the core and its mostly abrased away as would be expected.
I have lost count the number of times it has been explained to you it is not the copper that does the cutting or produce striations but the abrasive.
And I have explained to you that the corrundum does not cut deep into the granite as it is grit it quickly is ground into pulp. The fact all the other results using corrundum do not produce the lines or deep cuts but rather light stratches is evidence for this above.
This has gone on far enough, the Egyptians drilled holes in granite blocks which were used as hubs for hinge pins.
Not all of them. You make out you absolutely know the way you dictate to me what is and is not. So far your evidence does not support your claims.

These have been found at Saqqara and the green colour in right hand image is due to oxidised copper.
Where do you think this copper came from, it illustrates that copper doesn’t cause striations but leaves a residue on granite.
The copper tubes had fixed cutting points so of course there will be copper. The copper tube was the tool as there was no other metal to use as the drill. But as the evidence shows there must have been fixed cutting points embedded in the copper that could penetrate deep and cut through quartz as easily as feldspar.

Loose corrundum aabrasive will not produce the same results as shown in the many tests using corrundum.

As Petrie stated.
This essential principle- that the cutting action was not by grinding with a powder, as in a lapidary's wheel, but by graving with a fixed point, as in a planing machine-must be clearly settled before any sound ideas of the methods or materials can be arrived at.

Reading Tool Marks on Egyptian Stone Sculpture
Maybe points made from hard minerals like corundum, microcrystalline varieties of quartz or other gemstones could be embedded in another material like copper
or wood and used as a graver. All of these hypotheses require further investigation, including the consideration of contemporary gemstone carving technologies around the region.82
Reading Tool Marks on Egyptian Stone Sculpture - Rivista del Museo Egizio
Wrong it your delusion
There you go again. You keep belittling me and I keep showing your name calling is unjustified. Even if I was wrong you don't call people who truely believe what they do as deluded because it disagrees with your view. I have shown that you are wrong several times but I don't say your deluded. This debate has been going on for over 100 years and there is no resolution so how can you be calling people deluded when there is no absolute answer.
in refusing to accept the high pitch measurement standard deviations of both samples stems from the same source that they were produced in similar ways using the tools we know the Egyptians used.
Except as I jhave said many times now that the pitch was spiral and deep cutting through quartz deeply up to 1/100th to 5/100 of an inch deep in Petries core number 7.

Your examples and others I have linked are light strirations and horizontal surface lines. Completely different.
 
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stevevw

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I was referring to your lack of basic science and engineering knowledge in failing to see Dunn’s inconsistencies.
Ok where is Dunns inconsistencies. He supported Petriues findings and Dunns findings have been supported by other independent tests. I have linked the evidence.

But you want to call me stupid for not recognising Dunns inconsistencies and yet you can't even recognise the glaring inconsistencies in the results of experiments, even your own links.
But wait a minute you have provided absolutely no evidence for this and are claiming to know more than Dunn. You are yourself making the same claim logically that your resume makes you more an authoprity to kinow Dunn is inncorrect.
Since you bring up the subject again of Petrie’s sample which was addressed in my previous response and I want you to explain the copper oxidation found in the drill hole of the granite block.
I just did. The only tube or rod that could have been used to drill holes is copper. That was the only metal available. So as Petrie, Dunn and two other independent analysis stated fixed points of something harder than granite like quartz, diamond or corrundum were embedded in the copper tube or rod.

The fact your missing regardless of copper found in the hole is that these independent findings state a fixed cutting point was used to be able to produce the spiral deep cuts in the granite. Your making red herrings to avoid this important fact.

It is this fact alone forgetting everything else that needs to be resolved as the paper I linked above and Petrie stated.

This is the smoking gun as it makes all the difference between abrasion alone which cannot make the deep cuts and only leaves light horizontal lines and Petries core which has a deep spiral cut into the granite cutting through quartz as easily as feldspar. Abrasions alone cannot achieve this.
 
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stevevw

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Having your cut diverge with a tool is not about failing to measure. I didn't say anything about cutting the wrong length.
I think it is. You measure the line and then you cut along the line. If you measure the line crooked then the cut will be crooked. Otherwise what are you saying they did not have a line to cut to and just guessed if the line was straight.
Ah I see. I originally linked the video they came from and then just linked the images without the reference thinking everyone would have already seen the original links. The problem is because they come from seperate video's the page would be full of video links which would then expand the post making it too big.

You were checking my posts and seem to know what I was posting so you can find all those reference links in the other thread. I must have linked the same pics about 5 times now having to repeat the facts because people were dismissing things.

The images speak for themselves and you don't need a description as to what they are referring to. WE are talking about ancient advanced tech and the signatures in the rocks show this.
I am not basing it on one cut but many and its the overall evidence this builds for why it wasn't a mistake while cutting with a saw. The flat cut on the basalt block that looks like the cut was machines is another and I linked other pics where there was a mistake or a test run of some sort which shows machine like signatures.




This cut basalt comes from a number of places in Egypt including the pavement around the Giza pyramid, the old Kingdom site at Abusir and Saqqara.

The cut seems to curve more at the far end like it changed direction. It looks as though sheered off in the direction of the pointing finger. Closer inspection reveals machine marks in the same direction. A hand saw could not cut such sharp and curved lines while leaving a super flat surface well beyond the size of any saw found.





Granite slab at Abu Roash with a machined step. The slab surface is flat except for this deeper step shaved into it. The step doesn't run the full length but rather like a gouge in the middle as though whatever was cutting or more likely planing a layer off accidently went deeper for a few seconds. Also look at the curved sharpe edge once again like the one above. A small straight saw cannot produce these signatures.



Another gouge in a basalt paver at the great pyramid. Looks like whatever was cutting the surface dug in and went off line and left machine marks.

If there is any mistakes its this and like the box cut that suddenly goes crooked the same with this example where the machining suddenly went deeper.
And it is because we know the history of the building of the pyramids and can see how the techiniques developed, who built them, and *WHY*. They were tombs.
Actually these pyramids were built in a very short time spand vert early around 200 years of a 5,000 plus year history and then more or less stopped with the other precision works. The pyramids are not necessarily tombs as no mummies were found in them.

My point was that Imhotep was a great craftsman and overseen much of the works we see and I don't think he would have just let anyone with little skill work on the boxes.
And yet with all of this reading what you present here is by fringe amateurs who's claims don't just fill gaps, but challenge well established research. You seem to be reading bad sources and coming out with bad understandings.
No the science behind the works is not by amateurs. Flinders Petrie and Dunn are not amateurs and the analysts who did the other works such as stone masons, metrologists, Egyptologists and geometrists and not amateurs.

But you don't have to be an expert to see the signatures in the stone to know they don't match the tools in the records.
 
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Warden_of_the_Storm

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No the science behind the works is not by amateurs. Flinders Petrie and Dunn are not amateurs and the analysts who did the other works such as stone masons, metrologists, Egyptologists and geometrists and not amateurs.

Have you actually contacted any modern Egyptologists to talk to them about your ideas? Why are you focused on Flinders Petries and Flinders Petrie ALONE as the sole representative of your knowledge about Egypt?
 
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Hans Blaster

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No the science behind the works is not by amateurs. Flinders Petrie and Dunn are not amateurs and the analysts who did the other works such as stone masons, metrologists, Egyptologists and geometrists and not amateurs.
Again with Petrie. Sigh. No one is disputing Petrie's measurements from 100 or so years ago. I believe someone (perhaps you) noted that Petrie didn't offer any interpretations of the grooves and the "spirals".

Without Petrie, you have no Egyptologists. All you have is an aerospace engineer with a fantastical claim about a pyramid power.
But you don't have to be an expert to see the signatures in the stone to know they don't match the tools in the records.
The actual experts don't seem to agree with you.
 
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stevevw

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Have you actually contacted any modern Egyptologists to talk to them about your ideas? Why are you focused on Flinders Petries and Flinders Petrie ALONE as the sole representative of your knowledge about Egypt?
Have you done the same because your making absolute claims I am 100% wrong in everything I say. That in itself can easily be proven wrong as no one is ever 100% correct and anyone making absolute claims should be seen as making claims they cannot support.

So is this the new criteria that only those who have contacted Egyptologists can comment lol.

I refer to Petrie because when it comes to core number 7 which is what this thread is about or other cores Flinders Petrie is the formost expert. He found the core, he studied it many times and he studied many similar cores as he lived in Giza for 7 years. I think he has earnt the right to be cited when it comes to granite cores in Egypt.

I've also used two of the top stone masons in Egypt Yousef Awyan and his father Abd'El Hakim Awyan. So do they count. I don't think I have seen one Egyptologists linked by your side. Only Russian scientists and Stokes on some TV doco.
 
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Warden_of_the_Storm

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Please answer the questions put to you as they stand:
Have you actually contacted any modern Egyptologists to talk to them about your ideas? Why are you focused on Flinders Petries and Flinders Petrie ALONE as the sole representative of your knowledge about Egypt?
 
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