some even claim a hydroponics system using the Nile.
edit: yeah my b, I thought uall was askong howd they get the blocks there.. as its said the masonary was taken place in the earlier cataract down stream in upper KMT egypt..
the sand method is the closes to how they were building them. and the mold of step pyramids and the pyramid of djoser is proof
Last edited by BitterDiesel; 09-15-2021 at 11:34 PM..
what you do is place the 1st level
you cover that level with sand then you have a ramp to the second level
each level you lay you back fill with sand
as you go higher the ramp gets steeper but you have a descending ramp on the other side you can use a counter weight on wheels(or logs)like oxen or people to help pull up the blocks by walking down the other side.
When you are dont with the last level you just dig out your building.
what you do is place the 1st level
you cover that level with sand then you have a ramp to the second level
each level you lay you back fill with sand
as you go higher the ramp gets steeper but you have a descending ramp on the other side you can use a counter weight on wheels(or logs)like oxen or people to help pull up the blocks by walking down the other side.
When you are dont with the last level you just dig out your building.
Its not very hard
Exactly, I also saw a doc years ago that described something like that, and put logs underneath for them to roll on. They had hundreds of thousands of slaves and manpower. Pretty sure the doc also did some experiments using the same techniques and material as back then and it showed it definitely was possible and like ya said..: not that hard. Add in the theory water was there back then. Even if the exact spot might have not had water… they could divert any water around with canals and trenches to help in such things.
They used work trucks powered by fuel derived from prehistoric life forms.
When that no longer worked they would boil water to generate an invisible energy from spinning magnates and then have the blocks levitate to their final position.