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The Pyramids: A Concrete Possibility
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15612 |
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BOOK WORLD
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2 / 1989 |
4,852 Words |
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Harvey Hagman Harvey Hagman often writes on adventure and treasure hunting. |
THE PYRAMIDS
An Enigma Solved
Joseph Davidovits and Margie Morris
New York: Hippocrene Books, 1988
263 pp.$16.95
Monuments for the ages to ponder, the mysterious pyramids of Giza have fascinated mankind for thousands of years. Their mass brings wonder to all those who stand below in Egypt's Saharan sands.
The Great Pyramid, credited to the Pharoah Khufu, is the largest, its square base covering 13.1 acres. Its apex towers as high as a fifty-story skyscraper. Its estimated 2.6 million stone blocks, averaging 2.5-3 tons, make up a bulk of 6.25 million tons.
All this rock was quarried, dressed, and raised into its lofty position within less than two decades, without pulleys, draft animals, or the wheel, according to Egyptologists. Yet thousands of the blocks are situated at great heights. Ancient engineers relied on crowbars, sledges, rollers, ramps, and sweat to build the pyramids, historians tell us.
The immense blocks fit as close as 0.002 inches, although iron and bronze were not yet developed to provide high-quality stonecutting. Logistical problems surrounding the building of the pyramids have not been reconciled; the precision is too great, the scale too grand. As scientific methods become more sophisticated, more questions are raised. The enigma grows.
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