Level 3: The children of Chaos

Flying Stones

Last modified on 07/31/2011, 09:34 PM

Sacsayhuaman, l'indestructible forteresse des Andes

 

"On a hill overlooking the valley of Cuzco,Go to Les cités des cimes Peru, stands a colossal fortress known as Sacsayhuaman. This is probably the largest edifice ever built." But was it built by man?Click +

 

Sacsayhuaman, détail d'une muraille. On remarquera l'assemblage indestructible des blocs géants.

"Enormous blocks of stone, sometimes exceeding 200 tons, are attracting attention because of their perfect fitting, making impossible, even today, to slip between them a knife or a sheet of paper, even if there is no mortar between them and the blocks are all different."  (source)David Hatcher Childress, Technologies Of The Gods Nowadays, with our best steels, our diamond saws or our laser cutting, we could not have such perfect results. How did the Ancients manage this miracle? And what about the colossal weight of these blocks!

 

Colossal weight of these flying blocks of stone

 

Sciage de la pierre en carrière. Notez la taille des pierres que l'on travaille aujourd'hui. Rien à voir avec des mégalithes ! "The installation of each stone must have been the subject of careful preparation because they can not claim this accuracy by merely putting down a block of 20 tons (even sometimes 80 or 200 tons) as an ordinary stone."  (source)David Hatcher Childress, Technologies Of The Gods For such blocks, you better be sure of your cutting work, you cannot proceed by trial and error, as our masons who present a rubble stone, then take it off for correcting before repositioning it. In this case, everything must be calculated in advance.

 

Le mur principal de Sacsayhuaman comporte des pierres d'un poids   qui dépasse l'entendement

 

A Machu-Picchu, les blocs sont aussi énormes, mais leur assemblage, beaucoup plus approximatif, et l'absence de taille angulaire fait apparaître la main d'autres constructeurs. Plus anciens ? Non, plus récents que ceux de Sacsayhuaman.

François Flornoy, master in the traditional art of cutting stones, finds these giant blocks a bit hard to swallow: "Some of these blocks contain more than thirty edges, not to mention their weight. For the line drawing and the cutting, it is possible, though ... how to raise it in order to cut all the faces? And to polish them? I can not help thinking of a mechanical cutting, using diamond saws, electric saws." Electricity so long ago? Yes, it is possible.Go to Le Vril antique "As for the fitting, no current technology allows such a feat."

 

Exemple d'assemblage en queue d'aronde. L'aronde est l'ancien nom de l'hirondelle. Un tel assemblage est d'une grande solidité. Surtout avec de la pierre, non du bois !

Why this profusion of edges? The stones, all different from each other, fit together exactly like a giant 3D puzzle. "Their dovetail assembly creates a mutual lock that makes them earthquake-proof, and indeed the numerous earthquakes that devastated the Andes in recent centuries have not cut into the perfect fit blocks while they have knocked down twice the Spanish cathedral of Cuzco. "  (source)David Hatcher Childress, Technologies Of The Gods But there is another reason to this giant puzzle that seems more accurate indeed.

 

Le camp de Plédran, près de Saint-Brieuc, consiste en une muraille circulaire où, par endroits, la pierre a fondu et s'est vitrifiée en lave, soudant les moëllons entre eux. Les murs de Sacsayhuaman n'ont pas cette apparence.This prodigious strength made the walls resistant to lightning too,Go to La porte de la foudre assuming the fact that the ancient Andean CitiesGo to Les cités des cimes have captured and used lightning energyGo to L'énergie fulgurale just like the oldest pyramids and megaliths.Go to Le secret des grandes pierres By looking better the blocks' faces, you may notice a slight bulge at the base of each block, as if the stone had flown. Would have they melt the stone to cast it into blocks of lava? No, because the lava has not this look. See the opposite photo, a wall melted (by what?) into lava.

 

What disaster struck this "camp" of Plédran, and when?

 

Restauration d'un mur à Machu-Picchu. Beaucoup moins d'exigence dans la précision de l'assemblage. De quoi mesurer notre déclin, pas vrai ?The very high temperature would have transformed the entire wall into one block with visible runoffs. Or else: could it be, not stone, but a kind of polymer cement, made from the rock itself? Ancient legends evokes a technique, now lost, which allowed to soften and shape the stones. Yes, you read correctly. Hiram Bingham, the discoverer of Machu Picchu, has "heard of a plant which juice could make the rock so malleable that the tightest fittings became possible." (source)Hiram Bingham, The Discovery Of Machu-Picchu

 

Chrysanthème de Taquile, au bord du lac Titicaca (Pérou)Fawcett also reported having heard that the stones had been arranged thanks to a fluid which gave them the consistency of clay. Having found a jar in a pre-Inca tomb, he wanted to put it in safety but it broke on a rock: "Ten minutes later, I examined the pool by accident. It was no more liquid; the entire area where it had poured, and the underlying rock had become soft like cement! It seemed that the stone had melted like heated wax." (source) The jar contained the juice of a plant that local villagers knew well.

 

On se souvient du métomol, inventé par le comte de Champignac à base de champignons, qui ramollissait les métaux. Le "pierremol" existe-t-il vraiment ?

 

Coussin de cactus Sillustani, Pérou. Le genre de coussin qui ne donne pas envie de s'asseoir.They could describe it with details: one foot high, dark red leaves, it grows in the Chuncho, Peru. Soft stones mystery have an even better issue; David Childress reports what sounds like a kind of fairy tale : a biologist, in Amazonia, was watching a bird making its nest on a rock face. He "would have seen the bird rubbing the wall with a stick. He would have noticed then that the rock is dissolved on contact with the sap, leaving a cavity where the bird could lay out its nest." (source)David Hatcher Childress, Technologies Of The Gods

 

Quetzalcoatl, que l'on dirait dirait sculpté à l'aide d'une pelle en bois dans du sable mouillé…

 

In this case, there is no problem of line drawing, nor of cutting, nor of fitting. The soft paste flows in its place, and before it solidifies, a mason simply cut in it the edges and dovetails with a wooden shovel.

 

Le problème du transport des mégalithes résolu par © Chris Foss

Among all the enigmas posed by this incredible construction, there is that of the transport of stones. Being soft does not deprive them of their enormous weight. Unless? ... And if it had been sufficient that the builders brought small quantities of soft stone, say in buckets, and to pour them one after the other in the pan, until the stone hardens? As an ordinary mortar, the stone would have hardened up. It would have moulded very precisely the shape of the stone on which it had been cast.

 

Quetzalcoatl, que   l'on dirait dirait sculpté à l'aide d'une pelle en bois dans du sable   mouillé…

 

Les énormes pierres auraient été coulées comme ces pierres de sucreIn this imaginary equation, there are several unknowns: the time it takes for the soft rock to solidify, the amount of sap needed to "melt" these enormous blocks, and above all, the name and description of this wonderful plant. Perhaps you can find, lost in the Andes, a brujo who still knows this secret? Thanks to him, the multiple enigma of the giant stones would find a simple, stylish and economical solution: people always do what requires the least effort.

 

Cet invraisemblable mégalithe est encore couché dans sa carrière d'extraction, à Baalbeck, au Liban. Preuve que la technique de la pierre molle n'a pas été utilisée partout ! Mais comment fait-on pour bouger cet immeuble ?

 

Technique défendue par de nombreux scientifiques… Strictement inutilisable pour le mégalithe de Baalbeck ci-dessus !

Concerning the transport, another hypothesis has been proposed, the control of gravity by techniques of antigravity.Go to Antigrav Tradition says that the Ancients, helped by entities from elsewhereClick + to Exobiology  had learned to control the forces that govern gravity. This control, beyond our current reach, would have allowed them to achieve this superhuman masterwork: to straighten the axis of rotation of the Earth.Go to L'esploit d'Atlas But their mastery of gravitology had also taught them to remove the weight of objects, as heavy as they are.

 

That is the way they could build

the highest walls with the heaviest stones.Go to La science atlante

 

Lointain passé où scintillent des mondes et des empires. © Chris Foss

 

There is still another hypothesis : these Cyclopean walls might have been the work of aliens?Click + Giants coming from elsewhere in their strange machines? Do not laugh, they are standing just behind your back.