Believe it or not, no aliens were likely involved! Just some very smart humans and a massive amount of labor.

  • Flying SquidOPM
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    916 months ago

    You’d have a point if the Egyptians didn’t already tell us how they moved giant, heavy things over land.

    Lots of human labor.

    (Relief from the tomb of Djehutihotep in el-Bersheh)

    • @Haagel
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      256 months ago

      Yes. I’m familiar with this image. Some scientists claim that when just the right amount of water is poured over sand it reduces the friction by about 30%.

      Some also claim that there were not hundreds of thousands of laborers at the Giza pyramids, based on evidence discovered in the work camps near the site.

      I’m 38 years old and I think I’ve read about a new theory every year of my life…

      • Flying SquidOPM
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        6 months ago

        Who are these “some scientists?” Names please.

        I’d suggest arguing against what they literally showed us they did is an uphill battle.

        • @Haagel
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          296 months ago

          “The study was done by Christian Wagner and colleagues at Saarland University in Germany, along with researchers in the Netherlands, Iran and France. The team was inspired by an ancient Egyptian wall painting showing a huge statue being hauled across the sand on a sledge in about 1800 BC. The painting has a detail that has long puzzled Egyptologists: a worker who appears to be pouring water onto the sand in front of the sledge while others appear to be carrying water to replenish his supply.”

          https://physicsworld.com/a/did-slippery-sand-help-egyptians-build-the-pyramids/

          There are hundreds of articles about this theory. It was all the rage a few years ago.

          • Flying SquidOPM
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            -286 months ago

            I notice you don’t post the names of any of the scientists who believe only a small workforce built the pyramids. Why is that? That’s really the one I was curious about.

            Because, again, it’s kind of hard to argue against what they literally carved into a rock.

            • @Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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              186 months ago

              Because, again, it’s kind of hard to argue against what they literally carved into a rock.

              Not arguing with you here, cuz I have no dog in this fight, but you’re seemingly ignoring the possibility of the emperor bragging about crowd size the number of slaves workers utilized?

              • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                6 months ago

                I mean, he could lie about it, but is there really any doubt a pharaoh could conscript a few hundred guys?

                It’s just an easy, obvious solution, and probably the one they used because they weren’t dumb. We also have a lot of surviving paperwork from the organisation of pyramid building, including things like worker’s comp.

              • Flying SquidOPM
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                -146 months ago

                So you’re saying that they used some unknown means of pulling big stones over rocks, but rather bragged about one they didn’t use even though it would have worked?

                • @Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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                  136 months ago

                  I’m not saying they didn’t have a lot of slaves, just thinking that they might be exaggerating slave count (as a metric of how powerful they were) while using something like this river (something innocuous that they wouldn’t need to brag about) to augment the bodies in use.

                  • Flying SquidOPM
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                    -66 months ago

                    You are making the mistake that slaves built Egyptian religious monuments. They did not. Egyptians did it, not their slaves. They did it out of religious obligation.

                    Which makes sense. You don’t want slaves building your sacred places when slaves can sabotage things.

            • @Haagel
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              106 months ago

              Again, there are hundreds of articles about the adjacent work camps. Please look at the publications of Zahi Hawass, chief archeologist of Egypt, and Amihai Mazar, a professor of archeology in Jerusalem.

              Most claim that there could have been up to ten thousand workers. Some claim that the number of workers was as low as 1600.

              • Flying SquidOPM
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                -126 months ago

                I’m not sure why you think 1600 workers mean they couldn’t just drag large stones over land on sledges using a significant number of those 1600 workers. I’m not even sure why you think ten thousand workers would have been necessary. Can you explain please?

                • @Haagel
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                  126 months ago

                  I never suggested that they couldn’t.

                  Personally, I don’t think that the “brute force” argument is the best. I think it’s arguing from ignorance.

                  • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                    6 months ago

                    I mean, it’s probably both. They would have used a bunch of guys, and maybe oxen, because that was their source of mechanical energy for nearly everything. To make is easier, they would add the cleverest engineering you can do with no formal science and bronze age materials.

                  • Flying SquidOPM
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                    -96 months ago

                    How is it arguing from ignorance when, yet again, they showed us that they did just that.

                    Are you saying the carving is a lie? Why would it be?

        • @unreasonabro@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Can’t go doing that m8, that’d suggest they might have known what they were talking about, and they talked about a lot of stuff that’s very unpopular these days

      • Nomecks
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        36 months ago

        You grease up a sled and drag it down a track carved into some rocks.

      • @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        6 months ago

        Even with the wrong amount of water, sticktion is just proportional to weight. With enough force you can overcome any amount of it.