i dont agree HOW ABOUT YOU

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Coricancha Peru
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Everything we've been told, has been fabricated just like those blocks! Thanks for all you do getting us to think even more!

BolsteredBlades
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Bro lost me at hamers and chizzles 🤣🤣🤣

xxPROMETHEUSxx.
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Clues to this region still exist in the history of the textile wars. Huge old mill towns were abandoned over calico fabrics and loss of employment, water works being destroyed...i imagine a lot of the textile machines and looms were destroyed or transported elsewhere. This was 1700s and 1800s..maybe 1600s. Fights over linen, cotton and silks. Every mill town had a large food industry...farms, fields, trees, flour mills, etc. All the vital components are still somewhat visible in a lot of these ruins. Not nearly as old as they want it to appear

inquisitive
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I agree. It's kind of how they do modern rock walls inside your house.

Elkysium
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Cast in place geopolymer seems most logical, with the nubs being part of the formwork or scaffolding. Might also be to tie through. Rough cast then rendered. 🐰

huarwe
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Mostly an island that at one point had sea fortifications all around it.

indica
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Thanks for your insight. I'm now suspecting that the scoop marks found on ancient ruins is from larger tools like yours.

Now the question is, How did they make the rock soft enough to scoop it out... Or did they power up the tool to cut through the rock?

Always more questions than answers.

artistic_savage
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Don't believe anything they say I see something completely different also !!

MelissaFilobokova
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speaking of "knobs"....*eyeroll*

loneyukon-mw
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I concur, with your thoughts it's logical. Softening stones not logical.

gorrilaz-ckxs
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An interesting concept. In my pinion the size and weight of many known blocks exceed the parameters of this technique, and or would show evidence of being damaged from the tumble due to said weight. Achieving a precise line along the face this way is one thing, but a clean break resulting in precise 90° shape with a flat adjoining surfaces is something else entirely. Reliable consistency is necessary for construction. Furthermore there are myriad examples of South American "block work" that aren't 4 sided. This technique doesn't begin to account for those.
From one mark to another, cheers.

animoetprudentia
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2:54 little circles on the top kind of look like rivets.

Millennium-stvs
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Very neat, thank you for sharing, I was wondering about what those knobs were for. Hope you are having a very nice day.

danielschannel
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When you know how to make a sail or sac, you know how to build a sac wall, Sacsayhuaman.. just like asphalt.

sgashner
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When your psychotic everything makes sense

JamesDavis-wv
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Thanks! LOL Just "take advantage of those natural faultlines" ROFL God bless you Bro haha

GodsServant
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THANK U 4 ALL YOUR TIME & ENERGY PUT INTO THESE VIDS❤❤...

ChiefPontiac-bb
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Foolishness at it's best don't agree either. 🙄

hikerx
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Professor Joseph Davidovits proved it decades ago but the world ignores all his findings, books, replications, formulas etc.

The world prefers comfortable lies over inconvenient truths.

Edit: that guy with the clay was the only knob in this video. 😂

W_H_K
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There's blocks that are solid in machu pichu and have been separated from each other, distance of a bout a inch, so you can see, it's a solid block. Incredible analogy though!! Must of somehow softened though vibration work maybe?

joepro