Everyone knows from history that in Ancient Egypt there was a developed culture and civilization at that time. And some researchers of alternative history are sure that the civilization was highly developed, with a high level of technology, in particular, the technology of stone processing, which in some places is inaccessible even now. Traces of this processing can be traced in the reports of the LAI group and other researchers.
Despite this, few people pay attention to the fact that in Giza there are objects that are clearly not completed and have rough surfaces. What is the reason for this? If for thousands of years of the existence of this culture, the construction has not been completed! Or did all the construction take place at much shorter intervals of time than the Egyptologists tell us? Some questions.
I suggest that you familiarize yourself with examples of unfinished (not finished) elements in the buildings of Ancient Egypt.
Columns of the Karnak Temple.
Pyramid of Mekerin, Giza.
Granite blocks were laid (or poured, molded), leaving the front side "torn". This hypothesis has been discussed in previous articles.
How and with what did the builders process this granite, giving an even plane to the entire surface? Who or what interrupted their work, why did they not complete it?
The second place in this masonry with a treated surface. Did two teams work in different cladding areas?
Promotional video:
I have no idea how you can manually draw a plane in this granite masonry & hellip;
They also had time to apply hieroglyphs & hellip;
Pyramid of Khufu. Untreated areas remain in the upper part of the blocks.
The photograph shows "nipples" on blocks, such as in the Cuzco masonry in South America.
Sakkara. An unfinished quartzite sarcophagus.
In the courtyard of the Cairo Museum.
Another unfinished sarcophagus in the Cairo Museum. It seems that the rock was scraped off, and not beaten off with a tool.
Also untreated blocks in the masonry of the building near the pyramids.
They did not restrict the left upper block.
Is this the unfinished facade of the Medinet Abu temple or is it such a reconstruction? Official information: the work was stopped when the pharaoh Ramses III was killed by the conspirators.
Columns and blocks above them. Construction at the time of Amenhotep III with unfinished reliefs.
Pylon of Pharaoh Nectanebo I.
Unfinished facade and columns.
The most famous example of abandoned works in Giza is the Aswan Obelisk.
Relief on the wall of the Mandulis temple on the island of Kalabsha. and the walls themselves are not processed.
Temple of Pharaoh Seti II in the courtyard of the Karnak Temple. Western wall.
Karnak temple.
It is possible that much of this unfinished construction was made in the later kingdoms, when some of the secrets of processing, including casting, had already been lost. And they were already building from granite blocks hewn in quarries with their subsequent processing in masonry. It took a long time to build and process, often stopping work.