Corvidius Wrote:
>
> So, I've explained my thinking over two posts, yet
> I have no idea what you are really on about due to
> lack of explanation, and a focus so narrow as to
> exclude the context of the recitation, and those
> either side of it.
Howdy Corvidius
Yes 'what is he really on about'?
I believe he is trying to get you to agree that those words are in some way related to copper hydroxide/copper hydrate which would be some sort of evidence that his predictions are correct.
[
grahamhancock.com]
"I predict there will be copper hydroxide in, around, and especially under stone work in the area centered 10' north of the Great Pyramid and 35' east of the center line. There will be none in this exact location but concentrations where it is found will trail off with distance from this point.
My theory makes thousands of predictions because this is what the builders actually said. They merely failed to put it in words that we understand. We must deduce their meaning and put it in modern words.
It's easy to deduce peoples' premises when they communicate what they know rather than what they believe. You will never understand this because you believe everyone who disagrees with you is confused. Modern people with their giant vocabularies and words of superstition are hard to understand. Ancient people are simple. They just meant what they said and they said that the area north of the pyramid was stained "turquois". This should also especially affect the NE (and NNE) Trench and the area around the piles of stone at the base of the cliff face. Copper hydroxide is barely soluble in water so can be expected to last 4700 years in some protected areas. There will probably be a good sample at the end of the passage leading to the thermal anomaly, anyway"
[
grahamhancock.com]
"" Ancient people are simple. They just meant what they said and they said that the area north of the pyramid was stained "turquois". This should also especially affect the NE (and NNE) Trench and the area around the piles of stone at the base of the cliff face. Copper hydroxide is barely soluble in water so can be expected to last 4700 years in some protected areas. There will probably be a good sample at the end of the passage leading to the thermal anomaly, anyway.""
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/05/2020 08:07PM by Hans.