Excerpt from "Common Ground II"
Ed Leedskalnin's secret to the universe equation 7129/6105195 from Coral Castle, it turns out the numerator in Ed's equation is the 914th prime number. It is also hypothesized that all prime numbers are made up of squares of numbers and in this case that hypothesis holds true. (84^2) + (8^2) + (3^2) = 7129
What are the odds of producing the width and length dimensions of the Kings Chamber in inches using using nothing more than prime numbers?
Leedskalnin's 914th prime number 7129 along with the 4th and 5th prime numbers, being 7 and 11 respectively, that G1 so clearly demonstrates, are up to the task?
7129 / pi (22/7) /11= 206 51/242 or 206.21 (rounded to 2 decimal places)
7129 / (2x11^2) x 7 = 206 51/242 or 206.21 (all prime numbers)
Petrie's average width of the East and West walls top and bottom being 206.23 Kings Chamber Wall measures top and bottom.
East wall top 206.30
East wall base 206.43
West wall top 206.04
West wall base 206.16 added = 824.93 / 4 = 206.23 average width of all.
That is a mere 1/50th inch under the average width of the Kings Chamber, well within Petrie's margin of error, showing to be 0.000096979101% error, to be exact.
This process also includes and defines the Royal Egyptian cubit at 20.621 inches.
Using 7129 divided by the base height ratio of 11:7 of the G1 derives the length of the Kings Chamber.
7129 / 1/2 pi (11/7) /11 = 412 51/121 or 412.42 (rounded to 2 decimal places)
7129 / (11^2) * 7 = 412 51/121 or 412.42
For verification:[
www.ronaldbirdsall.com]
Would it be safe to say the Kings Chamber dimensions in inches are defined, by using the 914th prime # 7129 from Ed Leedskalnin's secret of the universe equation with G1 primes of 7 and 11, with a credible degree of accuracy? Could there be a link between the ancient builders and Leedskalnin’s abilities since both have built structures using multi-ton stones?
Regards,
Jacob
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, It is finally accepted as being "Self-Evident". Arthur Schopenhauer