sphere volume intent:
OGKOS SPhAIRAS(volume of a sphere) = (70+3+20+70+200)+(200+500+1+10+100+1+200) = 1375
KhEOPs(Cheops) = 600+5+70+700 = 1375
Did Cheops know it or did the Greeks think he knew it?
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
The relation between the total volume in cubic meters of G1 G2 plus G2 lid lead us to the question whether G1 was not meant to have a lid. I mean if it did, then the relation of coffers G1(no lid) + G2(lid) would not make sense.
I have been looking into the dimensions and it seems to me that I can design a hybrid coffer from G1 and G2. The idea is to take the average dimensions of both. For t
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Thanks, I didn't notice that.
NEILOS(Nile) = 50+5+10+30+70+200 = 365
ThHBAIOS EIMI(Thevaios eimi: I am a Theban) = (9+8+2+1+10+70+200)+(5+10+40+10) = 365
MESON(medium, or average) = 40+5+200+70+200 = 365
The volume of Khafre's coffer(without the lid) is V:
V = 2.718241255 m3
e = 2.718281828
Hard to accept another coincidence.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
The granite volume of G1's coffer is:
V1 = 8.0076 cubic royal cubits
The granite volume of G2's coffer including the lid is:
V2 = 15.5414 cubic royal cubits
The total volume is
Vtotalv = 8.0076 rc3 + 15.5414 rc3 = 23.54896 rc3
Equating this volume to that of a cube we have a side length s of:
s = 2.8663 royal cubits
But this length is equal to:
s = 1.50067 met
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Hello Mark,
Let's start with the pi encoding. It is possible that the architects wanted to encode pi. But if this was the case would they not want to encode the true, exact value of pi? And if they did not this through the volume of a sphere notion, would they not use this also elsewhere, like the volume of G2 or the internal volume of the coffer?
22/7 is not exactly pi, and it is equa
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Hello Mark,
If we consider the ledge to be on one of the long sides of the coffer plus on both the other two short sides(like at Khafre's), then with a depth of 1.7"(Petrie) and considering a width of 1.62"(Petrie mean Khafre coffer ledge width) then taking a Khufu pyramid base width of 230.364 meters equal to 440 royal cubits, we derive a Khufu pyramid granite coffer cube with
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Another idea(Petrie data):
The internal base half diagonal d of the coffer(distance from the center of the internal base to any base corner) is:
d = 1.04819 meters
If we subtract the internal volume of the coffer from the external volume of the coffer we actually get the volume of the granite material of the coffer. This volume V is:
V = 1.1552910548 cubic meters
If we equate this
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
This is practically the same distance as two pyramids, one in Africa and the other in Europe.
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
According to Petrie(1883 AD) the internal volume of the G1 coffer is:
V1 = 1.1804 m^3
According to Smyth(1865 AD) the internal volume of the G1 coffer is:
V2 = 1.1722 m^3
One of the two gives us the distance between my house and the pyramid.
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Is that your shoulder width? Are you a Nephilim?
Something else I noticed is that the height of the lower part of the niche agrees pretty well with the height of one's eyes above the floor. I checked it, it works out. I find that the length of my leg also agrees with the depth of the coffer. Also the height of my knee pretty much defines the royal cubit length.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
seven zeros added.
I did not refer to the meters, since multiples are multiples. But if one looks at the dimensions of the Khafre coffer which is the best preserved he will see that the meters was used.
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Hans Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Spiros Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > Hello Marc,
> >
> > The external base diagonal of G1's coffer is
> > 2.4775 meters.
> >
> > But the Equatorial radius of Neptune is
> 24,764,000
> > ±15,000 meters.
> >
> &
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Hello Marc,
The external base diagonal of G1's coffer is 2.4775 meters.
But the Equatorial radius of Neptune is 24,764,000 ±15,000 meters.
BR Spiros
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Thanks. It does seem that Capella formed a nice alignment with Thuban so it makes sense for them to consider it a sort of pole or pillar that reaches the sky. This also roughly aligned with Aldebaran in the South. I just want to note that Stellarium asings the Mooring Post to Arcturus.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Forgot to mention that the constellations are according to Lull and Belmonte.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
The Mooring Post represents the star Arcturus. O Great Mooring-post => Arcturus is great because it is the brightest star in the Northern Star. Osiris is standing thus it crosses the Meridian in the South and being high in the sky casts a shadow on to the observer. If we consider the time that Arcturus, the Mooring Post rises, then at this instance Osiris, Orion crosses the Meridian. This only
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
Hans Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Spiros Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> > Overall thus instead of identifying 3 stars
> that
> > match the 3 pyramids o Egypt I have found a
> total
> > of 9 mountain peaks in 3 continents that match
> the
> > main Giza Pyramids(three inde
by
Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
As I have shown in my other thread(Thebes latitude) the exact slope of the pyramid is 51° 52'. Petrie: 51º 52' ± 2'. 51º 50' 40" is within Petrie's error range but I don't think this was their intention. Due to the state in which the pyramid is in(external casing stones missing), it is difficult to compute the exact slope.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
The angle of this chart is incorrect and has not been measured as far as I know with accuracy. It is simply based on a seked of 5 1/2. No proof that this was the design. Petrie has the angle at 51° 52'. Imho it is hard to disprove the rainbow idea based on a slope divergence of 0° 8', or even 0° 10'.
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
In my books I show that the relative positions of the Giza pyramid apexes(or center base locations) was not dictated by the relative position of the Orion belt stars as Bauval postulated. His correlation yields a great degree of error. The central star/pyramid angle error is 4.35 degrees and the outer star/pyramid distance ratio error in regards to the central star/pyramid is 0.085. This distanc
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
I took some pictures of the sign with the presentation of the artifacts - structures. This is from the bottom left part of it where it depicts the color of the Proto-Helladic artifacts. These are depicted in this picture which is the part closest to the Pindaros - Antigone street corner:
Structures in blue are Classical Greek, and the top part in dark brown is Mycenaean. It is difficult t
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Spiros
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Byrd Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Spiros Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> > I converted the Khufu pyramid apex angle to the
> > corresponding latitude converting from
> geocentric
> > to geodetic and came up with the geodetic
> latitude
> > which corresponds to Antigone street
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Spiros
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
robin cook Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Forgive me if I am wrong, but your hypothesis
> seems to be that Giza architects copied three
> Greek mountains. But where is the evidence that OK
> egyptians had any interest in Greece and sent
> surveying teams to measure its topography?
>
In my book The Giza Mountains of Sinai: Uniting Sina
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Spiros
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Ancient Egypt
mstower Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Does anyone still have the paper mentioned here?
>
> http://www.hallofmaat.com/forum/read.php?1,431435,431872
>
> M.
Take a look at Scott's oldest article at the GH mb.
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Spiros
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Hello all,
I have just published a second enriched edition of my book on Amazon titled "The Giza Mountains of Sinai: Uniting Sinai Giza Hellas". It is available in Paperback. The book is in color. It's size is very large(8.5 x 11 inches) just as the previous edition. The new edition contains one extra chapter that deals with the African Egyptian peaks that correlate to the Gi
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Spiros
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Coffee Shop
In the diagram I posted it is not clear that I am referring to Greek, Boeotian Thebes(not Egyptian Thebes, Karnak/Luxor). That is what is encoded the city of 7 gates.
I converted the Khufu pyramid apex angle to the corresponding latitude converting from geocentric to geodetic and came up with the geodetic latitude which corresponds to Antigone street of Thebes. From this street photos are ofte
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Spiros
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Did the architects of Khufu's pyramid know about the shape of the Earth?
Geocentric latitude is the angular distance between a point on the Earth's surface and the equator, using the center of the Earth as the vertex. It differs from geodetic latitude in that it accounts for the ellipsoidal shape of the Earth rather than considering it as a perfect sphere. Compare geodetic latitude.
by
Spiros
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology