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Ahatmose Wrote:
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> Hi Byrd thanks for that clarification, however,
> why for goodness sake would they print that
> picture at the beginning of the article explaining
> what was found if it was not really what the
> article was about ?
It's an image from a Book of the Dead. Since they didn't have official pho
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
The image on the article is a drawing from a very old publication (copyright free) and is not what they found.
Also, the judgment scene is rendered in many different ways. They're "very similar" but not "exact copies."
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Source article at:
--------article bullet points quote --------------
* Egyptian archaeologists recently located a lost 3,500-year-old cemetery containing mummies and statues—among other discoveries.
* A particularly exciting find was a Book of the Dead papyrus scroll measuring over 43 feet long—a rare surviving copy of the traditional burial item.
* The team behind the find was mum on t
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Ahatmose Wrote:
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> The Enigma of Madagascar
>
> Hi all. At my teacher's insistence I watched the
> latest documentary on the island of Madagascar. To
> say it was amazing would be an understatement. I
> really never had an inkling of what went on there.
> HOWEVER (There always seems to be an However), it
&g
by
Byrd
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Well, that's sure to be a real selling point, isn't it? "Buy my book with all this stuff redacted!"
by
Byrd
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Paper Lens
I doubt if they have the resources to dig it out. They'd have to negotiate with the government for a permit, and since these are (apparently) not uncommon fossils, nobody would be in a hurry to document them or excavate them.
You'd have to remove a lot of rock to get it out (okay... say a 3 meter square area, and at least two feet deep) because you will have to make a trench around
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Hans_lune Wrote:
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> Did old SC show up with something new or just
> repeat the same arguments again?
It's the Same Old Stuff.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Corvidius Wrote:
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> This looks fake, or at least I doubt it's from
> KV62. The display case is wrong for the Egyptian
> museum and the features do not look like those of
> Tutankhamun. There appears to be a cartouche on
> the right shoulder, but the image is too poor to
> see it clearly. There appears to be the k
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
One of the most notable and scholarly Egyptologists of our time, Jan Assmann was 85 at the time of his death (7 July 1938 – 19 February 2024)
He was a proponent of the idea that the ancient Egyptian religion contributed more than is usually credited to Judaism. While I didn't agree with this, his book MOSES THE EGYPTIAN made fascinating reading.
His paper on cultural memory is an int
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Will have to give it a view...though anytime someone announces that they've "Solved the Great pyramid", I confess that I tend to twitch a bit.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Ahatmose Wrote:
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> Hi Hermione if it is caused by "Advanced
> Arthritis" (like mine was) all the exercise in the
> world would only make it worse. In my case the
> ball at the the end of my hip had totally
> deteriorated and was completely out of round and
> had nodules on it. Thus it was the only solution.
by
Byrd
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Hermione Wrote:
> (The person in my family with a bad hip has been
> told about PT, and is wondering if PT alone might
> do the trick without having to actually have the
> operation ... )
It will certainly delay it for a long time. My knees are in terrible shape, but I've had PT and have hired a personal trainer (I'm bad at going to the gym but if I've paid fo
by
Byrd
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
Ahatmose Wrote:
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> The operation was a success, I still have both
> legs. No joking aside it went very well but it is
> going to take a lot of hard work and exercise.
>
> Thanks again for the well wishes and sentiments
>
> db
Keep up with the physical therapy! I've had friends go through this same opera
by
Byrd
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Alternative Geometry and Numerology
They probably found their way blocked in some fashion... perhaps an unexpected bend or another big rock.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Ahatmose Wrote:
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> Well since you asked. I would think the fact that
> the ratio of the dimensions (base) of G1 and G2
> (9069 inches for G1 and 8472 inches for G2)
> precisely mirror the ratio between the square root
> of 3 (1.7230508075 and G1 and 9069 inches) and Phi
> (1.618033988 and G2 and 8472 inches) this tell
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
...and cue the conspiracy theories (thanks to Hawass) in 3... 2....
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
When I was a child, I would have accepted that. As an adult, I find it very problematic.
TECHNICALLY, the "cradle of civilization" could be Africa, where we all come from. But I tend to overthink many things....
by
Byrd
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Humanities
I think some of it has real merit (though I disagree with some points) and I wish you well on thie project.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Josephine Tey's book, "Daughter of Time" presented some strong arguments (including documents) that Richard did NOT kill them. Hadn't heard of the "escaped" rumor, though.
by
Byrd
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Ancient History
Spiros Wrote:
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> Were the Giza pyramids erected to warn us of the
> end of the world, maybe through a nuclear
> holocaust? Did they encode information of the
> antichrist? Did Osiris represent the planet Venus?
>
>
No. They didn't have any end of the world beliefs. They didn't know about nuclear holoc
by
Byrd
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Apocalypse
Pistol Wrote:
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> Essentially the author admits more evidence is
> required to substantiate his hypothesis; that the
> indentation found in the composition of the core
> masonry for each side of Khufu’s pyramid was the
> result of knocking/tumbling the upper stones of
> the pyramid’s facing stones and core stones down
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
The story initially broke in 2021, but Ars Technica has done a more recent piece that updates what we know. Location is still unknown, but the clues are tantalizing.
There's still some unresolved problems, though.
(from the article: "“The beauty of this project is that the mummies we studied are older than the first account of Adulis. So what we think we can say is that Adu
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
The field grew so rapidly and there's so much material... I think this accounts for a lot of the reasons why there's gaps in some areas. One thing I'm interested in is magical knives -- but we can find many more things where the knowledge base is simply a bunch of papers but no real books.
Unlike Victorian times, when they'd buy a book about anything on Egypt, few people t
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
waggy Wrote:
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> I certainly agree with that sentiment. In many
> ways the Bent pyramid still awaits exploration,
> and although G1 is a bit of a black hole, the
> available data on it is also not great. As Romer
> quoted in his G1 book, "Modern Egyptologists have
> largely given up on the pyramids" :-)
Th
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
It's good to see this work being done. So much attention goes to G1 at the expense of everything else.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
GChase Wrote:
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>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
I find it hard to think of those as djeds. Djed will have a concave pillar or a straight one with very flat projections (like a vertebra):
I thought the blue faience represented water but I don't have any link.
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Corvidius Wrote:
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> Ah, well the piece in the link you gave is in fact
> one of the lunar items spelling out
> Nebkheperuriah, and is in fact the best example of
> this name. It's identical to Nebkheperure except
> that it has a lunar disc, note the crescent under
> the disc, and not a solar one.
That's n
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Corvidius Wrote:
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> The issue with this name though is that it is
> never in a cartouche and never appears with the
> rest of his titularly.
I've looked at examples online and don't see the lunar/non-lunar items. It may be something I'm looking at but simply don't recognize your problem with it... could y
by
Byrd
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Ancient Egypt
Page 1 of 107
Pages: 12345