zoser, on 18 May 2012 - 05:02 PM, said:
BTW it's nice to be here again. Apologies for causing such a storm. You can't be serious when you say that these stone marvels were the produce of indigenous Indians using pounding tools?
Now where did I say that?
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So how did they bore out the hole? What was the tool? What was the motive power? How fast was the cutting speed?
If you're going to debate this stuff, you really have to pay attention to all the arguments. The types of tools available to the Inca and their predecessors have been brought up before in other threads.
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What caused the grooves (rotating tools do not do that; common sense?), what was it's purpose?, how did they achieve the high precision joints?
I'm waiting. Sorry to be a pain.
Z
Do the local stations air police procedurals on your lonely little island Zoser? Stuff like Bones or CSI? In forensics, there's specific emphasis on whether a given wound or mark occurred antimortem, parimortem or postmortem. That is, before, during or after death. Do you see what I'm getting at? And I'll make the same point I made in QM's thread, If you can lay out and carve a perfectly square block with nothing but steel hand chisels and a square, why is it such a stretch from there to stone tools using the exact same method, only slower?
"Apparently the Lemurians drank Schlitz." - Intrepid "Real People" reporter on finding a mysterious artifact in the depths of Mount Shasta.