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Author Topic:   Geology and the Great Sphinx
Jon
Inactive Member


Message 1 of 25 (373749)
01-02-2007 3:57 PM


What does it say?
The Great Sphinx is an Egyptian monument built at the site of Giza, Egypt (location of the Great Pyramids). In more recent times, a debate has ensued between what are considered "amateur" archaeologists and geologists by the professional community, and the professional community itself. The debate is thus:
These "amateur" geologists have agreed that the sides of the Sphinx and Sphinx enclosure (the pit that the statue sits in) show clear signs of water erosion through heavy rain downfall. The Giza Plateau is made of limestone, which alternate in layers based on hardness (soft layer, hard layer, soft layer, etc.). These geologists claim that had the Sphinx been eroded through by the wind, the soft layers would be missing, but the hard layers would have been left fully intact. However, the hard layers show up-down channels running between the alternating soft layers. It is their belief that the only way such erosion could've been caused is by heavy rains pounding down and trickling through cracks in the hard layers: slowly eating away at them.
The kicker of their theory is that the last time a rainfall sufficient enough to cause such erosion on the plateau would've stopped around the end of the last Ice Age! Some geologists are more conservative, and don't go back that far, but it still suggests an older date (2500 BC being the date accepted by the "pros"). A date of at least a few thousand years earlier, which is earlier than it has been previously thought a civilization even existed in Egypt.
What do the professionals have to say about this? Well, they think these people are all on crack (meth? pot? some sort of drug). They accept that the Sphinx was built by Khafre (Chephren), builder of the second pyramid on the plateau; placing it at around 2500 BC.
Please, check out this Wikipedia Article for pictures and more information.
So, tell me, what do you think happened? Is the Sphinx proof of a much older civilization? Is their an explanation for the erosion patterns found?
J0N
Edited by Jon, : Removed message to Admins.
Edited by Jonicus Maximus, : Fixed incorrect information.
Edited by Jonicus Maximus, : " " "
Edited by Jon, : Updated link for 2010!

"Can we say the chair on the cat, for example? Or the basket in the person? No, we can't..." - Harriet J. Ottenheimer
"Dim bulbs save on energy..." - jar

Replies to this message:
 Message 3 by New Cat's Eye, posted 01-02-2007 4:30 PM Jon has replied
 Message 11 by johnfolton, posted 01-03-2007 11:54 PM Jon has replied

  
Jon
Inactive Member


Message 8 of 25 (373861)
01-02-2007 11:27 PM
Reply to: Message 3 by New Cat's Eye
01-02-2007 4:30 PM


Re: What does it say?
I own a copy of Underworld, and have to agree with Paul that Hancock's ideas are seldomly anything more than bogous.
The trouble with using the constalation of Leo to make an estimate on the age of the Sphinx is that we have no idea if it was Leo that the Egyptians recognized as being a lion. They may have thought some other grouping of stars looked like a lion, or they may not have thought any grouping looked like a lion.
J0N

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 Message 3 by New Cat's Eye, posted 01-02-2007 4:30 PM New Cat's Eye has not replied

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Jon
Inactive Member


Message 12 of 25 (375086)
01-07-2007 6:56 AM
Reply to: Message 11 by johnfolton
01-03-2007 11:54 PM


Re: What does it say?
What does this have to do with the Sphinx? Are you also arguing that the pyramids were built longer ago than previously thought? Evidence? Dnde está?
Clearly ol' Chuck, you've gone mad!
Good greif Charley Brown!
Oh brother!
I could go on, but I won't
J0N

This message is a reply to:
 Message 11 by johnfolton, posted 01-03-2007 11:54 PM johnfolton has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 13 by johnfolton, posted 01-07-2007 11:05 AM Jon has not replied

  
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