The question of moving a single-piece stone that weighs tens or even hundreds of tons, is an interesting point to investigate.
In the old days, how could humans move 100 tons?
The question of moving a single-piece stone that weighs tens or even hundreds of tons, is an interesting point to investigate. Is it possible to deliver a simple instrument that weighs hundreds of tons of tons?
The largest manhir in the world in Lokmaracker in France weighs about 30 tons and is a little over 30 meters tal
l. Transported about ten kilometers. Probably the hardest part was getting out of the rock by the sea, because it had to be brought back up.. Which seems a lot harder than taking a rock down the mountain.
l. Transported about ten kilometers. Probably the hardest part was getting out of the rock by the sea, because it had to be brought back up.. Which seems a lot harder than taking a rock down the mountain.
Other giant rocks exist worldwide, obelisks weighing more than 30 tons, megalites weighing more than 100 tons, even rocks weighing more than 50 tons, than the Albees in Lebanon, or the famous colosie of Munnon in Egypt weighing between 30 to.. 3 tons of tones.
We always wonder how the ancient civilizations who threw these rocks did that? We only have a few witnesses. There are tests that have tried to re-produce the transmission of stone to different degrees of success. Jhan Pier Mohin conducted a test on a 5-tone men to draw and nearly twenty people to correct.
To bring back the words of Zhan Pier Mohen, French executive and a phenomenal specialist at Megalite, "there is no serious argument that explains how these stones were supposed to be delivered."
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