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Pyramids built with concrete



04 Dec 2006 07:55:01 GMT soc.retirement
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Earl...
*********

Pyramids were built with concrete rather than rocks, scientists

Jean Smith...
How cool! Is that why the Israelites wanted out of the business?

chatnoir...
Maybe the Egyptians did that because the Hebrews left at that time!
And in pushing to leave left a few disasterous plagues in Egypt that
caused some shortcuts to be made!

claim
Charles Bremner, Paris

Method used only at higher levels
Blocks set using a limestone slurry

How the Egyptians really built a Pyramid
The Ancient Egyptians built their great Pyramids by pouring
concrete into blocks high on the site rather than hauling up
giant stones, according to a new Franco-American study.

The research, by materials scientists from national
institutions, adds fuel to a theory that the pharaohs’ craftsmen
had enough skill and materials at hand to cast the two-tonne
limestone blocks that dress the Cheops and other Pyramids.

Despite mounting support from scientists, Egyptologists have
rejected the concrete claim, first made in the late 1970s by
Joseph Davidovits, a French chemist.

The stones, say the historians and archeologists, were all
carved from nearby quarries, heaved up huge ramps and set in
place by armies of workers. Some dissenters say that levers or
pulleys were used, even though the wheel had not been invented
at that time.

Until recently it was hard for geologists to distinguish between
natural limestone and the kind that would have been made by
reconstituting liquefied lime.

But according to Professor Gilles Hug, of the French National
Aerospace Research Agency (Onera), and Professor Michel Barsoum,
of Drexel University in Philadelphia, the covering of the great
Pyramids at Giza consists of two types of stone: one from the
quarries and one man-made.

“There’s no way around it. The chemistry is well and truly
different,” Professor Hug told Science et Vie magazine. Their
study is being published this month in the Journal of the
American Ceramic Society.

The pair used X-rays, a plasma torch and electron microscopes to
compare small fragments from pyramids with stone from the Toura
and Maadi quarries.

They found “traces of a rapid chemical reaction which did not
allow natural crystalisation . . . The reaction would be
inexplicable if the stones were quarried, but perfectly
comprehensible if one accepts that they were cast like
concrete.”

The pair believe that the concrete method was used only for the
stones on the higher levels of the Pyramids. There are some 2.5
million stone blocks on the Cheops Pyramid. The 10-tonne granite
blocks at their heart were also natural, they say. The
professors agree with the “Davidovits theory” that soft
limestone was quarried on the damp south side of the Giza
Plateau. This was then dissolved in large, Nile-fed pools until
it became a watery slurry.

Lime from fireplace ash and salt were mixed in with it. The
water evaporated, leaving a moist, clay-like mixture. This wet
“concrete” would have been carried to the site and packed into
wooden moulds where it would set hard in a few days. Mr
Davidovits and his team at the Geopolymer Institute at Saint-
Quentin tested the method recently, producing a large block of
concrete limestone in ten days.

New support for their case came from Guy Demortier, a materials
scientist at Namur University in Belgium. Originally a sceptic,
he told the French magazine that a decade of study had made him
a convert: “The three majestic Pyramids of Cheops, Khephren and
Mykerinos are well and truly made from concrete stones.”

The concrete theorists also point out differences in density of
the pyramid stones, which have a higher mass near the bottom and
bubbles near the top, like old-style cement blocks.

Opponents of the theory dispute the scientific evidence. They
also say that the diverse shapes of the stones show that moulds
were not used. They add that a huge amount of limestone chalk
and burnt wood would have been needed to make the concrete,
while the Egyptians had the manpower to hoist all the natural
stone they wanted.

The concrete theorists say that they will be unable to prove
their theory conclusively until the Egyptian authorities give
them access to substantial samples.
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