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One
of the greatest mysteries of all time is
the stones vases of Egypt. Thousands of
stones vases have been found in and around the pyramid of pharaoh Djoser in Saqqara, about 30 km south of Cairo. These stone vases originate
from before 2800 BC.
They are made of hard
rock materials such as diorite,
gneiss and granite
and require heavy-duty machinery such as
diamond drills,
diamond saws, cylinder bores, grinders etc., all of which did not exist
in those
days. The wheel had not yet been invented and iron was still unknown.
Yet many of these vases are perfectly shaped and are often
fully symmetric. In 1880 Professor Petrie, who has
done excavations in Egypt for years, noted that the ancient Egyptians really must have had
these
tools and pointed out saw and drill marks which undoubtedly prove this. However, only a few of Petrie's investigations
were followed up.
These mysterious vases are now housed in prominent museums such as the Louvre,
the
British museum and the Petrie museum.
However, the most bizarre objects are
the bent disks.
They look like ashtrays and one museum defines them as ‘oil
lamps’ but it is not conceivable that such a precious
object could have such a menial function. The form suggests an entirely different manufacturing process than mechanical
working. It seems more likely that these
forms were made by folding relatively soft material. But how were they able, more than 5000 years ago, to soften hard stone and
bend it into the desired shape?
More information on these mysterious
objects, see “Verborgen
geheimen van de mensheid (Dutch)”
Download
the free e-book at the end of the QUICK TOUR
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