- Joined
- Dec 9, 2017
- Messages
- 12,685
I still think it is something simple that is being overlook, something that was either forgotten or purposefully hidden.
With a quick search I found this on Viktor Grebennikov, the beetle wing guy. I have no idea what this forum is about, just found it doing a search. The quick video is in the first post.
Viktor Grebennikov and his beetle wing powered levitating platform., page 1
Someone also mentions:
“There is an intriguing passage in a history text by the 10th century Arab historian, Abul Hasan Ali Al-Masudi, known as the Herodotus of the Arabs. Al-Masudi had traveled much of the known world in his day before settling in Egypt, and he had written a 30-volume history of the world. He too was struck by the magnificence of the Egyptian pyramids and wrote about how their great stone blocks were transported. First, he said, a "magic papyrus" (paper) was placed under the stone to be moved. Then the stone was struck with a metal rod that caused the stone to levitate and move along a path paved with stones and fenced on either side by metal poles. The stone would travel along the path, wrote Al-Masudi, for a distance of about 50 meters and then settle to the ground. The process would then be repeated until the builders had the stone where they wanted it.”
I remember hearing about using sound, that would be the ‘hitting’ the object to make it resonate. I really never did any follow-up research. If it had been Aliens or visitors from another planet, we would have much more evidence of their being here besides hieroglyphs. I believe the ancients did just learn to harness the power of the Earth’s magnetic fields for their benefit/amusement.
With a quick search I found this on Viktor Grebennikov, the beetle wing guy. I have no idea what this forum is about, just found it doing a search. The quick video is in the first post.
Viktor Grebennikov and his beetle wing powered levitating platform., page 1
Someone also mentions:
“There is an intriguing passage in a history text by the 10th century Arab historian, Abul Hasan Ali Al-Masudi, known as the Herodotus of the Arabs. Al-Masudi had traveled much of the known world in his day before settling in Egypt, and he had written a 30-volume history of the world. He too was struck by the magnificence of the Egyptian pyramids and wrote about how their great stone blocks were transported. First, he said, a "magic papyrus" (paper) was placed under the stone to be moved. Then the stone was struck with a metal rod that caused the stone to levitate and move along a path paved with stones and fenced on either side by metal poles. The stone would travel along the path, wrote Al-Masudi, for a distance of about 50 meters and then settle to the ground. The process would then be repeated until the builders had the stone where they wanted it.”
I remember hearing about using sound, that would be the ‘hitting’ the object to make it resonate. I really never did any follow-up research. If it had been Aliens or visitors from another planet, we would have much more evidence of their being here besides hieroglyphs. I believe the ancients did just learn to harness the power of the Earth’s magnetic fields for their benefit/amusement.