(Please read from the start)
“The stone spheres are almost perfect. With some weighing in at almost 32,000 pounds. Obviously some type of mechanical process was needed to form the spherical shape but it is difficult to imagine how they were handled and carved with stone tools to such precision. Also, the region is a dense tropical area with steep terrain, making their movement a task equal to their actual construction.”
>> So we don’t have flat terrain and it has a dense flora, this certainly makes it hard to roll these petrospheres. They have a point here. Add for them being almost perfect spheres = the craftsmanship betrays a high technique and possibly some sort of sophisticated tool used to make the petrospheres. Which brings me to the Thunder deity mentioned in page 588: I’ve been talking about the Staff-god’s staff, calling it a weapon, than can emit some sort of laser beam or some type of electrical current, in this thread. So I’m wondering, can such a weapon make those spheres? Also, if it’s not made by that specific weapon, but we acknowledge the existence of such high tech weapons, can’t we also then acknowledge there might be TOOLS that can use laser, not just weapons? We have such industrial tools nowadays like when we cut diamonds for example. So I think it’s possible that the survivors of the Great Flood had laser tools used for industry with them, not just weapons.
“The leading expert on the stone spheres is Ifigenia Quintanilla, a Costa Rican doctoral student at the Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona. She is the author of the book Pre-Columbian Stone Spheres of Costa Rica (2007). The next leading expert is Dr. John Hoopes of the University of Kansas. Dr. Hoopes believes the majority of stones were made by local inhabitants who lived in the area from about 800 to 1200 AD. Because these ancient people had no written language, there is no record of the stones in their history. Dr. Hoopes says the stones were likely formed from granite blocks by successively heating and cooling the outside of the rock, causing it to flake away in layers. Hand tools such as a matate would have been used to refine the spherical shape with sand and leather to finish and polish the surface.”
>> I think my theory of using ancient laser tools fits perfectly with what is said about heating the petrospheres to shed off layers. Remember anons, all of these are theories I’m talking about when it comes to these petrospheres, it’s just theory.
“The construction of the spheres would have required a high degree of measurement and mathematics. One perplexing question is why this same level of skill and precision has not been found in any other artifacts of this era and region.”
>> I agree.
-
Page 592 –