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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Posthttps://www.spectator.co.uk/article/...astern-turkey-
This link was posted by Chris Phillips over on JTRForums. Intriguing stuff."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Talking about Amazing Archaeology, have you even seen photo's of this ancient Egyptian object?
As it says, it is a reconstruction of the original artifact.
A metal wheel?, actually no, it was carved out of stone about 5000 years ago, no-one knows what it's function was.
Here is the original artifact.
The dia. is 61cm or 24".
If it was cast out of metal it would be intriguing enough, but carved out of slate-stone must have taken a long, long time, and for what?
Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostTalking about Amazing Archaeology, have you even seen photo's of this ancient Egyptian object?
As it says, it is a reconstruction of the original artifact.
A metal wheel?, actually no, it was carved out of stone about 5000 years ago, no-one knows what it's function was.
Here is the original artifact.
The dia. is 61cm or 24".
If it was cast out of metal it would be intriguing enough, but carved out of slate-stone must have taken a long, long time, and for what?Thems the Vagaries.....
Comment
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostTalking about Amazing Archaeology, have you even seen photo's of this ancient Egyptian object?
As it says, it is a reconstruction of the original artifact.
A metal wheel?, actually no, it was carved out of stone about 5000 years ago, no-one knows what it's function was.
Here is the original artifact.
The dia. is 61cm or 24".
If it was cast out of metal it would be intriguing enough, but carved out of slate-stone must have taken a long, long time, and for what?"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Comment
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostThe dia. is 61cm or 24".
If it was cast out of metal it would be intriguing enough, but carved out of slate-stone must have taken a long, long time, and for what?
I have an educated guess.
I could be entirely wrong, but the first thing I thought of was a gizmo for separating seeds.
Have you ever tried to harvest a large amount of lettuce seeds or spinach seeds?
Once the plant is dried, one strategy some of the American tribes used was to crumble the dried plants and set them into a sort of bowl or 'gold mining' pan. One begins with a heap of chaff and tiny stalks and straws, with the tiny seeds mixed among them.
Instead of the painful task of picking out the seeds one-at-a-time, if one shakes and swirls the pan and blows into it, the dried chaff becomes air-born. Done correctly, the straws and stems blow away, leaving the heavier and non-aerodynamic seeds in the bottom of the pan.
I suspect that the Egyptian inventor was trying to create something along these lines. It is obviously meant to spin on a center rod, and it has three areas where one can grip the wheel. The 'fins' are meant to create an updraft as it rotates.
Whether it would work or not I cannot say, but it could conceivably separate tiny seeds from the chaff when they are dropped into the spinning plate.
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Thanks RJ, yes academia is mystified. Was it a one-off, or one of several? No wall relief has survived showing one of these. And, this artifact dates to a time when academia teaches us the Egyptians didn't know of the wheel, having no use for it, but as you say, if that center boss was for a shaft then you have an axle and this device turns like a wheel.
The raised up parts, the triangular looking 'leafs', or petals, for want of a better term, are not angled as we see in a propeller or a fan-blade so they can't easily disturb the air as it turns or water for that matter. The Egyptians did have a means for separating wheat from the chaff, I think we have wall reliefs demonstrating this, unless this was as you say, a new invention?
It seems to me that this could have been carved out of wood or formed out of clay, far quicker than cutting, drilling & grinding it out of hard stone. So, perhaps, the durability of stone was a clue to its use as opposed to softer materials like wood & clay?Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostThanks RJ, yes academia is mystified. Was it a one-off, or one of several? No wall relief has survived showing one of these. And, this artifact dates to a time when academia teaches us the Egyptians didn't know of the wheel, having no use for it, but as you say, if that center boss was for a shaft then you have an axle and this device turns like a wheel.
The raised up parts, the triangular looking 'leafs', or petals, for want of a better term, are not angled as we see in a propeller or a fan-blade so they can't easily disturb the air as it turns or water for that matter. The Egyptians did have a means for separating wheat from the chaff, I think we have wall reliefs demonstrating this, unless this was as you say, a new invention?
It seems to me that this could have been carved out of wood or formed out of clay, far quicker than cutting, drilling & grinding it out of hard stone. So, perhaps, the durability of stone was a clue to its use as opposed to softer materials like wood & clay?
If it didn’t have the ‘petals’ Id have gone for a cd holder.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostThanks RJ, yes academia is mystified. Was it a one-off, or one of several? No wall relief has survived showing one of these. And, this artifact dates to a time when academia teaches us the Egyptians didn't know of the wheel, having no use for it, but as you say, if that center boss was for a shaft then you have an axle and this device turns like a wheel.
The raised up parts, the triangular looking 'leafs', or petals, for want of a better term, are not angled as we see in a propeller or a fan-blade so they can't easily disturb the air as it turns or water for that matter. The Egyptians did have a means for separating wheat from the chaff, I think we have wall reliefs demonstrating this, unless this was as you say, a new invention?
It seems to me that this could have been carved out of wood or formed out of clay, far quicker than cutting, drilling & grinding it out of hard stone. So, perhaps, the durability of stone was a clue to its use as opposed to softer materials like wood & clay?"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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This is an interesting read.
"Ancient Egyptians were the first civilization to master a Solvay-like process for sodium carbonate manufacturing, long before it got reinvented in the 1800's in Europe. The key elements of that process is the temperature control of the chemical reactions (the cooling), and the dome shaped plate necessary for the counterflow chemical reactions to occur in an efficient way, and that plate is precisely what is the disc of Sabu."
Disc of Sabu by Ancient Egyptian Technology (milleetunetasses.com)
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Most of you must have heard of this device.
Antikythera Mechanism
Not as old as Sabu's Disc, but fascinating all the same.
Just sit through this video and see what they came up with when the mechanism was xrayed.
Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostMost of you must have heard of this device.
Antikythera Mechanism
Not as old as Sabu's Disc, but fascinating all the same.
Just sit through this video and see what they came up with when the mechanism was xrayed.
https://youtu.be/BoS75-0BRWo"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Comment
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It obviously fell off one of these:
They were built in British Leyland in those days so were totally unreliable.
Or it could be for mixing cloth with dyes in a dying business. An attached pole allows the operator to mix the cloth with the dye by pushing down into a stone hollow filled with water, dye and cloth.
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