This is an incredible writeup. I've visited almost all of these sites to inspect the masonry, spent weeks researching, pestered tour guides and museum workers for oral history, and still I learned things in reading this article.

However there is one aspect which I think is incomplete. When you closely inspect the seams of some of the non-layered works like sacsayhuaman, we are talking about 2mm precision along curved, inconsistent lines of two stones. The when you look at the joints up close, they make the joint between flat cinder-blocks look chunky.

The author posits that this was all hand chiseling and eyeballing, or scribe tools. However I believe there would be occasional gaps or inconsistencies, which simply aren't present in any of the pre-colonial precise works.

One thing I discovered in my research of other central American indigenous cultures (inca was a melting pot of culture and technology) was the use of rope or string, sand, and water to finely cut stones and gems. It is pulled like a circular sand paper and I believe this process would have been used, run between both stones being joined at once, in order to achieve the final tolerances through uniformly wearing the proud aspects of the joint on both sides.

> the use of rope or string, sand, and water to finely cut stones and gems

I haven't heard this one before, that's a great idea. Here's a YouTube video of somebody doing this with jade if anybody is curious:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=w_9MCNgY2Ww

This is neat but I could have done without the poor diction, AI voice, and inaccessible subtitles.

[flagged]

Take two stones of similar roughness and rub them together for many, many hours. Eventually you'll have to flat surfaces that fit almost perfectly together. Beyond that, it's not hard to see how some skilled craftsmen with some knowledge of geometry (and lots of laborers and a royal mandate) could construct what the Inca did.

What they built is incredibly impressive, but you don't need to invoke magic woo to explain it.

It doesn't take many many hours. I saw a TV documentary on it, it can be done in a half hour with stones the size of a box of kleenex. The archaeologist would also add sand in between the two surfaces to speed it up.

How will you do that to stones of granite, quartz or stishovite ? Several authors and experts of all kind say what you said and what the article states are completely unfeasible.

“ spiritual access to directed free-energy at the magnetic equator for dustifying/liquifying”

What? These words are English yet carry no meaning to me. Ancient people had clever engineers, just like us. Fuck all to do with magnetic spirituality whatever the fuck that is.

Every time there’s a thread about ancient engineering someone insists on this woo or different woo involving aliens.

Fucking tired of the arrogance and sheer dismissal of ancient people’s achievements.

Free energy at the magnetic equator. Fucks sake.

sorry, I was tempted to draw a connection between the coincidence of dustified steel recorded during a magnetic disturbance and the locations of megalithic sites, but I’m not committed to their connection. I find it fun to hypothesize but I don’t want to dismiss their achievements.

don't feed the trolls