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slimmouse wrote:cptmarginal wrote:And as for the lack of the Sphinx in the ancient texts problem, that could be explained too. The Sphinx was often mentioned in the Pyramid Texts, but not in a way which the Egyptologists could recognise. I quote the many references in the Pyramid Texts and the Coffin Texts to a giant Anubis at Giza, which is twice specifically described as sitting beside a causeway, and which was surrounded by a body of water with various names, the most famous of which is Jackal Lake, and another being the Winding Waterway.
That sounds like a pretty promising angle... I wonder what the conventional explanation for the "giant Anubis at Giza" might be?
When anyone can ever explain to me how the ancients built the great pyramid, and then why the later ones all fell down, then I'll start trusting theories about the Sphinx.
Anubis my ass.
Jeff wrote:I've been impressed by Robert Schoch's geological argument for a very old Sphinx. Currently reading his Pyramid Quest. A recent interview with him is posted here. Has some interesting things to say about consciousness and paranormal phenomena.
nathan28 wrote:Schoch, though, says the Sphinx dates to 5000-8000 BCE.
barracuda wrote:seemslikeadream wrote:apologies if this was already mentioned but don't forget the head was redone and is not the original head
I'd just point out that the vast majority of egyptologists would disagree with that statement.
xsicbastardx wrote:slimmouse wrote:cptmarginal wrote:And as for the lack of the Sphinx in the ancient texts problem, that could be explained too. The Sphinx was often mentioned in the Pyramid Texts, but not in a way which the Egyptologists could recognise. I quote the many references in the Pyramid Texts and the Coffin Texts to a giant Anubis at Giza, which is twice specifically described as sitting beside a causeway, and which was surrounded by a body of water with various names, the most famous of which is Jackal Lake, and another being the Winding Waterway.
That sounds like a pretty promising angle... I wonder what the conventional explanation for the "giant Anubis at Giza" might be?
When anyone can ever explain to me how the ancients built the great pyramid, and then why the later ones all fell down, then I'll start trusting theories about the Sphinx.
Anubis my ass.
If you read Fingerprints of the Gods, you will learn that the Egyptians had some kind of "Diamond Tip Drill" that bored out the Granite Sarcophagus Covers that not only were advanced for their time but removed material at a rate that we even have a hard time achieving.
I think it is quite amazing that folks haven't focused on Egypt more. IT's like all these "experts" profess their theories yet half of them don't even really believe them.
Explain what happened at Giza and you unlock a door to a long lost past of humanity.
Case in point......can't exactly remember them name....The Kings Scroll I think.....Supposedly it's etched on some Kings wall and it goes back 40,000 years thru Egypt History and the Kings that ruled"..... Yet scientists say that they had the same problem with dating time periods a la the Bible.
Fucking Bullshit.
These people built the Pyramids and the Sphinx.....and they couldn't tell time. I'm not buying it at all.
seemslikeadream wrote:Cosmic Cowbell wrote:From Andrew Collins...
"Redating the Sphinx
The Forbidden Legacy of a Fallen Race
Thanks for that, are you familiar with Graham Hancock and his series on the underwater ruins near Japan?
Why is it that the Sphinx, which we have always been told is a lion does not actually look like a lion at all? Do lions look like that? You have to ignore the lion-like paws, because they are a more recent construction, purposely made to resemble lion's paws by people doing what they call 'restoration'. We have no idea what the original paws looked like, since they had been rendered unrecognisable by Roman times. But if anyone has ever been to the zoo, he or she knows that lions do not look like that. When Olivia and I first saw the Sphinx we both blamed ourselves, we thought we did not have a certain ability which other people obviously had, an ability for seeing lions. We thought that we must be lion-dyslexic. We looked and we looked and no matter how hard we looked there was still no lion. Continuing to stare did not help. There is no rising chest, no mane, there just is nothing there which is remotely leonine at all.
"The human head was carved out of the neck and stump of the Anubis head, which was vandalised during the First Intermediate Period at the end of the Old Kingdom, when chaos reigned and the Giza Plateau was sacked by rampaging violent mobs."
As for the erosion, that was caused as a result of the Moat. The Sphinx itself has horizontal erosion, because it was sitting in a lake, the level of which rose and fell with the seasons. But the walls of the pit have both horizontal and vertical erosion, hence the earlier suggestion that the vertical erosion must have been caused by descending rain. But what I believe really caused this was the continual dredging of the moat, which was always being filled with windblown sand which had to be removed. As everyone knows, when you dredge, the water pours down as you remove the solid things. And as this happened, particularly on the south side, the dredging water poured down heavily, scouring out the vertical crevasses.
It was all very well to come to these conclusions, but we could not just write them down on a page of A-4 and hand them round to our friends and consider our job done. Clearly there was a lot of work to be done. And when I say a lot, I mean a lot.
It took ten years.
Cosmic Cowbell wrote:seemslikeadream wrote:Cosmic Cowbell wrote:From Andrew Collins...
"Redating the Sphinx
The Forbidden Legacy of a Fallen Race
Thanks for that, are you familiar with Graham Hancock and his series on the underwater ruins near Japan?
You're welcome. Thanks for the thread. I am familiar with the ruins near Japan through the documentary featuring Hancock. A strong case, as in the that of the Sphinx, for the existence pre-"civilization" civilizations.
nathan28 wrote:OP ED, what is the source for the 150,000 year-old histories?
"After the kingship descended from heaven, the kingship was in Eridug. In Eridug, Alulim became king; he ruled for 28800 years."
Perelandra wrote:
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