It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Hooke
originally posted by: Scott Creighton
originally posted by: Hooke
originally posted by: Scott Creighton
a reply to: Hooke
Hooke: Look again, for example, at the "north-east" arrow and the "north-west" arrow: they have not been placed at the same angle as each other.
In order that it can be shown as reaching the middle of the earth's landmass from North America, the north-west arrow has been completely curved round.
The same goes for the south-east and south-west arrows. If they were directions, those arrows would both show exactly the same angle of slope with respect to the equator.
But they don't.
SC: And they don't for a very obvious reason. (Hint: Giza sits at 30°N and NOT at the equator).
But you've missed the point that what is true for the equator is also true for any parallel, including the 30th, which is shown on Piazzi Smyth's map.
(And my apologies: I think I misspelt Charles Piazzi Smyth's name in my previous post).
No. The asymmetrical curve in Smyth's ordinals is a result of them being made on a flat projection of the world (from the 30th parallel). Had they been made from the equator they would then have been symmetrical.
No, this makes no sense.
It could explain an asymmetry between north and south arrows on a Mercator type projection: but not the asymmetry between east and west arrows.
We see for example that the north-east arrow is actually pointing roughly in a north-east direction, while the north-west arrow bends to become almost parallel to the equator...
The parallel going through Giza is also running shorter over land than the parallels to the north going over the whole of Asia. According to my measurements, 50° North would be the best candidate, running more than 2000 km over land than the one trough Giza. The “real” center of the landmasses would then be some kilometers west of Kiev at the Black Sea. In the Ukraine." - (from here).
originally posted by: Scott Creighton
...
The GP, however, is ~31° E of the Greenwich projection. In order to compensate for this 31° east-to-west offset from the map's Greenwich-oriented projection requires that, when drawing the ordinals, that they be drawn in the manner that Professor Smyth has presented them
....
originally posted by: Hooke
originally posted by: Scott Creighton
...
The GP, however, is ~31° E of the Greenwich projection. In order to compensate for this 31° east-to-west offset from the map's Greenwich-oriented projection requires that, when drawing the ordinals, that they be drawn in the manner that Professor Smyth has presented them
....
Again, this makes no sense.
The projection used by Piazzi Smyth is a Mercator projectio: north at the top of the map, south at the bottom, east to the right and west to the left.
Whether it is centred on the meridian of Greenwich, on that of Gizeh, or on any other meridian, there should be perfect symmetry with respect to the equator and to the meridian chosen for the centre of the map, if this is indeed a matter of directions.
The two red arrows on the map I provided point perfectly distinctly to the north-east and north-west. This is not the case with Piazzi Smyth's arrows at all.
originally posted by: Hooke
a reply to: Scott Creighton
Where did Smyth claim to have drawn a sine curve?
originally posted by: anti72
a reply to: Scott Creighton
this is nonsense. regarding the gods, newer research shows that in the 4th dynasty at Khufus times the figure of Osiris has not yet appeared as a mayor force, neither Isis.
Instead, the three most important deities were Horus, Hathor and Re.
“...while there is every likelihood that the Osirian material in the Pyramid Texts derives in part from a much earlier date, so far it has not proved possible to track down the god or his symbols tangibly to the First or Second dynasty...” (emphasis mine).
"...alhough there is a strong likelihood that the cult of Osiris began in or before the First Dynasty in connection with the royal funerals at Abydos, archaelogical evidence hitherto does not tangibly date the cult to an era before the Fifth Dynasty.” (emphasis mine).
- J.G. Griffiths, The Origins of Osiris and his Cult p.44
“…the myth of Osiris seems to be an echo of long forgotten events which actually took place.” (Emphasis mine).
- Walter B. Emery, Archaic Egypt(1961), pp.122-123
“…much points to the conclusion that Osiris’s story was cloaked in the veil of distant antiquity even at this [5th dynasty] early date. The discovery at Helwan of a very early Djed symbol and the ‘girdle of Isis’ (Isis being his female counterpart) shows that during the Archaic Period (Dynasty 1 and 2) Osiris’s cult already existed.” – Jane B. Sellers, The Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, Revised Edition 2007, p.6