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Originally posted by SLAYER69
The temple/temples [there are two in the area] were supposedly built around the same time as the Sphinx [+ or - a few years] was being carved with blocks taken from the Sphinx enclosure [Which means the blocks were of the same strength/weakness as it's body] for the temples construction as the enclosure was being excavated so to be able to carve the body.
Gauri established that the lowest strata, Member I, consists of a massive and durable limestone, exposed across much of the base of the Sphinx enclosure. The lowest lying parts of both the body of the Sphinx and the western exposures are Member I strata, with the quarried height increasing towards the north-west. The entire northern terrace of the enclosure consists of Member I limestones.
The upper body of the Sphinx and the upper part of the enclosure walls to the south and west, consist of the overlying Member II strata - a series of seven fine grained limestone units. Of these seven units, units 1 to 6 have been further divided into two sub-units, the lowest of which consists of a less durable, marly rock (with the upper sub-unit being coarser grained and generally more durable).
The head and neck of the Sphinx are carved from Member III rocks which have also been divided into two sub-units. The neck of the Sphinx consists of relatively less durable rocks, whereas, the head has been carved from 'one of the most durable limestones exposed at Giza'. The durability of the Member III strata has been cited by others to explain the remarkable preservation of the Sphinx's face and nemes head-dress.
Originally posted by Harte
Slayer<
Below is the fallacy that drives your argument:
Harte
Originally posted by Drala
reply to post by wiandiii
I doubt they were painting rocks...who does that? Perhaps they used a corrosive technique instead of chisels...but if you built that you wouldn't paint it would you?
I installed a cedar fence once and my client requested I paint it afterwards...it was like blasphemy to me...something so stunning and resistant should not be covered up with paint.
Are you aware of other painting in Egypt? I might just be unaware of that evidence, sorry if i am ignorant...couold you source me?
Originally posted by Harte
For example, the section of the head was carved from a protrusion of limestone that stood above ground level for a million years without weathering down, meaning that particular spot in that level of limestone was far harder than even the stone that was adjacent on the same level.
Originally posted by SLAYER69
Originally posted by LadyTrick
the sphinx was dug out of the ground, those walls are not actually walls but the ground and the enclosure is a hole dug out to create the body of the sphinx, the layers and grooves from older photos of the sphinx match up to the grooves/layers in those "walls"
Yes, most of us already know that.
This explains the better condition of the temple and head/face of the Sphinx how?
Originally posted by Heyyo_yoyo
Seriously though, couldn't certain plant extracts, mixed in with their colored pigments have preserved the permeable limestones that were saturated by them? Might explain some things.
Originally posted by SLAYER69
reply to post by meathed
Regarding the temple there seems to be two out of the box theories on it.
One group believes that the lower section are from a much much earlier period and was buried a long time ago. Not being exposed to the elements and therefore in much better condition while another group believe it to be much younger than the Sphinx. Which is why it does not show the same amount of weathering.
Either are interesting to speculate on.
Originally posted by fixer1967
Originally posted by buster2010
I think the Egyptians didn't build anything. They just repaired what they found. And the Sphinx is far older than we think and it wouldn't surprise me if it was built at the time Egypt was a grassland.
Here is an interesting read on it. Some people think the Sphinx could be over 50,000 years old. As for your statement that the Egyptians did not build it but just found it may inclued the three main pyramids at Giza which could be over 20,000 years old. If you think about it this does explain why we can not find out how the Egyptians built them. The snawe is simple. They did not. They just repaired what they found which not leaves a bigge mystery. If this is the case then who really did build the Sphinx and maybe the three main pyramids at Giza? We may never know.
www.lauralee.com...