Hi you all!Minimalist wrote: There are 2.5 million stone blocks in the Great Pyramid averaging the weight of a car. The math is instructive.
2,500,000 blocks divided by 20 years = 125,000 stones per year
125,000 stones divided by 365 days = 342 stones per day
342 stones divided by 24 hours/day = 14.25 stones per hour
14.25 stones divided by 60 minutes'hour = 1 stone every 4 minutes...rounded off.
I'd like to point out something that you might have not considered on your math. (I really mean it!, did you consider it?)
Speed on block transport from a quarry to the construction site is determined by the speed in which those blocks were quarried. Let me explain it.
Let's consider that it takes one month to move one stone block from the quarry to the site where the pyramid is being built. And suppose that we can build a block every 4 hours.
It will take 4 hours to build our first block. After it is built a team of carriers will take it and will start their trip to the pyramid. Then we start quarrying our second block... after 4 hours more another team will take the second block and start carrying it, etc.
It will take a month for the first team to get the first block to the pyramid, but from then on the guys at the pyramid will get a block every 4 hours.
Of course this is limited by the number of carrying teams. With x carrying teams you will get every month batches of x stones.
The conclusion is, the speed on stone transport depends more on how many people are moving stones at the same time and how much time does it take to build a stone, and less on how much time does it take a single team to carry a single stone from the quarry to the pyramid.
I don't know how many people worked on the pyramids but even considering this it doesn't fit much with the 20 years estimation.
Anyway, have you read this?
http://www.atse.org.au/index.php?sectionid=376
It's a nice theory about the transport of large stone blocks for the pyramids.