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Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 2:04 am
by alrom
I'm sorry for the Visoko people. They are going to look back to this in embarrassment. They will be mocked by the neighbouring towns for ages
BTW what's that tool that guy is using on the rock?

Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 3:02 am
by f9
Beside all critics I found some exelent points from all this saga.
First and most important we have seen that wider public and busines and
all non govermental groups and societies can find interest in archeological exavations.This is maybe and probably best organised exavation where
support is comeing from society and different social grups.
How much of this can be done if organisation have been in hands of state commisions,universities or museums.Probably that will be near 0.0004%.
It is the lesson for all archeologist who are desperately looking for financing of the projects,and it is slap in the face-of course.
How many archeological projects have at least move 500 people,not so many.Voluntering in houndreds?...Piramyd or not...there are lessons to be learned.
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 4:10 am
by eratoh
frank you are right. everyone on that hill with a shovel is getting it right up the arse. anyone that has donated money is getting penetrated too. why bother updating the english website.
its not hard to rouse thousands to action but the government has to allow it. the bosnian goverment like the bruces support this rebellion from their lands in the north and oppose it from their lands in the south. everybodys getting dressed up for nuthin.
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 5:11 am
by Essan
I see that
Bosnainpyramid.com are declaring that:
Satellite, aerial photographs and geographic maps show that Visocica hill has four sides like other existing pyramids around the world. All four sides are identical with the points of the compass, facing north, south, east and west.
and then, as evidence, presenting us with this map:-

heheh
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 6:50 am
by tintin
i told you all already...its so futile and ridiculous to think this a pyramid...u don't have to analysie something when u can use common sense and logic....it's a circus thats going on up on that hill...just put 10000 Cikos together and thats what u get...sad really...
:)...
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 6:58 am
by tintin
and what's really funny is that the so called pyramid-of-the-sun foundation has proudly put, on their website videos from NBC, CNN etc news that actually more or less, ridicule the whole thing....

...well done guys...Not to mention the professional work they are doing....
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 7:26 am
by stan
These are precisely the kinds of rock outcrops we have in the mountians of North Carolina.
BTW, Arch, do stones have gender where you come from?
That big rock just looks fleshy...like a lump of warm dough rising.
I wonder if it was some sort of altar or cult object? It seems
unusual and out of place.
Although perhaps it was deposited in some sort of alluvial event, at the same time as the the gravelly
interiorof the caves. What do you geologists say?
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 7:28 am
by Sam Salmon
archaeologist wrote:......this 'structure' looks like it was put together by blind, drunk men. there is no cohesion to the whole thing.
In that regard this thread parallels the '
dig'.

Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 10:02 am
by DougWeller
Essan wrote:I see that
Bosnainpyramid.com are declaring that:
Satellite, aerial photographs and geographic maps show that Visocica hill has four sides like other existing pyramids around the world. All four sides are identical with the points of the compass, facing north, south, east and west.
and then, as evidence, presenting us with this map:-

See here:
http://www.bosnianpyramid.com/index_files/image4901.jpg
and this
http://archaeoastronomy.co.uk/2006/04/2 ... -pyramids/
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 10:14 am
by Ciko
people do you know what erosion is ????
but if you look at this , you can see clear that the hill is a pyramid
south side of the pyramid has eroded , after so many years it is obvious

Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 10:41 am
by stan
Ciko, if the pyramid is eroded, how can it be covered up by a metre of dirt?
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 11:09 am
by Ciko
Ciko, if the pyramid is eroded, how can it be covered up by a metre of dirt?
i dont know
If those latin america pyramid was buried under the hills , why is bosnian pyramid so special then
Cholula pyramid i mexiko
San Andres , el Salvador step pyramid
El salvador step pyramid, Cihuatan
Ancient pyramid found in Mexico
The site will not be fully explored because of its religious significance
Archaeologists have discovered an ancient pyramid buried under a hill on the outskirts of Mexico City.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4881792.stm
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 11:13 am
by alrom
After seeing this picture, I've been wondering... for how long has the 'arrow sign' been used as a way of pointing to something? Any clue?
Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 11:38 am
by Minimalist
Probably started shortly after man invented arrows.

Posted: Mon May 29, 2006 12:56 pm
by Minimalist
Worth registering with the TIMES just to read this one!
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/27/world ... ref=slogin
THEY have been called mystical, awe-inspiring, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. But it is safe to say that in the 45 centuries the great pyramids of Giza have cast their formidable shadow over the desert, they have never before been described as a cuckoo clock.
But that is what Jean-Pierre Houdin said as he lifted his tall lanky body up the steps into the pyramid of Cheops, the largest of the three pyramids high up on the Giza plateau overlooking this teeming, ancient city on the Nile.
"This is not just a pile of rocks," he said, his words curled around a soft French accent. "This is a cuckoo clock."
And, of course, Zahi Hawass has to get his face in the story.
MR. HOUDIN'S enthusiasm has not exactly been embraced by the experts who have dedicated their lives to Egyptian antiquities, particularly the most important person in Egypt, the godfather of all that is pharaonic, Dr. Zahi Hawass, general secretary of the Supreme Council of Antiquities. For starters, Mr. Houdin is not part of the club, not a trained Egyptologist, and while his work is premised on facts it relies heavily on his imagination. Where some Egyptologists, for example, saw a tunnel leading from the burial chamber to the stars, Mr. Houdin said he saw a ventilation shaft.
"It is difficult to say whether he's right or not, there is no proof of anything," said Audran Labrousse, a French architect directing the excavation on the pyramids of South Sakarra, south of Cairo. "It is such a mystery because, of course, it is a question of engineering."
Dr. Hawass is less charitable. He says Mr. Houdin is wrong. Period. "Any Egyptologist cannot accept this," he said. "He imagined this. I don't see his evidence."