These Hieroglyphs Reveal How the Heaviest Stones Crossed the Desert — And the Tool They Used
The granite inside the Great Pyramid weighs up to sixty tons a block — and it was cut eight hundred kilometers away, then moved the length of Egypt and lifted into the air. And that isn't even the heavy one. In Lebanon, three stones weighing eight hundred tons each sit stacked in a wall. A fourth, still in its quarry, weighs over sixteen hundred. The largest worked stones on Earth — cut, shaped, and in some cases moved — by people the textbooks hand a rope and a wooden sledge. So how were they actually moved? And why is the oldest stonework the most impossible, while everything built after it is a step down? Something was known at the start. And then it was gone. If forbidden ancient history fascinates you, subscribe. Every week we look at what the textbooks state — and never explain.

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