ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...
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y computer, at the material to be cut. <strong>The</strong> material then either melts, burns, vaporizes<br />
away, or is blown away by a jet of gas, leaving an edge with a high quality surface finish.<br />
Industrial laser cutters are used to cut flat-sheet material as well as structural <strong>and</strong> piping<br />
materials. Some 6-axis lasers can perform cutting operations on parts that have been preformed<br />
by casting or machining."<br />
-- Reference: Wikipedia.org<br />
144 "... Baalbek..."<br />
"<strong>The</strong> great mystery of the ruins of Baalbek, <strong>and</strong> indeed one of the greatest mysteries of the<br />
ancient world, concerns the massive foundation stones beneath the Roman Temple of<br />
Jupiter. <strong>The</strong> courtyard of the Jupiter temple is situated upon a platform, called the Gr<strong>and</strong><br />
Terrace, which consists of a huge outer wall <strong>and</strong> a filling of massive stones. <strong>The</strong> lower<br />
courses of the outer wall are formed of huge, finely crafted <strong>and</strong> precisely positioned blocks.<br />
<strong>The</strong>y range in size from thirty to thirty three feet in length, fourteen feet in height <strong>and</strong> ten feet<br />
in depth, <strong>and</strong> weigh approximately 450 tons each. Nine of these blocks are visible on the<br />
north side of the temple, nine on the south, <strong>and</strong> six on the west (others may exist but<br />
archaeological excavations have thus far not dug beneath all the sections of the Gr<strong>and</strong><br />
Terrace). Above the six blocks on the western side are three even larger stones, called the<br />
Trilithon, whose weight exceeds 1000 tons each. <strong>The</strong>se great stones vary in size between<br />
sixty-three <strong>and</strong> sixty-five feet in length, with a height of fourteen feet six inches <strong>and</strong> a depth<br />
of twelve feet.<br />
Another even larger stone lies in a limestone quarry a quarter of a mile from the Baalbek<br />
complex. Weighing an estimated 1200 tons, it is sixty-nine feet by sixteen feet by thirteen<br />
feet ten inches, making it the single largest piece of stonework ever crafted in the world.<br />
Called the Hajar el Gouble, the Stone of the South, or the Hajar el Hibla, the Stone of the<br />
Pregnant Woman, it lays at a raised angle with the lowest part of its base still attached to the<br />
quarry rock as though it were almost ready to be cut free <strong>and</strong> transported to its presumed<br />
location next to the other stones of the Trilithon.<br />
Why these stones are such an enigma to contemporary scientists, both engineers <strong>and</strong><br />
archaeologists alike, is that their method of quarrying, transportation <strong>and</strong> precision<br />
placement is beyond the technological ability of any known ancient or modern builders.<br />
Various ‘scholars’, uncomfortable with the notion that ancient cultures might have developed<br />
knowledge superior to modern science, have decided that the massive Baalbek stones were<br />
laboriously dragged from the nearby quarries to the temple site. While carved images in the<br />
temples of Egypt <strong>and</strong> Mesopotamia do indeed give evidence of this method of block<br />
transportation - using ropes, wooden rollers <strong>and</strong> thous<strong>and</strong>s of laborers - the dragged blocks<br />
are known to have been only 1/10th the size <strong>and</strong> weight of the Baalbek stones <strong>and</strong> to have<br />
been moved along flat surfaces with wide movement paths. <strong>The</strong> route to the site of Baalbek,<br />
however, is up hill, over rough <strong>and</strong> winding terrain, <strong>and</strong> there is no evidence whatsoever of a<br />
flat hauling surface having been created in ancient times.<br />
Next there is the problem of how the mammoth blocks, once they were brought to the site,<br />
were lifted <strong>and</strong> precisely placed in position. It has been theorized that the stones were raised<br />
using a complex array of scaffolding, ramps <strong>and</strong> pulleys which was powered by large<br />
numbers of humans <strong>and</strong> animals working in unison. An historical example of this method has<br />
been suggested as the solution for the Baalbek enigma. <strong>The</strong> Renaissance architect<br />
Domenico Fontana, when erecting a 327-ton Egyptian obelisk in front of St Peter's Basilica<br />
in Rome, used 40 huge pulleys, which necessitated a combined force of 800 men <strong>and</strong> 140<br />
horses. <strong>The</strong> area where this obelisk was erected, however, was a great open space that<br />
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