The Biggest Cut Stone Block in the World Possibly Ever was Quarried Thousands of Years Ago at Baalbek, Lebanon
It amazing how easily we accept the current version of history while at the same time we have artifacts from ancient history that go to prove that something is very wrong with that current version. The Monolith at Baalbek was previously thought to be the largest stone block ever cut out but now--an even larger block has been found underneath it.
Two obvious solutions to explain why so big and how they were ever moved--which is a mystery--is 1)attenuated gravity conditions in the past or 2) Larger Humans operating the "machinery".....
International Business Times
Hannah Osborne
December 9, 2014
The stone block is believed to be the "biggest boulder known from antiquity".(Deutsches Archäologisches Institut)
A massive stone block dating to 27 BC has been discovered in the Roman sanctuary of Baalbek in Lebanon.
Researchers from the German Archaeological Institute uncovered the monolithic block earlier this year while excavating the quarry of Baalbek.
The stone block is almost 20m long, 6m wide and 5.5m high. It weighs approximately 1,650 tonnes, and is the largest known block to have been carved by human hand.
Similar stones of its size were used as the podium of the Temple of Jupiter - but it was never transported, researchers said. The base of the Temple of Jupiter is made up of huge limestone blocks, with the base stones weighing about 1,000 tonnes.
Baalbek was known as Heliopolis during Roman rule and was one of the largest sanctuaries in the Empire. It is home to some of the best preserved Roman ruins in Lebanon.
The stone was found near two other massive blocks, one weighing about 1,240 tonnes and the other - the Hajjar al-Hibla, or The Stone of the Pregnant Woman - weighing about 1,000 tonnes. The latest block was found under the Hajjar al-Hibla.
Experts said the level of smoothness and size specifications suggest it was meant to be transported as one piece, making it the "biggest boulder known from antiquity".
Archaeologists are now trying to establish why the stone was not completed and left in the quarry, and how it could ever have been transported.
"The aim of this year's excavations was to find new data mining technology and transport these megaliths," they said.
Experts believe the stone block was not transported because it there was a crack in one of the corners, meaning it would probably have cracked during transportation.
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