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Keyword: michelbarsoum

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  • Scientists Say Pyramids Could Be Concrete

    04/23/2008 1:23:56 PM PDT · by blam · 50 replies · 671+ views
    Physorg ^ | 4-23-2008 | UPI
    Scientists say pyramids could be concrete April 23, 2008 Scientists are taking a new look at Egypt's pyramids to see if some of the blocks could have been made from concrete. Linn W. Hobbs, a materials science professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told The Boston Globe there is a chance ancient Egyptians could have cast the blocks from synthetic material instead of carving them from quarries. Scientists have long believed Romans were the first to use structural concrete. Undergraduates in MIT's Materials in Human Experience class are building a scale-model pyramid made of quarried limestone and blocks cast from...
  • Riddle Of The Great Pyramids Of Giza: Professor Finds Some Building Blocks Were Concrete

    12/09/2006 4:41:35 PM PST · by Maelstorm · 40 replies · 1,548+ views
    www.sciencedaily.com ^ | December 9, 2006 | Drexel University
    Riddle Of The Great Pyramids Of Giza: Professor Finds Some Building Blocks Were Concrete In partially solving a mystery that has baffled archeologists for centuries, a Drexel University professor has determined that the Great Pyramids of Giza were constructed with a combination of not only carved stones but the first blocks of limestone-based concrete cast by any civilization. Picture of the Great Pyramid (Kheops pyramid). (Taken by Alex lbh in April 2005 / Courtesy of Wikipedia) Ads by Google Michel Barsoum, professor of materials engineering, shows in a peer-reviewed paper to be published Dec. 1 in the Journal of...
  • A new angle on pyramids: Scientists explore whether Egyptians used concrete

    05/01/2008 11:04:55 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 31 replies · 1,127+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | April 22, 2008 | Colin Nickerson
    At MIT, Hobbs and two colleagues teach a course called Materials in Human Experience... The MIT pyramid will contain only about 280 blocks, compared with 2.3 million in the grandest of the Great Pyramids... Hobbs describes himself as "agnostic" on the issue, but believes mainstream archeologists have been too contemptuous of work by other scientists suggesting the possibility of concrete. "The degree of hostility aimed at experimentation is disturbing," he said. "Too many big egos and too many published works may be riding on the idea that every pyramid block was carved, not cast." ...In 2006, research by Michel W....
  • Egypt's Pyramids Packed With Seashells (Not Concrete)

    05/01/2008 2:02:14 PM PDT · by blam · 43 replies · 90+ views
    Discovery Channel ^ | 5-1-2008 | Jennifer Viegas
    Egypt's Pyramids Packed With Seashells Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News Fossil-Filled April 25, 2008 -- Many of Egypt's most famous monuments, such as the Sphinx and Cheops, contain hundreds of thousands of marine fossils, most of which are fully intact and preserved in the walls of the structures, according to a new study. The study's authors suggest that the stones that make up the examined monuments at Giza plateau, Fayum and Abydos must have been carved out of natural stone since they reveal what chunks of the sea floor must have looked like over 4,000 years ago, when the buildings were...
  • Pyramids were built with concrete rather than rocks, scientists claim

    12/01/2006 3:55:23 PM PST · by Rodney King · 140 replies · 3,297+ views
    UK Times Online ^ | Today | Chalres Bremner
    The Ancient Egyptians built their great Pyramids by pouring concrete into blocks high on the site rather than hauling up giant stones, according to a new Franco-American study. The research, by materials scientists from national institutions, adds fuel to a theory that the pharaohs’ craftsmen had enough skill and materials at hand to cast the two-tonne limestone blocks that dress the Cheops and other Pyramids. Despite mounting support from scientists, Egyptologists have rejected the concrete claim, first made in the late 1970s by Joseph Davidovits, a French chemist. The stones, say the historians and archeologists, were all carved from nearby...