Occam's Razor Favors Walking Rocking over levitation!!!

Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2012 14:50:40 +0000
From: francis.x.roa...@lmco.com
Subject: RE: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Flint MI Stonehenge & Walking heads?
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com









So it’s not ambient gas trapped in the metal powder we call calcium of which 
the coral is made taking on inverse rydberg properties from agitation by 
acoustic
 or magnetic agitation? I was thinking the “fractional” gas might have a 
different frictional coefficient with space-time from our perspective allowing 
the rocks to fall slowly when agitated :_) maybe the manual labor was only 
needed to elevate and prop the
 stones then scoot them along quickly by agitating them and pulling out 
whatever you have propping them up… an old legend about striking the pyramid 
blocks and then moving them 2 bow lengths comes to mind.
Fran :_)
 


From: Wm. Scott Smith [mailto:scott...@hotmail.com]


Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2012 11:05 PM

To: vortex-l@eskimo.com

Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Flint MI Stonehenge & Walking heads?


 

I do believe the heads really walked there! Apparently the Islanders forgot
how to make them walk, but nonetheless:

 


A man in Flint Michigan has been casting concrete megaliths on one end of his 
(2-acre?) piece of land and "Walking" them all the way across his property to 
the construction
 site where he is replicating Stonehenge. I don't know the exact materials 
involved but we can imagine what he is doing to approximate the following:


 


On can insert two trailer hitches--or even just two really strong rocks, side 
by side, into adjacent holes near the center of gravity. The entire stone can 
pivot almost effortlessly
  on either or both of the two tiny "Legs" So he leans the rock onto one pivot 
point, walks in a half-circle until the floating pivot point swings out-front. 
Then he shifts the weight onto that pivot point and swings the other pivot 
point out-front, and
 so-on. 


 


I should add that the Coral Castle guy was said to cause stones to "levitate" 
or "hover" just above the ground, and that is pretty much what the stones look 
like as the Flint
 MI moves these enormous concrete blocks, single-handedly, especially if the 
Coral Castle witnesses were not really show the pivot-maneuvers.


 


Scott




Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2012 21:44:34 -0400

Subject: Re: [Vo]:Walking heads?

From: jedrothw...@gmail.com

To: vortex-l@eskimo.com



I do not think this was the method. I saw an anthropologist's 16 mm movie made 
in the 1930s, as I recall, in which the islanders moved one of statues left 
just outside the quarry. They used conventional stone-age techniques such as 
rolling logs and lots of
 manpower. This is the same technique used to build Stonehenge. I believe there 
are enough marks on the rocks to confirm that.

 


- Jed


 




                                          

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