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3,442 results for "in situ" — page 2 of 173
M_5_14 — Archaeological Dating Method Controversies
Archaeological chronology — the backbone of all historical interpretation — rests on a hierarchy of dating methods, each with specific strengths, limitations, and known failure modes that are well documented in the speci
M_3_14 — Construction Replication Experiments and Megalithic Engineering Tests
Construction replication experiments — attempts to reproduce ancient building techniques using period-appropriate tools and methods — provide the most direct empirical test of whether proposed explanations for megalithic
M_3_08 — Ancient Precision Drilling — Core #7 and Petrie's Evidence
Among the most debated artifacts in discussions of ancient technology are granite drill cores and bore holes from ancient Egypt, particularly a piece catalogued as "Core #7" — a cylindrical granite core (approximately 10
M_3_12 — Stone Softening Claims: Mythological and Chemical Analysis
Among the most intriguing and elusive claims in alternative archaeology is the idea that ancient Andean peoples possessed a botanical or chemical method of "softening" stone — reducing hard stone (particularly the andesi
M_3_04 — Ancient Mining and Tunneling Technology
Ancient mining and tunneling represent some of humanity's most technically demanding and dangerous engineering achievements, dating from Paleolithic flint mines (Grimes Graves, England, c. 3000 BCE; Spiennes, Belgium, c.
M_3_06 — Unfinished Obelisk and Ancient Quarrying Evidence
The Unfinished Obelisk at the Northern Quarry of Aswan, Egypt is one of the most important archaeological sites for understanding ancient Egyptian stone-quarrying technology. Dated to the New Kingdom (most likely commiss
M_3_09 — Precision Granite Machining Debate: Petrie to Dunn
The debate over precision granite machining in ancient Egypt has persisted for over 130 years, originating with Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie (1853-1942), the father of modern Egyptology, who meticulously documente
M_4_08 — Sphinx Water Erosion Hypothesis
The Sphinx Water Erosion Hypothesis is the controversial geological argument that the Great Sphinx of Giza and its surrounding enclosure walls show erosion patterns consistent with prolonged exposure to rainfall (precipi
M_4_14 — Richat Structure & Bimini Road: Geological Formations or Lost Civilizations?
The Richat Structure (also called the "Eye of the Sahara" or "Eye of Africa") is a prominent circular geological feature approximately 40 km in diameter located near Ouadane, Mauritania, in the western Sahara Desert (21°
M_2_14 — Tiwanaku and the Altiplano — High-Altitude Anomalous Engineering
Tiwanaku (also spelled Tiahuanaco) — located at 3,850 meters elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano, approximately 20 km southeast of Lake Titicaca — was the capital of one of the most significant pre-Columbian civilization
M_2_02 — Nazca Lines — Purpose, Astronomy, Water Rituals, and Modern AI Discovery
The Nazca Lines are a collection of over 1,500 geoglyphs etched into the arid Nazca Plateau of southern Peru, created primarily between 500 BCE and 500 CE by the Nazca culture. They range from simple geometric lines exte
M_2_16 — Gunung Padang: Indonesia's Megalithic Controversy
Gunung Padang ("Mountain of Enlightenment" in Sundanese) is a megalithic site in Karyamukti village, Cianjur Regency, West Java, Indonesia, situated atop a volcanic hill at ~885 meters elevation. The visible surface cons
M_2_09 — Baalbek Trilithon and Megalithic Quarrying
The Trilithon of Baalbek — three colossal limestone blocks forming part of the podium (retaining wall) of the Temple of Jupiter at Baalbek (ancient Heliopolis) in Lebanon's Beqaa Valley — represents one of the most extra
M_2_15 — Gunung Padang: Indonesia's Controversial Megalithic Site
Gunung Padang is a terraced hilltop site in West Java, Indonesia, covered with thousands of columnar basalt blocks arranged across five terraces rising ~30 meters above the surrounding terrain. Long revered as a sacred S
M_2_17 — Sphinx Water Erosion Hypothesis — Schoch Debate
The Sphinx water erosion hypothesis (WEH) — the geological argument that the Great Sphinx of Giza and its enclosure show erosion patterns consistent with prolonged rainfall rather than wind-blown sand, potentially indica
M_1_10 — Antelope Springs Footprint and Anomalous Fossil Prints
The "Antelope Springs footprint" — discovered by amateur fossil collector William J. Meister Sr. on June 1, 1968, near Antelope Springs, Utah — is one of the most widely cited "out-of-place artifacts" (OOPArts) in altern
M_1_05 — Phaistos Disc — Undeciphered Minoan Artifact
The Phaistos Disc is a fired clay disc approximately 15 cm in diameter, impressed on both sides with a spiral arrangement of 241 signs comprising 45 distinct symbols, discovered in 1908 by Italian archaeologist Luigi Per
A_1_23 — Proto-Writing & Token Systems: Precursors to Cuneiform
The invention of writing in Mesopotamia around 3200 BCE was not a sudden innovation but the culmination of an 8,000-year evolution of information recording technologies. Beginning with simple geometric clay tokens in the
A_1_20 — Elamite and Proto-Elamite Script: Iran's Undeciphered Writing Systems
The Elamite civilization of southwestern Iran — centered on the cities of Susa and Anshan — was one of the earliest complex societies of the ancient Near East, rivaling Sumer and Akkad yet remaining far less understood d
A_1_22 — Proto-Writing Development and Precursors to Cuneiform
The transition from pre-literate record-keeping to cuneiform script spanned approximately 5,000 years, from small geometric clay tokens used for commodity tracking in the Neolithic (c. 8000 BCE) through the emergence of
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