Friday, August 23, 2019

Puma Punku




Q.  At Puma Punku in Bolivia, they have an abandoned city, built with tremendous stones weighing several tons.  Many of them were H shaped or even T shaped joints.  Supposedly, they were designed so the stones could be joined together, but they are incredibly complex and over engineered.   If it was designed today, most people would use a dovetail joint or mortise and tendon.  Why were they so complex?  Or, have we mistaken them to be joints to connect the stones and actually served another purpose?

A.  Love this question!


I actually see this a little differently.   I don't see that there were enormous stones carried there.  I get the stones were created there.  

Let me explain.. It was if they used some kind of material (like an old fashioned form of paste/concrete powder) and mixed it with water to create a "cement" block.  When the block was mostly "dry" they were able to carve the joints and intricate notches with ease, and then allowed it to dry completely.  In some situations the blocks were placed next to each other while they were still moldable (and not all the way dry) to form tight joints.  If you were to separate the "tighter stones," I get you would see they are so compressed they almost feel like one stone (because they finished the drying process together and are somewhat stuck).  

I get that the vision for this was to fit these stones together, and many would have wood planks in some of the joints.  This was to be a megalithic stone and wooden "city."


It looks like when this project was started they highly underestimated the amount of resources that would be required.  They began to run out of the "concrete" material, and obtaining water was even becoming a challenge (drought??).  Even something that sounds as easy as obtaining wood was a challenge for this location.  Eventually they had to abandon what they started, and we are left with viewing the semi completed work.  

And that is all I have for this reading.  This was really interesting, and hope you enjoyed.  Love and light, Lynn 

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10 comments:

Robert Schoen said...

the pyramids throughout the world, Machu Picchu and other ancient building ruins like this one offer evidence that official history is ignorant of or ignores past advanced technology. there's a great YouTube channel called Ancient Architects which goes into some of these Mysteries and in one they explain how there is a chemical way that almost dissolves or melt Stone, which could explain the marshmallow like melted Stone walls at Machu Picchu that fits so perfectly together with no mortar. Many now believe the sub blocks on Cheops pyramid were made of concrete and the Roman roads of concrete are stronger than what we can build today. interestingly there is this company called Cemex which recently patented a method for making cement with blood as a way to make lighter and stronger concrete, maybe that's what the Romans used.

Craig said...

@robert- off topic but When you mentioned Cemex a bell went off. This is the company that had a factory in arizona where traces of a child trafficking and torture sight was discovered by accident by that vets organization looking for homeless vets. There was a homeless camp right next to the area. Anyway Cemex is owned by an investment company called Bronfman-Rothschild. Bronfman as in NXIUM and you know about the Rothschilds. So when you said the cement had blood in it i was thinking, whos blood? Children? God i hope not. Cemex is now owned by someone else or another company.

@Watch said...

Thanks Lynn, fascinating reading: Next to Puma Punku lies another important archeological site: Tiahuanaco. May I ask if they are related to each other or is there a time-gap between both?

Robert Schoen said...

@Craig you're absolutely right. Cemex also has a big operation in Dayton Ohio, which is another pedophile Hotspot with 13 children's hospitals in that city alone, which you can imagine is the perfect cover for this kind of dirty business. while I was not trying to make a political rant out of a historical architectural issue, it seemed logical to me that the Romans would not have been above mixing blood into cement to get their perfect mixture. Dnajlion7 on YouTube covers a lot of these nefarious goings-on. let's all pray and project our thoughts towards a world where these Horrors no longer exist.


@Watch said...

This may explain the lack of wood back then: "The tree line is the edge of the habitat at which trees are capable of growing. It is found at high elevations and high latitudes. " "Generally categorized as Arctic or alpine, tundra refers to a treeless biome that ranks among the coldest on Earth. Though covered in snow most of the year, the tundra experiences a short summer growing season during which animal and plant activity peaks. Virtually no reptiles or amphibians can live in tundra's harsh conditions, but other tundra plants and animals have developed adaptations that allow them to survive in such a frigid environment."

Raymond said...

It never occurred to me, that it was concrete or that it was abandoned before it was finished. It's a shame that they put so much effort into designing and building as much as they did and not be able to enjoy it.

I wonder how they made the cement. The site is over a thousand years old and many of those blocks looked like they were created yesterday. We could learn a lot from them.

Thanks Lynn

Lynn White, Focus Sessions said...

@Robert: That is super interesting! Thank you for sharing!! I had never heard of (or picked up on anything with) blood cement, but nothing would surprise me.

@Craig: Good point. There are lots of sick people doing very sick things..

@Raymond: Thanks for the comment!

Thanks for the comments, everyone. i really appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts! Have a great Sunday!

b87g87haofmg68g87g87g87 said...

Lynn. I feel like lose my faith in life. Also confused a lot.
Do you have inputs for me? One two wise words from you.

@Watch said...

Sorry but I actually had posed a question (that got unnoticed) about the relation to another archeological site that is just a stone´s throw away as can be seen on this sat-image with scale bar (https://postimg.cc/z3XNQMTb). Do they really care about South America?

Lynn White, Focus Sessions said...

@Watch: Sorry, I didn't see that when I scanned over this. Thank you for sharing! Yes, people do care about South America- amazing place with lots of history!