Egyptisk pyramide (Danish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Egyptisk pyramide" in Danish language version.

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books.google.com

howstuffworks.com

science.howstuffworks.com

  • Nov 29, 2018, Egyptianscience.howstuffworks.com: Egyptian Pyramids Built with Ramps, Not Alien Technology Arkiveret 8. januar 2019 hos Wayback Machine: Citat: "...It seems we may have an answer, and it wasn't aliens after all. Researchers have uncovered a sophisticated ramp system dating back 4,500 years. Located at Hatnub, a rock quarry in Egypt's Eastern Desert, the ramp was used to transport massive alabaster stones up steep angles and into place during pyramid construction. "This kind of system has never been discovered anywhere else," said Yannis Gourdon, co-director of the expedition, which also included archaeologists from the French Institute for Oriental Archaeology in Cairo and from the University of Liverpool in England..."

nytimes.com

  • Slackman, Michael (17. november 2008). "In the Shadow of a Long Past, Patiently Awaiting the Future". The New York Times. Arkiveret fra originalen 26. august 2019. Hentet 1. maj 2010.
  • Slackman, Michael (16. november 2007). "In the Shadow of a Long Past, Patiently Awaiting the Future". New York Times. Arkiveret fra originalen 26. august 2019. Hentet 17. november 2008. Deep below the Egyptian desert, archaeologists have found evidence of yet another pyramid, this one constructed 4,300 years ago to store the remains of a pharaoh’s mother. That makes 138 pyramids discovered here so far, and officials say they expect to find more.

phys.org

  • November 5, 2018, phys.org: Ancient quarry ramp system may have helped workers build Egypt's Great Pyramids Arkiveret 8. januar 2019 hos Wayback Machine: Citat: "..."They sit in a broad landscape of Bronze Age structures related to stone extraction and transport: huts for sleeping and stone working, pathfinding cairns, ancient footpaths, and even simple dry-stone religious structures. The quarries are connected to the Nile by one of the best-preserved Bronze Age roads in Egypt. "In our most recent season, we discovered an extremely well preserved ramp leading up out of the quarry, with traces of post holes that will enable us to reconstruct in more detail the ancient technologies of stone haulage and extraction..."Using a sled which carried a stone block and was attached with ropes to these wooden posts, ancient Egyptians were able to pull up the alabaster blocks out of the quarry on very steep slopes of 20 percent or more."..."

touregypt.net

ucl.ac.uk

digitalegypt.ucl.ac.uk

uwsp.edu

web.archive.org

  • Slackman, Michael (17. november 2008). "In the Shadow of a Long Past, Patiently Awaiting the Future". The New York Times. Arkiveret fra originalen 26. august 2019. Hentet 1. maj 2010.
  • Mark Lehner (2008). The Complete Pyramids: Solving the Ancient Mysteries. p. 34. Thames & Hudson. 2008-03-25. ISBN 9780500285473. Arkiveret fra originalen 13. februar 2014. Hentet 7. august 2011.
  • Slackman, Michael (16. november 2007). "In the Shadow of a Long Past, Patiently Awaiting the Future". New York Times. Arkiveret fra originalen 26. august 2019. Hentet 17. november 2008. Deep below the Egyptian desert, archaeologists have found evidence of yet another pyramid, this one constructed 4,300 years ago to store the remains of a pharaoh’s mother. That makes 138 pyramids discovered here so far, and officials say they expect to find more.
  • Michael Ritter (2003) Connections: Dating the Pyramids Arkiveret 11. maj 2008 hos Wayback Machine Dating the Pyramids. Retrieved 13 April 2005
  • Watkin, David (4th ed. 2005). A History of Western Architecture. Laurence King Publishing. s. 14. ISBN 978-1856694599. Arkiveret fra originalen 13. september 2019. Hentet 7. august 2011. {{cite book}}: Tjek datoværdier i: |date= (hjælp)"The Great Pyramid...is still one of the largest structures ever raised by man, its plan twice the size of St. Peter's in Rome"
  • mastaba Arkiveret 17. maj 2011 hos Wayback Machine Burial customs: mastabas. University College London (2001) Retrieved 14 April 2005
  • Early Dynastic burial customs Arkiveret 22. juli 2013 hos Wayback Machine Burial customs in Early Dynastic Egypt. University College London (2001). Retrieved 14 April 2005
  • Egypt: Imhotep, Doctor, Architect, High Priest, Scribe and Vizier to King Djoser Arkiveret 7. august 2011 hos Wayback Machine (Jimmy Dunn). Retrieved 24 April 2005
  • Velfunderet hypotese: Webarchivebackup: Historisk kemi: Bygningen af Keops pyramide Af Erik Larsen, Kemisk Institut, Den Kgl. Veterinær- og Landbohøjskole (pdf) Citat: "...Det er svært at forstå, at der blev lavet beton for ca. 5.000 år siden...luftbobler i materialet...I støbeprocessen, der førte til de kalksten, som udgør Keops pyramide...Produktet svarer til en zeolith...Stenen ligner efter hærdning en kalksten..."
  • Kapitel 1 kan downloades (pdf) (Webside ikke længere tilgængelig) Citat: "...The proof is there. The samples given to me by the Egyptologist Jean-Philippe Lauer in 1982 are indeed fragments og geopolymers (see chapter 8), confirming my own X-ray analysis in 1982-84...A geologist not informed of geopolymer chemistry will assert with good faith that the stones are natural...", hovedside: The book: They Have Built The Pyramids ISBN 2-86553-157-0 (fransk), ISBN 0-88029-555-4 (engelsk?). Citat: "...Joseph Davidovits has found hieroglyphic texts describing the construction of these gigantic monuments! You will understand that all problems and paradoxes connected to the construction of the Egyptian pyramids are solved...We can dismiss from our minds the scenario of numerous thousands of workers crowded onto the work site at Giza shoulder to shoulder..."
  • November 5, 2018, phys.org: Ancient quarry ramp system may have helped workers build Egypt's Great Pyramids Arkiveret 8. januar 2019 hos Wayback Machine: Citat: "..."They sit in a broad landscape of Bronze Age structures related to stone extraction and transport: huts for sleeping and stone working, pathfinding cairns, ancient footpaths, and even simple dry-stone religious structures. The quarries are connected to the Nile by one of the best-preserved Bronze Age roads in Egypt. "In our most recent season, we discovered an extremely well preserved ramp leading up out of the quarry, with traces of post holes that will enable us to reconstruct in more detail the ancient technologies of stone haulage and extraction..."Using a sled which carried a stone block and was attached with ropes to these wooden posts, ancient Egyptians were able to pull up the alabaster blocks out of the quarry on very steep slopes of 20 percent or more."..."
  • Nov 29, 2018, Egyptianscience.howstuffworks.com: Egyptian Pyramids Built with Ramps, Not Alien Technology Arkiveret 8. januar 2019 hos Wayback Machine: Citat: "...It seems we may have an answer, and it wasn't aliens after all. Researchers have uncovered a sophisticated ramp system dating back 4,500 years. Located at Hatnub, a rock quarry in Egypt's Eastern Desert, the ramp was used to transport massive alabaster stones up steep angles and into place during pyramid construction. "This kind of system has never been discovered anywhere else," said Yannis Gourdon, co-director of the expedition, which also included archaeologists from the French Institute for Oriental Archaeology in Cairo and from the University of Liverpool in England..."