The sphinx proves there was much rainfall in that region for centuries. The red pyramid proves the stockpiling of resources to make fertilizer. We are speaking of civilizations in antiquity not present day. You must love zari hawas
So...much rainfall = need to induce rainfall? I'm unfamiliar with the "red pyramid" or what they stockpiled to "make fertilizer." Do you know how they made fertilizer?
I'm only speaking of physics and chemistry. I have no problem with the discovery of ancient technology, so long as it has an identifiable purpose. But I have a problem with sheer speculation. I don't know Zari Hawas from anyone, but I suspect he is the moat dragon of the Egyptian establishment.
I briefly looked him up. Noted that he was tipped by an overwhelming smell of ammonia in the Red Pyramid. I hate to say it, but that is a commonplace of such structures, when animals and humans decide to urinate therein. You can smell that in the passages within Fort Casey on Washington's Whidbey Island, an old coastal defense fortification. Definitely not a place for the manufacture of fertilizer!
The sphinx proves there was much rainfall in that region for centuries. The red pyramid proves the stockpiling of resources to make fertilizer. We are speaking of civilizations in antiquity not present day. You must love zari hawas
So...much rainfall = need to induce rainfall? I'm unfamiliar with the "red pyramid" or what they stockpiled to "make fertilizer." Do you know how they made fertilizer?
I'm only speaking of physics and chemistry. I have no problem with the discovery of ancient technology, so long as it has an identifiable purpose. But I have a problem with sheer speculation. I don't know Zari Hawas from anyone, but I suspect he is the moat dragon of the Egyptian establishment.
Check out Jeffrey Drum Land of Chem. He is a smartypants like you. I don't have the patience to paraphrase his work
I briefly looked him up. Noted that he was tipped by an overwhelming smell of ammonia in the Red Pyramid. I hate to say it, but that is a commonplace of such structures, when animals and humans decide to urinate therein. You can smell that in the passages within Fort Casey on Washington's Whidbey Island, an old coastal defense fortification. Definitely not a place for the manufacture of fertilizer!