Most of the stone used was quarried locally. The most likely method was to load the stone block onto a sledge hauled by a gang of slaves using rope made from papyrus reeds. Granite was also used. This was quarried some 600 km down river and brought to the pyramid by boat. A specially built causeway links the river with the construction site. Again sledges were used to drag the stones from the river to the construction site. Hundreds of slaves were required to haul these monster blocks weighing anything up to 70 tonnes.
Slaves were forced to transport them on sledges. An average pyramid stone weighed about 2.5 tons (2,545kg) and took twenty slaves to drag it along. Water or oil was poured under the runners to reduce friction. Granite stones were brought from Aswan some 400 miles (640km) away. These were loaded onto barges made from papyrus reeds. The stones were then floated down the river Nile. A canal connected the river with the pyramid site. Once they reached the building site the stones were loaded onto sledges. These stones weighed anything up to 70 tons and took over 500 slaves to move.
The placed the blocks on sledges which were hauled by a gang of men. The number of men depended on the size of the block. A 2.5 ton block for example, used used on the Great Pyramid took about 20 slaves. This amounts to 8 men per ton of block. To move one of the 70 ton granite strain relieving blocks located above the King's chamber would have taken 70x8 = 560 men.
buttcheeks:):(<3
The Egyptians used a ramp. It was either a single strait ramp or a spiralling ramp that wound around the pyramid. The stone was placed on a sledge and dragged up the ramp by a gang of slaves.
with a series of pulley's, they gathered rock and stacked it together to form a pyramid
The average weight of a stone used to build the Great Pyramid was 2.5 tons took 20 slaves to move. The larger the stone the more slaves it took to move. The large 70 ton granite blocks used in construction of the Great Pyramid may of taken 500 slaves to move. Picture the great block on its sledge coming up the specially prepared roadway. Perched on top the great block the foreman stands shouting his orders. Ahead stretch lines of straining naked slaves, sweat pouring from their sun baked bodies, behind other men pry at the sledge with great wooden bars. Nearby the Overseer of Works stands, he watches anxiously as the great stone moves a few feet at a time, the slaves pulling and prying in slow rhythm to the foreman’s cries.
Stone chisels to carve the blocks of stone in the quarry Pounding tools (to pound on the chisels) Ramps Rollers (under the blocks of stone) or more likely wooden sleds to move the stones to the beginning of the ramp and up the ramp Lubrication to reduce friction as the stone was moved Barges to transport the stone from the quarry via the Nile Levers to move the stones into place
The Egyptians did not 'use' the pyramids. Each pyramid was a burial site for a great Pharoah or king. After the Pharoah's body was placed in his or her pyramid along with his servants, it was sealed up with huge stones so no one could get in.
well to make a pyramid Egyptians had to use an inclined plane and role a huge stone up the inclined plane, the Egyptians would continue this concept until they reached the top stone.
they carried them up with their muscles
The Egyptians used a ramp. It was either a single strait ramp or a spiralling ramp that wound around the pyramid. The stone was placed on a sledge and dragged up the ramp by a gang of slaves.
The answer depends on which pyramid. Geometrically, one stone makes a pyramid - a trivial one. Four make a proper pyramid.
There are thirteen rows of stone in the pyramid on the dollar bill.
there are 13 rows of stone that make up the pyramid on the dollar because at the time there were only 13 states in the U.S.
The Great Pyramid consists of more than 2.3 million limestone blocks. The Egyptians shipped the limestone blocks from quarries all along the Nile River. The stone was cut by hammering wedges into the stone. Next the wedges were soaked with water. The wedges expanded, causing the rock to crack. Once they were cut, they were carried by boat either up or down the Nile River to the pyramid.
with a series of pulley's, they gathered rock and stacked it together to form a pyramid
The average weight of a stone used to build the Great Pyramid was 2.5 tons took 20 slaves to move. The larger the stone the more slaves it took to move. The large 70 ton granite blocks used in construction of the Great Pyramid may of taken 500 slaves to move. Picture the great block on its sledge coming up the specially prepared roadway. Perched on top the great block the foreman stands shouting his orders. Ahead stretch lines of straining naked slaves, sweat pouring from their sun baked bodies, behind other men pry at the sledge with great wooden bars. Nearby the Overseer of Works stands, he watches anxiously as the great stone moves a few feet at a time, the slaves pulling and prying in slow rhythm to the foreman’s cries.
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