you need rule, pencil, some brown color papers and lots of sugar cubes
just glue and tapeee
well he was a king
The first Ziggurat was make by Nebbacanezer II in about 2000 B.C.
The Ziggurat at Ur is probably the most famous, but the Ziggurat at Teppe Sialk is also rather famous.
Ziggurat
No, a Mesopotamian terraced scribe is not a Ziggurat. The answer would be A Mesopotamian terraced Pyramid is a ziggurat.
It took 5 years to build the Ziggurat
Ziggurats were typically constructed using baked mud bricks and bitumen as mortar. These materials were readily available in ancient Mesopotamia, where ziggurats were commonly built. The use of these materials contributed to the ziggurat's durability and stability over time.
A ziggurat is a temple or a place of worship, so I assume they made the ziggurat as a place to honor the gods they believed in.
i think you need a box, glue maybe tape, scissor, pen or pencil, and a ruler. you probable need to draw it from different angles first on a sheet of paper so it's easier for you to actually do the project.
about 1 million I think
Ziggurats were ancient Mesopotamian temple structures built to honor multiple gods in a polytheistic religion. Both ziggurats and polytheism emphasized the worship of multiple deities and the belief in a pantheon of gods with distinct powers and attributes. The construction and use of ziggurats were closely tied to the practice of polytheistic rituals and ceremonies in Mesopotamian society.
Need serial # for build date & location, not model #.
well he was a king
It took over 180 people
you put one on top of the other repeatedly
The first Ziggurat was make by Nebbacanezer II in about 2000 B.C.
well you need clay