[TheForge] Mechanics of Stonehenge
Peter Fels & Phoebe Palmer
artgawk at thegrid.net
Mon Mar 30 15:24:22 EDT 2009
Old Dr Tinkerpaw thought it was amusing to move huge stones up the steep
slopes of his property single handedly...mostly using a prybar and
stones and blocks. He's say, when asked..."Oh, i just talk to them" and
sorta flap his big hands in a herding motion.
GRAF wrote:
>
> Bruce Freeman wrote:
>> The one flaw I saw in this video was that he moves monoliths on a
>> cement surface by placing a couple pebbles under the monolith and
>> rotating first on one, then on the other to get net linear motion. It
>> is not clear how he could apply this technique over soft earth, though
>> the demo of the barn moving might have been one such. (Not clear how
>> that barn was constructed to enable to be moved like a monolith.)
>>
>
> I'll bet that there was a fair amount of skeletal work done before
> jacking it up.
> Concrete on soft earth or flat stones set in flat earth or on movable
> sledges would be my guess. Stepping stones if you will.
>
>> I just went through my collection of "ancient engineering" books to
>> find a technique I've read about. Unsuccessfully. So I can't give
>> you a source, but I can give you another hypothesis, apparently based
>> upon relics from Egypt, IIRC. Apparently, excavations found what
>> could be described as large (6'+) millstones that were not quite
>> millstones. So the hypothesis was that these stones were placed one
>> over another and could then pivot fairly easily around a center shaft
>> because they touched only near the shaft. It continued that two booms
>> projected away from the center shaft in such a manner that they'd
>> rotate with the upper stone (I don't recall details). These two booms
>> were held at an angle above the stone (like, 60+ degrees to
>> horizontal) and connected at the top with a rope, from the center of
>> which rope a rope was dropped to the top stone. Call this the "center
>> rope". From the end of each boom, a rope was dropped. One of these
>> held the load, the other the counterweight sling.
>>
>> So you get a rope around your monolith and hook it up to one of the
>> boom ropes. Now load small stones up in the counterweight sling until
>> you have an equal mass on both booms. Pull down on (or hang a weight
>> from) the center rope and the load and counterweight both are lifted
>> from the ground a small amount. At this point, using oxen hitched to
>> a beam extended radially from the 'millstones', rotate the upper stone
>> on the lower 180* and you've moved your load by the distance between
>> the tops of the two booms. If you have a chain of these cranes in a
>> series, you can move loads continuously and the counterweights
>> oppositely.
>>
>> Note that since the counterweights are smaller stones, they could, if
>> necessary, be loaded up on a sledge and moved back for reuse.
>>
>> One neat thing was that you could take the two "millstones", stand
>> them on edges and put a beam between them and you've got wheels.
>> Place the other beams across them, hitch up the oxen, and you can move
>> your crane to the next work site.
>>
>>
> Something on this order might have application for a temporary crane for
> moving things around the yard or shop.
> Gotta go get the sketch pad, now.
>
> Mike Graf
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