The Unfinished Obelisk: (Egyptian Obelisk)
Credit: imgur |
This is disputably the largest stone ever quarried, and
certainly on-par with the unfinished stone at Ba'albek, Lebanon.
This obelisk would have been taller than any ever raised.
Measures 120-feet (42m) and would have weighed over
1,168 tons when complete.
(Sci. Amer. Dec. 1977. No. 36). - Estimated @
1200 tons
'Would have weighed nearly 1,200 tons' - (1)
One of the
most famous stones left behind is the 'Unfinished' Obelisk, taller than any
known obelisk ever raised. Quarrymen apparently abandoned the obelisk when
fractures appeared in its sides. However, the stone, still attached to bedrock,
gives important clues to how the ancients quarried granite. Much of the red
granite used for ancient temples and colossi came from quarries in the Aswan
area (500 miles south of Cairo). The Unfinished Obelisk still lies where a
crack was discovered as it was being hewn from the rock. Possibly intended as a
companion to the Lateran Obelisk, originally at Karnak,
now in Rome, it would have measured 120-feet and weighed over 1150 tons when
complete.
The
obelisk's creators began to carve it directly out of bedrock, but cracks
appeared in the granite and the project was abandoned. Originally it was
thought that the stone had an undetected flaw but it is also possible that the
quarrying process allowed the cracking to develop by releasing the stress. The
bottom side of the obelisk is still attached to the bedrock. The unfinished
obelisk offers unusual insights into ancient Egyptian stone-working techniques,
with marks from workers' tools still clearly visible as well as ochre-coloured
lines marking where they were working.(1)
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