Earths Forbidden Secrets By Maxwell Igan

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Impossible Buildings
The ability to soften stone would certainly go a long way in explaining the unique stonework
found in the Mayan structures and before you laugh the thought off as ludicrous, consider that
many of the fortresses actually bear some very unusual markings that could easily be explained
by tooling the surface while it was still soft. It should also be realized that many of the stones
used in these structures are truly immense, some as tall as three meters and virtually impossible to
maneuver into place using any of our our current expertise. And not to forget that some of the
stones, like this famous one at Cuzco (fig.64), have up to twelve perfectly fitting angles, and that
is just the ones that are visible on the face. Beneath the face, the back and side sections are also
perfect, In fact, so perfect that a razor blade cannot fit between the joints and it is the same over


Fig.64

the entirety of the wall on every block of stone! Consider that fact when looking at the wall at
Sacsayhuaman (fig.65). Apart from it resembling a wall made of grey ‘play dough’ from a
distance, such precision is, as yet, impossible using any kind of cutting tool and even if it were
possible to cut the stones with such precision, how on earth would they have then been
maneuvered into place? Presumably, if they were hewn and then placed in the walls, the process
would also have been repeated many times over for each block for fine adjustments to be made to
the angles in order to reach the absolute precision obtained in every block. Such a method is not
only implausible but is nothing short of impossible and so it stands to reason that the obvious and
somewhat disturbing explanation is that the joining edges, quite simply, were not cut in any
conventional sense. It is known that the stones were in fact quarried and transported to the site for
the quarries they came from have been located. But how were they worked to such perfection and
then transported to the site which is located 13,000 feet (Four Kilometers) above sea level and
how were the joints perfected? When one looks at these Mayan structures they certainly do have
the appearance of a wall that is made of clay that has solidified. Again, take the wall at
Sacsayhuaman (fig.65); it seems enormously strange, and also highly unlikely, for the builders to
have gone to such incredible trouble to make sure the stones fitted together with what is an
absolutely ridiculous degree of perfection, while using the most difficult shapes imaginable, only
then to leave the visible face of the wall virtually covered with a myriad of imperfections that
makes them look rough and unfinished.

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