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Egyptologists have done an amazing job of piecing together the history of Dynastic Egypt, but what they have failed to properly explain are the presence of certain anomalies, such as drill holes that we find in profusion, in hard stone such as rose granite above at many of the ancient sites.
In modern times we of course have diamond encrusted tube drills that can cut into hard stone, but the Dynastic Egyptians did not. Even though some academics theorize that the pharaohs had copper or bronze tube drills and used quartz sand as an abrasive, attempts at replicating the cutting process with such hand powered tools has been comical at best. This amazing example is at Karnak, and was discovered by a Khemit School tour member when we were there this year.
The tube drill used was massive, and cut into the rose granite with ease. But if this is not Dynastic Egyptian, and clearly not Greek, Roman or modern, then when could it have been made? This close up shows that the wall of the tube drill which accomplished this was in fact thinner than those in use today. What we are looking at is evidence that a superior technological culture existed thousands of years before the Dynastic Egyptians, they were the Khemitians. Read the work of Stephen Mehler :.
All that remains of them are artifacts such as the Sphinx, Great Pyramids of Giza and of course these drill hole examples. The above photo shows you the marks left by the cutter as it penetrated this black granite located at Abusir.
Each mark is a single rotation of the drill, and worked more efficiently than modern drills do. So the Khemitians in fact had superior technology to what we have today. And here we have an example in alabaster, at Abugurab, which is a softer stone than granite, basalt or diorite, but it shows the same even penetration of the drill as seen above. If it was done by hand, the score marks would be much more irregular.