A forest fire of trees devoid of sap and moisture that would normally slow it down. The well dried forest was also located on top of a really nice draft to feed it large amounts of oxygen from below. I have no idea how those windows survived based on the flames we watched though. You would think a water source hung on the rock above them would be a wise investment.
I did have to laugh when I noticed what appear to be lit candles in that picture. Testing fate that guy was. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rausch:
Say what you want about the religions that build them but these types of structures always amazed me. You can marvel at the beauty of Christian, buddhist, and Islamic places of worship but when you find out just how long ago they were built your brain goes "how? How could people who didn't even have electricity do all this?"
I have the internet, books, and I'm lucky if I can replace a toilet (fuck you wax seals!)
Yeah, it's amazing what they accomplish in architecture and art. Organized religion isn't my thing, but I've got to give them the nod on that sort of thing.
And yeah, I'm the same way on the craftsmanship. I'm in awe of what people could accomplish back in the day.
Originally Posted by Rausch:
That's what I wasn't understanding.
I'm clearly no architect or engineer but I thought most of the place was stone/granite/masonry. I can see the roof going up but how did it burn so hot and so fast?
Does old wood like that burn faster?
This is where the science bro's can help the dummies...:-)
well, in theory 800 year old wood will be a lot drier than newer wood, so that would help. [Reply]
On that note, did you see the new Egyptian tomb that was unveiled today? https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/e...ntl/index.html. Click the video link in the article. Those guys put on a good coat of paint to last 4,400 years.
Some rainy day when yer' bored do some reading on Hermeticism/Thoth (sp?)
Some of their belief systems were more evolved than we think. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
On that note, did you see the new Egyptian tomb that was unveiled today? https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/e...ntl/index.html. Click the video link in the article. Those guys put on a good coat of paint to last 4,400 years.
Sherwin Williams says "Nothing to see here!" [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rausch:
That's what I wasn't understanding.
I'm clearly no architect or engineer but I thought most of the place was stone/granite/masonry. I can see the roof going up but how did it burn so hot and so fast?
Does old wood like that burn faster?
This is where the science bro's can help the dummies...:-)
I guess it was all the timbers supporting the roof going up. Its nicknamed the forest because 52 acres of forest was cut down to construct it. I am guessing the bright orange glow was the lead roof shingling 250 tons worth was responsible for some to. I used to muzzleload and melting for casting it it puts out a bright orange glow. [Reply]
Here's a picture that explains what happened pretty well. You can see the stone ceiling that protected the interior. The only interior damage seems to be in areas where that stone ceiling collapsed. So it looked really bad when it was on fire, but it for the most part never got inside the building. Those medieval people really knew about fire safety engineering.
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Here's a picture that explains what happened pretty well. You can see the stone ceiling that protected the interior. The only interior damage seems to be in areas where that stone ceiling collapsed. So it looked really bad when it was on fire, but it for the most part never got inside the building. Those medieval people really knew about fire safety engineering.
It's astounding how much was not affected by that fire, on video it looked like it was going to be a total loss. It's a big building, and that was a damn big fire. [Reply]