MurphOnMillerAve wrote:webenda wrote:Roy wrote:Note the wheel grooves end. Gets me wondering if they were built into the road.
In some places, ruts were purposely cut into narrow streets to help guide carts between the stones. In other places no ruts were found in the streets so so maybe the street was closed to wheeled traffic.
That's the first I've heard anybody make sense of that phenomenon. And that includes instructors on-site who gave tours of Pompeii.
OK Murph, you just pushed one of my buttons!
Guides that lead us through antiquities,
“Hear this, you foolish and senseless people:
You have eyes but cannot see;
You have ears but cannot hear."
Why the deep groves is obvious just by observation of no groves before or after the stepping stones. What do theorists think, the stones only wear where wagons are guided between the stones? The direction of traffic is obvious by the length of the entrance groves compared to the exit. The entrance has to be long for the driver to maneuver a wagon into them. Length is not important on the exit, the wagon hops right out. Hardly rocket science now is it?
The guides that take one to the White House Ruins in Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, can't tell you anything about the writing on the wall except, "Nobody knows what it means." That is probably true, nobody can see with their eyes and they certainly are not going to hear me. And yet, reading the writing on the wall is easier than reading an elementary school primary reader.
I am starting a new "Whatzit?" This one will be in reverse, I will start with a wide view of the object and then narrow the view as this goes.
The question is not, "What is it?" It is writing on the wall of the cliff.
The question is not, "What does it say?" It says, "Warning, do not climb the wall, you might fall and get hurt!"
The question is, "Where is the verb, 'fall,' meaning to move downward, typically rapidly and freely without control, from a higher to a lower level?"




