“Those aren’t sawcuts. They look like the quartzilite string cuts we know they used”
I’d encourage you to do more research. The marks of large, circular sawblades are compelling.
I did read about these a decade or so ago as an amateur Assyriologist. These do not look like sawblades at Baalbeck.
I would also point out episode 2 of the Ancient Apocalypse has this illogical statement “professional archaeology would have us believe that 9,600 BC people suddenly developed agriculture and 6000 years ago founded cities.
That’s a period of 5000 odd years.
Not suddenly.
String cuts always curve.
“I’d encourage you to do more research. The marks of large, circular sawblades are compelling.”
I have watched every one of these archaeological and anthropological videos from every source. I am fortunate to have extensive apprentice knowledge in archaeology, anthropology, geology, and have done quite a bit of stone cutting myself. So this topic is a personal lifelong passion.
There are saw cuts and core drilling in these so precise that we can’t even reproduce them now with modern tools. Those who tried in an effort to debunk these theories failed, but you don’t hear about the failures because then it would not fit their control narrative.
Truth is we really can’t explain how they did it, but I do know we still can’t do it yet.
An important point is that the most precise cutting is all on the bottom in the older structures that were built over. This is counter intuitive. Newer stonework should be more advanced not less. Same with their stoneware bowls and vessels, the older are more advanced. This older work was there before the Egyptians inherited it and built over it with less advanced knowledge. I am sure the more advanced was there from a previous antediluvian civilization.