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Published: 2023-06-04 07:24:58 +0000 UTC; Views: 1557; Favourites: 6; Downloads: 0
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Book? “The Hundred-Foot Journey” by Richard C. MoraisA building technique which inspired modern day foundations for concrete was used in ancient times to make deposits like sandstone. Ground was tested in different areas of the world with water to see if it became sludge in water: even with rain or washed away or became quicksand (rarely spoken of in modern times) and if it held together. As such different diets were collected; even ashes and stacked then compounded together with glues like bone or sweet grass (acts like silica: a derivative of silicone) broth or soap and then tested to withstand the enemy’s: if the bricks lasted they were used to make permeant structures or settlements. Certain settlements were staged on hillsides: cliffs and as such they were stacked and sculpted to withstand floods or even hurricanes as it was deemed landslides were more of a risk in heavily jungled areas.
Over time this collection became instinctual as such tourists to this day collect sand and make jars and even colour it to create art. Over time this expanded to making patterned walls out of sand then later jewellery with stacked and patterned inlays like the wooden frames of kingdoms which later became tombs with leftover wicker stands with impartial earth like the ones pushed around in assassins creed origins to access a new part of your treasure map.
If you explore tombs in assassins creed Odyssey rammed earth structures can be seen which are similar to Victorian sand jars.
Read more about it here: www.architectural-review.com/e…