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  1. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Fall 1900. New York City. Metropolitan Opera House, Broadway and 39th Street.'

    Well, that article you linked does make that statement but it has no evidence to back it up. I don't believe there is an underground cable powering the above tram, its easy to see that all three rails are just that, rails, with nothing under the ground. You can even see a gap between the center...
  2. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Circa 1901. St. James Street, Montreal, Quebec.'

    That trench in the street full of cobblestones reminds me of this other picture... New York circa 1908. Presbyterian Building, Fifth Avenue and West 20th Street. In which they are digging a trench and filling it with similar cobblestones. I don't believe it was for drainage, as the one above is...
  3. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'New York City circa 1905. The Elevated, Eighth Avenue and W. 110th Street.'

    I'm no expert on scaffolding, having only been on some once when I had to go out the third floor window to rescue a cat, so I'll give you that one, although it seems kinda ridiculous to have that tip to one side when the worker walks over there, effectively creating a ramp to fall off of. But...
  4. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The childhood of Alexander the Great'

    Looks like "the cruel horse Bucephalus" had pointy teeth and weird horns on its head, as well as eyes that were too far forward for a horse. In fact, of the five horses I can make out, only one does not have twisty horns on its head. I assume that's Alexander on the "horse" that's breaking its...
  5. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedek'

    Unusual to see a cathedral in the background that does not have a pointy steeple to its main tower. Seems like those guys would have been stumbling over all that cloth. A sign of wealth?
  6. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Viviano_Codazzi_-_Architectural_View.jpg'

    Interesting. They really had some faith in that old ruin staying up, to put that house right there. At least some of the people seem to have been added later; the guy on the left is practically a ghost and the donkey seems see-through as well as the two guys on the right.
  7. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'New York circa 1908. Presbyterian Building, Fifth Avenue and West 20th Street.'

    Another detailed shot of a building with a giant of a doorway. Can't tell why they're digging up the street on the left, burying a pipe maybe, but they're certainly not putting it back "as good as new", unless those stones are temporary.
  8. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Fall 1900. New York City. Metropolitan Opera House, Broadway and 39th Street.'

    Now that tram has no horses pulling it and no electrical wires above it. Once again the cop and the guy he's standing with are the only ones looking at the photographer. Photographers must have been pretty common at that time.
  9. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'New York City circa 1905. The Elevated, Eighth Avenue and W. 110th Street.'

    Wonderfully detailed picture. That guy coming right at us in the wagon with the white horse has his left (driver's left) wheels in the track. Seems like that could tweak those narrow wheels, I wonder if its intentional. This time the guy up on the building on the right has actual scaffolding...
  10. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'New York circa 1910. Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, Fifth Avenue and West 34th Street.'

    The intricate design is just amazing for what could have been just a square block and once again we have guys out on the ledge cleaning the windows, but only on the third floor this time, though its a high third floor since the first floor appears to have high ceilings. Wish we could see the...
  11. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'New York, 1905. Hotel Netherland, Fifth Avenue and 59th Street'

    I'm surprised to read that it was a steel framed building, but even more surprised to see the guy standing outside on the eighth floor, at the window on the left, apparently cleaning the window. I don't see any safety gear. The only one who appears to be paying attention to the photographer is...
  12. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The Temple of Jupiter, from the North-East, Baalbek'

    Here are a couple more pictures that relate to this series, from the Library of Congress. We can tell that these two pics are later than the ones in this series because the extra wall that has been built across the facade, above, has been torn down, though the fortification on top of the pillars...
  13. Silhouette

    Book | Giant Cities of Bashan: do they still exist?

    Sure would have been cool to see what ol' Porter saw. The dimensions, particularly of the door jumped out at me. 4 1/2 ft x 4 ft x 8 inches thick. That's not even as tall as our normal doors; was it a half-door? We would have to duck to get through that. The inside dimensions are not...
  14. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'False Historical Narrative'

    The summer before last I was heading down to Utah to go out into the desert for a couple of weeks, so I did a little online sleuth work and figured out where Jon Levi's coffee shop is or was. It was out of my way but I went there and he made me a quiche, and the young lady at the counter got me...
  15. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media '1,000 y.o. Map of the World. Published in 1907.'

    "He evolved from it a theory of the flatness of the earth, despite all modern facts showing it to be a sphere." Ha, ha. Modern facts. I've done my own experiments and am certain we are on a flat Earth, as in the center of this map above, or as in the main map of the "1944 CBS American School of...
  16. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The Temple of Jupiter, from the North-West, Baalbek'

    In Baalbek today they have "restored" that whole back side, with pillars assembled and the ledge above put back together. Wiki calls this the temple of Bacchus.
  17. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The Temple of Jupiter, from the North-East, Baalbek'

    To summarize my somewhat rambling comments on this very interesting series of pictures (I was commenting as I went); it appears someone was trying to turn the Temple of Jupiter into a small fort. They built that wall across the front, blocking the huge doorway, and they built that watch tower on...
  18. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The Temple of Jupiter, from the North-East, Baalbek'

    I could write a book on this series of pictures. Notice the wall coming across from the third pillar, coming toward us to the right, made of somewhat smaller stones. That is the wall in the background, but not very far back, from the easterly view from inside the temple. Then look at the picture...
  19. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'Façade of the Temple of Jupiter, Baalbek'

    I suppose I should edit my comments. This is the facade shot without the wall and with the wedge stone in place, which had to have been taken earlier than the view of the temple of Jupiter from the north-east. The wall is not there in this picture. An examination of the stones on both sides...
  20. Silhouette

    Comment by 'Silhouette' in media 'The Temple of Jupiter, Baalbek.'

    In this one the wedge stone is still in place compared to the previous east view. Note the ribbed columns seen through the doorway, just as on the left in the east view from inside. Later, as we can see in the shot temple of Jupiter seen from the north-east, they would build a wall across this...
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