Pavel Pavel (March 11, 1957 in Strakonice) is a Czech engineer and experimental archaeologist investigating how the ancient civilizations did transport heavy weights.
Pavel Pavel studied electrical engineering at the university in Plzeň and later worked as a design engineer in Agrostav Strakonice. Solving how the ancient people could move megalithic statues and stone blocks became his hobby for which he became known.
After the Velvet revolution (1989), as a member of the Civic Democratic Party, Pavel became involved in local politics. In two elections into the Czech Senate (in 2002 and again in 2003) he ended as the second. Since the 1990 Pavel works in the field of heavy transportation, his company PAVEL PAVEL s.r.o. was founded in 2000. [1]
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Inspired by Thor Heyerdahl's Kon-Tiki, Pavel Pavel set out to demonstrate how the monolithic Moai of Easter Island might have been moved into place by a small number of people using only rudimentary technologies. He conducted a practice experiment in 1982 in south Bohemia using a concrete model (4.5 m, 12 tonnes). In 1986 he was invited by Heyerdahl to Easter Island to test his experiment in its actual setting, where he successfully replicated the experiment. Only 16 people with one leader were needed for relatively fast statue transportation. [2]
He then performed some further experiments. He and five assistants using only wooden sledges erected and moved a 30-ton rocking stone at the village of Kadov (in Strakonice District) to its original location, from where it had been removed by unknown vandals in the 19th century. [3] He estimated that only 160 people with similar simple technology would have been necessary for transportation of the 800 ton stones in Baalbek.