Pillar 7

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Revision as of 18:03, 9 March 2013 by Admin (Talk | contribs) (Transposition (Caesar) cipher)

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Pillar 07-Daytime.jpg

Pillar 7 is the shortest pillar. It also explains the method it uses to encrypt the alphabetic text. It is presumably a pillar to introduce participants to the concepts of encryption.

It contains an unexplained numerical grid near the top of the pillar.

Numerical Grid

P7-T1.jpg

At the top of the pillar is a grid of numbers of 5 rows and 26 columns. A triangular glyph surrounds a number (rather than pointing as in other pillars).

35248614916353547101490974

24725391509414892533731941

14909573522681490367353636

41635353213194116435346709

81491040353180149092635377

Transposition (Caesar) cipher

The remainder of the pillar is filled with a simple cipher - the Caesar cipher.

At the top is a plaintext which makes an obvious reference to Caesar:

A LETTER SHIFT A CIPHER MAKES

A FAMOUS ROMANS NAME IT TAKES

Then below that, it pictorially depicts a letter shift. In this example, A>B, B>C, C>D and so on, with Z>A.

Below this is a cipher text:

B MFUUFS TIJGU B DJQIFS NBLFT

B GBNPVT SPNBOT OBNF JU UBLFT


C UJKHV QH VYQ AQW PQY ECP DTGCM

DWV QVJGT OQXGU C EQFG ECP OCMG


KRZHYHU WKHB EH VZDSSHG DERXW

D NXID PDQ FRXOG ILQG WKHP RXW


RPKR QMWJZZKRG WYMABY

INGY PZBZIE XROZA

OPK RNQV SA ENMPL

XVZIZ GBHV ERIQIF

Using a simple online Caeser cipher calculator, this decrypts using various shifts to read

(With a shift of 1)

A LETTER SHIFT A CIPHER MAKES

A FAMOUS ROMANS NAME IT TAKES


(With a shift of 2)

A SHIFT OF TWO YOU NOW CAN BREAK

BUT OTHER MOVES A CODE CAN MAKE


(With a shift of 3)

HOWEVER THEY BE SWAPPED ABOUT

A KUFA MAN COULD FIND THEM OUT

Base

A string of numbers runs around the base.

10 11 9 11 9 12 13 17 28 29 15 17 11 12 11 12 11 13 20 24 9 13 11 11 7 93 11 11 14 17