Numbers for a single dotted-line-divided section of the pillar in my image:
Area of base:
side-length = 240 pixels, (24 dots at 10 pixels on the distant side, dodging PoV skew) 151 pixels = 6 ft, therefore sidelength = 9.536 ft.
^2 = 90.94 square feet.
Base = 90.94
Height = 173 pixels = 6.87 ft.
Base x height = 625.137 cubic feet.
Apply density: 150 lbs sound okay? Not a lot for stone.
93770.582 lbs per divided section, or 46 tons.
Tiem for countink!
Three are visible from where Link stands for measurement purposes, and then:
1 really long thin section at the bottom where the lines are broken off, let's leave that one alone.
*count*
I can get to 15, and the last section I can see clearly is only 6 pixels wide. From here there's still a significant length of the pillar left exposed.
33 pixels of it left, infact. So even if we ignore the effect of perspective, and assume each 6 pixels = 1 more section, rather than shortening them with distance, we get 5 more sections, which is 20, + 3 from above, 23.
2156723.4039 pounds.
1078.36 tons. And no gauntlets yet. Impressive.
Now to determine forces and things.