Posted on 04/04/2025 3:03:13 PM PDT by Ezekiel
A new development in the mystery of a purported city beneath Egypt's Giza pyramids could, if proven true, fundamentally reshape our understanding of human history.
Italian researchers told DailyMail.com that not only are the shafts and chambers they found deep below the Khafre pyramid 38,000 years old, but also the Giza complex.
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Biondi explained that the pre-existing civilization in Egypt built the city first, then the shafts and then the pyramid on top, creating a 'megastructure.'
The salt encrustations inside the Great Pyramid, according to the team, were left behind from ocean water flowing into the structure.
Colonel Howard Vyse explored the pyramids' King’s Chamber in 1837, finding thick layers of salt on the limestone roof-stones in areas above the chamber.
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Mei explained that the theory of the lost city is based on ancient Egyptian texts, specifically Chapter 149 of the Book of the Dead, which refers to the 14 residences of the city of the dead.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
“Colonel Howard Vyse explored dynamited his way onto the pyramids’ King’s Chamber in 1837””
Pretty neat trick as there was no dynamite in 1837.
Thanks much for the explanation.
I’d read/skimmed through the plot some months back but hadn’t seen it.
Would we have technology to construct cylinders 2100 feet deep today?
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Likely not, but then we do not have the tech to build the Pyramid complex at Giza [ which is much more than piles of stones ]; nor ability to carve granite stone bowls like those made during pre-dyanastic times in Egypt; nor lifting and carrying 200-500 ton blocks found in other monuments around the world.
He was on an episode of Lost Treasures of Egypt. Nasty piece of work was the sense he put across.
lost worlds for sure, very strange purposes to all the things
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