INDEX | May 13, 2025 | |
What lies beneath | ||
I very much doubt I will live long enough to find out what's underneath Giza, which is very frustrating.
The latest discoveries are truly mind boggling, though all sorts of stories have been told about what lies beneath for hundreds of years. The official view, which you can find everywhere, is that the Egyptian authorities will not permit anyone to take a look underneath, so the non-invasive technique which uses not only a vocabulary but a technology far beyond my comprehension is the only way to investigate. No doubt this is true but the Osiris shaft deep beneath the Pyramid of Khafre, Giza, seems to have been discovered, or at least opened up to tourists, fairly recently. And it is not difficult to Google stuff about many other tunnels and shafts at Giza, though somewhat smaller than the Osiris shaft. Personally I find it truly remarkable that the immensely heavy pyramids have never sunk into the bedrock. That goes double because the sphinx had to be dug out, since it used to be buried in sand. But if instead of bedrock there is actually a honeycomb of tunnels underneath, what keeps the pyramids standing? Why don't they sink? When I was a small child there used to be only a few pyramids in the world and they were all situated in the sands of Egypt. Now they are everywhere notably in Latin America and China. How did that happen? Strangest of all some of the 'new' pyramids are actually bigger than the biggest Egyptian pyramids. How could you lose something that size? If the scientists who claim to have discovered what amounts to some kind of factory underneath Giza are not the perpetrators of the biggest hoax in history, there needs to be an urgent (and highly professionally organised) dig to discover exactly what is there. I don't mean uncover the lot; just get access. The world needs to know since rather like these tiresome posts that you see all the time attempting to command your eyeballs for nonsense 'this could change our knowledge of the history of the human species'. We need to know. And let's not wait 50 years please. |
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INDEX Jonathan Brind |
May 13, 2025 | |