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🚨 BREAKING: Massive Chambers Found Beneath the Sphinx For the first time in history, tomographic scans have revealed a complex system of chambers over a kilometer below the Great Sphinx. This changes everything we thought we knew about Giza. 🧵👇

308,124 просмотров • 11 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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🚨 The Secrets Beneath the Giza Plateau 🚨Is ancient Egypt hiding structures far older than mainstream archaeology admits? This episode with vigilante archaeologist Luke Caverns (Luke Caverns) explores the mystery beneath the Giza Plateau, from long-rumored underground chambers to the origins of the Sphinx itself. Caverns argues that many ancient monuments—once thought to be tombs— may have served for more mysterious functions. From skull-elongated pharaohs and the forbidden Amarna revolution to the buried water tombs beneath the Sphinx and pyramids, this conversation unveils a hidden Egypt erased by the modern official history. It also reframes ancient Egypt not as a primitive past, but as the remnant of a forgotten epoch where god-kings ruled, advanced technology flourished, and history was written in stone before being buried in sand. Key Revelations: The Osiris Shaft and Underground Tombs: - Beneath the Giza Plateau lies the Osiris Shaft, a multi-level structure with a sarcophagus surrounded by water—matching Herodotus’ ancient account of a “king’s tomb on an island.” - The shaft includes seven chamber extensions and a subterranean water-filled room, with a raised sarcophagus now submerged due to the rising water table. - Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities has confirmed this site’s existence, but much about its purpose remains unexplained. Zahi Hawass and Suppressed Discoveries: - In the 1990s, Zahi Hawass oversaw drilling near the Sphinx to test for underground chambers, but the dig was shallow and inconclusive. - Despite downplaying alternative theories, Hawass has publicly acknowledged the presence of three tunnels beneath the Sphinx. - Allegations persist that deeper structures remain undisclosed by Egypt’s Ministry of Culture. Luis Alvarez and 20th Century Scans: - In the 1960s, Nobel-winning physicist Luis Alvarez used muon detectors to scan the pyramids for hidden chambers. - The scans confirmed chamber boundaries but found no new internal voids—suggesting the interior was fully accounted for. - Later Stanford-led scans revealed two large voids (69 ft and 112 ft below) near the pyramid, still absent in recent AI-generated imaging. AI Scans and the Viral Hoax: - A 2025 viral release claimed synthetic aperture radar and AI detected an “energy grid” under Giza. - However, the images reused 3D models from other pyramids, omitted known structures, and falsely claimed flawless AI reconstruction. - Caverns and other researchers warn this reflects a trend of monetized pseudoscience exploiting public fascination. The Sphinx and Pre-Dynastic Origins: - Water erosion on the Sphinx enclosure suggests it predates the Old Kingdom by thousands of years. - Thutmose IV’s Dream Stele (c. 1350 BC) describes the Sphinx as already buried in sand—supporting earlier construction than 2500 BC. - Caverns posits it was originally a lion figure, tied to a lost “Sphinx cult” before dynastic Egypt. Skull Elongation and the Amarna Period: - Pharaoh Akhenaten and his family are depicted with elongated skulls during a sudden religious revolution (14th century BC). - This period, marked by Aten worship and rejection of Amun, shows abrupt changes in art and theology—with no known origin for the skull depictions. - The deformation vanishes with the end of the Amarna dynasty, suggesting a symbolic or spiritual significance now lost. Pyramids as Temples of Divine Essence: - Caverns challenges the tomb narrative, arguing the pyramids may have been built not for human remains, but to house the Pharaoh’s “ka”—his divine soul. - This aligns with later accounts of Middle Kingdom pharaohs who split their burial between symbolic tombs and real ones elsewhere. - The absence of hieroglyphs inside the Great Pyramid supports the idea that it wasn’t meant to be read by humans, but served a spiritual function. The Collapse of Trust and Rise of Grift: - Caverns critiques modern alt-history circles for sensationalism, yet insists the academic world is equally dogmatic. - With widespread mistrust of institutions, the public is vulnerable to narratives that sell hope and mystery, even when built on shaky evidence. - True investigation, he argues, requires both skepticism and wonder—balancing evidence with openness to mystery.

Jesse Michels

46,546 просмотров • 1 год назад