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🔥🚨BREAKING: Scientists have discovered an underground city beneath the pyramids of Giza after initially discovering the pillars that are underneath them according to Italian researchers, led by Prof. Corrado Malanga from the University of Pisa A heated debate has erupted among Egyptologists after researchers claimed to have found an...

3,555,473 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

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SafeHaven Exchangevor 1 Jahr

Will we ever truly know how they were built though?

Profilbild von Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives
Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narrativesvor 1 Jahr

We have that answer but it depends on who believes it. In the age of information, information itself becomes a censor, we are flooded with so many lies it’s hard to decipher what is true

Profilbild von Garbage Deplorable
Garbage Deplorablevor 1 Jahr

Fascinating find! The idea of a vast underground city beneath Giza is mind-blowing—those radar scans really shake up what we thought we knew about the pyramids. I’m with you on this one! 🏜️🔍

Profilbild von Ç3 ✝️ ⛪️
Ç3 ✝️ ⛪️vor 1 Jahr

@grok from 1 to 10 how fake is this?

Profilbild von joshua
joshuavor 1 Jahr

Well they better start digging.

Profilbild von Stephen Miller Smackdown Fan Club
Stephen Miller Smackdown Fan Clubvor 1 Jahr

Pyramids of Giza are buried obelisks.

Profilbild von Danny🇺🇸
Danny🇺🇸vor 1 Jahr

There’s definitely stuff we don’t know about under the pyramids of Giza.

Profilbild von Paul A. Szypula 🇺🇸
Paul A. Szypula 🇺🇸vor 1 Jahr

I’ve read the it’s all a hoax. There’s no way that radar would penetrate that far beneath the earth.

Profilbild von Cosmos Info
Cosmos Infovor 1 Jahr

A.I. come on Dom

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MamaBearvor 1 Jahr

This is the ultimate portal to the mirror of this world.

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Discovery of secret tunnels below Egypt's Giza pyramids linked to forgotten underworld | Armando Mei, Daily Mail On the northeastern edge of the Giza Plateau, I discovered three perfectly cut shafts hidden beneath the sands. They sit in the triangle between the Great Sphinx, Khufu's Pyramid and Khafre's Pyramid, and may open into a long-forgotten underground world. These are not water wells. They bear no inscriptions, no signs of casual digging, and their geometry is too precise, their walls too smooth, their design too deliberate. Could these shafts be the keys to the network of hidden chambers the Greek philosopher Herodotus once whispered about, possibly connected to the Nile? Herodotus described a massive 'labyrinth' in Egypt with 3,000 chambers, many hidden below ground, which included and a large underground pyramid. Explorers in the 1800s, like Giovanni Caviglia and Henry Salt, recorded strange wells near the Sphinx and Khafre's causeway. French archaeologist Pierre-Jean Mariette mapped additional anomalies in 1864 and 1885, and scholars like George Reisner, Hermann Junker, and Selim Hassan traced a line of cavities between the Sphinx and Khafre's Pyramid between 1929 and 1939. After that, the area was largely forgotten. Fragments of those old reports hinted at a larger pattern, one pointing to a vast, interconnected world beneath the plateau. Now, the three shafts I rediscovered may unlock that hidden map. I came across the shafts while conducting fieldwork with the Khafre Research Project, where I serve as a researcher. Our team, including Professor Corrado Malanga and engineer Filippo Biondi, used Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellite technology to investigate subsurface structures beneath Giza. Guided by these spectral traces, we located the shafts, still standing, perfectly cut and utterly enigmatic. The first shaft lies northeast of the Sphinx. Its square mouth, framed by limestone blocks, plunges 130 feet, about the height of a 12-story building. Its walls are squared with astonishing precision, lined with limestone and sandstone blocks that resemble the walls of some ancient machine. At a depth of 40 feet, an 80-foot-wide cavity encircles the shaft, too intentional to be natural erosion. Satellite imaging suggested it continues even deeper beneath the rubble. Just feet away, the second shaft mirrors the first. Located beside Khafre's processional causeway, a covered ramp linking the Valley Temple to the area near his pyramid, it features the same smooth precision and perimeter channel. Two shafts built to identical specifications suggest a deliberate system rather than randomness. The third shaft, on the eastern side of Khufu's Pyramid, is the most intriguing. Its entrance was once reinforced with retaining blocks, hinting at frequent access. A recess cut into the west wall appears designed to lift or guide objects from below. The surrounding cavity again appears, perfectly measured. Less than 165 feet separate the three, forming a pattern too deliberate to ignore. When mapped, their alignment mirrors the three great pyramids themselves, with a resemblance to Orion's Belt that is uncanny. Two smaller, rougher shafts nearby seem to be later additions. They lack the depth and polish of the originals, suggesting imitation rather than original intent. Even so, they hint at the underground's complexity, reminding us that Giza is far from fully explored. The purpose of these shafts remains uncertain. Were they for ritual offerings, hydraulic systems, or vertical transport chambers? Modern imaging, including Ground-Penetrating Radar, Electrical Resistivity Tomography and our own SAR technology, reveals further anomalies near the Sphinx, hinting at interconnected cavities beneath the plateau. If confirmed, these shafts could be entry points to a vast, engineered network aligned with the pyramids themselves. Beneath the plateau, trenches and sockets carved in the limestone, along with deep rock-cut shafts and wells, show that the builders engineered the underground with the same care as the monuments above. This hidden dimension has fueled speculation about subterranean chambers and hydraulic systems, possibly connected to the Nile, and suggests a purpose far beyond what conventional archaeology has recognized. The precision and alignment of these shafts, coupled with their mirrored pattern of the pyramids, hint at a cosmic and terrestrial plan interwoven above and below ground. For decades, the true extent of Giza's underground world has been overlooked, but these shafts may finally reveal a lost chapter of ancient engineering and ceremonial practice. What lies at the bottom of these shafts remains a mystery. Yet every measurement, every radar image, points to a singular conclusion: the Giza Plateau still holds secrets that could reshape our understanding of ancient Egypt. The shafts are more than anomalies; they are doorways into a subterranean world waiting to be explored.

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🚨#BREAKING EGYPT STAIRCASES TO THE PRE FLOOD ERA as HUGE STRUCTURES are Discovered 2km BELOW Pyramid of Giza! Synthetic Aperture Radar Doppler Tomography Reveals Details of Undiscovered High-Resolution Internal Structure of the Great Pyramid of Giza A research team consisting of Corrado Malanga, Armando Mei, Filippo Biondi, and Nicole Ciccole has released new findings from a SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) scan conducted on the Giza Plateau, focusing specifically on the underground structures beneath the Khafre Pyramid. This work is part of the ongoing Khafre Research Project, which leverages advanced satellite technology to explore the site’s hidden architecture. A mysterious L-shaped structure has been observed underground in the western cemetery of Giza. Known as the Cemetery of the Nobles or the Cemetery of the Pyramid Builders, it is an ancient burial ground located on the western bank of the Nile River, near the famous Giza pyramids in Egypt. The team used remote sensing technology to detect remains in the underlying structure. This cemetery served as the final resting place for individuals who held significant roles in ancient Egyptian society, including officials, administrators, and artisans involved in the construction of the pyramids. To look for more remains in the area, the team used electrical resistivity tomography, a geophysical imaging technique used to investigate the subsurface properties of the Earth, such as the distribution of rocks, soils, groundwater, and man-made structures. It involves sending electrical currents into the ground and the resistance is measured to detect underlying structures. According to a report in LiveScience, an anomaly was observed roughly 6.5 feet beneath the surface indicating the presence of some structure. Further investigation revealed an L-shaped structure measuring at least 33 feet in length. According to a paper published in the journal Archaeological Prospection, the structure seems to have been filled with sand, which means it was backfilled after it was constructed. The team has begun excavation to find out what this mysterious structure is could be a mix of sand and gravel, or perhaps an air void, the team said. Experts speculate that the structure is not natural in formation given it has a sharp shape. Dating back to the Old Kingdom period (around 2600-2100 BCE), the Western Cemetery contains a vast array of tombs, mastabas (rectangular structures with flat roofs), and burial shafts. These structures vary in size and complexity, reflecting the social status and wealth of the deceased individuals. One of the most famous tombs in the Western Cemetery is that of Queen Hetepheres I, the mother of King Khufu (Cheops), the builder of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Discovered in 1925 by archaeologist George Reisner, her tomb contained a wealth of artefacts, including furniture, jewellery, and other personal belongings, providing valuable insights into ancient Egyptian funerary practices and royal life. A problem with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is that, due to the poor penetrating action of electromagnetic waves inside solid bodies, the capability to observe inside distributed targets is precluded. Under these conditions, imaging action is provided only on the surface of distributed targets. The present work describes an imaging method based on the analysis of micro-movements on the Khnum-Khufu Pyramid, which are usually generated by background seismic waves. The results obtained prove to be very promising, as high-resolution full 3D tomographic imaging of the pyramid's interior and subsurface was achieved. Khnum-Khufu becomes transparent like a crystal when observed in the micro-movement domain. Based on this novelty, we have completely reconstructed internal objects, observing and measuring structures that have never been discovered before. The experimental results are estimated by processing series of SAR images from the second-generation ROBIN WESTENRA

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