Solve_et_Coagula Earthfiler
Anmeldedatum: 21.12.2008 Beiträge: 1874 Wohnort: Zürich
|
Verfasst am: 19.09.2010, 23:19 Titel: A New Theory for the Great Pyramid: How Science is Changing |
|
|
A New Theory for the Great Pyramid: How Science is Changing Our View of the Past
September 19, 2010 By davidjones
© By EDWARD F. MALKOWSKI
Of all the chambers in the Great Pyramid, the subterranean chamber is the largest, as well as the most mysterious. It is 46 feet long, 27 feet wide, hewn into the limestone bedrock, and difficult to describe. The descending passageway’s entrance to the subterranean chamber is near the floor at the northeast corner. A six-foot-wide square pit shaped like a funnel has been tunnelled in the middle of the floor, near the east wall. This square-shaped pit is actually the mouth of a shaft that is eleven feet deep, although in 1816 the Italian explorer Count Caviglia drilled into the pit another thirty feet.
The western half of the chamber has been carved nearly six feet higher than the eastern half and sculpted into several large finlike protrusions. All these finlike protrusions are situated east to west and are nearly as tall as the ceiling. Between the large protrusions, a stepped channel starts at the floor and flows toward the back of the chamber. In its centre there is a channel leading to the western wall. In the southeastern corner, a tunnel known as the “dead end shaft,” thirty inches in height and width, runs south fifty-seven feet, then ends at a wall. There are two other features in the design of the Great Pyramid that appear to be part of the work performed in the bedrock, the well shaft and the “grotto” (see figures 1 & 2)
Continue to read:
http://www.newdawnmagazine.com/arti....ging-our-view-of-the-past |
|