Researchers have used non-invasive scanning techniques to peer inside the pyramid and reveal its hidden internal structure, but they have been puzzled by the function of the hidden void. Now, Giulio Magli, a professor of archaeoastronomy at the Politecnico di Milano, has proposed one of the first hypotheses for what lies inside the mysterious space. He has suggested that it may hide an iron throne made from metal harvested from meteorites. The pyramid, which was built around 2560 BC during the reign of Pharaoh Khufu, "is one of the largest and most complex monuments in the history of architecture," said Magli. As an archaeoastronomist he studies how ancient peoples understood the sky and what role it played in their culture. His findings are outlined in a pre-print online journal arXiv.org. They have not been peer-reviewed.
Magli argued that it was unlikely that the void was the result of sloppy building, as some have suggested. The extreme care exhibited in the pyramid's design goes against that theory, he explained."Further, the void cannot be interpreted – as proposed by some Egyptologists - as a chamber devoted to relieve weight from the roof of the Great Gallery."Thus, there must be a solid reason for its existence, and this reason must be deeply connected with the Egyptian funerary religion-quote:Giulio Magli", which says that the pharaoh's afterlife lay among the stars.""All in all, if the void cannot be attributed either to chance or to structural reasons, its presence must be functional to the scope of the pyramid: the tomb of the Pharaoh, built to assure its eternal afterlife.
Iron harvested from meteorites:
Researchers know that the Egyptians produced valuable objects from rare iron harvested from meteorites - for example King Tutankhamun's dagger - centuries before Iron Age metalworkers learned how to smelt iron from the Earth's crust.
King Tuts dagger Magli said his hypothesis could be proven if the unexplored northern shaft was investigated to see if it leads into a room inside the big void. The void is at least 30 metres long and is situated above the Grand Gallery – a steeply slanted passageway which connects two other chambers, the Queen's Chamber and the King's Chamber. At 146 metres high, the pyramid was the tallest building in the world until the 19th Century, and is still one of the largest man-made structures on the planet.- Aristos Georgiou |
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