Breaking discovery at the Pyramids of Giza!
Breaking discovery at the Pyramids of Giza!
In 2022, researchers Corrado Malanga (University of Pisa) and Filippo Biondi (University of Strathclyde) published groundbreaking peer-reviewed research using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) technology that revealed never-before-seen structures inside the Great Pyramid of Giza.
Now, their latest findings on the Pyramid of Khafre — the second-largest pyramid on the Giza Plateau — have stunned the scientific and archaeological community.
🛰 Using proprietary software that translates radar signals into phononic information, they reconstructed the 3D internal layout of Khafre’s pyramid and what lies beneath it.
What they discovered is nothing short of mind-blowing:
🔹 5 massive structures near the base of the pyramid, connected by geometric passageways. Each contains 5 horizontal levels and sloped roofs.
🔹 Beneath these lie 8 vertical cylindrical wells, hollow and encircled by spiral descents — dropping 648 meters into the earth.
🔹 These cylinders converge into two massive underground cubes, each about 80 meters per side — forming part of a system that extends two kilometers beneath the plateau… beneath all three pyramids.
This isn’t just a void. It’s a designed, functional underground complex.
Mainstream Egyptology has long told us the pyramids were tombs. But these findings — combined with the pyramid’s precise use of Pi, the golden ratio, and even the speed of light — challenge that narrative.
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