Secret Chamber In The Great Pyramid? 87
ferkelparade writes "The Guardian reports that two French amateur archaeologists believe they have located a secret chamber in the Cheops pyramid using microgravimetry and radar. The team believes that this might be the pharaoh's burial chamber - as the chamber seems to be unopened, it might still house the complete burial treasure. More coverage from abc."
Be careful! (Score:5, Funny)
I saw a documentary just a few weeks ago about the hidden dangers of secret pyramid chambers. Walls can start shifting around for no reason and for God's sake stay the hell away from any pod-shaped living structures attached to the ground!
Re:Be careful! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Be careful! (Score:3, Funny)
GTRacer
- Sorry, my son has got me into the game of the King of Games
Re:Be careful! (Score:2)
Helllooooooo Curse!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Helllooooooo Curse!! (Score:2)
Unfortunately... (Score:5, Funny)
Don't open it! (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Don't open it! (Score:2, Funny)
Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2, Interesting)
I really start to wonder about disturbing the graves of others. I guess the fact that they aren't from a current religion means they don't deserve respect, right?
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:5, Insightful)
For what it's worth, a grave robber wants to loot the objects in the grave to make money.
An archaeologist seeks knowledge. Now, yes, his actions can lead to fame and fortune, but that isn't (shouldn't) be his primary goal (and it almost always isn't.)
And I think that that's worth a lot.
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2, Interesting)
We know about as much as we are going to about the ancient Egyptian Culture.
Read this [grahamhancock.com] and tell me if you change your mind. You may not like his answers, but that's not the point. The questions he asks are the real brain-teasers.
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting stuff. There may never have been an Atlantis, and aliens certainly didn't build anything, but there's a hell of a lot of absolutely LOST and intentionally destroyed human history.
I think it's our duty to explore this stuff.
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:1)
For those who haven't read it (and you should anyway) - Basically his theory is that there was an advanced civilization that predated the Egyptians and taught them (as well as some of the other ancient races) much of what they know. Now, if you take, say, the last 4000 years of "western" civilization, we went from basically being barbarians, to being advanced enough to turn ourselves back to barbarians with naught more than an accidental push of a button (read: nuke), is there anywhere in the pre-Egyptian t
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:3, Insightful)
We have not found ANYTHING of that sort that predates us here on earth. Guess why. Maybe because they were not there?
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Anyway, I'm not saying the egyptians had cars or factories. Just that there's quite a bit of mechanical evidence that they had much better tools than we credit them with.
After all, how well do you think a bronze tool could cut diorite? It wouldn't last an hour
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:1)
The last 5 on your list would easily be long gone in much less than 50,000 years. Mines collapse, bridges and buildings fall and the metal inside them rusts and the glass and concrete deteriorates. If we spent those 50,000 years destroying ourselves we'd make the first three either non-existent or very hard to find as well. Given that there were a lot less people around 5000 years ago and they mostly lived in pl
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
The other thing is that an advanced civilisation requires lots of people to sustain itself. with 1 million people you simply cannot build a large civilisation of the same magnitude as ours.
Ok, that does not discount the id
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Now I will grant that there is a fine line between grave robbery and exploration. But ask yourself: do you object to grave robbery because it's vandalism and theft, do you object becasue it's disrespectful of the dead, or do you object on religious grounds? If it's the first reason, then really any expediton mounted for scientific gain doesn't merit objection. If you think it's disrespectful, bear in mind that these tombs are _ancient_. You have to draw the line somewhere, and these dead are long forgotton. If it's a religious objection then thats another matter, but not everyone will agree with you on this one.
Anyway which is worse: letting ancient Egypt be forgotton, or studying what remains of it? I'm sure that we wouldn't mind our graveyards being studied by future generations in three thousand years time, in fact we'd probably want to be remembered.
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Hmm... I'm bretty sure that somewhere in pre-history that same argument was used on some guy experimenting with that newfangled fire thing....
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Who forgets history, is doomed to repeat it.
Bring out the new pharaos and let's build pyramids again!
Good Point (Score:5, Interesting)
For what it's worth, most archeological artifacts end up in museums and the protective-but-publicly-accessable vaults (though you sometimes need a reason better than "I just wanted to find out if any Joanne Schmoe can look at ancient pottery shards"), rather than in private collections and on the auction block. For the archaeologist (and, again, historians in general), knowledge alone is its own treasure.
~UP
[Note: To establish my own credibility on this subject, I submit that I am a student and History Major at a university noted within academic circles for its history department; just as an example of this, we had a visiting professor, last year, who was one of the top five asian-history historians on the planet.]
Addendum (Score:1)
The vaults I mention above are those of Universities and other academic institutions.
~UP
Re:Good Point (Score:1)
Was your professor Asian or was he a professor of Asian studies?
I hope his visit to our planet was interesting.
Re:Good Point (Score:1)
~UP
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:3, Funny)
An archaeologist seeks knowledge
...and then sells the rights to the official opening to TV.
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2, Funny)
(Hey, at least they aren't gaint bouncing balls)!
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:4, Interesting)
I would think that a long dead king would be pleased by the thought of having his name and burial site discussed all over the world thousands of years after his death. Lump in the increased population, the television coverage, and newspapers and knowledge of him would likely be many orders of magnatude more now than when he was alive.
If someone had discribed the phenomena that surrounds the pyramids today to the pharos in the past I would think that the more megalomaniacal would find that sufficient reason to create the pyramids, regardless of the religious ramifications. Amazing feats of architecture and megalithic construction, secret chambers with undiscovered riches, and mysterious curses will do alot to keep your name in circulation over the ages. Putting these things into the pyramids is like serving notice on the future that you were there first and best.
You know, kind of like a inter-temporal multi-millenial easter egg.
Re:Not if it kills you (Score:2)
Re:Not if it kills you (Score:4, Interesting)
Did you ever wonder if there was a pharoh that was uneasy at the thought of having their body put through the embalming process? What with their brains being pulled out of their nose and their organs being put into jars I would expect that some of them were not to excited about the prospect.
The ancient Egypitans also believed that the pharohs were gods. It was central to their religion. I think that *maybe* the pharohs themselves knew whether or not they were actually gods, and this knowledge might have had some bearing on their perception of their religious beliefs.
Not to mention marrying and having sex with their sisters. I bet that some pharohs were kind of upset about that, but did it anyways because it was not only expected, but required to make sure that the power system continued to function. The believers knew that this was proper according to the religion and it would be improper to change it, possible weakening the strength of the pharoh who tried to do it. Fear of the population's reaction to violating their belief system could have been a motivator, as easily as the actual belief itself.
Also, I find it strange that with the current climate of acceptable atheism and self directed spiurituality that varys wildly from person to person as a cultural refrence point that almost everyone seems to have the impression that past cultures' populations were all 100% believers, completely succeptible to religious indoctrination.
These are the cultural archaelogy questions that may (probably will not) ever be answered. Pity too, because what REALLY caused people to act in a certain manner is infinitely more interesting to me than the plausible or probably answer.
Re:Not if it kills you (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not if it kills you (Score:2)
Did you ever wonder if there was a pharoh that was uneasy at the thought of having their body put through the embalming process? What with their brains being pulled out of their nose and their organs being put into jars I would expect that some of them were not to excited about the prospect.
Perhaps they would be horrified that they could just be plac
Re:Not if it kills you (Score:2)
Why? There's nothing in the uncivilized brain that makes that an untenable aspect--if there were, civilizations wouldn't need the laws we have against it.
Also, I find it strange that with the current climate of acceptable atheism and self directed spiurituality that varys wildly from person to person as a cultural refrence point that almost everyone seems to have the impression that past cultures' populations were all 100% believers, completely succe
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:1)
...and we've got to beat the Nazis! (Score:1)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:1)
Well, I am an archaeologist ... and every-time I excavate a grave I deal with serious moral problems.
But archaeology today (real one, not fancy stories like this one) is mainly about saving graves from bulldozers. The only dilemma we face in reality is weather ancient ground will be excavated by archaeologist (which treat and study human remains with respect and share the knowledge) or destroyed by capital driven bulldozers, preparing ground for new shopping mall.
However, I do believe that right of [liv.ac.uk]
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:2)
Re:Archaeologist... Grave robber.... (Score:1)
Your right to undisturbed grave is granted by law -- if not by moral standards of people who might disturb it, of course (in my experience most people deal with human remains graves ... with respect and fear).
But I am talking here mainly about burial places that were lost, forgotten and buried under modern sediments -- burials under modern playgrounds, streets, buildings... When they are eventually discovered (usually during earthworks of some kind) and excavated, local indigenous groups claim right to
What do they find? (Score:4, Funny)
Is it the Holy Grail?
No; they find an even rarer, more legendary, and more precious [google.com] treasure.
Re:Al Capon's vault? (Score:2)
How did they measure in the first place? (Score:5, Insightful)
Did they use some Star Trek Sensor array from high above the surface of the earth?
Re:How did they measure in the first place? (Score:5, Informative)
Someone is doing their job... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Now the Egyptian Gov't just needs to stall long enough to let him make his way to the great wall of China.
-Adam
Finally (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, THIS has never happened before... (Score:2)
In other news today, Geraldo Rivera announced that he's discoverd Al Capone's secret vaults!
Re:Wow, THIS has never happened before... (Score:1)
Can you blame them? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, given that numerous cultural sites have been desecrated and priceless Egyptian artifacts have been stolen from Egypt by European and Egyptian "researchers" over the last couple centuries (and millenia), can you blame the Egyptian officals?
If the French researchers really want access to the pyramids, maybe they can petition the French, British and other governments to return some of the artifacts as a sign of good will.
Hey, scientific progress is great, but so is maintaining your cultural heritage.
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:1)
Either that or commence a full scale invasion.
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:1, Funny)
Start the petition. I'm in.
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:2)
I would argue that the Egyptians in charge of such a dig are mostly composed of people who want to maintain their cultural heritage, and who also want the glory and maybe a bit of profit.
The Iraqis who robbed their own museums probably mostly just wanted the money and a piece of history for themselves.
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of taking a picture of an obelisk, you would just take the obelisk with you (the obelisk on the "place de la concorde" in paris is an original specimen brought by Napoleon on his Egyptian campaign) to be able to show your mom where it was
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:2)
those "stolen" atrifacts have contributed much much more to mankind and science than they would possibly have could while buried in a grave...
How does "show your mom" contribute to mankind and science?
How do you know that colonization was better then letting Egypt develop on their own?
Imagine if a horde of Egyptians invaded the United States and took the corpse of Thomas Jefferson, the wreckage of the Santa Maria, tons gold from Fort Knox and some priz
Belzoni used Dynamite to enter this pyramid (Score:3, Informative)
Belzoni used a battering ram, dude. (Score:1)
I'm not trying to defend Belzoni, just making a minor correction on your post. Belzoni was responsible for the loss of many irreplaceable artifacts, and like most treasure hunters of his time he was no different from a grave rob
Re:Belzoni used a battering ram, dude. (Score:1)
Re:Can you blame them? (Score:2)
Also, perhaps the Egyptians know it's really home to a Goa'uld Symbiote [gateworld.net].
Obvious (Score:1)
Harry Potter fans rejuice! (Score:1)
Re:Harry Potter fans rejuice! (Score:2)
I'm so confused.
Re:Harry Potter fans rejuice! (Score:2)
right or wrong... (Score:2, Funny)
Cheops (Score:1)
Microgravimetry (Score:4, Informative)
I was not familiar with microgravimetry. The Federal Highway Administration has an article on using it to find old mines [dot.gov]
It looks like basicaly you use Newton's law of gravatation to measure the local density of the earth, and just look around for a dip.
Microgravimetry is also used in the study of thin films [aip.org]
Re:Microgravimetry (Score:1)
Re:Microgravimetry (Score:2)
Old news? (Score:2)
Weren't both kooks and serious people yahooing 4-5-8 years ago about secret tunnelling and hidden chambers, both the "air shaft/star shaft" group and the "echolocation/GPR" people back then? Or am I mixing and matching paleocliology?
Do we all have such short attention spans?
Though if this ends up being a room holding a statue of Osiris holding an Ankh, I'm giving money to the kooks, same day.