New void identified in the Great Pyramid
ConversesHistory at 30,000 feet: The Big Picture
Afegeix-te a LibraryThing per participar.
1stellarexplorer
It’s large, and no one knows whether it’s a chamber of archeological significance, or possible a gap left to reduce pressure on the ancient structure:
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-41845445
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-41845445
2PossMan
There's also an account in the Guardian but I prefer the one you've linked to. It's intriguing and I'd like to think it's not just a big hole. I get the impression we may have to wait a long time to find out.
4timspalding
I bet it's nothing. $10, any takers?
5PossMan
>4 timspalding:: a mere $10 suggests you're not all that confident. I'd go $100 against if I thought we might have an answer within the next few years. But I suspect we won't. And when I say I believe "nothing" is wrong it's not because I expect there will be new Tutankhamun or a treasure hoard but because I think we may discover a reason for the presence of this cavity, or perhaps some items of archaeological significance even if only hieroglyphs or a stonemason's hammer.
6Marissa_Doyle
It's full of very sharp razor blades and unspoiled bananas. ;)
7PossMan
"The Conversation" have a story here:- https://theconversation.com/particle-physicists-discover-mysterious-structure-in... from The Conversation for November 3 2017 - 87117253&utm_content=Latest from The Conversation for November 3 2017 - 87117253+CID_e990d567cbb7d188ceed97c48d1176e2&utm_source=campaign_monitor_uk&utm_term=Particle physicists discover mysterious structure in Great Pyramid heres how they did it
8PossMan
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/tutankhamun-secret-chambers-king...
Not what I was hoping for but I suppose really not a surprise.
Not what I was hoping for but I suppose really not a surprise.
9pmackey
>8 PossMan: I saw the article in the Washington Post and was disappointed.
10Macumbeira
They'll find other chambers when tourism is slowing down. Don't worry
11pmackey
>10 Macumbeira: That's a wry comment, but I never thought of it that way. I'm sure there was an increase of tourism when the possibility of the chamber was announced. The situation reminds me of Geraldo Rivera's over-hyped and anti-climatic Al Capone chamber from a few years back.
12Macumbeira
>11 pmackey: It is nasty world outside. That's why I stay here
13pmackey
>12 Macumbeira: Well, don't get too comfortable or some future archeologist or Geraldo may use your secret lair for their own gains.
14PossMan
Here we go again:-
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-00465-y?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&am...
I'd really really love this to be true but I'm afraid like previous reports it will come to nothing.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-00465-y?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&am...
I'd really really love this to be true but I'm afraid like previous reports it will come to nothing.
15clamairy
>14 PossMan: Yeah, not holding my breath.
16PossMan
And here we go again after 2 years. The Times (London) devotes almost a full page to findings in a new book by Nicholas Reeves - actually a revised edition of a book he wrote 30 years ago. He claims that there are 2 hidden doors in the walls of Tutankhamun's burial chamber, one of which leads to the burial chamber of Nefertiti. As before I'd love this to be fact but. . . . .
17clamairy
>16 PossMan: Yeah, I read that too. Cara Cooney (another Egyptologist that I follow on Facebook) believes he's right, and it should be looked into. It is a hard thing to explore without causing damage, though. I keep thinking they can just drill a tiny hole and insert fiber-optic cameras, but I guess it's not that simple.