What if the Great Sphinx is far older than we’re told? Geological evidence raises serious questions

Most people learn that the Great Sphinx was carved around 2500 BCE during the reign of Khafre. But geology doesn’t care about dynasties—and the rock surrounding the Sphinx tells a different story.

In the Sphinx enclosure, we find deep, vertical erosion channels that closely match damage caused by prolonged, heavy rainfall, not wind or sand. The problem? Egypt hasn’t seen that kind of climate since the end of the last Ice Age, thousands of years earlier than accepted timelines.

This raises some uncomfortable questions:

  • Why does the erosion pattern differ from nearby Old Kingdom structures?
  • Could the Sphinx predate dynastic Egypt?
  • If so, who built it and what civilization did they belong to?

I put together a short documentary breaking down the geology, the counterarguments, and where the evidence is strong vs. where it’s still debated. No wild claims—just the data and the implications.

Would love to hear thoughts, especially from those familiar with geology, Egyptology, or climate history.



by Intrepid-Wait1912

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