
We often hear the tomb theory, but from a purely engineering perspective the 8-sided concavity of the Great Pyramid (visible only during the equinoxes) serves no purpose for a burial. This level of precision requires advanced surveying and a specific understanding of light and shadow.
Could this be a massive ancient mystery hiding a functional non funerary purpose? Perhaps a synchronization tool or a resonance-based energy system?
What 'technical lens are we missing that mainstream archaeology refuses to look through? Let’s discuss
by Professional-Fee3323

8 Comments
No pharaoh has ever been found in a pyramid. While pyramids were designed as tombs to protect the bodies of kings, all were looted in antiquity. Only sarcophagi, empty, broken mummy wrappings, or fragments of human bones (some dating later) have been discovered, rather than the intact mummy of the pharaoh himself.
For a purely funerary purpose, the whole pyramid structure is unneccessary. Just dig a hole, drop the body in, plop a single rock on top and be done with it.
The pyramids were not built because they were strictly neccessary, but because they served as monuments to a literal living embodiment of divinity. And so them having certain seemingly superfluous features is still within the realm of reason, is it not?
Serves no purpose looking through a modern lens.
When you are making your final monument, you might want some pezaz aded to it for yearly spectacle.
That’s not a picture of the great pyramid of Giza. And why is there some AI slip white woman in front of it?
I fail to see how many sides it has has anything to do with it being a tomb or not?
That’s the khafre pyramid in the pic
What’s under it!
The corners are more rigid than the sides. It may be possible that the middle line of the face subsided slightly over time due to the weight.