Discovery of vast underground city beneath Giza pyramids challenges human history
03/28/2025 / By Willow Tohi
- A team of Italian and Scottish scientists claims to have found a massive underground city beneath the Giza pyramids, potentially dating back 38,000 years, which would predate known human history by millennia.
- The researchers base their findings on interpretations of ancient Egyptian texts, such as the Book of the Dead and the Turin King List, suggesting a pre-existing civilization was destroyed by a cataclysmic event.
- The team used radar technology, including Doppler tomography and synthetic aperture radar (SAR), to generate high-resolution images of subsurface structures, identifying wells, chambers and potential pathways to the underground city.
- The claims have faced significant skepticism from the scientific community. Experts like Dr. Zahi Hawass and Professor Lawrence Conyers have criticized the methodology and questioned the feasibility of an underground city, citing the limitations of the technology used.
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