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The Great Pyramid of Giza May Have Been a Water Pump

Topic: Small Business MarketingPublished March 31, 2012

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Wood was burnt in the upper chamber inside the Great Pyramid, and this chamber was meant to be an ancient gas furnace. Archeologists claim that the Great Pyramid was a tomb or religious worship place, but this is not the case. I've been to Europe and seen the Cathedrals, they are massive, and proof that civilizations will squander time and resources building massive religious edifices. In most cases, temples are easily recognized as temples. The Great Pyramid has many unique interior design components which have never been found in any other temple anywhere. The shafts are an excellent example of these features. To construct the Great Pyramid, 2.8 million stones weighing two tons each were used. The Great Pyramid was as tall as a modern 40 story building before its capstone was stolen. Hate to have been a worker on that project, trying to place almost three million limestone blocks and align them so precisely. Now imagine how much harder such a task would be with a shaft. A shaft that must run from the outside of the pyramid all the way to its center. A slew of blocks have to have tracks chiseled into them, and they must align perfectly, with such precision that there is less than a hundredth of an inch of drift. Why include such a difficult to create feature for a mere temple? Does anyone really believe a temple needs two shafts penetrating it and running to the center? No freaking way. The shafts, and other features including the King's Chamber, Queen's Chamber, and Grand Gallery, suggest a purpose other than worship. They suggest a device that was some sort of machine, or which served some engineering purpose? What purpose? Egypt was prosperous because of the Nile River. It flooded annually and created farmland that was the most fertile in the world. This made Egypt the grain supplier of the ancient world, and its flood plains were kind of like America's great plains with their amber waves of grain. It has been suggested that the Great Pyramid was actually a two phase pump which raised water to a height of almost 30 stories via the shafts. Aqueducts would have then caught water, and their gradual downward slope would have transported away from the pyramid to the surrounding plains without need for further pumps. The Great Pyramid thus would have been an agricultural watering device that made the flood plains larger than normal. This theory may be incorrect, but the Great Pyramid's peculiar internal features, especially the Gallery and King's Chamber, clearly reflect mechanical engineering, not temple building. They have some physical engineering purpose which must be deduced if the mystery of the Great Pyramid is ever to be solved. Wood would have been ignited in the upper chamber, which would have consumed all the air and created a reduced or low pressure area that would have drawn water upward in accordance with Bernoulli's principle. This chamber did not heat like gas furnaces in our homes today, but it was an isolated an enclosed chamber which had many design features of the gas furnaces in our homes. The King's chamber and Queen's chamber were two separate phases of a two phase pump which was the Great Pyramid.

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About the Author

I'm an electrical specialist with an interest in water heaters in Seattle. Check out my Website at http://www.washingtonenergy.com.

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