Posted on 08/26/2002 4:37:00 PM PDT by Pokey78
A MYSTERIOUS passage in the Great Pyramid at Giza will be explored by a robot next month in an attempt to unravel one of the final secrets of the last remaining wonder of the Ancient World. The Pyramid Rover will be sent to find out what lies beyond a blocked, 8in-square shaft that has puzzled researchers since its discovery in 1872. The custom-built machine will climb 210ft along the channel, which leads upwards from an unusued and apparently unfinished room known as the Queens Chamber, until it reaches a stone plug with two copper handles which ended a previous attempt to chart the passage a decade ago. On arrival, it will use the worlds smallest ground-penetrating radar antenna to look beyond the blockage for the first time since the pyramid, built to house the remains of the Pharaoh Cheops, or Khufu, was completed about 4,500 years ago. If the radar reveals a structure of interest behind the seal, such as a third great chamber, Pyramid Rover will pass a fibre-optic camera through cracks to capture the first pictures. The entire procedure, which is headed by Zahi Hawass, director of Egypts Supreme Council of Antiquities, and Mark Lehner, director of the Giza Plateau Mapping Project, will be screened live on the National Geographic Channel, starting at 1am on Tuesday, September 17. It will be repeated at 7pm that night.
The Pyramid of Khufu contains two great rooms: the Kings Chamber, holding Khufus tomb, and the Queens Chamber, which is smaller and directly below it and which, despite its name, was probably not meant for his wife. It is unique not only for its size, but also because it was built with two small shafts running diagonally upwards from the two chambers. The shafts running from the north and south wall of the Queens Chamber are especially curious because they are blocked at each end. There are many theories as to their purpose. It seems unlikely that they were for air or water, being blocked at both ends. Some experts believe that they are star shafts pointing to Sirius and the constellation Orion: it is widely thought that the layout of the three pyramids at Giza mimics the stars in Orions belt. Another explanation is that they are soul shafts, built to allow a soul to escape to heaven. Again, however, the passages are blocked, and archaeologists do not think that the Queens Chamber ever held a tomb. One popular theory is that the room was originally designed for Khufu before it was decided to build a larger chamber for the pharaoh and abandon the lower room. Some experts even believe that the southern shaft, the longer of the two, leads to a third, undiscovered chamber. It ends 54ft from the outer face, leaving ample space for a room, and the seal is made of Tura limestone, a rock found only in the central chambers. Kate Spence, of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at Cambridge University, said that Pyramid Rovers mission ought to shed important new light on the mystery, even if all it does is to debunk some of the most outlandish theories. Opinion is very divided as to what the shafts are for, she said. Its the only pyramid that has this sort of shaft so we have nothing to go on in terms of comparison. The huge question is why they are blocked. It is incredibly difficult to say. My own expectation is that there wont be anything behind the blockage, but we just dont know. Its possible they just stopped building, but if thats the case, why did they plug it so elaborately? The great thing is that whatever they find, even if they find theres nothing there, thats absolutely fascinating. You cant lose. Its going to be interesting whether theres nothing there or a chamber full of treasure and statues. Pyramid Rover will build on the achievements of Rudolf Gantenbrink, a German scientist whose robot, Upuaut 2, explored the southern shaft and discovered the blockage in the early 1990s. The new probe, based on models used to search for World Trade Centre survivors after September 11, is less than 5in high and wide and about 1ft long. Its ground-penetrating radar has a range of more than 3ft through concrete and much farther through the more porous limestone of the pyramid. It also carries an ultrasonic transducer that can measure the thickness of the stones. A force gauge will detect whether the blocking stone moves, and other tools will seek out cracks through which fibre-optic cameras can pass. A conductivity sensor will also be applied to the copper handles to determine whether they form an electrical circuit, which would show that they are linked on the other side. Theories about monument's unknown heart
Wonder of the world that was ordered by Cheops
KHUFU, the pharaoh also known as Cheops, ordered the construction of the Great Pyramid at Giza (Mark Henderson writes). He was the second pharaoh of Dynasty IV in Egypts Old Kingdom, but almost all other information about him has vanished. Even the date at which its builders began work is disputed. It is normally dated to 2554BC, but recent work by Kate Spence of Cambridge University, based on the position of the stars used to align it to the north, has indicated that it may have been started in 2480BC.
The pyramid contains 2.3 million stone blocks, some weighing up to 40 tonnes. Its total weight would have been six million tonnes. The stones were brought to Giza from Aswan and Tura, almost certainly by water. The entire structure was originally covered in white marble, which has since been removed.
The pyramids base was 13 acres. It stood 481ft high and 756ft wide, though erosion has reduced the height to 455ft.
Each face slopes 51 degrees and 52 minutes, and each is aligned to the north, south, east and west with extreme accuracy.
Although the Greek historian Herodotus claimed that it took 100,000 men to build, modern archaeological evidence suggests that the true total was between 20,000 and 30,000, in itself an great logistical feat. The construction is generally considered to have taken at least 20 years.
Heh, that's just as plausible as some theories!!!
A weird sense of humor?
LOL
I'm not sure. The one I saw was by a German guy who put a robot with a camera and it crawled down the tube. (Maybe this is another?)
The story refers to the efforts (in the early 1990s) of the German team. These efforts were filmed and have been shown on the Discovery channel. As the story makes clear, the German effort ended when their robot encountered a blocking stone.
But I digress - it was merely my way of bumping this so I can keep up with the thread from time to time :0)
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