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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

out of its walls: four on the eastern side and two to the north. These were<br />

presumed by Egyptologists to have functioned as ‘magazines ... for<br />

storing objects which the dead king wished to have close to his body.’ 6<br />

Coming out of this chamber, we turned right again, back into the<br />

horizontal passage. At its end lay another empty chamber, 7 the design of<br />

which is unique among the pyramids of Egypt. Some twelve feet long by<br />

eight wide, and oriented north to south, its walls and extensively broken<br />

and damaged floor were fashioned out of a peculiarly dense, chocolatecoloured<br />

granite which seemed to absorb light and sound waves. Its<br />

ceiling consisted of eighteen huge slabs of the same material, nine on<br />

each side, laid in facing gables. Because they had had been hollowed<br />

from below to form a markedly concave surface, the effect of these great<br />

monoliths was of a perfect barrel vault, much as one might expect to find<br />

in the crypt of a Romanesque cathedral.<br />

Retracing our steps, we left the lower chambers and walked back up the<br />

ramp to the large, flat-roofed, rock-hewn room above. Passing through<br />

the ragged aperture in its western wall, we found ourselves looking<br />

directly at the upper sides of the eighteen slabs which formed the ceiling<br />

of the chamber below. From this perspective their true form as a pointed<br />

gable was immediately apparent. What was less clear was how they had<br />

been brought in here in the first place, let alone laid so perfectly in<br />

position. Each one must have weighed many tons, heavy enough to have<br />

made them extremely difficult to handle under any circumstances. And<br />

these were no ordinary circumstances. As though they had set out<br />

deliberately to make things more complicated for themselves (or perhaps<br />

because they found such tasks simple?) the pyramid builders had<br />

disdained to provide an adequate working area between the slabs and the<br />

bedrock above them. By crawling into the cavity, I was able to establish<br />

that the clearance varied from approximately two feet at the southern end<br />

to just a few inches at the northern end. In such a restricted space there<br />

was no possibility that the monoliths could have been lowered into<br />

position. Logically, therefore, they must have been raised from the<br />

chamber floor, but how had that been done? The chamber was so small<br />

that only a few men could have worked inside it at any one time—too few<br />

to have had the muscle-power to lift the slabs by brute force. Pulleys were<br />

not supposed to have existed in the Pyramid Age 8 (even if they had, there<br />

would have been insufficient room to set up block-and-tackle). Had some<br />

unknown system of levers been used? Or might there be more substance<br />

than scholars realized to the Ancient Egyptian legends that spoke of huge<br />

6 The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 127.<br />

7 It was in this chamber that Vyse found the intrusive burial (of bones and a wooden<br />

coffin lid) referred to in Chapter Thirty-Five. The basalt coffin where he also found (later<br />

lost at sea) is believed to have been part of the same intrusive burial and to have not<br />

been older than the Twenty-sixth Dynasty. See, for example, Blue Guide, Egypt, p. 433.<br />

8 The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 220.<br />

299

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