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

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 />

The Grand Gallery and the King’s and Queen’s Chambers with their<br />

northern and southern shafts.<br />

The reason, though I was unaware of it at the time, was that a German<br />

robotics engineer named Rudolf Gantenbrink was at work within, slowly<br />

and painstakingly manoeuvring a $250,000 robot up the narrow southern<br />

shaft of the Queen’s Chamber. Hired by the Egyptian Antiquities<br />

Organization to improve the ventilation of the Great Pyramid, he had<br />

already used his high-tech equipment to clear debris from the King’s<br />

Chamber’s narrow ‘southern shaft’ (believed by Egyptologists to have<br />

been designed as a ventilation shaft in the first place) and had installed<br />

an electric fan at its mouth. At the beginning of March 1993 he<br />

transferred his attentions to the Queen’s Chamber, deploying Upuaut, a<br />

miniaturized remote-controlled robot camera to explore its southern<br />

shaft. On 22 March, some 200 feet along the steeply sloping shaft (which<br />

rose at an angle of 39.5° and was only about 8 inches high x 9 inches<br />

wide), 15 the floor and walls suddenly became very smooth as Upuaut<br />

crawled into a section made of fine Tura limestone, the type normally<br />

used for lining sacred areas such as chapels or tombs. That, in itself, was<br />

intriguing enough, but at the end of this corridor, apparently leading to a<br />

sealed chamber deep within the pyramid’s masonry, was a solid<br />

limestone door complete with metal fittings ...<br />

It had long been known that neither this southern shaft nor its<br />

counterpart in the Chamber’s northern wall had any exit on the outside of<br />

the Great Pyramid. In addition, and equally inexplicably, neither had<br />

originally been fully cut through. For some reason the builders had left<br />

the last five inches of stone intact in the last block over the mouth of<br />

each of the shafts, thus rendering them invisible and inaccessible to any<br />

15 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 24.<br />

310

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