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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 antechamber.<br />

Genuinely puzzled, I ducked under it and then stood up again in the<br />

southern portion of the Antechamber, which was some 10 feet long and<br />

maintained the same roof height of 12 feet. Though much worn, the<br />

grooves for the three further ‘portcullis’ slabs were still visible in the<br />

eastern and western walls. There was no sign of the slabs themselves<br />

and, indeed, it was difficult to see how such cumbersome pieces of stone<br />

could have been installed in so severely constricted a working space.<br />

I remembered that Flinders Petrie, who had systematically surveyed the<br />

entire Giza necropolis in the late nineteenth century, had commented on<br />

a similar puzzle in the Second Pyramid: ‘The granite portcullis in the<br />

lower passage shows great skill in moving masses, as it would need 40 or<br />

60 men to lift it; yet it has been moved, and raised into place, in a narrow<br />

passage, where only a few men could possibly reach it.’ 3 Exactly the same<br />

observations applied to the portcullis slabs of the Great Pyramid. If they<br />

were portcullis slabs—gateways capable of being raised and lowered.<br />

The problem was that the physics of raising and lowering them required<br />

they be shorter than the full height of the Antechamber, so that they<br />

could be drawn into the roof space to allow the entry and exit of<br />

legitimate individuals prior to the closure of the tomb. This meant, of<br />

course, that when the bottom edges of the slabs were lowered to the<br />

floor to block the Antechamber at that level, an equal and opposite space<br />

would have opened up between the top edges of the slabs and the<br />

ceiling, through which any enterprising tomb-robber would certainly have<br />

been able to climb.<br />

3 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 36.<br />

318

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