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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 />

The Antechamber clearly qualified as another of the pyramid’s many<br />

thought-provoking paradoxes, in which complexity of structure was<br />

combined with apparent pointlessness of function.<br />

An exit tunnel, the same height and width as the entrance tunnel and<br />

lined with solid red granite, led off from the Antechamber’s southern wall<br />

(also made of granite but incorporating a 12-inch thick limestone layer at<br />

its very top). After about a further 9 feet the tunnel debouched into the<br />

King’s Chamber, a massive sombre red room made entirely of granite,<br />

which radiated an atmosphere of prodigious energy and power.<br />

Stone enigmas<br />

I moved into the centre of the King’s Chamber, the lung axis of which<br />

was perfectly oriented east to west while the short axis was equally<br />

perfectly oriented north to south. The room was exactly 19 feet 1 inch in<br />

height and formed a precise two-by-one rectangle measuring 34 feet 4<br />

inches long by 17 feet 2 inches wide. With a floor consisting of 15<br />

massive granite paving stones, and walls composed of 100 gigantic<br />

granite blocks, each weighing 70 tons or more and laid in five courses,<br />

and with a ceiling spanned by nine further granite blocks each weighing<br />

approximately 50 tons, 4 the effect was of intense and overwhelming<br />

compression.<br />

At the Chamber’s western end was the object which, if the<br />

Egyptologists were to be believed, the entire Great Pyramid, had been<br />

built to house. That object, carved out of one piece of dark chocolatecoloured<br />

granite containing peculiarly hard granules of feldspar, quartz<br />

and mica, was the lidless coffer presumed to have been the sarcophagus<br />

of Khufu. 5 Its interior measurements were 6 feet 6.6 inches in length, 2<br />

feet 10.42 inches in depth, and 2 feet 2.81 inches in width. Its exterior<br />

measurements were 7 feet 5.62 inches in length, 3 feet 5.31 inches in<br />

depth, and 3 feet 2.5 inches in width 6 an inch too wide, incidentally, for it<br />

to have been carried up through the lower (and now plugged) entrance to<br />

the ascending corridor. 7<br />

Some routine mathematical games were built into the dimensions of the<br />

sarcophagus. For example, it had an internal volume of 1166.4 litres and<br />

an external volume of exactly twice that, 2332.8 litres. 8 Such a precise<br />

coincidence could not have been arrived at accidentally: the walls of the<br />

coffer had been cut to machine-age tolerances by craftsmen of enormous<br />

4<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, pp. 94-5; The Great Pyramid: Your Personal Guide, p. 64.<br />

5<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, pp. 94-5.<br />

6<br />

The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 30.<br />

7<br />

Ibid., p. 95.<br />

8<br />

Livio Catullo Stecchini in Secrets of the Great Pyramid, p. 322. Stecchini gives slightly<br />

more accurate measures than those of Petrie (quoted) for the internal and external<br />

dimensions of the pyramid.<br />

319

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