Be true to your school!
Manu Seyfzadeh, subsequent to looking at the components of the tomb of Hemiunu (ordinarily named "G4000"), the planner of the Great Pyramid, considers it an "outline" for that powerful structure.(1) In the primary structure period of Hemiunu's tomb Seyfzadeh claims the draftsman encoded the fundamental outer estimations of the Great Pyramid, including its stature, side, and the indent of its center workmanship. In the second and extended period of the draftsman's tomb, Seyfzadeh finds encoded a portion of the inside estimations of "G1", (a customary assignment for the Great Pyramid), including the components of the Kings Chamber. Seyfzadeh comments of the associations between Hemiunu's mastaba (G4000) and G1, "This is ground-breaking proof that the association somewhere in the range of G4000 and G1 isn't just genuine yet was proposed on the grounds that the possibility of a unintended arbitrary match as for every one of these highlights is low." Such ends block banter over the creation and dating of the Great Pyramid. It was authorized by fourth Dynasty pharaoh Khufu, the uncle of his engineer Hemiunu.
With this article I might want to add to the associations between the planner of the Great Pyramid and his terrific accomplishment in stone at Giza. I made introductions at the Annual Conference of The American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) in 2019 and again in 2020 about markings on the East side of the Great Pyramid. This is a huge and profoundly regarded Egyptological gathering. In 2019 I made a few inferences about the Trial Passages and the "Third Trial Passage" and their connection to the Great Pyramid. In 2020 I demonstrated how some fairly irrelevant looking markings on the eastern bedrock highlighted the components of the Pyramid's inner section framework. My introduction at the 2020 ARCE meeting can be seen here.
The following is a photograph of one lot of 5 denotes (the fifth is partitioned into 3 segments) east of the Great Pyramid. You can see the base of the Pyramid at the highest point of the photograph. It appeared to me that these were pointers intended to cause to notice the Great Pyramid. In February and March of 2020 my examination group estimated these imprints, with the fundamental research plan of seeing where they pointed.
Incredible Pyramid East side markings
In the wake of numbering these imprints we shading coded them, as underneath:
Markings on the East Side of the Great Pyramid
Here is a composite drawing indicating the aftereffects of finishing these lines to the Pyramid's inside. There was not one of these pointers that pointed outside the line of the Pyramid's entries named in red on the outcomes drawing. The blue line on the left from mark #2 focuses toward the southernmost finish of the entry framework, the finish of the "impasse" section in the Subterranean Chamber. This is a top perspective on the Great Pyramid with North on the right. A large portion of the lines from these pointers appeared to point a particular territory in one of the sections.
Resultant points from 5 East side Great Pyramid markers
As I was spreading out these markings on this arrangement of the Great Pyramid and its satellites, the two pontoon pits, hovered in the drawing underneath grabbed my eye:
E-W pontoon pits east of the Great Pyramid
I detected they also may be pointing at something… why these odd edges? So when I spread them out, this is the thing that they came to:
You can see I made a note to myself to look at where this point would be regarding tallness outwardly of the Pyramid… I thought there was presumably more than chance included when these two pointers merged precisely on the Southwest inclining of the Pyramid. With the assistance of AIP partner, engineer Bob Crielly, we found out that the vessel pits highlighted the point on the Southwest arris edge that was similar to the "Score" which is the broadly known and exceptionally noticeable "opening" on the Northeast arris edge. Here is photograph of the Great Pyramid's "Indent":
The "Score" on the Great Pyramid Northeast arris point.
So the "Score" and the point on the Southwest arris highlighted by the pontoon pits shaped a square on a top perspective on the Great Pyramid:
Square framed on the Great Pyramid by the Notch and the vessel pointers.
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Further assessment of this square, made by the vessel pits pointings, prompted more disclosures. The secretive ventilation ducts beginning in the Kings Chamber, whose reason has no consensual clarification, both leave the Great Pyramid through this square! The north ventilation duct exits 3 regal cubits east of the north-south focal hub on the Square's (I will presently start to underwrite notices of this particular square) north side, and the south ventilation duct exits 10 illustrious cubits east of that middle line, on the Square's south side, as found in the accompanying graph:
The north side of this exceptional square goes straightforwardly over the start of one of the most astonishing rooms on the planet, the Grand Gallery. It seems as though the Square is featuring, or sketching out the Grand Gallery and the Pyramid sections past this point: the Grand Gallery, the Queens Chamber Passage and Chamber, the Great Step, the waiting room, the Subterranean Passage and Chamber, and obviously The Kings Chamber and its alleviating chambers, and, obviously, the chamber found by the ScanPyramid group's muons. The sections enclosed are similar ones highlighted by the 5 markers talked about above. This Square accordingly focuses on the building explanation made by the change from the low, upsetting bounds of the Pyramid's First Ascending Passage to the wonderful inspire of the 7-corbelled, lofty, Grand Gallery, and appears to suggest that these are the sections to the great pyramid.
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