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One of the great mysteries of the pyramids may have been solved—by state-of-the-art radar systems that can penetrate the desert sand. The Egyptian pharaohs built 90 pyramids, with the most famous, at Giza, constructed almost 5,000 years ago. At nearly 500 feet, the Great Pyramid of Khufu was the world’s tallest manmade structure for almost 4,000 years! To build it, 20,000 workers assembled 2.3 million stone blocks, each weighing tons. Scientists have long wondered how ancient people, without modern energy, wheels, pulleys or even iron tools, could have cut and moved such massive stones from the quarries in eastern Egypt to the pyramid sites. It was long thought they were transported by boat along the Nile—but many pyramids are miles from the river. From today’s river that is. Recently, satellite and ground penetrating radar identified an ancient tributary of the Nile that ran next to many of the pyramid complexes. The advanced radar even revealed what may have been ports, to deliver the stone blocks and huge labor force. These channels filled with desert sand when the region dried out millennia ago, and centuries of agriculture obscured the geologic signs of the tributary. This finding also suggests there may be entire settlements along the ancient waterway that were entombed by the desert—just waiting to be discovered.
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