Paper Trails and Rabbit Holes
Was the Great Pyramid a 4,500-year-old construction project or an inherited relic from a lost epoch? In this episode, we investigate the timeline of the Giza Plateau. We debate whether the "official narrative" is a triumph of archaeological deduction or a "failure of imagination" regarding the true depth of human history. We analyze the established 4th Dynasty chronology (~2560 BC). * The Merer Logbooks: We examine the "Diary of Merer," the oldest known papyrus, which documents the transport of Tura limestone for the pyramid's casing during Khufu's 27th year. * The Mortar Data: Analyzing the carbon-14 dating of charcoal and organic matter found within the pyramid's core mortar, which consistently points to the Old Kingdom. * The Administrative Context: Evidence from the nearby "Worker’s Village" and the tombs of officials that suggest a centralized, national effort. We descend into the anomalies and the 2026 "Relative Erosion Method" data. * The REM Revelation: We discuss the January 2026 study by Alberto Donini, whose Relative Erosion Method (REM) suggests the pyramid’s base may have been exposed to the elements for 20,000 to 24,000 years. * The Sphinx Water Erosion: Revisiting geologist Robert Schoch’s theory that vertical fissures in the Sphinx enclosure were caused by thousands of years of heavy rainfall—weather Egypt hasn't seen since the end of the last Ice Age. The Paper TrailThe Rabbit HoleStructural Inheritance: Is it possible that the Dynastic Egyptians were "renovators" rather than "originators," moving into a "structural deep event" left behind by a much older civilization?.
22 episodes
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