|
By Steven Myers
No one in the world really knows how the Great Pyramid of
Giza was built — that is, of course, except for myself! Such is how I start a
lecture or speech on this controversial subject. As an attention grabber, it
works well, but it is nothing compared to the subject matter at hand.
There are about as many proposed methods of construction as
there are people who propose theories on the subject, with the informed reader
aware of most. The following brief and condensed explanation of the Great
Pyramid’s construction is one of the most fantastic and unconventional methods
ever proposed. With some consideration, this is possibly the method that makes
the most sense.
The following narrative of the Great Pyramid’s construction
is based on a privately published and very rare book called Pharaoh’s Pump written
by the late independent researcher, Edward J. Kunkel. This is the book that is
so highly regarded in the recent best selling book, 5/5/2000: Ice, the
Ultimate Disaster by Richard W. Noone.
Pharaoh's Water Pump
Traditional Egyptologists explain the subterranean passages
and the chamber deep below the Great Pyramid as a change in design.
Egyptologists tell us after working so long and hard on this part of
construction the Pharaoh decided he wanted to be entombed in a chamber up in the
pyramid. Pyramidologists tell us the passages are designed and built as Man’s
prophetic chronology set in stone. Others say the descending passage and
subterranean room were used to view the stars.
The Pharaoh’s Pump Foundation and the book Pharaoh’s
Pump maintain that these passages cut into solid bedrock are a colossal and
enormous hydraulic ram pump! This hydraulic ram pump is built on a
gigantic scale never duplicated in the ancient or modern world. Massive amounts
of pumped water was used to supply a series of water locks, up to the Great
Pyramid, transporting barges with stones to the building site. With its own
pumped water and a series of water locks as a lifting medium, the Great Pyramid
supplied its own water power to build itself!
Before the Great Pyramid’s construction, the site was not
flat but a granite outcropping. The shape and size of this outcropping is
unknown. In the finished pyramid the granite outcropping protrudes up to a
height near the bottom of the Grand Gallery. The site is on a gradual sloping
hillside. Uphill from the Great Pyramid is the Libyan Desert.
Almost all agree that the two subterranean shafts and the
subterranean room were excavated before the pyramid was built. Herodotus, the
famous Greek historian, tells us ten years were spent in preparation. The
subterranean excavations at the construction site were the preparatory work
needed before construction started.
At this stage of construction, there was only one mechanical
element needed to create the largest, most colossal, hydraulic ram water pump
ever created! That one single mechanical element being a drain and valve. The
dead end shaft, cut in the south-eastern corner of the Subterranean Chamber is 2
feet 7 inches wide, 2 feet 5 inches high and 52 feet 9 inches long. Its
direction is from true north to south. Its position is horizontal and it lies at
the lowest corner of the lowest chamber. This suggests that it functioned
as a drain, but it dead ends in the rock. Even though it is 105 feet below the
base of the building, it is still high enough from the outside to function as a
drain.
The cutting of this shaft must have been an awful job. It is
so small — only 29 inches high and 31 inches wide with a length of 52 feet,
leaving very little elbow room. Maybe a midget crew cut it. I’ll never believe
that its existence is due to over-sight or gross error. I’ll never shrug it
off as a miscalculation. I have too much respect for the ancient engineers for
that. Why is there so much interest in the lowest shaft of the Subterranean
Chamber? The answer lies in this simple fact: a waste duct in this particular
area would be definite proof that the engineers had cut a simple water ram in
the solid rock!
Around the base of the Great Pyramid and in its immediate
vicinity are a number of unusual and hard to explain cuttings in the solid rock. Among
these cuttings are the “crypts” that contain the so-called “sunships.” Traditional
Egyptologists maintain these ships were entombed at the same time as the Pharaoh
and the ships were used during the funereal precession. The location of the
sun ship pit and other features indicate that they were created at the same time
as the Great Pyramid and were part of a drain system with a valve that would
complete the greatest water ram pump in the world. The dead end shaft that leads
south from the Subterranean Chamber heads directly towards the sunship pit. This
water drain system of the pump was unnecessary after the Great Pyramid was
completed. Later the ancients used the pit for ceremonial purposes after
the functional purpose of this cutting was no longer needed. Our current
understanding of the passage from the Subterranean Chamber towards the sunship
pit is that the passage is a dead end.
Apparently this dead end has never been examined with the
idea in mind that it may be a drain duct. In 1954, two sun ships were discovered
in the rock hewn cavity at the very southern base of the pyramid. It is
reasonable to assume that the size and shape of this cavity has been surveyed
and recorded. Such data is hard to come by. It would be interesting to examine
the north wall and ascertain the distance from it to the terminus of the dead
end. The terminus of the dead end is about 83 feet south of dead centre of the
building. This leaves a space of about 300 feet to its southern base. In short,
I believe there exists a connecting duct, between the dead end and the sun ship
cavity. Explorers might hit pay-dirt if they take a good hard look at the end of
the dead end and the north wall of the sun ship’s crypt.
This pump was a simple water ram of monstrous proportions. A
ram that pumps far more water than it wastes. My guestimate? At least 4 tons for
one ton of wastage to a height of 60 feet during a time cycle of one minute. The
sun ship cavity itself may be part of it. My line of reasoning follows this
pattern. Originally, the cavity was cut for use as part of the drain for the
water pump. When the Great Pyramid was completed the pit was no longer needed.
Only after the construction of the Great Pyramid were the sun ships installed in
their pits. Why not decorate and touch up these pits with some regal trappings?
I have believed from the very beginning that this tube is
part of a drain and that its outlet is sealed in as clever a fashion as the
ancients managed to conceal other openings. It is utterly fantastic to believe
that the ancient engineers overlooked this common device — a drain that can be
opened and closed at will and thus employ the same mechanics of the common ram.
I predict that one or more baffle walls will be found in the horizontal tube
leading south from the subterranean chamber, the function of which is to slow
down the high velocity of water discharge and ease the shock exerted on the
waste valve.
What will the drain valve look like? It will be a “door
with pivots.” We call them butter-fly valves. They are easy to open and close
and are operated by a handle. Pairs of holes with granite seats to fit this type
of valve are found in the passage near the top of the lower diagonal. No one,
for a moment, doubt that these seats and holes are for this type of “door.”
There are two other check valves in the subterranean
cuttings. A short distance down in the solid rock of the lower diagonal is an
offset “wherein,” says Sir Flinders Petrie (The Pyramids and Temples of
Giza), “hung a door that swung inward.” A pair of eight inch round holes
are found here, one in the east wall and the other in the west wall. Adjacent to
these round holes is granite masonry. This mechanical element, given a hydraulic
interpretation, is a check-valve. The holes support a round shaft and the
granite masonry is the valve seat. Halfway up the passage leading from the
Subterranean Chamber to the lower part of the Grand Gallery is the Grotto.
Detailed research indicates it too in ancient times housed a check valve.
How the Water Was Pumped
The Ancients were doing what every engineer does
before he undertakes a massive construction project. The machine comes first,
and in this case it was a water pump. These subterranean cuttings formed a
hydraulic ram pump. The lower diagonal holds about 88 tons of water! When the
valve in the drain is opened the water in the lower diagonal moves down. Then
the drain valve is closed. The water in the lower diagonal continues to move
down compressing the air in the Subterranean Chamber. This chamber has an air
capacity of 7000 cubic feet! Once this moving water has compressed the air to
the maximum, the water stops moving. At that point, the check valve in the upper
end of the lower diagonal closes. The highly compressed air in the Subterranean
Chamber pushes water up through the “grotto” and onto the rocky knoll.
Research including computer modelling shows that the water ram pump would easily
pump water to a height of the top of the completed Great Pyramid.
Water ram pumps are a very interesting device and are still
being built and sold to this day. Water ram pumps work and work well. When you
shut a water faucet off and the pipes rattle, think about the ancient engineers
who used the same force in a colossal scale to move and lift the blocks in
constructing the Great Pyramid.
What existed at this point is a mound of rock with a passage
in the centre that leads up from the Subterranean Chamber and the descending
passage down to the Subterranean Chamber. All of the subterranean passages and
subterranean valves were finished and the colossal hydraulic ram was ready to
go. The source of water for the pump was the ancient lake of Moeris. This lake
was huge, about the size of Lake Erie. Its elevation was above the base of the
Great Pyramid. Water for the pump was brought to the site and channelled into
the lower diagonal from this lake.
If the hydraulic ram pump pushes water up the central shaft
it will be wasted because the water will just flow down the granite outcropping.
At this stage, parabulious walls were built around the building site. This
created a catch basin for the water. Near the base of the Great Pyramid to this
day can be seen these same “parabolus walls” made of earth, which surround
the building. The walls form a rectangular basin and look like the remains of an
ancient catch basin or reservoir. The 14 foot vein of river silt found inside is
mighty convincing evidence that in ancient times this rectangular enclosure held
water, and formed a pond 180 acres in area. And the little rocky knoll, upon
which the pyramid stands, became a little rocky island.
The Construction Process
Try to envision, if you will, the rocky knoll high above the
Nile before a single block was set. It must have been a bleak, bare, gray mound
of limestone. It was not flat. The perimeter had to be levelled off to create a
base for the first row of casing stones. To use the water, it must be caught.
The simplest device to catch it is a ditch. Once a ditch was cut in the location
of the first row of casing stones and filled with water, it formed a perfect
device for a levelling operation. Water would pour from the ditch at the lowest
contour of the rock. This lowest contour determined the elevation of the base.
Five hundred chisellers could be put to work at one time and whack the perimeter
of the base down to a uniform level. The still water in the ditch would be their
gauge, and simplify surveying operations.
The next step would be to move the casing stones from the
quarry across the river up to the base of the prepared building site of the
Great Pyramid. How would you bring 16 ton stones from across the river,
that are already on barges, up to the site of the Great Pyramid? A site with
subterranean cuttings that are a hydraulic ram pump. Evidence indicates that a
series of water locks from the Nile to the building site were created to move
the stones up from the river to the building site. The locks worked just as the
water locks work in the Panama Canal. The subterranean cuttings that are a
colossal hydraulic ram pump supplied the needed water to operate the locks.
Comparatively recent excavations have exposed the cutting of
a giant rock-hewn stairway with huge risers, ascending from the basin near the
Nile River to the top of the knoll. This cutting has the basic characteristics
of the remains of a series of water-locks, although every relic that would
indicate water-locks is gone. The accepted explanation for this cutting was to
extract blocks for structural use in the pyramids. I never believed this
explanation because the cutting is too precise, too neat, and too regular. If
the ancients were quarrying blocks alone, the sides, the treads, and the risers
would have been left rough and uneven.
As they are today, these stairs are too wide to be of
practical use as water-locks, but if a wall were built in the centre of the
steps, dividing the stairway in two, the result would be two narrower sets of
stairs. If appropriate masonry were placed in this divided stairway with pairs
of water-gates made of wooden planks, the locks would be complete. When water
was pumped into the locks they would have been ready to take stone laden barges
up one set of locks, while the empty barges came down through the other. I
believe that this stairway of locks is part of the 60 foot roadway described by
Herodotus.
The completion of the first course of casing stones formed a
rectangular enclosure in which water could be impounded, forming a pool or
artificial pond. Once this pool was created, barges with the rough interior
stones were brought up the locks into the pool and put in place with remarkable
ease. The block was moved into place by workers wading waist high in a pool of
water. When the block was in position, the water level was lowered, which set
the stone gently down on the floor of the pool. When this pool was filled with
the rough interior stones, the next course of casing stones were brought up and
placed above the previous course of casing stones. This created a higher pool of
water. Barges with rough interior stones were brought up the locks and put in
place with remarkable ease, until that pool was filled. A 16 ton casing stone or
even a large 40 ton monolithic block could be moved and set as gently as a
mother lays her sleeping babe in a crib. This simple process continued, step by
step, course by course, level by level, until the Great Pyramid was completed!
The workers moved the stones into the correct position on
special barges. Then the water in the pool was lowered, gently lowering the
stone in place. The barges were such that when the stone was lowered into place
the barge could be removed from the stone, similar to a modern day forklift.
With the use of water as a powerful and easily controlled lifting medium, the
massive weight and size of the stones created no problems. Using the largest
casing stones possible is a measure of economy. Large stones mean less quarrying
work and finishing of the faces. The same is true for the rough cut stones one
sees now that the casing stones have been removed. Since moving the stones to
the building site is the least labour intensive part of the construction, the
use of very large stones makes the job easier.
It is interesting to note that the sides of the Great Pyramid
“bend inward.” Or to put it another way, the sides of the Great Pyramid have
a concave crease from the apex down to the centre of the base of each side. The
Great Pyramid of Giza actually has eight sides. This was vital because of the
hydrostatic pressure of the water inside the pyramid during construction. The
Great Pyramid is the only pyramid in the world with this characteristic. This
feature must have made the design and construction more difficult, but it was a
must. Each side bends inward against the pressure of the water inside of the
pyramid just as a dam like Hoover Dam bends towards the force of the water it
holds back. The casing stones have precision joints that are cemented together
to make the exterior of the Great Pyramid water tight. This was not to
keep the pesky Egyptian rain out, but to hold water in during
construction.
According to Herodotus: “… they raised the remaining
stones to their places by means of machines formed of short wooden planks. The
first machine raised them from the ground to the top of the first step, on this
there was another machine, which received the stone on its arrival, and conveyed
it to the second step, whence a third machine advanced it still higher.”
Another translator of Herodotus offers this translation: “They made it first
in the shape of stairs, and lifted up the stones that remained with engines made
of short timbers. From the ground they raised them to the first range of stairs;
when the stone came up to this, it was set in another engine that stood on the
first range, and drawn up from this to the second range; and thence by another
engine to the third, for there were as many engines as there were ranges of
stairs . . .” In the first, the word “machine” is used, while in the
second, the word, “engine.” But the gist of the translations are identical.
In modern usage, the words ‘engine’ and ‘machine’ are
often used synonymously. And it may be here that in the translation of the
ancient Greek the meaning of these two words are even more closely allied. For
example, the dictionary defines the word catapult as “an ancient engine of
war.” By a physicist’s definition, a catapult is not an engine of war, but a
machine of war. An engine uses fuel directly to make it go. More than a hundred
years ago, the US state of Ohio built an elaborate system of canals. Even today,
in the vicinity of Akron, Ohio, century old water-locks are in operation.
Nowadays, pleasure craft pass through them. The lock-gates are made of wooden
planks about eight feet long. These locks are truly machines. They are water
elevators and a floating body can be raised or lowered in them. They are made of
stone and short wooden planks. I believe that the machines Herodotus
described were a series of water-locks. Elsewhere in the same volume he tells of
seeing an old dry-dock that was used by King Necos to repair damaged war
vessels. Think of this: How can anyone build a dry-dock and not use a
water-lock? It cannot be done.
The construction of the Great Pyramid continues. Upon the
completion of each level, the next level above was assembled on the level before
it. But how are the massive blocks moved up to ever greater heights as the
construction progresses? As each level was completed, a water lock was built to
move the blocks up to the next level. These series of locks moved blocks up the
north face of the pyramid, one lock per level, all the way to the top. When the
top of the pyramid was completed, the top lock was not needed. That lock was
removed and the casing stones put in place. Small stones and rubble were placed
in the area of the removed lock by hand. If solid close fitting stones were used
then the water from the pump could not supply water to the rest of the locks
below the top lock. Each lock was removed and replaced with casing stones from
the top to the bottom with small stones and rubble placed in the area of the
locks. Herodotus says he was told the pyramid was finished from the top,
downward. To this day one can see along the north face where small stones and
rubble fill the location of the series of locks.
Most have heard the legends and myths that tell the stones
were levitated into place by some unknown force. Some fables speak of the stones
being somehow floated to their destination. These stories from distant past,
lacking detail, do speak great truth. Even though this description is brief and
abbreviated, you now know the answer to the riddle of the ages! You know how the
Great Pyramid was built! No massive ramps almost the size of the pyramid itself.
No sweated brow or tortured back. No multitudes of slaves harnessed like animals
heaving to the crack of the whip. No aliens from distant worlds. Just workers
wading waist deep in cool pools of water. Men moving barges, operating valves,
locks and pumps under the watchful eye of talented Ancient Engineers.
Building the Great Pyramid was not an exercise of oppression
by a ruthless Pharaoh. Building the Great Pyramid was a snap! Its construction
was an orderly, systematic, inventive and wondrous, piece of cake. But why build
it? WHY? What was its purpose? Was it a tomb to be used once by an all powerful
ruler? Was it built as a sacred place for those initiated in secret societies of
higher wisdom to perform unknown rites? Was it somehow an observatory to view
the stars? Was it built as prophecy in stone to confirm Biblical prophecies?
What is the meaning of the mysterious interior chambers and passages? Is it a
power source that we do not understand? Is it a temple, tomb or machine? The
answer to why the Great Pyramid was built is the subject of the second
half of this series to be published in the next issue of New Dawn.
____________________________________________________________________
Steven Myers is the founder of the Pharaoh’s Pump Foundation,
Coquille, Oregon, USA. Further information on the Foundation can be
obtained by visiting the web site http://www.thepump.org.
|