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Originally posted by Jean Ange
Yes, couple of (if I remember correctly) ships have been found next to the pyramids in Giza but not underneath the Great Pyramid. Here is a wikipedia link about a ship that was found next to it and is assumed to have belonged to Cheops:
en.wikipedia.org...
Weren't the ships symbolic. Egyptian kings were entombed with everything they would supposedly need for their journey to the next world like food, furniture and even their servants. They would also need a boat to make this journey so they were entombed with a boat. Thus a boat that could serve no practical purpose could be included in an Egyptian tomb.
Originally posted by zephyrs
What kind of evidence would be needed to prove that there were ancient canals in the area?
Originally posted by Jean AngeI'm quoting this from my book, unfortunately I do not have a link for an online version of The Histories
and the pyramid is square, each side measuring eight hundred feet, and the height of it is the same
It is built of stone smoothed and fitted together in the most perfect manner, not one of the stones being less than thirty feet in length.
Originally posted by Gazrok
Wouldn't Herodotus' measurements been in Greek units, and not "feet"? I'd imagine the errors there occur more in the translations....
Originally posted by zephyrs
But recently, here on ATS I think, I read about a theory that the Egyptians used canal(s) to transport the blocks for the pyramids.
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by zephyrs
But recently, here on ATS I think, I read about a theory that the Egyptians used canal(s) to transport the blocks for the pyramids.
Erm, the pyramid plateau is considerably higher than the Nile. Water doesn't flow uphill.