Saturday, April 12

Archaeological breakthrough as 'lost city' found 4,000ft under Giza pyramids could be far older than originally thought


A team of Italian and Scottish archaeologists has made a controversial claim that a "lost city" beneath the Giza pyramids could be thousands of years older than experts originally believed.

If true, their findings could dramatically transform human understanding of ancient civilisations and history.

Now, the researchers have asserted that the Giza pyramids in Egypt are approximately 38,000 years old - not 4,500 years old as widely claimed.

This bombshell revelation comes alongside claims that they have discovered a "lost city" beneath the famous landmarks, having deployed radar technology to identify "an entire hidden world of many structures" 4,000 feet beneath the pyramids.


No comments:

Post a Comment