Pyramid mystery 'cracked'
2007-04-02 10:45
Paris - A French architect said on Friday he had cracked a 4 500-year-old mystery surrounding Egypt's Great Pyramid, saying it was built from the inside out.
Previous theories have suggested Pharaoh Khufu's tomb, the
last surviving example of the seven great wonders of antiquity,
was built using either a vast frontal ramp or a ramp in a
corkscrew shape around the exterior to haul up the stonework.
But flouting previous wisdom, Jean-Pierre Houdin said
advanced 3D technology had shown the main ramp which was used to
haul the massive stones to the apex was contained 10-15m
beneath the outer skin, tracing a pyramid within a pyramid.
"This is better than the other theories, because it is the
only theory that works," Houdin told Reuters after unveiling his
hypothesis in a lavish ceremony using 3D computer simulation.
To prove his case, Houdin teamed up with a French company
that builds 3D models for auto and airplane design, Dassault
Systemes, which put 14 engineers for 2 years on the project.
Now, an international team is being assembled to probe the
pyramid using radars and heat detecting cameras supplied by a
French defence firm, as long as Egyptian authorities agree.
"This goes against both main existing theories. I've been
teaching them myself for 20 years but deep down I know they're
wrong," Egyptologist Bob Brier told Reuters at the unveiling.
"Houdin's vision is credible, but right now this is just a
theory. Everybody thinks it has got to be taken seriously," said
Brier, a senior research fellow at Long Island University.
Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities was not immediately
available for comment. Dassault said Brier and other
Egyptologists attending the ceremony were supporters of Houdin's
theory but had no financial links to him or the firm.
Intuition
Houdin began working full-time on the riddle eight years ago
after a flash of intuition passed to him by his engineer father,
and five years before actually visiting the site.
He found that a frontal, mile-long ramp would have used up
as much stone as the pyramid, while being too steep near the
top. He believes an external ramp was used only to supply the
base.
An external corkscrew ramp would have blocked the sight
lines needed to build an accurate pyramid and been difficult to
fix to the surface, while leaving little room to work.
"What characterised the Egyptians was their sense of
perfection and economy. We talk of durable development now, but
it was the Egyptians who invented it. They didn't waste a single stone. They relied purely on intelligence," Houdin said.
Houdin also claimed to have shed light on a second enigma
surrounding the purpose of a Grand Gallery inside the pyramid.
The Frenchman believes its tall, narrow shape suggests it
accommodated a giant counter-weight to help haul five 60-ton
granite beams to their position above the King's Chamber.
He thinks that no more than 4,000 people could have built
the pyramid using these techniques rather than the 100 000 or so
assigned by past historians to the task of burying the pharaoh.
Houdin, 56, brushed aside concerns about the popular curse
which is supposed to punish those who penetrate the secrets of
the pyramids, dating back to the opening of Tutankhamun tomb.
"Why should I be worried? I'm just explaining that the people of the time were architects of genius and that Khufu was a genius to order the pyramid's construction. What could happen to me, except that Khufu would thank me?," he said.