
Thanks to newly emerged satellite data, we now may know a bit more about how the pyramids were built.
The pyramids are one of the world’s greatest mysteries, but we’re now a bit closer to the truth.
READ MORE: Stargazer is a new hypersonic plane that will fly from New York to Tokyo in one hour
Most historians agree that Egyptians began engineering and building pyramids between 5000 and 6000 years ago.
We also know they were used as glorified catacombs for the elites, mostly for pharaohs and their consorts.
Over 110 pyramids are still intact, including the Great Pyramid of Giza, which is one of the world’s Seven Wonders.
However, we’ve never really been able to figure out how they built them.
Boesijana / UnsplashAlex Azabache / Unsplash
The Egyptians had a vast knowledge of mathematics, architecture and engineering but no one knows for sure how they moved giant blocks of solidified sand and rock.
Mind you, a recent discovery from space provided a potential answer.
Dr Eman Ghoneim, an Egyptian-American geologist who specializes in image and space data processing, discovered a landmark on the River Nile.
According to Dr Ghoneim, the landmark in question is actually a dried-out waterway that once ran through Giza from the Nile Valley.
Dr Ghoneim believes that the Egyptians potentially used this waterway to transport material to build at least 38 different pyramids.
This is because she also discovered that this waterway passes through 38 different pyramid sites.
For a while it looked like we almost forgot we’d been to the moon but now the space race is back in full swing.
And, more to the point, it seems we’re also using space as a source for knowledge and data.
Dr Ghoneim’s discovery is just the latest example of space being used for something other than exploration.
The post Discovery from space shows how the pyramids were built appeared first on Supercar Blondie.