![]() ![]() This discovery was almost lost in history, but was rediscovered in 2008, when author and researcher Andrew Collins read Henry Salt’s 1817 diary and suggested that the Tomb of birds was a tribute to a guardian of the hidden records and perhaps this place, a few steps from the pyramids, is one of the entrances to the underground world beneath Giza. ![]() These men were able to research the area with the limited technology of their time in the early 1800s and were led by the topography of the desert to an area on the edge of the Giza Plateau, an important archaeological discovery that was called “The Tomb of Birds”. Two researchers stand out in the search for the discovery of these underground spaces under the pyramids: the British Consul General Henry Salt and the explorer Giovanni Battista Belzoni. He realized that beneath the pyramids were the remains of other much older civilizations, and if Herodoto is correct, the pyramids may be settled on the most incredible “time capsule” in history, revealing not only long-lost cultures, but also their technologies and origins described in the early texts and images created by mankind. Herodoto speculated that there were passages hidden under the pyramids, as well as chambers, labyrinths and large spaces, all created when egypt’s climate and topography were very different from what it is today. Researcher Gregg Braden explains that some of the first beareble accounts of the Giza plateau come from the Greek historian and geographer Herodoto who in the early 400s BC compiled a reference book on civilizations, cultures and ancestral technologies.īefore Herodoto, no one had presented a systematic and complete study of the past, trying to link events to how they shaped history. ![]()
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