The Great Pyramid of Giza has made a fresh discovery, as specialists now believe it was never meant to be a tomb in the first place, but rather something far more intricate.
The finding was produced by a team led by Mikhail Balezin of the Russian Monash University in St. Petersburg and Andrey B. Evlyukhin of the German Laser Center in Hannover, and the data, according to them, point to an outlandish conclusion.
Scientists said that after investigating the Great Pyramid of Giza, they discovered that it emits electromagnetic waves that are not hazardous to people but are odd, to say the least.
Nobody knows why or where these electromagnetic waves originate because the entire edifice purportedly oozes with them, but the two think it was created in such a manner that it would operate exactly this way when the Great Pyramid of Giza was initially erected.
In the “Journal of Applied Physics,” the two went into further detail about this, claiming that nonlethal electromagnetic radiation had a role in the riddle of how they made them in the first place.
The researchers matched them to WLAN signals, even implying that ancient Egyptians had access to sources like the internet or just signals in general. They can’t seem to pinpoint the source of these waves no matter how hard they try.
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