El inframundo oculto de la meseta de Giza finalmente sale a la luz

 

Se ha descubierto una vasta red de cámaras subterráneas y túneles de agua debajo de varias de las pirámides más conocidas del mundo, incluida la Gran Pirámide en la meseta de Giza en Egipto.

Durante siglos, estos antiguos túneles han permanecido ocultos y fuera del alcance de todos, excepto de unos pocos elegidos. Pero ahora están saliendo a la Luz y lo que se ha descubierto plantea preguntas aún más profundas.

Hay un antiguo dicho hermético: “Como es Arriba, es Abajo”, que significa “Lo que está Abajo corresponde a lo que está Arriba, y lo que está Arriba corresponde a lo que está Abajo, para realizar el Milagro de la Única Cosa”.

Esto es especialmente cierto cuando se trata de los muchos misterios que rodean a todas las pirámides del mundo. En verdad, apenas estamos comenzando a juntar las piezas del rompecabezas que nos han eludido durante siglos. Por lo tanto, estaba decidido a saber más sobre lo que había bajo tierra.

La autora, la Dra. Kathy Forti, se prepara para descender bajo la meseta de Giza. (Autor proporcionado)

It wasn’t easy getting permission to explore under the Giza Plateau. Negotiations to enter the hidden shafts began in 2017. We were initially met with suspicion by Egyptian authorities who wanted to know who we were, what we wanted, and how we even knew about the shafts. They claimed no one had been down there in decades. Initially they refused our request, but eventually caved in for a price. In Egypt, all things are negotiable. (Our entry has now opened the way for others wanting access, but also for a hefty price.)

So it was in early 2018, at 4:30 AM, when a Giza Plateau inspector, my Egyptologist friend Hares and myself plodded across the desert sands with only a flashlight to light our way in the morning chill.  A military police escort hovered nearby.

In the darkness, we were led to an iron-gated entry under the causeway between the pyramids. The inspector handed me the key and allowed me the honor of opening this secret doorway. In the past they referred to this hidden place as “that shaft complex”. They now officially call it the “Osiris Shaft”.

Entrance to the Osiris shaft. (Author provided)

A few steps inside the heavy gate there is a square hole in the ground. The inspector pointed to an iron ladder leading down this first shaft. From what I could see in the darkness, it didn’t look all that sturdy and I had no idea how old or maintained it was. This was one time when no male offered to go first. Instead, they let me lead the way with the caveat, “be careful.” (The liability factor in traversing such shafts would be off the charts in the U.S., but things are different in Egypt.)

First stage of descent into ‘that shaft complex’ below the Giza Plateau. (Author provided)

I was told there were three lower levels, the last leading to the water tunnels more than 125 feet (38 meters) below ground.

The first level opened to a spacious but empty room. The air felt close and dusty, the temperature much warmer with little outside ventilation. I continued my descent to the second level, the longest, where the lighting was low, lit by a single bulb hanging from the ceiling which someone had thought to put in place years ago.

I stepped down and turned to find a chamber room with seven niches for seven large sarcophagi. Only two black basalt and granite sarcophagi were still there, both empty with their heavy lids slightly ajar. They had to weigh several tons. I wondered how they had managed to remove the other five sarcophagi, if they indeed existed. I was told this chamber was for the “favored ones”—the guardians which tended to be the highest of priests.

Chamber with niches for seven sarcophagi. (Author provided)

According to Herodotus, ancient Egyptian priests spoke of a long-held tradition of the creation of underground chambers by the original builders of ancient Memphis. These stories were confirmed when these large cavities were discovered during a survey conducted at Giza in 1993.

An article about the find stated: “…We have discovered a subway used by the ancient Egyptians of 5000 years ago. It passes beneath the causeway leading between the second Pyramid and the Sphinx. It provides a means of passing under the causeway from the Cheops Pyramid to the Pyramid of Chephren [Khephren]. From this subway, we have unearthed a series of shafts leading down more than 125 feet, with roomy courts and side chambers…”.

One of the granite sarcophagi found in the chamber. (Author provided)

It is less well-known that this Osiris Shaft was actually discovered as early as 1933–34 by famed Egyptologist, Dr. Selim Hassan. He claimed that the tomb dated from the Saitic period (26th Dynasty, c. 600 BC), and labelled it “the most extraordinary example of this type of tomb hole”.  Others dispute this dating and believe it dates back much earlier.

I looked down the last shaft and saw water was up to the last rung of the ladder leading to the third underground chamber. It is known that as early as 1934, the third chamber was already under water. Dr. Selim Hassan tried to clear the chamber but, after four years of pumping, the water level had not descended.

This chamber is known to flood and this year the water had mysteriously risen higher than expected. The authorities have no idea why this is occurring nor the source of the water. The Nile, which flows north, and is considered to be the largest river in the world, is approximately 5 miles east of the Giza Plateau.

The flooded chamber has proven impossible to drain due to an unknown source of water. (Author supplied)

I climbed down to a narrow ledge and got my first look at this mysterious chamber. The energy down there feels electrified, the air even feels cleaner. The water is clear but filled with silt and some debris. A rotting wood platform structure leans off to the right of the chamber, probably left behind from Dr. Hassan’s day.

And then I saw it, a stone slab cover to a sarcophagus buried just beneath the water’s surface. There were undecipherable markings on the slab, a crisscross of deeply carved lines and some symbols.

There are those who believe this to be the tomb of the god Osiris, which is why they refer to it as the Osiris Shaft. However, my inside sources reveal it to be anything but a tomb. My magnetometer had a higher reading than the norm, suggesting something else entirely. One of my sources, an expert timeline reader, claims it is a dimensional portal that only those that have the correct DNA can ever hope to open. It’s hermetically sealed by some form of ancient technology process. Interesting, if true!

The Giza Inspector confirmed it had never been opened, which one would find odd, unless they had already tried to open it and had been unsuccessful. The water looked to be about mid-thigh on a man but could be deeper in parts further back.

While the water down there is relatively clear, there exists a hodgepodge of construction debris from earlier explorers–broken stones, scattered wooden slats, some papyrus strips, and a strange white filmy substance on the water in several places. I wasn’t sure of the bacteria levels, so I put on plastic gloves and filled up sterile containers with water samples. I had come prepared (see water analysis report further down).

Global Pyramid Conference – “The Healing Power of Pyramids.” Are you ready to change your vision of the past?

Water samples were collected for analysis. (Author supplied)

As I crouched down to obtain my samples, my Mena House hotel key card literally leapt out of my backpack. Instead of falling by my feet as physics would allow, the card bizarrely flew out across a short span of water and onto the top of the stone sarcophagus. One couldn’t help but feel there were some unseen observers down there that day observing our entry into their watery crypt.

The Giza Inspector used a wood strip to attempt to retrieve my key card, but the card slid down further into the silt where it will probably remain forever. Someday, someone will find it and wonder who it belonged to. It felt like I was meant to leave something personal behind. How ironic that it was to be my room key.

Off to the left of the cavern area is a tunnel entrance, leading to other tunnels that may extend for miles, linking other pyramid sites. The Egyptian authorities suspect there to be artifacts hidden under the water, possibly a treasure trove of information as well, which the Egyptian government has been reluctant to fully explore.

There is always the possibility that what they find may pre-date Egyptian culture, disproving the accepted timeline of history. It might reveal instead an earlier pre-dynastic culture which some scholars have referred to as the “Atlantic Period”, relating to those who fled a catastrophic flood event on earth and brought advanced knowledge to the Egyptian lands to preserve it from future global destruction. These “Atlanteans” may indeed be the true builders of the ancient pyramids.

It may be that the water tunnel system was built prior to the actual building of the pyramids. If the Great Pyramid was indeed intended as some kind of ancient power plant, as some physicists and engineers have theorized, then it would indeed need water to generate power.

Perhaps the locations for all great pyramids around the world are based on a water need. In 2015, with the aid of Electric Tridimensional Tomography, scientists discovered a lake and caverns run underneath the Yucatan’s Kukulcan Pyramid at Chichen Itza. This water source connected both east and west of the pyramid.

3D map of underground water chambers at Temple Kukulcan Pyramid. (Image: Rene Chavez, Author provided)

Did the Mayans have knowledge of this body of water before building their pyramid? Is underground water a pre-requisite for all pyramid building?

There are hundreds of pyramids around the world, many overgrown by vegetation and barely recognizable. The pyramids in Bosnia were discovered in 2005, in the town of Visoko. Beneath the Bosnian Valley of the Pyramids there is an extensive underground tunnel and chamber network which runs for a total of more than ten miles, connecting all pyramids and other places together.

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Bosnian Pyramid Tunnels. (Author provided)

The Bosnian Pyramid, which is even larger than the Great Pyramid, also has water tunnels which look remarkably similar to the water tunnels running under the Giza Plateau. Coincidence?

When you think of pyramids, most people think only of those in Egypt and Middle America. However every continent has them, regardless of the fact that they often are not recognized by the scientific establishment.

China has many pyramids and some are extremely tall. The Chinese government doesn’t talk much about them and has cordoned them off from the public. Large pyramids, totally overgrown, recently were discovered in Indonesia, as well as one big one in West Java. Do these pyramids also have extensive water tunnels running underneath them? It wouldn’t be surprising if they did.

I was curious to know what an analysis of the water samples I took from under the Giza Plateau might show, if anything. I enlisted a certified water analysis lab in California to run a series of tests, then called a friend of mine, who is an organic chemist, for his analysis of the test results.  (CLICK HERE for the full report.)

The tests showed something I hadn’t expected. The Water Report showed highest concentrate of sodium, followed by chloride. The percentages displayed a sodium level which is higher than the fresh water of the Nile River, and lower than the salinity of the Mediterranean Sea, which the Nile flows into.

Which means the water that runs under the Giza Plateau is essentially salt water. I wondered if there might be any inorganic salts in the rock walls, which could have leached into the water. My chemist friend thought that unlikely due to the indigenous rock in the area. So where is this salt water coming from?

Consulting a map, the only known salt water lake in Egypt is Lake Moeris, which is 50 miles southwest of Cairo. Lake Moeris is an ancient man-made lake in the northwest area of the Faiyum Oasis.

Historic water levels of Lake Moeris. (Author provided)

In prehistory it was once a freshwater lake, with an area estimated to vary between 490 – 656 miles. Today it is a smaller saltwater lake called Birket Qarun. The lake’s surface is 140 feet (43 meters) below sea-level and covers about 78 square miles (202 sq km). It is unknown when Lake Moeris turned from freshwater to seawater, or the cause.

El lago Moeris es también el sitio del complejo piramidal de Hawara. Las antiguas leyendas griegas hablan de un complejo piramidal oculto sobre y bajo tierra en Hawara conocido como “El Laberinto” que contenía “Doce Grandes Salones”. Los escritos antiguos hablaban de estas 12 grandes cámaras, que en la actualidad tendrían varias veces el tamaño de un campo de fútbol. Como ocurre con muchos sitios controvertidos, el gobierno egipcio no permite excavaciones allí.

Los investigadores Dra. Carmen Boulter y Klaus Dona están utilizando tecnología espacial para penetrar en el complejo Hawara en busca de anomalías subterráneas. Lo que encontraron es alucinante. Múltiples niveles de enormes cámaras y lo que parece un complejo de una ciudad subterránea o quizás un antiguo búnker de almacenamiento. Es posible que este sea el depósito del conocimiento antiguo y avanzado detrás del cual los atlantes se escondieron en caso de una futura catástrofe global.

Lo interesante del lago Moeris y Hawara es que también muestra una enorme red de túneles y vías navegables subterráneas. El historiador griego Heródoto escribió acerca de que los “caminos” entre el Laberinto de Hawara y la meseta de Giza estaban conectados, de manera muy similar a un antiguo sistema de metro subterráneo.

Si Hawara tiene doce grandes salones, como escribieron los antiguos griegos, los túneles de agua debajo de la Gran Pirámide pueden ser aún más significativos. Antes de que un faraón pudiera afrontar las pruebas de los Doce Grandes Salones, primero tenía que asegurarse un pasaje en forma de barco que lo llevaría río abajo por el inframundo. Una vez que un faraón era colocado en su tumba, su espíritu descendía al inframundo donde se encontraba con un grupo de guardianes y los dioses Heka, Sia y Hu, quienes lo ayudarían (junto con el dios Sobek) durante su viaje. Entonces el faraón zarparía y comenzaría su aventura.

Los túneles de agua bajo la meseta de Giza también pueden tener un doble propósito al llevar a cabo representaciones rituales en el viaje al inframundo. El segundo nivel del Eje de Osiris puede ser los sarcófagos simbólicos de los siete “guardianes” y el tercer nivel el portal de ascensión al Inframundo.

Como siempre, suceden muchas cosas debajo de la superficie. ” Tanto arriba como abajo.” Es un secreto bien conocido que puede existir una ciudad antigua debajo de las pirámides, muy parecida a Hawara. Fue bien documentado en el pasado por los primeros arqueólogos egipcios, algunos de los cuales supuestamente tropezaron con entradas. Sin embargo, las autoridades egipcias niegan y a menudo ridiculizan a cualquiera que intente verificar esta ciudad subterránea escondida.

Así pues, los túneles de agua plantearon más preguntas que respuestas, recordándonos a todos que tenemos mucho más que aprender sobre nuestra historia antigua.

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