Produced by: Manoj Kumar
Beneath Giza’s sands, an L-shaped structure hints at something deeper—maybe a hidden tomb, maybe something stranger. Radar reveals the shape, but not the secret.
A 33-foot L hidden just six feet underground near the Great Pyramid has experts buzzing. Is it an entrance? A decoy? Or a message left behind 4,500 years ago?
Beneath the L-shaped structure lies a mysterious, resistive anomaly—possibly a void, possibly a grave. Scientists suspect it’s not natural. But what is it?
For decades, this section of Giza was overlooked—too flat, too quiet. But ground-penetrating radar says otherwise. Something big lies just below.
Radar and electrical mapping lit up the desert with something unexpected: a non-random, L-shaped interruption to the sand’s usual silence. Not a glitch—maybe a gate.
The western cemetery was thought to be exhausted of surprises. Then came the signal: a shape too straight to be chance, buried in the boring.
Electrical resistivity readings from Giza suggest something big, hollow, and deliberate beneath the L-shaped discovery. The silence of the sands just got louder.
Could ancient engineers have built a concealed shaft into the necropolis? Researchers say this new structure could be the entrance to something “deep and large.”
A structure backfilled with intention. A buried anomaly resisting every probe. Whatever lies beneath the Giza plateau, it wasn’t meant to be easy to find.