Unveiled Data Blows Lid Off Giza Pyramid's 'Secret City' Hoax

Unveiled Data Blows Lid Off Giza Pyramid's 'Secret City' Hoax

Have you ever been so deep in the digital rabbit hole that you stumbled upon a conspiracy so wild, even the guy who’s convinced the Earth is flat would take pause? Yeah, me neither… until now! Imagine this: some scientists have been playin’ Indiana Jones… but, like, without the whips, the cool hat or, uh, respect for basic scientific principles. They’ve claimed they’ve got proof—PROOF, mind you—of a massive hidden ‘underground city’ right underneath the ol’ Khafre pyramid in Giza!

Here I was thinking, “Wow, finally, something to spice up my next blog post!” But wait—enter stage left, the debunker supreme, our man Milo Rossi, aka Miniminuteman, who basically said, “Hold my beer, folks, let’s dive into this nonsense!” He’s an environmental scientist, archaeologist, and all-around myth-buster whip-smart enough to make Joe Rogan’s head spin in a good way.

Rossi goes, “Look, I can tell you straight—they didn’t find what they say they found. Where’s the evidence, huh? Where’s the peer review? These guys turned some sonar blips into a freaking ‘Vegas in the Sahara’ without even bothering to show their homework!”

Now, let’s ponder… could the ancient Egyptians have built an underground hotel with a spa, casino, and a ‘we never close’ buffet… or was all this just a bunch of sensational hocus-pocus turned into clickbait? As we’ve seen in my decades in SEO—he who shouts the loudest might get the most clicks, but he sure as heck ain’t always got the most facts.

So, what’s your take, folks? Does Rossi’s debunking slap a “False” label on this so-called discovery, or are there still some undiscovered mysteries of the Pyramids we’ve barely scratched the surface on? Are you team underground city or team Rossi’s ‘Nice try, but no’? LEARN MORE and let me know your thoughts—how deep does the rabbit hole go?

A man has debunked a recent discovery claiming to have found proof that massive structures existed under the Khafre pyramid in Giza.

This comes as the latest in a series of claims back and forth between a group of scientists who claim to have found proof of ‘vertical cylinders’ 2,000 feet below the ground.

They have even said there are ‘spiral staircases’ beneath the pyramids and that there is potential that there is or was an ‘underground city’ below.

This news was first revealed by a team of three Italian researchers, with the story being picked up by Infowars and then Joe Rogan, leading to widespread coverage.

Experts within the field hit back at this however, with famous Egyptologist Zahi Hawass saying: “All this information is completely wrong and has no scientific basis.”

Now, a famous YouTuber and author has had a viral video digging deep into the claims made by the researchers and his claims against it.

Rossi is a YouTuber and scientist (Instagram / Miniminuteman)

Rossi is a YouTuber and scientist (Instagram / Miniminuteman)

Miniminuteman, whose real name is Milo Rossi, is an environmental scientist, archaeologist, and science educator, and released a video digging into the claims made.

In a YouTube short version of his 44 minute deep dive into the topic, Rossi said: “I can tell you that they absolutely did not find this [a diagram showing complex structures existing] under the pyramids.”

He went on to point to videos you ‘may have seen’ discussing how complex structures had been discovered under the pyramids, adding: “You want to know what you might not have seen? The actual data that they got.”

He then shows data provided by the researchers, gathered using ‘SAR Technology’, tech that uses radar waves to create pictures underneath the Earth.

The data scientists claims proves the existence of underground network like structures (Khafre Project)

The data scientists claims proves the existence of underground network like structures (Khafre Project)

The SAR tech, in combination with other technology the researchers used to try and recreate what is under the pyramids showed that the earth beneath the pyramids is far more dense than would be expected.

Whilst researchers behind this, Infowars, and the Joe Rogan Experience have claimed this points to a massive structure underneath the Khafre pyramid, Rossie disputed this.

Acknowledging that the findings were interesting and should be looked into, in his deep dive into the topic he says: “I think it is so wildly manipulative to turn this data into this image (showing an image of a simulation showing complex structures under the pyramids) which you don’t even bother to get published.

“The fact that this SONAR image is turned into this is absolutely laughable.”

This is backed up by other experts, such as Zahi Hawass.

Hawass spoke out against the findings (Marc Deville via Getty Images)

Hawass spoke out against the findings (Marc Deville via Getty Images)

Hawass stated that using SAR technology to discover a network of structures was ‘false’, adding: “The details they announced could not have been detected using such methods.”

The Italian researchers, Corrado Malanga from the University of Pisa; Filippo Biondi from the University of Strathclyde; and Egyptologist Armando Mei, have stood by their researcher, though it is yet to be peer reviewed.

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