ScanPyramids: The French Failure
In 2015, the ScanPyramids project was launched with high expectations and global attention. Ten years have passed - yet what has been achieved? Regrettably, very little of scientific substance. The initiative, despite its ambitious goals, has so far failed to produce credible results that might unravel the enduring mysteries of the Giza Pyramids. Over a decade of operations has yielded no scientifically verified discoveries - not my opinion, but a fact reflected in the official communications themselves. The only announced "finding," the so-called Big Void, remains entirely undefined. We know virtually nothing about it: no confirmed height, width, length, orientation - nothing. This lack of clarity underscores a deeper issue: muon tomography technology, while promising in other fields, is fundamentally ill-suited for this type of archaeological investigation. This is not a new revelation - decades of failed attempts, dating back to 1967, have already demonstrated its limitations in such contexts. The project leader, a well-known Egyptian archaeologist, should now find the intellectual courage to acknowledge what the international scientific community and media are increasingly pointing out - especially in the wake of his recent appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience: the ScanPyramids project has, thus far, been a scientific and archaeological disappointment. In contrast, the Khafre Research Project SAR Technology, in less than eighteen months of focused work, has effectively turned the Giza Plateau inside out - unearthing data and insights that are reshaping our understanding of the site. And we are far from finished. The coming months promise even more groundbreaking revelations.
Comments