A new fossil discovery suggests the Egyptian pyramids were submerged under the water. | Image courtesy: Pinterest
A new scientific theory suggested by scientists shows compelling evidence that the entire landscape at the Pyramid of Giza including the pyramid of the Sphinx which shows clear water erosion signs.
This has led several scientists and scholars to believe that the ancient necropolis was once submerged under the sea.
Do you know what the compelling evidence is?
An archaeologist named Sherif El Morsi, who has worked extensively on the Giza plateau for more than twenty years, and his colleague Antoine Gigal discovered a strange fossil at the Giza plateau.
It supported the theories that the Giza Pyramid, as well as the Sphinx, was once submerged underwater. But Gigal and El Morsi were not the first to propose or study that the Giza plateau was submerged under the sea.
The first expert to address the idea that the plateaus of the ancient Egyptian pyramids were Dr. Robert M. Schoch who said that the ancient structures are far older than what the mainstream scholars suggest and that the entire region was once submerged underwater.
Back in the early ’90s, Dr. Schoch proposed that the Great Sphinx of Giza was a structure that is thousands of years older than archaeologists currently accept and that it was created between 5,000 and 9,000 BC.
This theory was based on erosion patterns of water discovered at Giza’s monuments and the surrounding landscape.
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