DAVID HAMBLING looks at scientific attempts to probe the mysteries of the Great Pyramid
The Great Pyramid is a focus for theories about occult wisdom, lost technology and alien interventions; hardly surprising given that it is the oldest and only surviving member of the original Seven Wonders of the World. Even in the 21st century, its massive size and geometric precision overawe visitors, and engineers still puzzle over how it was built with nothing but Bronze Age technology and muscle power.
The so-called King’s Chamber, which contains an empty sarcophagus, might have been a dummy to distract robbers. Many have suggested that there is a hidden chamber which holds the key to the mystery: an intact pharaohs’ tomb filled with riches, Edgar Cayce’s ‘Hall of Records’ left by Atlanteans, or even an alien spacecraft. Hence there is immense excitement when scientists announced that they had discovered just such a chamber, reporting their findings in November’s Nature magazine.
The discovery was made with imaging technique using cosmic rays. These are high-energy particles striking the Earth’s atmosphere from space – and for a long time a scientific mystery themselves. Cosmic rays produce a shower of particles known as muons, which, like X-rays, can travel through solid matter with only a few being absorbed on the way. Muons are even more penetrating than X-rays, and with a long enough exposure they can provide images through even the Great Pyramid itself.
Denne historien er fra Christmas 2017-utgaven av Fortean Times.
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Denne historien er fra Christmas 2017-utgaven av Fortean Times.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Lightning Or Legendry?: The Chase Vault Moving Coffin Mystery Revisited
The moving coffins of Barbados have been a staple subject of books on the unexplained for over a century, and yet no one has so far provided a wholly satisfactory solution to the mystery. BENJAMIN RADFORD argues that we might have been looking in the wrong place...
The Haunted Generation
Bob Fischer Rounds Up The Latest News From The Parallel Worlds Of Popular Hauntology...
The House On The Borderland In Search Of William Hope Hodgson
In his new book, EDWARD PARNELL goes in search of the ‘sequestered places’ of the British Isles and explores how these haunted landscapes shaped a kaleidoscopic spectrum of literature and cinema. Here, he arrives in Cardiganshire to look for the house in which the neglected master of weird fiction William Hope Hodgson wrote one of his greatest works.
Fortean Traveller: 117. The Mediæval Crime Museum, Rothenburg, Germany Fortean Traveller
STEVE TOASE feels the thumbscrews tighten as he explores a grisly collection exploring the history of mediæval torture and its relationship with the law
Where Ghosts Gather
In 1977, Usborne published World of the Unknown: Ghosts, the children’s book that inspired a generation of junior forteans. Four decades on, following a concerted fan campaign, the book is back in print... and the perpetually haunted BOB FISCHER tracked down its pleasantly surprised writer, Christopher Maynard, to discuss its genesis and unexpected impact.
A Bang On The Head
MARK GREENER explains how traumatic brain injury can change personality, creating serial killers and even vampires.
Out Of The Shadows
In an extract from a new book celebrating the history of Boscastle’s Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Professor Ronald Hutton introduces the photographs of Sara Hannant, which aim to bring a range of enigmatic objects from the museum’s unique collection to life.
The Face In The Window - Windowpane Ghosts And Lightning Daguerreotypes
One of the most fortean of lightning phenomena is the “lightning daguerreotype,” where a face or figure, often recognised as a particular deceased person, is mysteriously etched upon a windowpane. Chris Woodyard traces some of the fenestral flaps of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Bodies On Ice
Couple who went missing 75 years ago ... found by chance in thawing Swiss glacier
happy old christmas
you thought it was all over, but due to the orthodox refusal to accept the new fangled gregorian calendar, many people – from margate to memphis – will still be celebrating christmas in january. ted harrison goes in search of some stubborn old traditions...