12-19-2025, 06:19 PM
What if those recent GPR Scans of the Pyramids are showing water wells / water management shafts?
Then under the pyramids is exactly where you’d expect some of them to be.
Those vertical shafts could be just ancient water wells....
https://denyignorance.com/uploader/image...01c8b5.jpg
![[Image: 268a441da3e78108790545271301c8b5.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/268a441da3e78108790545271301c8b5.jpg)
The Giza Plateau isn’t flat sand it’s solid limestone bedrock, the pyramids were placed on the most highest, stable bedrock. Putting shafts/water-wells under the most massive, stable structure actually protects them long-term.
The pyramid itself is a perfect passive water-management structure. It forces rainwater to shed evenly on all sides, prevents pooling directly above shafts. Acts like a giant umbrella and weight stabilizer, reducing erosion around it's openings.
It's very common historically that water infrastructures were protected by large architectures. There are Temples over springs, Shrines over wells, Megaliths over water sources, Churches over earlier sacred wells, etc...
Water wells under the pyramids = sealed, protected, preserved, temperature stable, filtered, harder for later people to rob or fill.
Who knows... maybe those shafts/water-wells could have been dug before the pyramids. Maybe the sphinx sat in a pool... etc.
As well... water was / is a sacred thing, linked to rebirth and regeneration.
Anyway... because the pyramids sit on the best bedrock in that area, it offers protection, and carry symbolic importance... putting water shafts beneath them actually makes sense.
Of course I could be wrong... just throwing it out there, I'm sure others have thought the same.
Then under the pyramids is exactly where you’d expect some of them to be.
Those vertical shafts could be just ancient water wells....
https://denyignorance.com/uploader/image...01c8b5.jpg
![[Image: 268a441da3e78108790545271301c8b5.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/268a441da3e78108790545271301c8b5.jpg)
The Giza Plateau isn’t flat sand it’s solid limestone bedrock, the pyramids were placed on the most highest, stable bedrock. Putting shafts/water-wells under the most massive, stable structure actually protects them long-term.
The pyramid itself is a perfect passive water-management structure. It forces rainwater to shed evenly on all sides, prevents pooling directly above shafts. Acts like a giant umbrella and weight stabilizer, reducing erosion around it's openings.
It's very common historically that water infrastructures were protected by large architectures. There are Temples over springs, Shrines over wells, Megaliths over water sources, Churches over earlier sacred wells, etc...
Water wells under the pyramids = sealed, protected, preserved, temperature stable, filtered, harder for later people to rob or fill.
Who knows... maybe those shafts/water-wells could have been dug before the pyramids. Maybe the sphinx sat in a pool... etc.
As well... water was / is a sacred thing, linked to rebirth and regeneration.
Anyway... because the pyramids sit on the best bedrock in that area, it offers protection, and carry symbolic importance... putting water shafts beneath them actually makes sense.
Of course I could be wrong... just throwing it out there, I'm sure others have thought the same.



![[Image: 6d07986bbebbb217fdea4f64e2a73183.png]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/6d07986bbebbb217fdea4f64e2a73183.png)

![[Image: 12433c676391342efbc88e54b9c11b86.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/12433c676391342efbc88e54b9c11b86.jpg)



