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  • 00:07

    Welcome to History for Granite.

  • 00:12

    Join me to explore ancient Egypt.

  • 00:15

    Together we’ll uncover secrets that only stones from antiquity can reveal.

  • 00:22

    Please subscribe to the channel to show your support for this line of inquiry.

  • 00:27

    That drives me to make more of this content for you.

  • 00:31

    The Great Pyramid of Giza has a long and fascinating history whence it has been probed and tinkered

  • 00:38

    with by civilizations over four Millenia.

  • 00:41

    It is a uniquely difficult monument to study because so many critical parts have been damaged,

  • 00:48

    altered, or given ill-advised repairs.

  • 00:51

    When examining the evidence that remains inside the Great Pyramid, one needs to read numerous

  • 00:57

    past accounts of excavations and explorations in order to understand what has occurred and

  • 01:03

    put the existing clues into context.

  • 01:07

    I find it particularly strange that the Great Pyramid as a destination doesn’t offer much

  • 01:12

    assistance to help tourists understand what they are looking at, and many visitors are

  • 01:17

    left hopelessly confused when they come across unusual features.

  • 01:21

    One of the most common points of curiosity I notice among visitors, are the isolated

  • 01:26

    granite fragments that remain inside the pyramid.

  • 01:30

    There are four substantial granite blocks that have been scattered inside the Great

  • 01:34

    Pyramid, and their shared history is a story of both incredible destruction and meticulous

  • 01:40

    preservation.

  • 01:41

    It was only 20 plus years ago that a fifth large granite fragment remained inside the

  • 01:46

    pyramid, located within the King’s Chamber.

  • 01:49

    Sadly, this fragment was removed as part of a cleaning and restoration campaign, and I

  • 01:54

    have never managed to find documentation about its current location.

  • 01:59

    Was this block part of the floor that had been dug up in the corner, perhaps now reseated

  • 02:04

    and filled in as shown here?

  • 02:06

    It seems probable, but without explicit documentation we must be cautious with our assumptions.

  • 02:12

    This rare photo shows the hole in the floor partially restored with the center portion

  • 02:17

    filled in.

  • 02:18

    Since the granite fragment is no longer visible in the room, this is the best evidence I have

  • 02:23

    that the block is now part of the floor in this place.

  • 02:26

    Whether or not this spot in the floor was the original location, remains uncertain.

  • 02:31

    You can see in these pictures that this block had been pushed around the King’s chamber

  • 02:35

    a bit here and there, and this is a good context for thinking about what surely would have

  • 02:39

    befallen the other four remaining stones.

  • 02:42

    Turning our attention to these four present granite fragments, they are located as follows:

  • 02:48

    The first and most impressive fragment is located outside the original entrance to the

  • 02:53

    Great Pyramid, just to the left as you approach the descending corridor.

  • 02:58

    The second fragment is found within the small alcove that is located at the bottom of the

  • 03:03

    descending corridor, right before the entrance to the unfinished subterranean chamber.

  • 03:09

    The third fragment is balancing on a ledge halfway down the large central pit that has

  • 03:14

    been dug within the subterranean chamber.

  • 03:17

    And the fourth fragment is partially buried within the grotto that lies along the well

  • 03:22

    shaft where the bottom of the pyramid meets the bedrock of the Giza plateau.

  • 03:27

    Written accounts of these stones begin with Howard Vyse in 1837, who mentions multiple

  • 03:32

    granite fragments in the descending corridor near the forced passage just beyond the granite

  • 03:37

    plugs.

  • 03:38

    However, Vyse does not describe the fragments with enough detail to identify them.

  • 03:43

    The first and largest fragment outside the pyramid is the earliest to be identified.

  • 03:48

    It was documented by Flinders Petrie in 1881, its location being where Vyse found it just

  • 03:54

    below the ascending corridor junction.

  • 03:56

    At this time the descending corridor was still clogged with sand and debris, and so Petrie

  • 04:01

    only observed a single bore hole and 3 dressed faces on the stone.

  • 04:06

    Presumably the other portions were obscured and Petrie did not take the time to dig out

  • 04:11

    the entire block.

  • 04:12

    A couple of decades later Lorenzo Covington of ‘Covington’s tomb’ fame, propped

  • 04:18

    the stone up and affixed an iron gate above it as a means of locking access to the inner

  • 04:23

    chambers of the pyramid.

  • 04:25

    Brothers John and Morton Edgar give additional documentation about this in their 1910 book,

  • 04:31

    “The Great Pyramid Passages Volume 1”.

  • 04:34

    The Edgars state that Gaston Maspero, the Director of the Service of Antiquities, lent

  • 04:40

    them the keys to the iron gate so that they could gain access to the inner pyramid chambers.

  • 04:45

    The gate is quite visible in these Edgar brother photos, but the granite fragment is much harder

  • 04:50

    to make out.

  • 04:52

    There is further confusion about this fragment because the Edgar brothers state that it had

  • 04:56

    5 finished faces, yet still only observe 1 single bore hole.

  • 05:00

    Notably this light-colored section in the lower eastern corner here is not the granite

  • 05:06

    fragment, the Edgars state explicitly that it is a different block made of limestone.

  • 05:11

    This block is propped against the granite gate and obscures the lower portion from this

  • 05:16

    angle.

  • 05:17

    This limestone fragment seems to have been lost to time, which is lamentable because

  • 05:21

    it appears to have remnants of a bore hole along the edge and may contain valuable clues

  • 05:26

    to the history of the Great Pyramid.

  • 05:29

    The large granite fragment in its current state has four finished faces, the front,

  • 05:34

    back, top and one lateral side.

  • 05:37

    Two bore holes are easily seen, and the third is a bit more subtle because it is only partially

  • 05:42

    intact along the break line.

  • 05:45

    So how do we reconcile that the Edgars observed only 1 hole and 5 finished faces?

  • 05:50

    Taking the dimensions of the granite fragment as it exists today, I’m fairly confident

  • 05:55

    the block is the same one that once served as the gate.

  • 05:58

    The granite piece would be slightly too wide to fit perpendicular in the corridor, and

  • 06:02

    so fitted in place it would need to be askew.

  • 06:05

    The clearly visible iron gate portion looks to be askew as well, matching the orientation

  • 06:11

    of the stone it sits upon.

  • 06:13

    The Edgars also state that the gate was only about 18 inches tall, and this closely matches

  • 06:19

    the vertical space that would be available if the block was seated with the top smooth

  • 06:23

    face against the floor and the bore holes parallel to the corridor at the bottom.

  • 06:28

    The photo shows the faintest trace of the broken side of the granite block as it tapers

  • 06:33

    downward, and presumably this small, round, light colored-section is a limestone block

  • 06:39

    placed there to fill the small gap.

  • 06:42

    Since the two fully intact bore holes would be in the deepest, lowest corner where the

  • 06:47

    fragment and corridor meet – perhaps the Edgars never fully dug out the sand here and

  • 06:52

    thus failed to notice them.

  • 06:54

    The partial bore hole along the break line would be much less likely to clog up and thus

  • 06:59

    be more easily observed.

  • 07:01

    Also, the Edgars would only be looking for a single bore hole based on the information

  • 07:06

    provided by Petrie.

  • 07:08

    As for the fifth finished face that is now missing, I can only speculate that a small

  • 07:13

    portion of the other lateral side was still intact 110 years ago and has since broken

  • 07:19

    off.

  • 07:20

    One final point of confusion about this important granite block is the documentation given by

  • 07:26

    Vito Maragioglio & Celeste Rinaldi.

  • 07:30

    Their detailed survey and 1965 publication about the Great Pyramid are perhaps the most

  • 07:35

    valuable modern resource for researchers.

  • 07:38

    It is available free on the Internet Archive at archive.org – and I will put a link to

  • 07:43

    it in the description.

  • 07:45

    I have the utmost respect for Maragioglio and Rinaldi, but they seem to have made serious

  • 07:50

    errors about the granite fragment in question.

  • 07:53

    Their figure looks nothing like block as we currently observe it, but I will try to offer

  • 07:58

    an explanation why.

  • 08:00

    I believe Maragioglio and Rinaldi never personally observed the block, but instead made a reconstruction

  • 08:07

    based on the combined descriptions of Petrie and the Edgar brothers.

  • 08:11

    Five finished faces, and the partial remains of a bore hole along the break line.

  • 08:17

    Interestingly this reconstruction looks extremely similar to the missing limestone block mentioned

  • 08:22

    earlier, so perhaps they mistook it for the granite fragment in the Edgar brothers’

  • 08:26

    photo.

  • 08:27

    This is a great reminder of why it’s so important to verify sources with all the available

  • 08:33

    physical evidence, because with every past mistake, the truth gets a little harder to

  • 08:38

    reach.

  • 08:39

    Fortunately, we live in a time where you can find quality photos of the pyramids online,

  • 08:43

    and thus anyone can research for themselves.

  • 08:47

    Now let’s travel down the descending corridor to the next granite fragment, located within

  • 08:52

    the alcove before the subterranean chamber.

  • 08:55

    This fragment has remained in its current location since it was first documented by

  • 08:59

    the Edgar brothers in 1910.

  • 09:01

    It’s the only large fragment without bore holes, but there is an interesting small groove

  • 09:06

    along a finished face.

  • 09:08

    A proper reconstruction of the block in combination with the other granite fragments could make

  • 09:14

    this groove a valuable clue, but that will have to wait until mainstream Egyptology values

  • 09:19

    the importance of these stones.

  • 09:22

    Moving into the subterranean chamber we encounter a difficult granite fragment to photograph,

  • 09:27

    located halfway down into the fenced-off pit.

  • 09:30

    It’s just visible enough to make out two distinct bore holes very close in size and

  • 09:36

    orientation to the first granite fragment located outside.

  • 09:40

    This stone was also documented by the Edgar brothers.

  • 09:43

    It was first discovered by Lorenzo Covington a little further up the descending corridor

  • 09:48

    than the bottom of the well shaft.

  • 09:50

    The Edgars write that a mishap occurred whereby a small granite shard was dislodged and plunged

  • 09:56

    down the descending corridor, striking this block and causing it to tumble nearly to the

  • 10:01

    bottom.

  • 10:02

    The small granite shard is now lost, but this block remains and was reported to be undamaged

  • 10:08

    from the incident.

  • 10:09

    Later the Edgars moved the block into the subterranean chamber to get it out of the

  • 10:13

    way, and since then someone has rolled it into the pit, where it now rests.

  • 10:18

    The final granite fragment located within the grotto has been a source of confusion

  • 10:22

    for many researchers, but its story is rather simple.

  • 10:26

    It was first written about by Nathanial Davison in 1763 who noted about 8 meters down the

  • 10:32

    well shaft a large stone nearly blocked passage through it.

  • 10:36

    Indeed, explorers of the 16 and early 1700s before him also remarked about how the well

  • 10:41

    shaft was quite plugged up with debris.

  • 10:44

    However, once you go back to 1591, a Venetian explorer, Prosper Alpini, writes that the

  • 10:51

    well shaft was:

  • 10:53

    Quote, “easily explored to a depth of seventy feet”, end quote.

  • 10:58

    So sometime in the years following 1591 a vandal rolled this granite block down into

  • 11:04

    the well where it became logically stuck shortly after the shaft makes a lateral bend.

  • 11:10

    It remained approximately in this location until 1817 when the captain Giovanni Caviglia

  • 11:16

    undertook the task of clearing the well shaft of debris.

  • 11:20

    He recorded the granite block being a little over 11 meters down the shaft when it was

  • 11:25

    found.

  • 11:26

    Captain Caviglia doesn’t explicitly record what he does with this stone, but it can be

  • 11:30

    logically deduced that it was dumped into the grotto which was less than 10 meters further

  • 11:35

    down the shaft.

  • 11:36

    From approximate measurements of the granite fragment, we can calculate its weight at 600

  • 11:41

    pounds or more.

  • 11:42

    Therefore, hauling it upwards would have been prohibitively difficult.

  • 11:46

    The bottom of the shaft was also still closed off when Caviglia began his work.

  • 11:51

    As Caviglia continued his downward excavation of the well shaft, he brought the loose debris

  • 11:55

    up to the Grotto, which remained the closest dumping spot available.

  • 11:59

    Thus, the granite block became partially buried in this loose debris that followed it.

  • 12:04

    The Edgar Brothers observed the granite stone in the Grotto in 1910, and captured a small

  • 12:09

    corner of it in their photograph.

  • 12:11

    The stone remains in this location to this day.

  • 12:14

    Now having accounted for the known whereabouts of all four remaining fragments, what can

  • 12:18

    we deduce about their journey and original purpose?

  • 12:21

    It shouldn’t be surprising that the granite stones all tended to travel downwards.

  • 12:27

    Every time an explorer rolled over a stone to examine it or simply push it out of the

  • 12:32

    way, the fragments would fall further down into the pyramid.

  • 12:35

    Other than the 3 enormous plugs that block the ascending corridor, the only other granite

  • 12:40

    currently found in the Great Pyramid is in the King’s chamber and portcullis antechamber.

  • 12:45

    The portcullis having been entirely demolished, seems like a probable location where large

  • 12:50

    pieces of granite could have come from.

  • 12:52

    The strongest clue that the fragments match the portcullis are the 4 vertical grooves

  • 12:57

    in the antechamber south wall above the entrance to the King’s chamber.

  • 13:01

    These grooves are all 8 – 9.5 centimeters in diameter.

  • 13:05

    The horizontal spaces between each groove are also precisely equal at about 17 centimeters.

  • 13:12

    The diameter of the grooves decreases slightly as you travel down them, which is typical

  • 13:17

    of tubular drill holes, and accounts for some of the minor variation in their size.

  • 13:22

    Remarkably, the groove diameters and the spacing between them are a very close match to the

  • 13:28

    dimensions of the drill holes present in the rogue granite fragments.

  • 13:32

    The blocks at the entrance to the pyramid and the bottom of the pit have had their holes

  • 13:37

    measured quite precisely.

  • 13:39

    The block inside the Grotto is not so perfectly measured, but with the Edgar brothers verifying

  • 13:44

    two drill holes, one of which seems visible in this photograph, they can be presumed to

  • 13:49

    fit these dimensions as well until someone can explicitly prove otherwise.

  • 13:54

    The reason for the holes matching the grooves is that ropes would pass through them to operate

  • 13:59

    the portcullis and facilitate the movement of the granite stones.

  • 14:03

    The grooves exist on the south wall so that the inner-most portcullis can be flush against

  • 14:09

    the wall and still allow space for the ropes to pass through.

  • 14:13

    For the granite fragment without drill holes, we can rely upon its physical dimensions and

  • 14:18

    finished faces to match it to the portcullis as well.

  • 14:22

    The key metric is that each original portcullis block had 55 centimeters of depth to fit into

  • 14:27

    its vertical housing.

  • 14:29

    This means the portcullis blocks themselves would be 1 royal cubit deep, or about 52.5

  • 14:36

    centimeters.

  • 14:37

    The granite fragment lacking drill holes matches this dimension, and the 3 other fragments

  • 14:43

    do as well.

  • 14:44

    Author Charles Rigano gives a good summary of this in his 2014 book, Pyramids of the

  • 14:50

    Giza Plateau.

  • 14:51

    Even though we now have a probable solution for the original purpose of the granite fragments,

  • 14:57

    there is still much we could learn from their reconstruction.

  • 15:00

    Khufu’s portcullis was an ingenious and complex apparatus that modern Egyptology has

  • 15:05

    neglected to study, and its importance in relation to all the pyramids of the Old Kingdom

  • 15:11

    cannot be overstated.

  • 15:13

    In future videos I will examine in great detail how the portcullis likely functioned, and

  • 15:18

    how it served as a foundation for the design of pyramid complexes for many centuries after.

  • 15:24

    We owe a great debt to explorers such as Petrie, Vyse, Caviglia, and the Edgar brothers who

  • 15:31

    were wise enough to understand that these granite fragments represented important clues

  • 15:36

    to a mystery they did not possess enough knowledge to solve.

  • 15:41

    Rather than dispose of them with the rest of the loose debris inside the Great Pyramid,

  • 15:46

    they kept them safe and relatively undisturbed so that future explorers might come upon them

  • 15:51

    to uncover new secrets held within the pyramid.

  • 15:55

    This is a lesson in humility modern Egyptology ought to learn from.

  • 15:59

    Instead of constantly patching up holes and incidentally destroying evidence with cosmetic

  • 16:04

    repairs, the pyramid should be preserved in such a manner that honors the entire history

  • 16:10

    of the monument rather than recreating a crude facsimile of its original design.

  • 16:15

    And finally, the four rogue granite fragments ought to be examined to determine how they

  • 16:20

    might be reconstructed, and rightfully hold a place of prestige inside the new Grand Egyptian

  • 16:26

    Museum.

  • 16:27

    In future videos it will be my honor to share additional discoveries about them with you

  • 16:33

    all.

  • 16:34

    Thanks to everyone who watched this video to the end.

  • 16:37

    Please subscribe to the channel to see more of this content.

  • 16:40

    Give a like or comment as you see fit, and above all, remember to ask your friends if

  • 16:44

    they take their History for Granite.

All

The example sentences of FLINDERS in videos (5 in total of 17)

it personal pronoun was verb, past tense documented verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction flinders proper noun, singular petrie proper noun, singular in preposition or subordinating conjunction 1881 cardinal number , its possessive pronoun location noun, singular or mass being verb, gerund or present participle where wh-adverb vyse proper noun, singular found verb, past tense it personal pronoun just adverb
the determiner team noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction flinders proper noun, singular connect verb, non-3rd person singular present can modal also adverb help verb, base form you personal pronoun out preposition or subordinating conjunction with preposition or subordinating conjunction general adjective course noun, singular or mass information noun, singular or mass , fees noun, plural ,
it personal pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present located verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner banks noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner yarra proper noun, singular river proper noun, singular beside preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction under preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner flinders proper noun, singular street proper noun, singular viaduct proper noun, singular .
fly verb, base form there existential there but coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun really adverb want verb, non-3rd person singular present to to get verb, base form to to flinders proper noun, singular island proper noun, singular apparent adjective you personal pronoun can modal rent verb, base form
loop proper noun, singular tunnel noun, singular or mass approaching verb, gerund or present participle flinders proper noun, singular street proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun will modal notice verb, base form that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner tunnel noun, singular or mass changes noun, plural shape verb, non-3rd person singular present . . here adverb .

Definition and meaning of FLINDERS

What does "flinders mean?"

/ˈflindərz/

noun
small fragments or splinters.
other
Bits and splinters and fragments.