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A new radar-based study has uncovered extensive underground formations beneath Egypt’s Khafre Pyramid, challenging long-held assumptions about the Giza Plateau.
Recent findings from a ground-breaking remote sensing study using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) have unveiled massive underground structures beneath the Khafre Pyramid, the second largest of the three Giza pyramids. The study, conducted by Corrado Malanga of the University of Pisa and Filippo Biondi of the University of Strathclyde, employed SAR Doppler tomography—a non-invasive radar technique capable of detecting millimetric vibrations—and revealed internal formations previously unknown to Egyptology.
🚨This is the official PRESS RELEASE of the Massive Underground Structure Findings at the Giza Plateau from the Khafre Pyramid Project
Speaker: Nicole Ciccole https://t.co/3DzgWFaU3Y pic.twitter.com/O8IqIbKi2E
— Jay Anderson (@TheProjectUnity) March 20, 2025
Malanga and Biondi, whose peer-reviewed research was published in 2022 via MDPI under the title “Synthetic Aperture Radar Doppler Tomography Reveals Details of Undiscovered High-Resolution Internal Structure of the Great Pyramid of Giza,” applied this same method to the Khafre Pyramid. Their work involved transforming SAR signals into phononic information using proprietary software developed by Biondi, enabling unprecedented visibility into subsurface structures. A press release issued on March 15 summarized their key findings…
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