New discovery throws light on mystery of pyramids' construction
This article is more than 5 months old
Egyptologists stumble across ramp that helps explain how huge blocks of stones were hauled into place
Kevin Rawlinson
Mon 5 Nov 2018 19.32 EST Last modified on Mon 5 Nov 2018 19.38 EST
The mystery of how, exactly, the pyramids were built may have come a step closer to being unravelled after a team of archaeologists made a chance discovery in an ancient Egyptian quarry.
Scientists researching ancient inscriptions happened upon a ramp with stairways and a series of what they believe to be postholes, which suggest that the job of hauling into place the huge blocks of stone used to build the monuments may have been completed more quickly than previously thought.
While the theory that the ancient Egyptians used ramps to move the stones has already been put forward, the structure found by the Anglo-French team, which dated from about the period that the Great Pyramid of Giza was built, is significantly steeper than was previously supposed possible.
They believe the inclusion of the steps and the postholes either side of a rampway suggests the builders were able to haul from both directions, rather than simply dragging a block behind them. The team believes those below the block would have used the posts to create a pulley system while those above it pulled simultaneously.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/nov/06/new-discovery-throws-light-on-mystery-of-pyramids-construction
(Sorry to throw in an article from last November, but I stumbled across it, didn't remember ever having seen it before and wanted to post it here, in case it's new to anyone else.)