~I do Remember the shaft in the 90s. but as far I recall, it was rectangular, not like this one with a roof like feature. Back then, they allowed a mini Rover type of remote vehicle with a camera go up until the end of the shaft, where they found a closing stone with two rusty handles on it. The team wanted to make a perforation to push a tiny camera tru the hole. Thats when Zahi Awass, the top Dog of antiquities in Egypt stopped it all.
LOL ... Not that good memory, but I'm in this Business since the age of 10 (1967) . And in 1969 I had the oportunitiy to interview Erich von Däniken in Bonstetten, Zurich, Switzerland, right after he came out of prison, where he wrote his first Bestseller "The Gods Were Astronauts" he also wrote some stuff about the pyramids in his other following books. But at the age of 12 I allready knew, that this guy just did some copy pasta from other authors.
~I do Remember the shaft in the 90s. but as far I recall, it was rectangular, not like this one with a roof like feature. Back then, they allowed a mini Rover type of remote vehicle with a camera go up until the end of the shaft, where they found a closing stone with two rusty handles on it. The team wanted to make a perforation to push a tiny camera tru the hole. Thats when Zahi Awass, the top Dog of antiquities in Egypt stopped it all.
LOL ... Not that good memory, but I'm in this Business since the age of 10 (1967) . And in 1969 I had the oportunitiy to interview Erich von Däniken in Bonstetten, Zurich, Switzerland, right after he came out of prison, where he wrote his first Bestseller "The Gods Were Astronauts" he also wrote some stuff about the pyramids in his other following books. But at the age of 12 I allready knew, that this guy just did some copy pasta from other authors.
I loved his books. You're saying Eric did copy pasta?