Collection: Giza Plateau

The most studied structure in human history also harbors the most secrets.

The pyramids at Giza collectively form the only surviving wonder of the ancient world. They are aligned to true north with greater precision than the Greenwich Observatory. Their pi and phi ratios are encoded in their dimensions to a degree that cannot be accidental. The Nile once ran to their base. In its original form the Great Pyramid was cased in white Tura limestone, polished to a mirror finish, capped in gold — visible from the mountains of Lebanon on a clear day, gleaming like a beacon across the ancient world. It was never a tomb. The so-called sarcophagus in the King's Chamber was too large to fit through the entrance — it was built in place before the chamber was sealed around it, and it has never contained a body.

Dr. Robert Schoch and Graham Hancock have spent decades making the case that the Sphinx enclosure reveals water erosion on a scale that requires rainfall patterns last seen in the region around ten thousand BC — pushing the age of the complex thousands of years before the pharaohs, thousands of years before the civilization that supposedly built it existed.

The structure was already ancient when ancient Egypt was young. Someone built it. Someone — or something — who understood acoustics, harmonics, sacred geometry, and precision engineering at a level we are only now beginning to reverse engineer.

This is the collection for everyone who understands that the greatest clue to our true origins is sitting in plain sight in the Egyptian desert — and has been since before history began.