Were the Egyptian pyramids wireless power stations?

Somya Jha
6 min readJun 15, 2021

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The most commonly accepted theory is that the Great Pyramid at Giza was a tomb for the fourth dynasty Egyptian Pharoah Khufu or Cheops (two different versions of the same name).

However, there are a disturbing number of features about the Great Pyramid that this theory doesn’t account for. The first and most obvious being that the Great Pyramid doesn’t contain any of the things a real Egyptian tomb would, such as extravagant artifacts; ornate wall art; sealed entrances; elaborate coffins; or even mummies.

Nikola Tesla, who is perhaps the greatest inventor of all time had a particular infatuation with the pyramids. He believed they served a higher purpose and throughout his career, he attempted to unravel their mystery.

His idea has been dismissed and forgotten over the last century but considering that Tesla is directly responsible for 80% of the technology we use today, perhaps we should view his theories with a more open mind.

The pyramid contains angled tunnels that lead not only into the pyramid but deep underground, into areas as yet unexplored. What tomb needs a shaft directed underneath it? We also know that centuries ago, there were enormous swivel doors that weighed no less than 20 tons. But miraculously, they were so well engineered they could be opened by the push of a hand. Since no Egyptian tomb has been found to be deliberately accessible, what were the pyramids for?

So what were the pyramids for? Limitless energy? Suspend your disbelief and take a journey down the rabbit hole:

The great pyramid is few miles away from the ancient location of the Nile.

The Great Pyramid of Giza was once covered in white polished limestone, referred to as casing stones. The stones fit together so perfectly, they would have given the pyramid, smooth, flawless sides. This would have made the giant structures brightly reflect the sun like a mirror. It also would have made the inside of the structure perfectly insulated.

A large earthquake in 1303 shattered many casing stones, and the remainder were removed to use on other structures. Today, all that remains is the inner core of the pyramid.

The material dolomite was used on the inner surfaces of the pyramid. Dolomite is known to increase electrical conductivity, directly relative to the amount of pressure on it: high pressure creates more electrical current. Lining the passageways and underground tunnels of the pyramid is granite, which is slightly radioactive. Granite contains high amounts of quartz crystal with metal, and it’s a well-known conductor.

The granite actually ionizes the air inside the pyramid, creating a chemical reaction, which again, increases the conductivity of electricity. When such electrons are given the chance to bypass sections of rock via metal wire, quite large currents can flow.

If granite was not chosen for its electrical conductivity, we must ask, why else would the Egyptians use it? It has certainly stood the test of time, no matter which version of history you believe: the conventional one, that says it was built 4,500 years ago; or unconventional versions, which say it could be as old as 20, 000 years!

In 1993, a mysterious and inaccessible room was discovered after remaining hidden for thousands of years. Appearing to have been deliberately concealed by the structure’s engineers, the room came to be called the Queen’s chamber and was finally explored in 2011 with a small remote camera to reveal a carefully crafted copper wire. More importantly, there were instructions painted as symbols onto the floor which appeared to show a clear wiring diagram.

A windowless room, with copper wirings, could create a higher potential on one wall, which transfers energy to the lower potential on the other wall, consequentially releasing electromagnetic energy into the confined space of the so-called “Queen’s Chamber.”

It could still be argued that the electrical materials used to construct the great pyramid are purely coincidental because an energy generator still requires a catalyst from another source. Perhaps this explains why the pyramids are geographically located over a powerful natural generator: underground rivers and aquifers.

So if water was the source of power, it would have traveled up the limestone-based on the principle of capillary action, which happens when a small area of a substance that gets wet, absorbs into the entire area of that substance. The tunnel leading down from the bottom of the pyramid could’ve tapped into an aquifer, channeling the water up into the pyramid, through a series of tunnels. So, water flowing near or underneath the pyramid could have been absorbed as it passed over the limestone, even traveling upward to the top of the structure. The quartz and the tunnels of the pyramids would be subject to the stress or vibration creating electricity.

We don’t know for sure what capped the pyramid, but there’s speculation that it may have been gold (explaining why it was the first thing to go missing). If it was indeed, gold, this could have created a conductive path for energy to be directed upwards, high into the ionosphere.

In 1905, Tesla filed a patent in the U.S. titled “The art of transmitting electrical energy through the natural medium,” outlining designs for a series of generators around the world that would tap the ionosphere for energy collections. He saw planet Earth itself, with its two poles, as a giant electrical generator of limitless energy. His triangle-shaped design became known as Tesla’s electromagnetic pyramid.

Tesla sitting in his Colorado Springs laboratory

Unfortunately, Tesla’s work was funded by J.P. Morgan, who was an oil and gas tycoon, who dominated the electricity industry in the 1900s. Morgan correctly saw Tesla’s Tower as a threat to his business (as it would have meant free electricity for everyone) and used all of his money and influence to ruin Tesla.

If the ancient Egyptians had electricity, it would explain why so many ancient carvings seem to depict giant light bulbs. It would also explain why there are no soot marks from flame torches inside the pyramids: they may have had electrical lighting.

The Dendera Lightbulb

Tesla’s discovery and device disappeared after his mysterious death in 1943.

His device was later referred to as Tesla’s Electromagnetic pyramid based on his design looking like a triangle shape –just like a pyramid.

The physicist had realized that the ionosphere was sparkling with electrical energy which could easily be tapped. Planet Earth according to Tesla, was a gigantic electrical Generator spinning around two magnetic poles from which limitless energy can be harnessed using the right medium or shape.

A few modern calculations suggest that Tesla’s original goal of “wireless electricity” wasn’t completely impossible, and it’s easy to wonder what would have happened had the Wardenclyffe Tower project been able to continue uninterrupted.

The pyramids on the other hand… well, everybody knows that they’re just the tombs of Egyptian Pharaoh's — and it’s in the best interests of the fossil fuel magnates to perpetuate this myth. Although it’s possible that the copper wires in the Queen’s chamber by relic hunters/thieves; I think it’s more likely they were taken by agents of the fossil fuel companies… to erase the most compelling evidence of the true purpose of the Great Pyramid.

Were the “energy pyramids” created to conduct energy or alter frequencies over large areas of land? There still remain a lot of unanswered questions regarding the many theories as to how they would have achieved this process, but even the shape of the pyramid itself leads some to believe that pyramid “power plants” were and are possible.

So to conclude this theory, The dream of wirelessly transporting electric energy is not new to humanity.

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