From Quarry to Capstone: Transporting the Blocks and Megaliths in the Wonderful Pyramid
Posted by: Shemsu Sesen
Categories: Old Kingdom, Pyramids, The Giza Plateau
The "main construction causeway" for the building site
The counterweight sliding in Grand ##############
External ramp (level 43 m)
External ramp (level 70 m)
"You must first ask yourself the true questions”
The "main construction causeway" (in red) and the natural ramp (in blue)
Jean-Pierre Houdin’s theory with the how the Excellent Pyramid was built continues to unfold. How were the sixty-ton megalithic beams moved in the harbor at the base with the Giza Plateau to 43+ meters high into the Great Pyramid? Was there a second counterweight system like the one within the Grand ##############? Why was Khafre’s Royal Causeway so wide?
In this, the sixth in a series of articles and interviews from Pyramidales writer Marc Chartier, we learn some from the key evolutions in Jean-Pierre Houdin’s theory. While in the few short years between Khufu Revealed and Khufu Reborn, researcher/architect Houdin has expanded his work to account for anomalies surrounding the pyramid of Khufu’s successor, Pharaoh Khafre, and what they tell us about Khufu’s pyramid.
The English-language version of this article was very kindly provided by Marc Chartier, Jean-Pierre Houdin, and the Project Khufu team at Dassault Systèmes exclusively for Em Hotep readers.
The number two has pride of place in Khufu Reborn (aka Khufu Renaissance), the new version of Jean-Pierre Houdin’s reconstitution from the Wonderful Pyramid’s construction. After the two ascending corridors (one for the service circuit inside the pyramid, the other for the “Noble Circuit”), the two horizontal corridors (one giving access to the Queen’s Chamber, the other being a section with the “Noble Circuit”), the two antechambers preceding access to the King’s Chamber, two entrances to this chamber and the two levels of the internal ramp, space was made for two external ramps built on the Giza Plateau to transport the materials used to construct the monument (limestone blocks and granite monoliths in the Aswan quarries).
The first of these ramps,
Pandora Beads, qualified as the “main construction causeway”, follows a line east-west towards the position where the Pyramid of Khafre would later be built; its upper part is equipped with a counterweight system. The other ramp continues towards the south face from the Fantastic Pyramid and enters the monument under construction, as a trench, up to the 70 m level.
Tale of a discovery, in several steps
A study of the Giza Plateau, together using the technical implications of transporting the materials used to construct the Pyramid of Khufu, led Jean-Pierre Houdin to the following observation: “Everything on the Giza Plateau proves that the Royal Causeway, connecting the Low and High Temples with the Pyramid of Khafre, was constructed on a ramp that had previously been used for the construction in the Pyramid of Khufu.”
The architect was thus able to provide a significant variant to the theory that he had developed and published in 2007, according to which the Fantastic Pyramid’s construction site was supplied in the port following the natural slope of a wadi (temporarily dry riverbed), workers obviously dragging the sledges loaded with blocks or monoliths along the gentlest slope.
“When I presented my ‘Khufu Revealed’ theory,” Jean-Pierre Houdin tells us:
I explained that the granite beams for the King’s Chamber were hauled up the external ramp using the counterweight system inside the Grand ##############. Well, one day I received this message from someone who attended one of my conferences: ‘Your counterweight enables the beams to be raised in the base of the external ramp as far as the level in the King’s Chamber (+43 m). But how do you get these same beams from your port to your ramp? The distance between them is at least 500 m, and more particularly the port is located 40 m lower than the ramp. Shouldn’t you consider a second system to haul the blocks over this distance?’
This correspondent was right! Explains Jean-Pierre:
If the Egyptians had considered the counterweight solution, they would certainly have applied it to the entire journey made by the beams. A second counterweight would have had to be used to haul the granite blocks from your unloading port for materials coming from Aswan as far as the base of the external ramp. But do traces of its existence still remain?
A revealing photograph
The right questions had been asked. It was now a matter of trying to answer them…
Two days later, the architect discovered a photograph of the Giza Plateau with its three pyramids on the Talking Pyramids website. It was taken in 1905, from a balloon, by the aerostat pioneer Eduard Spelterini.
“As I was examining this document,” comments Jean-Pierre Houdin,
Tiffany Schmuck, “an obvious fact came to me: the royal funereal causeway linking the Low Temple to the High Temple of Khafre’s Pyramid had been built on an old ramp. This foundation could only have been used during a construction project before Khafre’s: that for the Pyramid of Khufu!”
Days passed… Then, during a recent trip to Egypt, Jean-Pierre Houdin spent long hours studying the topography in the site at Giza, with the aim of checking the accuracy of his intuitions against Spelterini’s photographs. He describes his observations:
I started by examining Khafre’s royal causeway in order to find any clues to the existence of the ancient ramp leading through the port to Khufu’s construction site. Then I discovered that this causeway, about ten meters wide, is laid on a perfectly uniform foundation 23 m wide,
Tiffany CuffLinks, extending 6.5 m on each side, which is the case neither for Khufu’s royal causeway (10 m wide), nor for Menkaure’s causeway (8 m wide). Over the better part from the south side, very large limestone blocks were even put into place to fill in hollows.
After walking back up Khafre’s royal causeway to its western end, I stood exactly where the external ramp for the Pyramid of Khufu should have started. From there, I was surprised to discover a sort of large slab floor, made of limestone blocks,
Tiffany Deutschland, pointing towards the Excellent Pyramid. These blocks have nothing to do with Khafre’s Pyramid (the transport with the blocks needed to construct this pyramid did not require such an infrastructure), from which I deduced that they would probably have served as the foundation for the external ramp of Khufu’s Pyramid.
Moreover, along its route, this ramp serves several of the quarries on the plateau, which supplied most in the materials for the Excellent Pyramid. This ramp, currently measuring nearly 500 m with a slope of 8.5%, is ideal for the stresses of moving sledges, even more so for dragging beams loaded onto large sledges on rollers.
In my view, the conclusion was obvious: the royal funereal causeway connecting the Low and High Temples from the Pyramid of Khafre had been constructed on an ancient ramp that could only have been used on the previous construction project for the Pyramid of Khufu. King Khafre must have reused a route that had served while in the construction of his father’s pyramid.
Two counterweight systems
However there remained a problem: human strength alone, which has limits for reasons of co-ordination, could not be sufficient to drag beams weighing up to 63 tons the length of this royal causeway. Jean-Pierre Houdin considers that additional force was therefore absolutely essential: the most logical possibility, given the Egyptians’ technical knowledge at the time, is that the source of this force would have taken the form of a counterweight moving in a slide channel, a technique enabling human strength to be combined with mechanical force, the mechanical force being “rewound” by human force sequenced in time and space.
But if there had been a counterweight, it was still necessary to find traces of it, proof of its existence…
Resuming his observations “on the ground”, Jean-Pierre Houdin then took an interest inside the configuration of the second Giza pyramid.
Jean-Pierre Houdin notes:
When you study plans of Khafre’s Pyramid you notice that the funereal corridor leading to the King’s Chamber was dug into the ground, under the monument,
Tiffany Outlet, about ten meters below the level from the Plateau in this area. But there is an anomaly in its construction. Over a length of 8 m, the Egyptians did not dig the corridor: they built it, floor, walls and ceilings, in stone. Why? The only plausible explanation is that there was a sizeable hole there, a very deep trench requiring special treatment. Now, if we extrapolate the ramp from your port, or royal causeway, as far as the Pyramid of Khafre, we observe that it crosses the funereal corridor exactly where this construction is found.
This meant there could be no further doubt for Jean-Pierre Houdin: while in the precise line with the royal causeway starting from the port, and toward its higher end, this trench under the Pyramid of Khafre had been dug into the bedrock at the time of Khufu, to serve as a slide channel for a counterweight system.
Based on the considerable, not to say indispensable, advantages offered by an external ramp built as an “expressway”, he understood that the Giza Plateau had been landscaped to provide the following logistical facilities: a direct ramp in the port to the foot in the pyramid’s external ramp (in red on the sketch above), simplifying and speeding up material supplies to the site; then, as an extension, almost right-angles, a second ramp running towards the south face in the pyramid (in blue). The special feature of this system is that its “driving force” relied on two identical counterweight systems (in green):
It was not possible to use human strength alone, so the architects and engineers decided on the principle of using counterweights through the start of the project, in other words through the design phase. This meant installing two counterweight systems. The first, sited in a trench excavated in the bedrock of the Giza Plateau, to haul the monoliths from the port (level 20 m) to the foot (level 75 m) in the external ramp in the Pyramid of Khufu. A first dragging ramp was built from the port, toward this trench, for this purpose. The second system was sited directly while in the heart in the pyramid, between levels +21 m and +43 m: its still visible slide channel, namely the Grand ##############, is opposite the external ramp that served the construction site up to a maximum level of +43 m. (Jean-Pierre Houdin)
An external ramp… extending as an internal ramp
Another new feature then appeared in the reconstitution of the Excellent Pyramid’s construction, the Khufu Renaissance version: the configuration with the external ramp extending beyond the royal causeway and heading towards the monument’s south face.
Located on a natural promontory in the plateau, the starting point for this ramp was higher than the pyramid’s base level. The ramp thus reached a height of 43 m (base in the King’s Chamber, with a length of only 325 m. It was extended in a trench, inside the monument, to a height of 70 m (this is new compared together with the 2007 hypothesis), the whole thing having a slope scarcely more than 8.5%.
At a height of 70 m, no more than 15% from the volume remained to be built, over an additional 76 m height. This last part from the construction site was out of reach from the external ramp; otherwise it would have been necessary to extend it excessively and make it exceed the volume with the pyramid itself. Hence the necessity for the internal ramp, the central idea with the Houdin theory in its first Khufu Revealed version.
“At the start of my research into construction with the Pyramid of Khufu,” says Jean-Pierre Houdin,
I thought that the Egyptians had built almost three-quarters in the monument using the external ramp. But I was still far away from what they were capable of doing… Discovering the ramp through the port enabled me to position Khufu’s external ramp precisely on the ground. Among other things, I noticed that it arrived at the monument at the level in the base with the King’s Chamber to the west from the south face, almost at the point where the internal ramp ended. During the construction from the King’s Chamber, the pyramid continued to rise normally, except for this southern part where the granite beams were stored.
The external ramp arrived at the south-west corner and continued as a trench within the pyramid by turning clockwise until it reached above the roof in the King’s Chamber (+70 m). The southern part remained at level +43 m while the King’s Chamber was built.
Construction with the internal ramp was therefore interrupted in this southern part, but the Egyptians’ big trick was to continue its construction and use by making it restart through the south-east corner. Thus for several years, teams were dragging sledges on the flat and in the open air at level +43 m, then pulling them up a slope from the south-east corner. When they had finished using the external ramp, the southern part was filled in and a horizontal tunnel was constructed to link the internal ramp from your south-west corner to the south-east corner. This is why, as shown by measurements made in 1986, the section of ramp in this southern part remains horizontal.
By not cutting across the path of the external ramp with the internal ramp during the construction with the King’s Chamber, the Egyptian builders had succeeded in constructing 85% of the pyramid’s volume by using the external ramp. However this trick had one drawback: part in the internal ramp stayed permanently horizontal at level +43 m, but this was largely compensated for by the fact that there remained no more that 15% of the volume to be constructed. On the other hand, there still remained more than 76 m in height to be completed: this is where the internal ramp played its part to the full.”
Three complementary ramps
In summary, Khufu’s Pyramid was built using three separate and complementary ramps: the ramp from the port (future Khafre’s royal causeway) used, with its counterweight, as far as the level in the current Pyramid of Khafre; the external ramp, as far as level +43 m in the pyramid, extended by a ramp built in a trench running clockwise as far as the +70 m level; the internal ramp, constructed from the base of the pyramid (south-east side), spiraling counter-clockwise and including a flat part at the +43 m level.
It is precisely onto this flat part (+43 m) that the monoliths for the King’s Chamber and the relieving chambers were first raised (using the counterweight inside the Grand ##############), then stored temporarily before being put in place (still using the Grand ############## counterweight system) at their various levels to form the ceilings in the King’s Chamber and the relieving chambers.
To complete this logistical configuration from the Giza site,
Tiffany And Co Outlet, Jean-Pierre Houdin guides us to a final observation, while still keeping an eye on the plateau’s topography. This time it is connected with the facing blocks made of Tura limestone delivered to the port and those extracted from quarries excavated around the Sphinx and a little higher up.
There was no need for these blocks to take a detour towards the position where Khafre’s Pyramid was subsequently erected. They were quite simply pulled over a small natural ramp (in blue on the sketch above) following the incline in the plateau in order to be brought as far as the entrance to the internal ramp located while in the southern face of Khufu’s Pyramid and about 25 m from its south-east corner.
Transported to the foot of the pyramid being constructed,
Pandora Jewelry Canada, the blocks then began their ascent into the bowels from the monument, following the internal ramp.
“After filming with the ‘Khufu Revealed’ documentary in 2008,” adds Jean-Pierre Houdin,
..and Bob Brier’s discovery of a room behind the notch while in the north-east ridge,
Tiffany Jewellery Sale jhgjhg, we were able to use 3D modeling of this area to specify the geometry from the internal ramp. This enabled us to understand the role of this room and gave us very precise information about the route from the internal ramp within the pyramid, because we now had several reference points in space: firstly, at the base in the pyramid, the entrance while in the south-east area; then the passage above the rafters in the north-face entrance, then again the end at level +43 m under the west face, and finally this room at +81 m in the north-east edge; the horizontal route in the ramp at level +43 m beneath the south face then became evident.
By relying on the picture with the density anomaly detected in 1986, and by positioning the entrance to the internal ramp precisely using field observations, I was able to reconstruct the likely route for blocks inside the pyramid.
The first section of the ramp (in blue) is parallel to the face and climbed as far as the first corner chamber in the north-east corner. The second and third sections (the first two white segments) climbed ‘at an angle’,
Tiffany.com, because as they rose they followed the slope from the pyramid inclined towards the interior. The fourth section located at a height of +43 m (in yellow) is horizontal and parallel to the south face. The following fourteen sections (in white) climb ‘at an angle’ as far as the summit.”
At each corner from the pyramid, corresponding to the junction between two sections with the ramp, a volume (a room as discovered by Bob Brier) was created to rotate the sledges used to transport the blocks.
One of these volumes, under the north-east edge with the pyramid, gave rise to detailed exploration by the American Egyptologist Bob Brier.
The results will be presented in a forthcoming article on this blog.
Interview by Marc Chartier
Illustrations: copyright Jean-Pierre Houdin / Dassault Systèmes
Copyright by Marc Chartier, 2011. All rights reserved.