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Dr Zahi Hawass, Egypt's former Minister of Antiquities, says the signs of "water erosion" are simply a result of natural weathering. Similarly, he insists the salt crusts come from within the ...
Zahi Hawass, an Egyptologist and a former minister of tourism and antiquities in Egypt, joined him. Earlier this week, Hawass dismissed the Khafre Project's claims that there was an underground ...
Dr. Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s former Minister of Antiquities, dismissed these claims, attributing the erosion to natural weathering processes. The team also speculated that the shafts and chambers ...
Scientists have controversially claimed that a vast underground city in Egypt predates the Giza pyramids by tens of thousands ...
However, Dr Zahi Hawass, Egypt's former Minister of Antiquities, said that these signs of erosion are due to natural weathering rather than an extinction level event. He also said that the salt ...
Rogan alluded that Egyptian archaeologist and ex-Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, Zahi Hawass, suggested that the Giza pyramid-related claims weren't backed by scientific evidence. Williamson ...
The team of researchers that shocked the world with their theory about underground structures beneath the pyramids continue ...
Mr. Musk, we are waiting for you.' Egyptian archaeologist Zahi Hawass also waded into the bizarre row, saying in a video that Mr Musk's argument was a 'complete hallucination'. The largest of the ...
Recent reports circulating on social media about the supposed discovery of a vast hidden network of chambers and tunnels beneath the Great Pyramid of Giza have been categorically denied by Dr Zahi ...
Researchers claimed that five structures were discovered in the centre of the pyramid. (Representational) Scientists have discovered a "vast underground city" running beneath the famed Egyptian ...
And that’s the generous interpretation. A less generous view is expressed by established Egyptologist Dr. Zahi Hawass, who wrote on his Facebook: All this information is completely wrong and has ...
Egyptian archaeologist Dr Zahi Hawass also questioned the claims, calling them "completely wrong" and having "no basis in truth". The former minister of antiquities told Aawsat: "There are no ...