Egypt: Sphinx - Time Keeper

15 12. 11. 2023
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

Robert M. Schoch was the first pioneer to reveal the real age of the Great Sphinx in Giza on the basis of his extensive knowledge as a professor of geology. Read on and learn fascinating details!

Erosion on the back of the Sphinx could only be caused by precipitation, but the rain has not fallen so far since the last 5 500 has been so much to cause the erosion we are seeing today (textbooks say it was built by the Egyptians of 4. 2558-2532 BC).

Schoch believes that the Sphinx could be 10 000 years old or perhaps even more. He and others, along with Graham Hancock, have been gathering for many years evidence of technically advanced culture, much older than the cultures we consider to be one of the first. Their theory points to a catastrophic event that took place sometime before 12 500, when Earth was struck by a significant climate change in a relatively short period of time.

What about the Sphinx? Apart from the very age of the Sphinx, there are many other things that are not here:

1. The Sphinx is a giant sculpture of the size of a small steamship with a small stone as a head. Do you feel right? If we know anything about the ancient Egyptians and their statues, then it is the fact that their statues always had the right proportions. Practically, we could say they were directly obsessed with the right proportions. So why would they be carving something that is still considered today to be one of the largest statues and made the wrong proportions?

2. Why does the Sphinx sit in the hole? If you wanted to carve out the largest statue in the world, would you put it in a hole in the country? Even if you suffer from excessive modesty, would it not be disrespectful to the gods that the sacred statue lay in the pit below the surface? Would it not be more logical to boast with his stone statue, rather than hide it? After all, the Great Pyramid is not built in a pit, but on a hill. So why is the Sphinx so hidden that you can barely see it from the pyramid from the hole?

3. Why doesn't the Sphinx, which has always been told as a lion, actually resemble a lion even remotely? Do lions look like this? You have to think about the lion's paws, because they are a deliberate newer reconstruction from people who do the so-called "restoration". We have no idea what the original paws looked like, as they have been destroyed beyond recognition since Roman times. "When Olivia and I first saw the Sphinx, we both felt guilty that we didn't have the same obvious ability as everyone else, the ability to see a lion," writes Graham Hancock. "We looked once, we looked a second time, and no matter how hard we looked, there was still no lion." No more staring helped. There is no big chest, no mane, just nothing that remotely resembles a lion.

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