Scientists believe the Great Pyramid was an alien transmitter

How Egypt’s most famous monument may contain a hidden mathematical message that could point extraterrestrials straight to Earth

A new theory suggests The Great Pyramid may have been designed to broadcast Earth’s location to intelligent life | ©Image Credit: Unsplash / Nada Habashy
A new theory suggests The Great Pyramid may have been designed to broadcast Earth’s location to intelligent life | ©Image Credit: Unsplash / Nada Habashy

The Great Pyramid has been called a tomb, a wonder of engineering, and the subject of countless conspiracy theories. Now, it is being called a potential extraterrestrial communication device.

A new and highly controversial study suggests Egypt’s Great Pyramid may have been designed as a kind of cosmic beacon, helping communicate Earth’s location to intelligent civilizations elsewhere in the universe.

Before anyone starts packing for Area 51, note that the idea is entirely theoretical and has not been peer-reviewed. Let’s unpack it all.

The theory starts with a surprisingly familiar number

The argument comes from Iranian researcher Jalal Jafari, who believes the Great Pyramid’s location may contain a hidden message. The pyramid sits at approximately 29.979234° north latitude.

Why does that matter? Because the speed of light is 299,792,458 meters per second.

According to Jafari, the similarity between those numbers is too close to ignore. He argues the pyramid’s coordinates may have been intentionally designed to encode scientific information about Earth in a way that any advanced civilization familiar with mathematics and physics could recognize. In other words, a giant stone GPS marker for the planet.

The Geek Reality Check

As mind-bending as that number match sounds, it hits a massive historical wall – the meter is a modern invention. The French Academy of Sciences didn’t define the meter until 1791, while the ancient Egyptians built the pyramids using cubits. Because the speed of light only matches the Giza coordinate when measured in modern metric units, the connection is almost certainly a cosmic coincidence rather than an alien design.

Still, Jafari argues there might be more to these monuments than meets the eye.

More than just a tomb?

Mainstream archaeology has long held that the pyramids served as monumental tombs for Egyptian pharaohs. That remains the accepted explanation. Jafari himself isn’t arguing the pyramids weren’t important burial monuments. Instead, he suggests they may have served an additional purpose.

His theory proposes that the structures could have been part of an encoded system designed to communicate information about Earth’s position, planetary movement, mathematical constants, and astronomical relationships. The idea is that geometry itself could act as a universal language.

The researcher also points to the alignment of the three famous pyramids on the Giza Plateau. The pyramids of Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure are arranged with remarkable precision.

According to Jafari, that level of accuracy demonstrates a sophisticated understanding of astronomy and geometry among the ancient Egyptians.

If they possessed that knowledge, he argues, creating a structure that encoded information about Earth might not have been impossible.

The strangest part of the theory

The most ambitious claim Jafari makes involves gravity. The scientist suggests the Great Pyramid’s enormous mass could theoretically act as part of a gravitational signaling system while Earth moves through space.

The concept is that Earth functions as a kind of carrier signal as it orbits the Sun, while the pyramid subtly modulates that signal through its position and movement.

It’s a fascinating idea.

It’s also where many physicists begin raising their eyebrows. There is currently no known technology from ancient Egypt that could have transmitted information across interstellar distances. Critics also note that finding meaningful patterns in numbers can sometimes be misleading. Just because two values look similar doesn’t necessarily mean they were intentionally connected.

Jafari also acknowledges that the hypothesis requires significantly more evidence.

This isn’t the first pyramid-space theory

The Great Pyramid has attracted cosmic theories for decades. In the 1980s, researcher Robert Bauval proposed the famous Orion Correlation Theory. The idea suggested that the three pyramids at Giza were intentionally arranged to mirror the stars of Orion’s Belt.

The theory became hugely popular in documentaries and books. Archaeologists, however, argued there was no evidence supporting the claim and said people were simply seeing patterns where none existed.

This new theory definitely still calls for more data. But we have a researcher asking whether one of humanity’s most famous structures might contain a mathematical message hidden in plain sight.

Whether that is evidence of ancient cosmic communication or simply an extraordinary coincidence remains very much up for debate.

Source: New York Post