Nephilim, the Flood, and the Pyramids of Giza: A Two-Phase Reinterpretation (Pre-Flood Construction โ Survival โ Old Kingdom Refurbishment)
Abstract
This article presents a falsifiable hypothesis regarding the origins of the pyramids of Giza. Drawing on the biblical timeline (Gen 6–10, NWT), widespread flood traditions, documented cases of rapid fluvial catastrophes, the geology of the Giza Plateau, and the archaeological record (logbooks, worker settlements, non-destructive imaging), we propose a two-phase model articulated in three chronological steps: (A) megalithic cores erected before the Flood (associated with the Nephilim of Gen 6:1–4); (B) survival of these massive stone structures during months of high waters following 40 days of rain (Gen 7–8); (C) refurbishment and rededication during the Egyptian Old Kingdom (including Tura casing, reorganization of corridors and chambers, port and worker logistics, and inscriptions). This model does not reject or diminish Old Kingdom activity; rather, it re-contextualizes it as a monumental, state-led Phase C intervention built upon pre-existing cores. We outline empirical tests—such as deep coring, multi-method dating, and surface and tool-mark forensics—capable of corroborating or falsifying Phase A. We also examine dating uncertainties (old-wood effect, dead carbon in mortars, OSL and U-Th caveats), which may bias monument chronologies when only surface layers are analyzed. The proposal remains speculative, yet falsifiable through targeted scientific testing of deep-core materials.
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