The puzzle of the pyramids
The Curious Cases team discovers how Egypt's pyramids were really built.
The Great Pyramids of Giza are awesome feats of engineering and precision. So who built them - and how? Was it a mysteriously super-advanced civilization now oddly extinct? Was it even aliens?
Nah, course not! Rutherford and Fry investigate how these inspiring monuments were really constructed, and learn about the complex civilisation and efficient bureaucracy that made them possible.
Professor Sarah Parcak busts the myth that they were built by slaves. In fact, she reveals, it was gangs of well-paid blokes fuelled by the ancient Egyptian equivalent of burgers and beer. And Dr Chris Naunton explains how it was not some mysterious tech, but incredible organisation and teamwork which made it possible to transport massive stone blocks over long distances several thousand years before trucks arrived.
Dr Heba Abd El Gawad points out how racism led to bizarre assumptions in the history of archaeology, and how those assumptions linger in contemporary conspiracy theories which refuse to accept that Egyptians could have built the pyramids themselves!
Contributors: Professor Sarah Parcak, University of Alabama, Dr Chris Naunton, Egyptologist and broadcaster, Dr Heba Abd El Gawad, University College London
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Broadcasts
- Mon 10 Apr 2023 19:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
- Tue 11 Apr 2023 04:32GMT大象传媒 World Service Americas and the Caribbean, Australasia, South Asia & East Asia only
- Tue 11 Apr 2023 12:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except East Asia & South Asia
- Tue 11 Apr 2023 19:32GMT大象传媒 World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Mon 17 Apr 2023 00:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except Americas and the Caribbean
Space
The eclipses, spacecraft and astronauts changing our view of the Universe
The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry
Podcast
-
Discovery
Explorations in the world of science.