A new study has sparked debate in the archaeological world, challenging the official chronology of the Great Pyramid of Giza. The author, Italian engineer Alberto Donini, proposes that this wonder of the ancient world was not built around 2580-2560 BCE, as traditional Egyptology accepts, but thousands of years earlier, between 37,000 and 9,000 BCE.
This revolutionary hypothesis is based on a new method called ‘relative erosion’. Donini’s method compares the level of erosion in the pyramid’s stones with those known earlier, such as the covering removed about 675 years ago.









