Filippo Biondi, a telecommunications engineer with a PhD from Rome’s La Sapienza, used satellite-based Doppler radar to detect spiral vertical structures beneath Egypt’s pyramids—including Khafre’s—in 2019–2020. Over 200 scans confirmed debris-filled shafts descending 600 meters, possibly linked to floods like the Younger Dryas (11,800–10,000 years ago) or Zep Tepi (36,000+ years ago), with salt deposits and erosion patterns hinting at far older origins. His team proposes a $20M robotic excavation, while Biondi’s theories align with Christopher Dunn’s vibrational tech claims, suggesting the pyramids may be remnants of an advanced, pre-dynastic civilization—challenging conventional history and raising questions about humanity’s forgotten past. [Automatically generated summary]
And I was involved in some research where together with the Italian Research Council of Bari, always south of Italy, we were testing some special processing that were able to perform something special.
Yes, it is something, in my personal opinion, very simple.
The radar is installed on board on the satellite.
The satellite flies in the space at a distance of 600 kilometers at seven kilometers per second in velocity.
So while it flies along the orbit, it is able to catch snapshots of the Earth.
The snapshots have to be focused.
And this focusing procedure, let's say it in the Azimuth, I take it easy, in the Azimuth direction, is done by sound, by the processing of sound, because it is involved at the so-called Doppler frequency.
You know, Joe, when you hear noises that are approaching to you, this noise will rise the frequency because the target has a velocity, a positive velocity, with respect to you.
And so the frequency is rised up.
And this procedure allows us to estimate or to grab, let's say, the vibration information that is always present at the surface of the Earth in terms of a vanishing waves that are present on the surface of the earth.
So this vibration, which is mechanical vibration, carries inside of this the information that is located underground.
Once we discovered this method, it was a coincidence that I knew Corrado Malanga.
And at that time, we are in 2018.
He was studying the pyramids.
And so we were talking about something that if there were some methods able to scan inside the pyramids because he needed some information to conclude the research that he was doing.
And so I proposed him to use my technique and we started to work together.
Let's say that this research can be divided by two.
The first one, 1.0, we were concentrating research on the Khnum Kufu pyramid, the Chaops pyramid, to watch inside the pyramid.
And so we have detailed, tailored our processing to watch only inside the pyramids, because that pyramid, only one pyramid, because we were doing that kind of research.
Then once we discovered things in 2020, we published the peer-review paper and we gave public the results that we found inside the Khnum Kufu pyramid, we decided to expand our research in all the GISA plateau.
Because we have detected this multi-layer structure that is inside the Khnum Kufu pyramid, the so-called Z.
We have discovered it very well from the space and it is located inside the pyramid.
And also we discovered a new, no, we discovered it, we gave an image also of the other known structures like the Grand Gallery, the Grand Gallery, and then also the Queen's chamber and the King's chamber also.
We decided to focus below the pyramid because our intention was to expand our research.
And then also thanks to the third component of the research group, which is Armando May, he suggests us to expand our research and scan all the GISO plateau.
Did give you pause at all that they were so uniform, that these columns were in very specific places and that they lined up, there was a uniform gap in between them?
And once we at the beginning we were using only the Italian satellite system that it is Cosmos Cimed and Cosmos Cymed second generation.
It's very good, very precise.
But we wanted to shift our research using also other satellites.
Because, Joe, in research, when we have diversity, diversity is a good thing, because it confirms other things that we were searching.
We were searching confirmation.
So once we had the same results, while we were using American satellites called the Capella Space and also other satellites, having always the same results, we decided to disclose.
There's a lot of resistance to this, and it's from the usual characters, and it's from people that I would characterize as gatekeepers of archaeological information.
And unfortunately, they are not willing to approach this with an open mind.
And you see this skepticism that just seems to me to be confirmation bias.
They want this to not be true, regardless of the sheer number of scans and the uniformity of the results of these scans.
And also the fact that this stuff has been proven to work on other things.
Like, didn't you guys use this exact technology to get the exact dimensions of a particle collider that you have?
Yes, you have a particle collider where I have born in L'Aquila, which is located in the center of Italy, at the center of Italy.
There is a huge mountain called Gran Sasso, the Gran Sasso d'Italia, which has a maximum altitude of about 3,000 meters for being precise to 993 meters.
And so there is a tunnel, very, very long tunnel, about 11, 12 kilometers.
And in the core of this mountain, there is a particle collider.
Which, you know, he's an engineer, and he said it appears that this thing is some sort of a mechanical thing and that it's probably designed to generate some kind of power.
And what is truly spectacular is that if this data is accurate, those immense structures that have baffled mankind forever are just the tip of the iceberg.
And underneath it, you have these immense structures that we have not yet fully explored, but you have data that shows that let's look at the images.
Let's pull up some of the images so people can see what we're talking about.
Because once you see it, your mind just goes, okay, what are we even talking about?
Like, what was this civilization?
When did it exist?
And what kind of technology would allow them to not just construct the pyramids, which is absolutely baffling.
But if this structure that is underneath the pyramids is accurately described by your work, we're looking at something that is going to have to change our entire perspective on the history of humanity.
The 3D model has been retrieved, not observing just only one result, but observing a lot of results.
So putting on a table all the results that we have, we were able to retrive, so to facilitate people to read our measurements.
So observing the results, we were able to determine the spirals and the structures that are located, starting from the base of the CAFRA pyramid going down.
And below the structure, at the end of the structures, there are huge chambers, but they are really huge, approximately having a width and a length and a height of 80 meters.
Okay, here we can observe a regular pattern, so not coils.
And we go down, please.
Okay, regular pattern, and the coils are beginning to be seen there on the third image.
Here, regular pattern, go down, please.
And here, this is, in my personal opinion, the fourth image from the left to the right, the fifth image, one, two, three, four, the fourth image, I'm sorry, where you have a core at the center of the coil, at the center of the structure,
Okay, because it is a very important project, research project that I am working now, and it is something that if it could be possible, we can go there and without digging anything, we can go below.
Why?
Because belonging between the Sphinx and the CAFRA pyramid, there are some shafts.
And there are the photos of the shafts where we can go in situ and we can physically go there and see and watch those shafts.
Currently, the shafts are blocked by debris.
And there is also rubbish inside.
So I performed a lot of scans at those shafts.
And you see, Joe, the shafts go down, down, down, down, and they reach chambers that are below.
Well, they even built a lot of precise things that confuse us.
Like, one of the things that Christopher Dunn gave me is this.
It's the recreation of the vase of one of the many vases that they have that is accurate in its way it was made down to God, what was the number?
A thousandth of a human hair or something crazy like that?
Like much less than a human hair in the diameter, in the uniformity of it, in the fact that it was carved out of this incredibly hard stone at a time where there was no metal alloys.
They supposedly had copper tools.
No one understands it.
No one knows how they did it.
And it has handles on it, so it couldn't have even been turned on a lathe.
When you started acquiring this data and you started accumulating it and then started going over it with experts, what did that feel like to you when you're realizing, oh, this is real?
I tell you, Joe, I didn't find a lot of resistance.
I found a lot of resistance in the internet.
Yes.
A lot of the banking, a lot of people that know it's not true, it's not true.
A lot of people that were continuing to say, no, radar can penetrate the earth for one kilometer.
And they didn't know, or they purposely not saying this, that we are not penetrating anything, because we are just grabbing the entropy that is on the surface of the earth.
And with that information, we are retrieving tomographies.
It's something new that I invented, but it works because we have benchmarks that demonstrate the effectiveness of the method.
There are companies related to mining and crude oil extraction and then also water.
Joe, today we are leaving a particular time because water is very important.
We are in a so-called water emergency in all the world.
So for me, the first thing that we have to do is to scan the earth and to fetch, to find, to try and find other, let's say, opportunity to extract not salty water, because it's very important.
Have you looked at the labyrinths underneath the ones that were described by Herodotus that Ben Van Kirkwick has been talking about and his Uncharted X channel, where there is a huge atrium with a 40-meter metallic object that's a shape of a tic-tac and a map?
Now, are you absolutely convinced that this data is accurate, or have any of the criticisms of any of the people that are trying to debunk it, has any of that resonated with you and rang true?
These structures and this whole area, if this turns out to be something that you don't find just at the Giza Plateau, but around other parts of Egypt, I mean, there's always been a lot of speculation as to whether or not a civilization existed in sub-Saharan Africa, an advanced civilization that are now sand.
You could probably do that same sort of research there as well.
Yes, I am not very used on all this exposure on the internet.
It is something that I have to get used to this.
Yes.
My life is simple, Joe.
I live in Italy.
But now I repeat this.
It is time to go ahead and go on the Giza Plateau and in person I wish to see the effective structure, how they are and the purpose of all the plateau, what it is.
I wrote a project proposal, which is research and also not research, a proposal.
And is now our intention is to submit this proposal at the Egyptian authorities.
If you want, I can explain you this proposal.
Please.
We are involving the University of Ferrara, principal scientist, Professor Risa Vaccaro, Italian professor, she is a geologist, and other and other governmental, Italian governmental institutions that are very clever to do scans, in situ scans.
So we are not using my technique.
We use the state-of-the-art technique that it is recognized by science today.
And our intention is to concentrate the efforts on those shafts that I showed you, that we have seen, because we are not 99% convinced that, or sure, that those are natural entrances into the structures that are below, that are located below.
Because we have the vertical structures and you saw on the tomographies, you have also horizontal connections.
So how you explain it to these when you have these semi-sceptical scientists that are sitting down there and you're going to tell them, I'm about to rewrite human history.
Oh, they were they were listening me very well and they asking me uh things uh uh about uh how the uh everyone um the first thing that they ask me is how it works and that's good.
And so I slowly explain ex explain them how it works and how I arrived to to to make this presentation so to have our results and uh and so and so on.
And they they they someone of them is skeptical, someone a bit less skeptical.
Well, it just seems like if these shafts exist alone and they are at that depth that you describe and they are the dimensions you describe, it really does lend credence to what you're saying.
Because it seems like there's a purpose for those things.
And if they do go down to the area where all these structures are, it seems like there's something there.
He also had a theory that perhaps the lower chamber that's below the pyramid itself, that there was some mechanical device inside of there that was generating vibration.
Do you imagine if this entire structure was just built so that someone could have some sort of a bizarre out-of-body experience or psychedelic gateway experience?
It's fun for kids, but also would make them feel amazing, but also adding what this vibration stuff does and sound and music and all these other things.
You could put them all together and be like, you could feel like a god.
It's an interesting idea because you think people have always been fascinated by achieving novel experiences.
And what more novel experience than a 2,300,000 stone structure that's perfectly aligned to true north, south, east, and west, aligns to the stars of Orion's belt.
You lie inside a stone box and the vibrations hit you and you're in that box, boom, Naturally, you go out of the body.
Who knows what it does to the body and the mind, because we know that the mind is capable of producing endogenous psychedelic chemicals.
We also know that people have a very profound reaction to frequencies.
That's why sound hits us so hard and we love music and just vibration itself.
And this sound weapon that they just recently used in Venezuela, supposedly to knock out all Maduro's troops.
Maybe it can be also one more than one purpose, more than one scopus of the pyramids.
The pyramids intended to be, now I am 100% convinced that the pyramids can be considered the tip of the iceberg of something very huge that is composed by things that are below the earth and the pyramids that are up at the surface of the earth.
Yes, probably because they have to resonate with the universe.
In some, they have to resonate with the universe.
You know, the universe...
The universe jaw, it is not complicated.
It's simple.
Because the universe is constituted by things, the matter, the particles, the light, yes, but everything is regulated by some constants.
There are the constants.
So the velocity, the speed of the light, C three times ten to the eight kilometers per second.
Then you have, so the velocity of the light, so you have the electric constants, the magnetic constants that are that arranges very well the law of the universe.
So it is important that something that has to be well related to the place that we live, to the universe, has to contain very precisely the dimensions of recasting the constants of the universe.
This is something that I actually just talked to Graham Hancock about.
This is Stella, is a limestone inscription discovered in 1858 near the Great Pyramid complex at Giza.
And the text describes a pharaoh Khufu who ruled from 2589 to 2566 BC visiting the site and ordering restorations to existing structures, including a temple associated with the goddess Isis.
The stela refers to Isis as the mistress of the pyramid, a title that has raised questions about whether parts of the Giza Plateau were already considered sacred before Khufu's reign.
And although most Egyptologists date the stela itself to the 26th dynasty, more than 2,000 years after Khufu, its wording continues to draw attention because it portrays the pharaoh as a restorer rather than the original builder.
Whether the inscription provides older tradition or reflects later religious interpretation remains debated.
But if this is accurate, this describes Khufu as restoring the pyramids.
Now, this exists throughout history.
The temple of Tenochetlan, where the Aztecs had, when they described it, they described it as the place where the gods were born.
And they found it.
Like, people think the Aztecs made the pyramids.
They did not.
There was some sort of a previous civilization that lived in Mexico prior to the people that called themselves the Aztecs or what we call the Aztecs.
And they built.
So there's a long-standing history of people repurposing existing structures and claiming them as their own.
And if this stela is accurate, and this was also in Fingerprints of the Gods, Graham Hancock's book.
So I sent this to Graham, and his reaction was pretty interesting.
What he said to me was that There's a strong suggestion that the Khufu Pyramid might have been one of the three subsidiary structures alongside the Great Pyramid's eastern flank, and all that looked like damaging evidence against the orthodox chronology of ancient Egypt.
It also challenged the consensus view that the Giza pyramids had been built as tombs and only as tombs.
However, rather than investigating the statements from the Stella, the Egypt childifs, they chose to devalue them in his quotes.
They chose to say, ah, that's just inconvenient.
But if they are describing it that way, it seems like this is a long-standing tradition of people finding things that exist.
There's clearly ancient Egypt itself, dynastic Egypt, is a very complex society, very complex and very advanced society, even if they didn't build that stuff.
See if you can find some images of salt in the Great Pyramids, because it is quite fascinating.
And if there was some sort of a massive rise of sea and massive flooding, which is depicted in every single ancient religion, from Epic of Gilgamesh to the Hopi talk about it.
I mean, it's like almost all cultures have a story.
Obviously, Noah and the Ark and the flood in the Bible, but this salt.
And that's why the reason that I don't want that people goes to work inside the shaft because they're dangerous, can collapse the debris, can collapse, because you can have a bubble of air, and so it's dangerous.
You know, I mean, this is, it's not outside of the realm of possibility.
That's what's so crazy about this.
It just really does seem like we are getting more and more evidence that things are far older than conventional wisdom, than conventional, the conventional narrative that's taught in schools.
And if we see the rooms, all the structures that are currently inside, let's say the Chaos Pyramid, which I like it a lot, the Grand Gallery is very nice, fascinating.
They have a precision, incredible precision.
All those big, huge stones that is composing the Grand Gallery is very exciting.
Or Joe, I remember when I was young, very young, I used to uh I had a it uh how you say I had a sm a personal computer, very old one, and I was always playing all always on a on something that uh and there was the pyramids, they were all the pyramids.
And there in that meantime, I I realized that uh I liked the pyramids.
And so when you start to research on something that is our history, our past, our origins, because our origins are there.
So we have to fetch, we have to find what there is there because it is important to research our origin because in this meantime, humanity does not know, we don't know who we are.
We don't know our origins.
We don't know anything of who we are.
And most of the answers can be found in studying the pyramids.
And it is for me, it is something that I have always in my mind, only to know how they did, how they cut the stones, how they have transported the stones, and how, I don't know, how, how, how, everything.
And not only that, I think it will enhance tourism.
Because if this speculation proves to be fruitful and you start looking under there and you find that there is evidence to all this, it's just going to make more people want to go there.
And when the people that don't know, if you're hearing this, like what great flood?
That's just not, that's just myth.
There's a thing called the Younger Dryas Impact Theory, and the Younger Dryas Impact Theory group that's been studying this, they now know that there was impacts to the Earth that are around the 11,800-year mark, and then I believe again in the 10,000-year range.
Randall Carlson is probably the best guy to talk to about that, but that they find high levels of iridium, which is very common in space and very rare on Earth, but there's a layer of it.
They also find these nano-diamonds that they also discovered during the first Trinity explosion when they detonated the atomic bomb.
They find these microscopic glass particles that are created by the intense explosion interacting with the sand.
But which makes sense if there is a great flood that fills the pyramid with salt water, that it probably washed all that sand into that gigantic vertical shaft.
And I tell you, Joe, if we do the chemical exploration of death debris, we can find also a certain density of salt because where mixed in the past by salty water and debris and soils.
Well, that is also the problem with the labyrinth.
So the labyrinth that they have where there's this enormous atrium and this 40-meter-long metallic object that apparently is underneath there, and this is through ground-penetrating radar they discover this.
I don't think they know what that metal is either.
I think it's an unknown metal.
But they built a dam there, I believe in the 1960s, and to help the farmers.
And unfortunately, that flooded that whole area.
So because they changed the direction of the water and built this dam, the water table rose.
And that entire labyrinth is now filled with water.
But through ground-penetrating radar, they've been able to get this accurate assessment of the dimensions of it.
And then they go back to the descriptions of Herodotus, who described it.
See if you can pull that up.
Herodotus described it as greater than the Giza Plateau itself.
So these labyrinths, these corridors, these atriums, these huge passageways underneath the Great Pyramid area, more complex and more spectacular than the pyramids themselves.
These people living in Africa, however long ago, were so much more advanced than perhaps anybody that's ever existed, including us, just in a different way.
Just to remark the fact, Joe, that there is a difference between the water table, which of course is composed by drinkable water and the water that they found compounding the Osiris shaft, and the water that transported all the debris, but that water was salty water because of the Great Flood.
Which makes sense when you see the salt that's all over the pyramids.
This is Herodotus' quote.
I've seen it myself, and indeed words cannot describe it.
Though the pyramids beggar description, and each one of them is a match for many great monuments built by Greeks, this maze surpasses even the pyramids.
That is crazy.
That's crazy that he said that.
And have you ever seen any of the artistic renditions of what it looks like?
More impossible than, I mean, if you'd imagine with modern technology trying to recreate something like that, you're talking about an immense project that would cost hundreds of billions of dollars, if not more.
And the engineering involved in it.
I mean, you're an engineer.
The engineering involved in doing something like that.
And just how, how and where did they get the understanding to construct something like this?
And this is what screws up our idea of a linear timeline of human progression and civilization to go from caveman to modern 2026 human being.
We like to think that it was just, oh, we figured this out, then we figured the wheel out, and then it was agriculture.
Now here we are today with cars.
But more likely, there were some peaks and valleys.
We rose up to a very high level, probably during Egypt, and it was shattered down, and it took probably a long time before civilization rebuilt itself again.
We have the government that's constantly trying to censor people and control speech and limit your ability to express yourself and complain about things so they can continue to dominate resources.
We have a weird society today.
But it's also a society because of this access to information where you can discuss and explore things in a way that has never happened before.
And that is that's the most exciting thing about our time.
I want to, if I can, to explain you something that is maybe related to philosophy or to other things.
We have an example of how modern humans are a bit strange because we are not made, it is like that we are not made to research or to find the harmonics in our living.
Do you remember in the 80s when the cold fusion rises?
So maybe we are speaking about Fleshman and Pons that made for the first time they had a glass of water and inside they made a mini nuclear reactor inside.
They had some results that were very, very poor results, I know, but was a base to build something stronger.
They put away that experiment, so no, they debunked that experiment.
It was not good, it is not good because it is not possible.
And the example of the cold fusion is how we are, because cold fusion was devoted to find the energy using resonance.
Resonance.
Why?
How it works, cold fusion.
have two atoms of hydrogen, we start putting together these two atoms, but while we put together these two atoms, there are the atomic forces that tends to, no, I don't want to stay with the other atom.
But then there is a limit that the atoms fuse together and it transforms, they are transformed in helium plus energy because the mass difference.
And so you can do energy by fusion.
This is fusion, not cold fusion.
So you can have a fusion by forcing together the atoms that they don't want to stay together.
So the force, force together.
And that is hot.
Yes, that is hot fusion.
Cold fusion, you convince the two atoms to stay together naturally.
You have to find a third material that convinces the two atoms to stay together.
Like you say, I have a couple.
You have a couple, a girl and a man.
They don't want to talk one to each other.
If you put a third person between them, at the center of them, and she and maybe a third person convince the man and the girl to speak together and they will speak together.
Okay?
So the third material, which is palladium, they use that palladium.
Palladium has the physical property to make speak together the two atoms and without force them, they naturally transform into helium and they generate energy because the helium has a mass lower than the two atoms.
Because I tell you, today also hot nuclear fusion does not exist.
Because it is very difficult to make a huge reactor that uses the tokamaks or something related to laser that uses, that forces together the atoms to is something not natural.
Cold fusion was natural.
And so the pyramids are something related to vibrations, to harmonic resonance, to something like that.
Some of them a hundred tons carved from stones that who knows how they put them into position, but they carved them in this very strange way to absorb the impact of earthquakes, right?
The idea of this technology is that the reason why they're like a puzzle piece is because it would be much less likely to move in an intense earthquake.
E Gubbio, just a few words on this city that is a small town that is located in Perugia, where I live.
Look, the Italian, the authority of the city, of the town, asked me to perform a scanning around that Colosseum, that mini Colosseum that is located in Gubbio, because probably there is a huge Roman city, not so old, but it is a Roman city, that compounds that arena that is there.
It says it's currently known from fringe social media and YouTube style sources rather than former archaeological publications because it hasn't been explored, correct?
But I mean, who's doing that kind of work in Russia, especially now?
Deep underground shaft lined with large parallel megalithic stone blocks with walls described as straight and polished suggest artificial construction rather than a natural cave or fissure.
And this is all from our sponsor, Perplexity, that we run all our questions through.
And it's always been very accurate.
Said to lie somewhere between in the Russian caucus, often simply described simply as North Caucasus or Caucas Mountains, with videos and posts presenting it as evidence of unknown or very ancient civilization with advanced stone working techniques.
Crazy that they don't know who made this.
There's no accessible peer-reviewed archaeological articles, official Russian heritage records, or academic monographs to describe a site formerly named the Karahora shaft.
But just the fact that that exists and that a human made that or humans made that, that's crazy.
The whole thing is crazy.
Because it really does, like, anybody that, boy, modern archaeologists and people that are the gatekeepers of archaeological information are fighting an uphill battle.
Because like you can't, at a certain point in time, you have to give up and go, I don't know.
trying to it's I'm digging down a hole in it there's a post here on yes there are not so many like they're misinterpreting something This is Jay Anderson, who's been on the podcast recently.
We use this shaft, the OSIRIS shaft, like a benchmark because we are able to understand the effectiveness of our technique that is able to retrive the shape of the OSIRIS shaft.
Why the Osiris shaft?
Because it's a benchmark that we know exactly how it is established and so it accurately depicts the Osiris shaft.
It's very huge, it's 300 meters tall, has a height of 300 meters and 3 kilometers from one part to the other part of the dam.
So it contains a huge amount of water from the upper side, there is the water, that contains, and below there there is the river that the water comes out of from the reservoir that is on top.
Why the Musul Dam?
The Musul Dam has a problem.
It has been built on a a bed of Jeep gesso, how you say Jepsum, Jepsum.
And the Jeepsum is While it is in contact with water, it melts.
So the muscle dam is dangerous because it has a serious problem of stabilization.
In this case, there are a lot of satellites methods and synthetic virtual rather methods that are devoted to perform the so-called infrastructure monitoring.
And in this case, the muscle dam is crucial to be observed by radar.
In this case, I wanted to see this slide 37, please.
Here, inside the dam, look, there is a tunnel, the red line, the tunnel.
And here we have people that are working inside the tunnel.
And the task was, my technique is with my technique, it's possible to detect the tunnel.
We go in slide 38, okay, and we see on the right top there is the tunnel.
Just to explain you, where you see red, the vibration energy is high, so is red.
When you see blue, the vibration energy is low, it's low.
And inside the tunnel, because you have the air, you don't have vibration, so it's low.
And so you see the tunnel.
And so we were also able to detect slide 39, also the principal facility that are located inside the dam, which are the turbines, the turbines, the turbines, and other stuff, and all the mechanical machines.
This is all the mechanical machines that are located inside.
So when you have two lasers that go together and you can study the pattern, the interference pattern that coherent signals are generating, you can use an interferometer.