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According to Lauer, the second layout plan
provided that the intermediate chamber would act as a chapelle
ardente, while the gallery would be built as a dead-end hall for
storing the large granite blocks which would obstruct the whole
upward corridor.
In the end, this idea might have been
discarded by the builders. The upper- and antechambers were
furnished with a built-in blocking system which provided
sufficient safety for the upper storey, so the builders may have
deemed it unnecessary to obstruct the whole upward corridor and
thus limited the number of blocks to three.
The remaining granite stones were used for
building the upper chamber. They mounted a scaffolding akin to
the one formulated by Borchardt - and consistent with the various
details found in the gallery - in order to raise the blocks of
stone to the upper chamber.
Techniques for Lifting the Stone Blocks
The average weight of the blocks of stone in Cheops' Pyramid
amounts to 2,500 kilogrammes - except for the huge slabs on the
68-metre-high roof of the granite chamber and its outlet rooms,
near the centre of the building.
There was but one way in which ancient
Egyptians could lift those enormous slabs: the use of the
straight ramp made of bricks and earth.
Considering that vestiges of ramps were
found during archaeological explorations, the straight ramp
theory formulated by Borchardt and completed by Lauer was
unanimously accepted at that time.
However, the use of a straight sloping path
proves extremely laborious when it comes to reaching heights like
those in this pyramid, as the volume of the material on the ramp
could only be compared with that of the pyramid itself. The use
of a spiral ramp might have helped overcome this difficulty.
Even though no archaeological evidence has
confirmed it, the spiral ramp theory has been widely accepted
among scientific circles.
J.F. Lauer, an archaeologist who has
greatly helped elucidate this issue, suggested a variant to his
straight ramp model.
He postulates that ramps of increasing
steepness were placed one on top of the other, taking into
account both the gradual average-height decrease in the courses
as they approached the peak, and the fact that the huge stone
slabs are not found above the height of 68 metres in this
pyramid.
Furthermore, superimposed ramps make it
possible to limit their length from the foot of the pyramid to
300 metres.
The great advantage of this system is that
the ramps in the lower levels of the pyramid are extremely wide,
providing vast building surfaces. Their width decreases slightly
as each new row of stones is placed.
The outer path, on the other hand,
lengthens towards the south and towards the north, where a system
of large counterbalance baskets filled with sand, descending
along the face of the building, may have helped lift the heavier
blocks of stone.
A Different Proposal
It is clear that one of the objectives of pyramid builders was to
increase the height of their constructions.
In the case of Cheops's Pyramid they
achieved the maximum height of 147 metres - surpassing by far
that of the proceeding South Pyramid (103 metres) and North
Pyramid (92 metres) of the Dahshur Group.
This remarkable increase in height entailed
growing difficulties. Builders had to solve a number of
structural problems which were apparent both in Meidum and in the
South Pyramid, and they also had to confront ever-increasing
difficulty when raising the blocks of stone to much higher
positions.
Most probably, as construction evolved the
block-lifting techniques also varied. Thus, the difficulties that
the old construction methods entailed could finally be overcome.
Coinciding with the unprecedented height of
Cheops's Pyramid there is also an unprecedented feature in its
inner layout: the Grand Gallery.
Let us consider that both phenomena are
connected, that is to say, that the remarkable increment in
height has been achieved by applying a block-lifting method which
calls for the existence of an inner ramp with the characteristics
of the Grand Gallery.
In order to clarify my thesis, I shall
adopt the hypothesis that the gallery was used as an inner ramp
whereon a counterweight would slide (see Fig. 3)
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