A Tiny Camera Revealed a Hidden Passage in the Great Pyramid

2026-03-140:08110modernengineeringmarvels.com

“We’re going to continue our scanning so we will see what we can do… to figure out what we can find out beneath it, or just by the end of this corridor,” said Mostafa Waziri, head of Egypt’s …

“We’re going to continue our scanning so we will see what we can do… to figure out what we can find out beneath it, or just by the end of this corridor,” said Mostafa Waziri, head of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities. In the Great Pyramid of Khufu, one of the world’s most studied monuments has yielded another interior space without a single stone being pried loose. A sealed corridor, about 9 meters long and roughly 2.1 meters wide, sits about 7 meters above the main entrance, tucked behind the pyramid’s chevron masonry and hidden for some 4,500 years.

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The discovery began not with excavation, but with muography. The method tracks muons, particles created when cosmic rays strike Earth’s atmosphere, as they pass through stone. Dense blocks absorb more of them; open spaces allow more through. What researchers get is not a photograph, but a density map, a kind of interior shadow that can hint at cavities inside structures too massive or too fragile to open by force.

That hint still needed confirmation. The ScanPyramids team combined several non-invasive tools, including ultrasound measurements and ground-penetrating radar, to identify a safe path for direct viewing. Then came the narrowest instrument in the sequence: a Japanese endoscope only 6 millimeters wide, inserted through a tiny joint between stones. The footage revealed an empty passage lined with rough-hewn blocks and capped by a vaulted ceiling, a finished space in a zone long assumed to be solid limestone. The result matters because muon imaging can show that a void exists, but it does not by itself distinguish a corridor from a gap, a chamber, or a construction pocket.

That distinction turns a technical anomaly into an engineering question. Specialists have linked the corridor to the pyramid’s internal load management. Its position near the entrance and behind the gabled stonework suggests it may have helped redirect the immense weight pressing down from above, much as the relieving chambers over the king’s chamber were designed to protect spaces below. Egyptian officials have also noted another possibility: that the corridor relates to a still-unmapped space deeper inside. Zahi Hawass described it as “a major discovery”, while the wider debate remains the same one that has shadowed Khufu’s pyramid for generations: the monument’s known chambers do not settle every question about its original internal plan.

The find also belongs to a longer arc of particle-assisted archaeology. In 2017, ScanPyramids identified a large void above the Grand Gallery, more than 30 meters in minimum length, using three separate muon-detection systems. Beyond pyramids, muon imaging has been used to study volcanoes, industrial structures, shipping containers, and damaged nuclear facilities, all places where seeing inside matters but drilling or dismantling carries risk.

Built around 2560 BC and once rising to 146 meters, the Great Pyramid still appears, from the outside, to be an argument in stone. Inside, discoveries like this corridor suggest something more intricate: a monument designed not only for scale, but for controlled stress, hidden spaces, and structural decisions that modern sensors can detect long before they can fully explain them.

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