Utter Fabrication: The ‘Reese Report’ on Khafre Pyramid Scans

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The Voice Behind the Claim

Underground Khafre structures? In the shadowed corners of online media, Greg Reese has carved out a niche with his “Reese Report”. A series of videos often laced with bold assertions and conspiratorial flair.

Known for his ties to Infowars, Reese’s March 18, 2025, report claims a stunning discovery. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) scans of the Khafre Pyramid unveiled vast underground structures. Including five identical chambers and eight cylindrical wells descending 648 meters.

His narrative, amplified across Substack, Telegram, and Rumble, paints a picture of hidden technology and ancient secrets. Yet it crumbles under scrutiny, revealing itself as a fabrication woven from threads of speculation rather than fact.

The Fake Unveiled

Scan Macine

Reese’s report is a mirage, unsupported by credible evidence and contradicted by established research. Luis Alvarez’s seminal 1965 paper, “Search for Hidden Chambers in the Pyramids,” used cosmic-ray muon detectors to probe the Khafre Pyramid. Finding no hidden chambers; only solid rock surrounding known spaces.

This non-invasive technique is a precursor to modern muon tomography. Relying on the penetration of muons through dense material, revealing no anomalies beyond the pyramid’s documented structure.

Peter Tompkins’ “Secrets of the Great Pyramid”, pg. 272, confirms the absence of secret voids.

scans
Scan Data, Source: Science, VOL. 167 1970

The ScIDEP (Scientific Investigation of Egyptian Pyramids) project, focused on Khafre, employs muon radiography and has yet to report any such subterranean marvels or additional cavities either. SAR, a surface-imaging radar, lacks the depth penetration to detect structures 648 meters underground; Reese’s claim defies both physics and precedent.

Khafre
ScIDEP Project at the Egyptian Pyramid of Khafre

Suspiciously ScanPyramids is Down

Oddly, as Reese’s video gained traction, ScanPyramids.org, the official site of the ScanPyramids project, which has scanned Giza’s pyramids since 2015 using muon tomography and infrared techniques, went offline. This timing raises eyebrows.

The project, led by Cairo University and the French HIP Institute, documented voids like the “ScanPyramids Big Void” in Khufu’s Pyramid but found no such features in Khafre. Its sudden inaccessibility, just as fact-checkers might turn to its data, feels suspiciously convenient.

Is this a coincidence, a technical glitch, or a deliberate cyber-attack amid Reese’s misinformation? Update to this story can be found here at AncientHistoryX

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