Filippo Biondi
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So
hopefully, and I think that we're doing that.
So thank you for doing a great job answering the question.
I guess, so I'm trying to visualize what it might look like beneath the pyramids.
And so when I look underneath the pyramids and I see that science or whoever is telling me that there's about a hundred feet of solid limestone bedrock underneath the period, and then
the pyramid.
And then beneath that, you have more solid, you have more limestone bedrock, but it's all within this quote unquote water table.
And so you're right.
That doesn't mean that there's these huge gaps and swimming pools at that point and below.
It means that the water is there and
and it's infiltrated the limestone, and it's created gaps and fissures, and it's a very pliable, moist environment, basically.
So when I hear that, and I understand that that's what it's like under there, and that when you dig to that level, you're going to be able... If you put a drill down to that level, you're going to be able to pump water out of that
area just like we do here when we install wells.
So I guess my question is like, you know, these structures that look like they go down, if that whole area is already limestone and what we're seeing with the tubes is just a solid tube of limestone, where...
what is around the solid tube of limestone?
Were they removing the bedrock material to expose the tubes that were already there?
And if so, then what is around those tubes?
Is it sand?
Is it water?
Is it more limestone?