^^
There is a precedence in theory of using SAR satellite to discover underground structures from other scientists.
Brian Roemmele forwarded a post by a scientist, Prof Shane Ross on this subject.
https://x.com/RossDynamicsLab/status/19 ... wdJEw&s=19
https://x.com/i/grok/share/XUlWZEZIK94Vun6jLJZ6kpGqJ
There is a precedence in theory of using SAR satellite to discover underground structures from other scientists.
Brian Roemmele forwarded a post by a scientist, Prof Shane Ross on this subject.
https://x.com/RossDynamicsLab/status/19 ... wdJEw&s=19
Brian, I really appreciate you taking the time to dig into this. When I first saw posts about mega-structures beneath the pyramids, I was amazed and reshared them. Some called it nonsense—but I disagree. As a professor of aerospace engineering and engineering physics, I’m familiar with the individual technologies. What’s impressive is how they’ve been ingeniously combined to approach the research question. It’s reasonable—and the results are astounding!
Link to Grok 3 search on peer reviewed status of one of the paper shared by Shane Ross. The conclusion is it is peer reviewed but could be less rigorous than top level journals.Yes, SAR tomography like in the Giza discovery has been used for mundane situations, like detecting tunnels (tinyurl.com/2nnwjau8), underground military structures (tinyurl.com/29vhjcu9), infrastructure & utility detection (hexagon.com, softdig.com). Other tomography approaches, like using muons streaming out of the sun, has been used archaeologically, e.g., the Big Void in the Great Pyramid (ScanPyramids, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ScanPyram…).
https://x.com/i/grok/share/XUlWZEZIK94Vun6jLJZ6kpGqJ
Statistics: Posted by Hriday — 23 Mar 2025 08:37