Discover the lost secrets of the ancients.
Throughout history, folklore, and mystery, tales have circulated of massive stones being moved through the air effortlessly, seemingly by means of sound. Bizarre? Well, yes, it is. That doesn’t negate the fact that sound was, and still remains, the key to the construction of the pyramids of Egypt, Stonehenge, the stone figures of Easter Island, and the massive stones at Baalbek, Lebanon. Were they the work of ancient humans, of equally ancient extraterrestrials, or of both?
How Antigravity Built the Pyramids delves into such stories and theories as:
A ninth-century story of a mysterious papyrus with the power to move large stones at the Giza Necropolis
The Mayan story of the construction of the Pyramid of the Magician, said to be overseen by a small humanoid who could whistle large stones into place
Native American stories of ancient priests being able to make stones light
Redfern argues it was not literally music and whistling that somehow raised stones with the weight of dozens of modern-day cars into the sky. Such a thing is not possible. But music and whistling have one thing in common: sound. That is, acoustics. Almost certainly, acoustic levitation was at the heart of these incredible feats.
No doubt as the centuries passed, the truth of the science behind acoustic levitation was lost and forgotten—and distorted, too—with little left than fanciful tales of music, whistles, curious papyrus, and strange metal rods that could achieve incredible feats in the air.
Today, we are finally starting to get a grasp on this incredible technology, a technology that may have been the work of ancient humans, aliens from faraway worlds—or, perhaps, a combination of the two.
Nick Redfern is the author of more than sixty books. He has been on many television shows, including Travel Channel’s In Search of Monsters, History Channel’s UnXplained, Ancient Aliens and Monster Quest, SyFy Channel’s Proof Positive, and the National Geographic Channel’s Paranatural. He is a regular guest on Coast to Coast AM.
Patrick Lawlor, an award-winning narrator, is also an accomplished stage actor, director, and combat choreographer. He has worked extensively off Broadway and has been an actor and stuntman in both film and television. He has been an Audie Award finalist multiple times and has garnered several AudioFile Earphones Awards, a Publishers Weekly Listen-Up Award, and many starred audio reviews from Library Journal and Kirkus Reviews.