A Peek Inside Two Secret Chambers

Digs & Discoveries September 1, 2011

Miniature cameras are providing archaeologists with a new way to explore the inaccessible parts of the tombs of two ancient kings, one in Egypt's Great Pyramid of Khufu and another at the Maya city of Palenque in southern Mexico.
SHARE:

Related Articles
How to Build a Pyramid (Feature, May/June '07)
Return to the Great Pyramid (Feature, July/August '09)

Miniature cameras are providing archaeologists with a new way to explore the inaccessible parts of the tombs of two ancient kings, one in Egypt's Great Pyramid of Khufu and another at the Maya city of Palenque in southern Mexico.

In Egypt, a robot carrying a flexible camera made the 213-foot journey through an eight-inch-square shaft that leads from the northern end of the Queen's Chamber. The robot progressed until it was blocked by a limestone "door." The pyramid has a total of four shafts. The ongoing research project is supposed to help scientists figure out what purpose they served, but so far it has only raised new questions. The robot's camera was able to peer through a hole in the door and take photographs revealing two copper pins with curved heads and some hieroglyphic numbers painted about 4,500 years ago in the space between the door and a second piece of limestone that also blocks the shaft. The purpose of the pins and the numbers is still unknown.

In Mexico, beneath a pyramid named Temple 20, a camera was lowered into a tomb through a six-inch-wide hole that was made by archaeologists in 1999. They had not been able to tunnel into the tomb because the temple is unstable. Now, the photographs have revealed that the tomb contains jade and shell artifacts as well as black-on-red wall paintings depicting at least nine figures. The tomb probably belonged to one of the early rulers of the site and dates to roughly 1,500 years ago.

  • Features March/April 2026

    Pompeii's House of Dionysian Delights

    Vivid frescoes in an opulent dining room celebrate the wild rites of the wine god

    Read Article
    Frescoed panels in the House of the Thiasus portray a satyr (left) and a woman (right)
    Courtesy Archaeological Park of Pompeii
  • Features March/April 2026

    Return to Serpent Mountain

    Discovering the true origins of an enigmatic mile-long pattern in Peru’s coastal desert

    Read Article
    Courtesy J.L. Bongers
  • Features March/April 2026

    Himalayan High Art

    In a remote region of India, archaeologists trace 4,000 years of history through a vast collection of petroglyphs

    Read Article
    Matt Stirn
  • Features March/April 2026

    What Happened in Goyet Cave?

    New analysis of Neanderthal remains reveals surprisingly grim secrets

    Read Article
    The Third Cave, one of the galleries in a cave system in central Belgium known as the Goyet Caves
    IRSNB/RBINSL