There is now sufficient information available in the geometry to be able to analyse and solve the construction of the fascinating lower northern shaft of the Great Pyramid.
The lower northern shaft has three sections to it. The first section runs along a north-south plane from the lower chamber to just below the gallery. From this point the shaft continues upwards, but is also angled to the west (into the screen) until it reaches the same height as the top of the gallery, at which point it resumes its ascent on a north-south plane. Click here to zoom in on the lower section of the shaft.
The full details of the first exploration of this shaft can be found on the engineering team's website where the still images from the exploration robot's video camera can be seen.
There are several artifacts that have been recovered from inside this section of the shaft, some of which were found when the shaft was first opened in the 1800's and the rest of which were found during the robotics exploration in the 1990's. Click here to show the artifacts on the drawing.
As will be shown with irrefutable logic on the coming pages, ALL of these 7 artifacts are not only original parts of the Great Pyramid's architectural design and are over 4500 years old, but they are also essential items for understanding the design system within the building. The items, as numbered on the drawing, are
Neither of the two engineering teams that have explored the lower northern shaft using electronic robotics equipment have been able to get a scientifically valid reading of the angle of this shaft. The first team, "The Upuaut Project", report the angle as 'still unknown'. The second team, "The Djedi Project", despite allowing me to have a copy of the raw data from the lower southern shaft, would not provide me with the northern shaft data because "whatever rough measurements we have are meaningless".
It is clear from this that the floor stones of the lower northern shaft cannot be set in the architecture at a consistent angle and consequently, along the lower part of this shaft, the inclination readings from the robot's sensors as it moves from floor stone to floor stone fluctuates to such and extent that the average value of the ascent angle is meaningless.