Recent claims by scientists suggest a vast undiscovered site beneath the Pyramids of Giza, possibly linked to a legendary Hall of Records containing ancient wisdom. This idea has stirred debate among scholars, with notable Egyptologists arguing that there is no credible evidence supporting the Hall's existence. Experts like Dr. Roland Enmarch and Dr. Nicholas Brown denounce the concept as fictional, with parallels drawn to Atlantis, underscoring the need for substantial evidence in archaeological claims.
'I will believe something exists when the balance of credible evidence points towards such a thing existing or having once existed,' he scathingly told MailOnline.
'There's certainly no evidence of Hall of Records from ancient Egypt and it is linked to Atlantis, which also doesn't have any hard evidence of being true,' he told MailOnline.
However, most scientists agree that it is fictional. Dr Nicholas Brown, an Egyptologist at Yale University who has just published a new study on Tutankhamun's tomb, told MailOnline that there is 'no such thing' as the Hall of Records.
Dr Roland Enmarch, Reader in Egyptology at the University of Liverpool, said that the concept 'makes for great science fiction, but it is most definitely not science fact'.
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