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What Happens When AI Recreates Building of Pyramids? This VIDEO will leave you speechless

A recent AI-generated video has sparked intrigue by depicting extraterrestrial beings involved in the construction of the Great Pyramids. This imaginative scenario suggests that these ancient marvels might not have been built solely by human hands but could have involved non-human entities equipped with advanced technology.

Shantanu Poswal
Last Updated : Tuesday, 25 February 2025
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The video starts with an unidentified flying vehicle (UFO) or unidentified aerial vehicle (UAV) ascending from the top of a pyramid.  As the video continues, onlookers observe gigantic beings that could be extraterrestrial in nature descend from the UFO.  These giant figures appear to walk and move about, constructing large pieces of stone as if they were constructing a pyramid. The film continues to demonstrate aliens shifting these enormous blocks into place effortlessly using advanced tactics such as sound levitation or aerial levitation.

This is a video produced by AI

Even if this movie is aesthetically beautiful, it's essential to remember that it was made by artificial intelligence and that it's only designed to intrigue the audience. It opens up the question of whether or not aliens were involved in building the pyramids, although there isn't any concrete evidence to support this hypothesis.

How did Egyptians actually build the pyramid?

For millennia, historians have been intrigued with the topic of how the pyramids were constructed by the Egyptians, but until today, they have no conclusive answer. From the prevailing hypothesis, the Egyptians used a sloping embankment made up of sand, brick, and soil that added up in volume as the pyramids were raised. Then sledges, rollers, and levers were utilized to pull the stone blocks up the ramp.  The Greek historian Herodotus writes that it took 20 years to construct the Great Pyramid and took around 100,000 laborers.  

The assumption that farm laborers could have worked on the pyramids seasonally, during periods when the Nile inundated their fields, is supported by this figure. But by the close of the 20th century, archaeologists uncovered evidence that indicated the job would have been done by a smaller, permanent staff of about 20,000, with the help of bakers, doctors, and other personnel.  Rather than laboring in shifts due to the agricultural season, veteran workers labored year-round, based on this more recent conception.