The UFO Hidden Under an Egyptian Pyramid
Analysis Summary
Summary
In 2025, an independent researcher discussed a UFO in Egypt on the Joe Rogan podcast. He mentioned a scan revealing a 40-meter metallic tic-tac-shaped object located 200 feet below the sand, near an ancient pyramid. This pyramid sits above a lost structure described by the Greek historian Herodotus as more impressive than the pyramids of Giza. In 2008, geophysicists attempted to map the area but were halted by the Egyptian government for national security reasons. The discovery of the tic-tac-shaped object has led to speculation about its origins and connections to ancient history. The encounter has sparked ongoing interest and debate among researchers and the public regarding the implications of such findings.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The video discusses claims of a buried tic-tac-shaped object beneath the Hawara pyramid in Egypt, linking it to historical accounts and modern scans. It highlights government secrecy surrounding archaeological digs and the implications of recovered craft potentially being of non-human origin.
A 40 m long metallic tic-tac-shaped object is reportedly buried beneath the Hawara pyramid, with government efforts to suppress excavation.
Mark Gagndon
“There's a UFO in Egypt.”
Bob Lazar
“I think at least one of them was a part of an archaeological dig.”
David Fraver
“It was about 40 ft long, shaped like a tic-tac mint.”
Ben Van Kirkwick
Zahi Hawass
Managed by: Gent University
Scan the Hara site with ground penetrating radar
A 40 m long metallic tic-tac-shaped object is sitting in a giant underground room 200 feet below the sand, next to a 4,000-year-old Egyptian pyramid.
The Egyptian government allegedly shut down a project to map what was underneath the pyramid in 2008 on national security grounds.
Bob Lazar mentioned that at least one of the recovered craft in US custody was found during an archaeological dig.
The underground structure at Hara is a multi-level complex with at least three to four distinct levels extending to a depth of roughly 60 to 100 meters.