What has knowing the best time of year to move home and the Pyramids of Giza got in common? Far more than anyone could have imagined it turns out.
Built around 4500 years ago, how those huge rocks weighing anything up to 15 tons that make up the Pyramids of Giza could have been moved has finally been solved by a group of eminent scientists led by Lirpa Tsrif of the University of Skcirt, Egypt.
After centuries of investigations and experiments, there has finally been a paper published that definitively explains, and proves, how the huge rocks of the Pyramids of Giza were moved.
What, you may wonder, has that to do with you determining the best time of year to move home.
Normally the best month to move is determined by price, removal company availability, when the kids are off of school, the weather, or when you have annual leave available.
But this year, the best month to move will be determined by just how easy and simple your home move will be, and this discovery will ensure your home move is the easiest ever.
You may also like to read: When is the Best Time to Move House when we look at not only the best seasons but months and even days to move home.
What is the Best Month to Move 2022?
Following the amazing discovery by Professor Lirpa Tsrif and her team, April 2022 could be the best time to move home.
To understand why that is, we need to look at what Professor Lirpa Tsrif has discovered.
The team of scientists never set out to solve the riddle of how the pyramids were built, the study was originally to determine the effect of passing meteorites on the Van Allen Belt and the earth’s magnetic fields.
Their study led them to simulate what will happen when 3 major time and space events occur within quick succession.
The 3 events they studied were:
- 20th March Spring Equinox 2022
- The Lyrid Meteor Shower 16-25th April 2022
- Eta Aquariid Meteor Shower 9TH April – 25th May 2022
In isolation, there is nothing extraordinary about these events, but when they happen in such quick succession, then there is an effect that they have named Stella Iocus.
The source of the Lyrid meteor is the comet c/1861 G1 Thatcher which orbits the sun once every 415 years.
So since the pyramids were built these meteors have only visited us about 100 times. And during each meteor pass, when in conjunction with an Equinox alignment, there were exceptional weather events or unexplained phenomena recorded.
It will be unique that this year the Eta Aquariid Meteor shower will be in our orbit at the same time as the Lyrid Meteors, not long after the Spring Equinox.
So the team set out to project how the two meteor groups in alignment would affect the earth’s magnetic fields, then if the Spring Equinox would have any further effect on that.
Their experiments show that during such a cosmic event the magnetic field around the earth, and particularly the Van Allen Radiation Belt, will become supercharged creating a vacuum that will reduce the effect of gravity by up to 34%.
The team of scientists was able to reverse plot the times of alignment for a number of cosmic events when the pyramids of Giza were being built.
They surmised that there would have been a period of almost 32 years when gravity was exceptionally lower than we have today.
The Egyptians had an intricate and deep understanding of the cosmos and how planets affected the earth.
They would have been easily able to predict when unusual lunar events would take place and how to take full advantage of the effect they had.
So with less gravity, the stones would be easier to move, the heavy stone tools they used would be lighter, and there would be less friction as they moved those huge stones.
In lab experiments, the scientists were able to easily move rocks during these simulated cosmic events. They could work faster and harder and achieved far more in a much shorter space of time.
So whilst it is generally accepted that the pyramids were built over hundreds of years, they could easily have been built within the 32 years of intense cosmic activity.
It is therefore easy to apply this logic to your home move and realise just how much easier and quicker it will be this April.
Talking of history, you may like to read How to Research the History of a House in which we help you discover how old your home is and the history that is contained within its walls.
Share your thoughts by leaving a comment