Engineering data, mathematical analysis, and competing theories behind the construction of the Pyramid of Menkaure.
The bottom 25% of courses contain over 70% of the total mass. This is why the pyramid is extraordinarily stable — its center of gravity sits very low. The foundation courses use the largest blocks (up to 30 tonnes), while upper courses use progressively smaller stones.
Three modes of this simulation visualize competing theories about how the pyramids were built. Switch between them live with keys Q, W, E — or watch them rotate automatically in stream mode.
The Giza pyramids encode mathematical relationships that ancient Egyptians may or may not have intended. Whether by design or emergent from their construction methods, these ratios are present in the geometry.
This reconstruction models the pyramid as a stepped structure of uniform blocks. Each block is 1.0m × 1.0m × 0.5m. While the real pyramid used blocks of varying sizes, this simplified model preserves the correct overall geometry: base dimensions, slope angle, and total volume.