Hidden structural features inside Egypt’s Great Pyramid may have helped it withstand earthquakes, new study finds

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May 21, 2026

2 min read

Hidden structural features inside Egypt’s Great Pyramid may have helped it withstand earthquakes, new study finds

Constructed by ancient Egyptians, the Great Pyramid has survived multiple earthquakes through the ages—now researchers think they know why

By Jackie Flynn Mogensen edited by Claire Cameron

A lateral view of the Great Pyramid of Giza with detail on its weathered surface.

The Great Pyramid of Giza.

Nicola Micheletti/Getty Images

The Great Pyramid of Giza, also known as the Khufu pyramid, is among the most famous wonders of the ancient world. It is also a wonder that the structure is still standing—given that it was erected some 4,600 years ago and has had to withstand significant weathering and seismic activity over that time, including earthquakes in 1847 and 1992. Why the pyramid could withstand such trauma hasn’t been fully understood, but now scientists are beginning to unearth some answers.

In a new study published on Thursday in Scientific Reports, researchers took dozens of measurements from inside the Khufu pyramid to characterize its “fundamental frequency,” a measure that can inform how a building might respond during an earthquake.

You can think of a building’s fundamental, or natural, frequency like the sway of a swing, says Mohamed ElGabry, the study’s lead author and a professor at Egypt’s National Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics. It might take a lot of force to move the swing from a still position. But at a certain point, even just a small push to a moving swing can send it flying. A similar effect happens in structures: a building’s natural sway affects how it responds during “pushes”—or earthquakes. If a structure has the same frequency as the ground below it, that can amplify the effects of an earthquake, he says.

Jackie Flynn Mogensen is a breaking news reporter at Scientific American. Before joining SciAm, she was a science reporter at Mother Jones, where she received a National Academies Eric and Wendy Schmidt Award for Excellence in Science Communications in 2024. Mogensen holds a master’s degree in environmental communication and a bachelor’s degree in earth sciences from Stanford University. She is based in New York City

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