Does an ancient pyramid hide the true measure of our world?
This book traces a bold claim about a single, ancient coffer and its supposed link to British units of weight and capacity, challenging long-held ideas about metrology and measurement history.
In a clear, evidence-minded style, the author surveys old statutes, ancient volumes, and modern calculations to ask whether the Pyramid’s coffer really shaped the bushel, the quarter, or other standard measures. The argument weighs the coffer against centuries of British and American practice, with careful attention to units, volumes, and the evolution of standards.
- Understand how historical measures were defined and how they changed over time
- See how experts interpret the coffer’s capacity and its possible role in ancient and modern systems
- Learn about the testing ideas used today to verify standard measures, like precise filling and capillarity considerations
- Explore the debate around whether a single object could truly serve as a universal standard
Ideal for readers curious about the history of measurement, archaeology, and the Great Pyramid’s scientific mysteries.