To be fair, there is absolutely no scientific evidence to suggest that scientists have discovered a device that opens up a wormhole to travel across the galaxy, but they didn't not not say that there was one. So, y'know, technically, it could be there.

Most likely, however, is that it isn't. A team of Japanese and French scientists conducted two years of study on the Great Pyramid of Giza and discovered two voids - one large, one small - in its structure. The precise nature of the voids remains unclear, as neither are accessible through the normal passageways through the pyramid.

The voids were discovered using muography, which detects changes in density in large rock structures. At 140 metres high, the Great Pyramid - also known as Khufu's Pyramid, in honour of Pharoah Khufu - is the largest of the three pyramids of Giza. The void is said to be directly above the Great Gallery, and roughly mirrors its size.

Speaking to the BBC, archaeologist Mark Lehrer believes that the newly-discovered voids may simply be there for structural purposes, and not actual chambers. "It could be a kind of space that the builders left to protect the very narrow roof of the grand gallery from the weight of the pyramid."

Again, nobody's not saying it doesn't contain a Stargate - so, yeah, let's just say that there's something there and it could contain one. Or not.

 

Via BBC