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135 The southern line of the Landing Corridor was a line connecting the twin-peaked Ararat with the highest peak in the Sinai penin- sula, the Harsag (Mount St. Katherine), and its twin, the slightly lower Mount Moses. The northern line of the Landing Corridor was a line extending from Ararat through the Landing Platform of Baalbek and con- tinuing into Egypt. There the terrain is too flat to offer natural landmarks, and it was thus, we are certain, that the Anunnaki pro- ceeded to build the artificial twin peaks of the two great pyra- mids of Giza. But where was this anchor to be erected? Here came into play an east-west imaginary line, arbitrarily con- ceived by the Anunnaki in their space sciences. They arbitrarily divided the skies enveloping Earth into three bands or "ways." The northern one was the "Way of Enlil," the southern one the "Way of Enki," and the central one the "Way of Anu." Separat- ing them were the lines known to us as the 30th parallel north and the 30th parallel south. The 30th parallel north appears to have been of particular— "sacred"—-significance. Holy cities from antiquity on, from Egypt to Tibet, have been located on it. It was chosen to be the line on which (at the intersection of the Ararat-Baalbek line) the great pyramids were to be built; and also the line which would indicate, in the Sinai's central plain, the site of the Spaceport (SP). A line in the precise middle of the Landing Corridor, the Landing Path, was to lead to the exact location of the Spaceport on the 30th parallel. This, we believe, is how the Landing Grid was laid out, how the site of the Spaceport was marked off, and how the great pyramids of Giza had come into being. By suggesting that the great pyramids of Giza were built not by Pharaohs but by the Anunnaki millennia earlier, we of course con- tradict long-held theories concerning these pyramids. The theory of nineteenth-century Egyptologists, that the Egyptian pyramids, including the unique three at Giza, were erected by a suc- cession of Pharaohs as grandiose tombs for themselves, has long been disproven: not one of them was found to contain the body of the Pha- raoh who was their known or presumed builder. Accordingly, the Great Pyramid of Giza was supposed to have been built by Khufu (Cheops), its twin by a successor named Chefra (Chephren), and the third, small one by a third successor, Menkara (Mycerinus)—all kings of the sixth dynasty. The Sphinx, the same Egyptologists presume, When Earth Was Divided