The Association for Research and Enlightenment has periodically supported investigations at the Giza Plateau in hopes of finding the Hall of Records. In 1978, the ARE cooperated with
SRI International in an effort to detect possible chambers in the bedrock beneath the sphinx. Although
ground-penetrating radar showed possible anomalies near the paws of the sphinx, test drilling in the area revealed only natural fissures in the rock. In 1991, the ARE sent one of its members, Joseph Schor, as an official observer on a geological survey of the sphinx's environs, led by
Robert Schoch, in an effort to test Schoch's hypothesis that the sphinx was eroded by water and thus several millennia older than its conventional date. One of the survey's participants, the geophysicist Thomas Dobecki, argued that
seismography showed a possibly man-made chamber under the sphinx's right paw. These claims were incorporated in the 1993 television documentary
The Mystery of the Sphinx, which also mentioned Cayce's prediction about the Hall of Records. Shortly afterward, the authors Adrian Gilbert and
Robert Bauval put forward the
Orion correlation theory, which argues that the monuments at Giza were arranged according to stellar alignments from several thousand years before the conventional date of their construction. In 1995, the author
Graham Hancock published
Fingerprints of the Gods, in which he drew together the
sphinx water erosion hypothesis and the Orion correlation theory to argue that the Giza monuments were built by or under the influence of a lost civilization that was remembered in legend as Atlantis. Hancock, Bauval, and
John Anthony West, who had initially convinced Schoch to study the erosion of the sphinx, all advocated these claims and attracted wide publicity. Although Schoch argued that the sphinx dated to 7000 to 5000 BC, and the stellar alignments proposed by the Orion correlation theory could relate to a wide range of dates as far back as 12,500 BC, West, Bauval, and Hancock all came to support a date of 10,500 BC for the sphinx, under the influence of Cayce's prediction. Hancock and Bauval also implied that future finds at Giza could have a transformative impact on the world, reminiscent of Cayce's claim that the discovery of the hall would coincide with other dramatic changes. They connected these transformative events with the impending beginning of the
third millennium and with the astrological
Age of Aquarius. Beginning in 1996, Schor and
Florida State University sponsored a further survey of possible cavities in the rock on the plateau, including the anomaly near the sphinx that Dobecki identified. In 1998, the
Supreme Council of Antiquities, the government agency that oversees archaeological work in Egypt, permitted these investigators to drill into one of the anomalies they detected, near the Great Pyramid, as a test of how effective radar might be in finding man-made chambers. When the drilling revealed only a natural cavity, the council denied the investigators permission to drill elsewhere. As these investigations produced no sign of the Hall of Records, adherents of the ideas advocated by Hancock, Bauval and West focused their attention on the
"water shaft" or "Osiris shaft", a subterranean tomb west of the sphinx that was cut during the
Late Period ( 664–332 BC). Those who hoped to find the Hall of Records argued that this tomb might be connected to the hall. The shaft was first recorded by the Egyptologist
Selim Hassan in the 1930s but could not be fully explored because it was flooded. Spurred by the public interest, the Egyptologist
Zahi Hawass had the water pumped out and fully explored the chamber in 1999. Nothing matching Cayce's description has ever been found. Enthusiasm over the Hall of Records waned toward the end of the 1990s as the predicted window of time for its discovery passed, and as mainstream academic criticisms of the claims about Giza came to be more widely aired. Colavito writes that beliefs about the Hall of Records are motivated by "the idea that seeking out physical evidence of Atlantis or some other lost civilization would somehow prove that the spiritual values embodied by occult and New Age groups were objectively true... The search for the Hall of Records became a cudgel to be used against doubt, since the possibility that physical proof could be found removed the temptation to question the otherwise outlandish claims believers were asked to accept." ==References==