others to experiment with pyramids, for I am convinced that there are unbelievably wide horizons to be explored in this area, and only by countless people experimenting on their own will new uses of the pyramids come to light. One need not hold a doctorate in physics or any other scientific field in order to experiment; an inordinary curiosity and the ability to make a simple pyramidal shape are sufficient to launch one into unravelling some of the mysteries left hidden by the proposed extraterrestrial visitors of ancient times. To be of any value, however, the experiments must be meticulously documented. The day, the time, the weather, where the experiment is carried out, whether it is indoors or out, exactly what is done step by step, room or outside temperatures, or whether near to metals, electrical apparatus or wiring, metal fences or expanses of water are all factors which must be taken into account and recorded, anything that later may help you to draw useful conclusions about your results. Controls should be made, one subject under pyramid conditions being used simultaneously with one or more subjects under normal conditions. In conducting pyramid experiments you should look daily for signs of change and note them meticulously, and above all be patient. Don't plant a seed one day and expect to have a plant six feet high the next. A plant takes just as long to develop inside a pyramid as it does outside, but in time you will see the tremendous difference in results, with respect to size. Also, don't keep moving plants around inside your the pyramid during an experiment; leave pots stationary so what you see is what you are getting. In later pages this book will show you how to make your own pyramids for experimentation; they can be constructed entirely from inexpensive materials equally as well as from costly ones. Cardboard, wire, plywood or anything rigid enough to retain the pyramid shape will suffice. The pyramid does not necessarily have to be solid; in many experiments just the outline shape is sufficient, provided that it is jointed at all corners and at the apex. Once you have made a discovery, record it on paper and put it into practice. Not only do you stand to gain a sense of achievement, but you might discover something of inestimable benefit to mankind in its titanic struggle for existence.