While many people usually associate them with the ancient cultures of Egypt and Central America, the pyramids, both ancient and modern, can be found at a variety of locations around the globe, including:
- Cairo/Giza — the most famous pyramids of all, the Giza Pyramids, just outside modern Cairo
- Abusir
- Dahshur
- Meidum — one of the earliest pyramids built by the ancient Egyptians
- Saqqara
- Paris/1st arrondissement (central Paris) — the Louvre Museum is home to the most famous modern pyramid, built in glass and steel
- Rome/Aventino-Testaccio — the Italian capital has a famous steep-sided pyramid, built as an ancient cenotaph for a nobleman's tomb
- Chichen Itza
- Palenque
- Teotihuacan — some of the largest pyramids of the world in what was once the largest city of the Pre-Columbian Americas
- Meroë — the site of the pyramids built by the Nubians, the southern neighbours of the ancient Egyptians
- Merowe — downriver from Meroë, Jebel Barkal near Merowe is the site of another set of Sudanese pyramids
- Las Vegas — a large pyramidical structure is to be found at a Las Vegas casino
- Long Beach — the gymnasium for the basketball and volleyball teams on the California State University, Long Beach campus is an impressive 18-story-tall blue pyramid
- San Francisco — the Transamerica Pyramid is an iconic skyscraper built in the shape of a very narrow pyramid
See also
[edit]- Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay/Pyramid Rock reef and Shark Alley — a dive site in South Africa, marked by and named for a pointed rock above it
- Pyramid Lake — a lake in the US state of Nevada, named after a pyramid-like limestone formation that emerges from its waters
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