China has a bunch of Pyramids. There are approximately forty of them, and they were built thousands of years ago. Just as the Pyramids of Egypt are curiously aligned, the Chinese pyramids, too, feature an intricate alignment that experts were unable to fully understand.

And while the Chinese Pyramids may not be as famous and spectacular as those in Egypt, they share similar characteristics with them.

They are aligned with the cardinal points, but very little is known about them, and there is something that has always intrigued experts.

While some of those pyramids show a perfect alignment to the North, some of the Chinese Pyramids have a small deviation of almost 14 degrees. Some were built to align with the cardinal points, but others seem to have been built with an error.

But were they?

Is that deviation the result of a mistake made by its builders? Perhaps, but an Italian scientist believes he has an answer.

Italian astronomer Giulio Magli has proposed a really interesting hypothesis. Maybe the builders of the Pyramids did not want to align the structures to the North, but rather to the North Star.

According to Magli’s study, which investigated more than 40 of such structures, some of the Chinese Pyramids were not oriented to the cardinal points but rather built to point in alignment with the North Star.

Magli takes as reference the movement of our planet known as the precession of the equinoxes, the axis on which Earth rotates leans in one direction as it orbits the Sun, pointing towards two spots in the sky called the celestial poles. This takes about 25,700 years to complete.

That means that if the North Pole and the Polar Star are aligned today, they were not in the same position 2,000 years ago.

And all of that begins to make sense. In fact, according to scholars, the North Star was an important celestial object in Chinese tradition, as it was seen as the great emperor of the heavens.

This is why some experts believe that the builders of some of the Chinese pyramids decided to stop aligning the structures to the cardinal points and align them with the mighty North Star.

Using satellite images and field surveys, Magli discovered two’ families’ of monuments in the northwestern region near Xian, along the Wei River.

One family of monuments aligns with the cardinal points – North, south, east, and west. But the other family of monuments does not. It used to align with the North Star.

The study was published in Archaeological Research in Asia.