Cutting through the layers
Arguments proposing a date for the Sphinx that is much earlier
than 4th Dynasty Egypt are based on a misreading of the Giza
geology.

Giza geological formation
The Sphinx is carved from the natural limestone of the Giza
Plateau known as the Mokkatam Formation. An Eocene-period
sea retreated 50 million years ago, leaving an embankment that became
the north-northwest part of the Giza Plateau.
As the sea receded, a shallow lagoon formed above a shoal
and coral reef in what is now the south-southeast part of
the Plateau. Over millions of years, carbonate mud petrified
to become the layers from which the pyramid builders quarried
limestone blocks and from which they carved the Sphinx.
The Sphinx within the Giza geology
The Sphinx is cut from the lowest layers of the Mokkatam
Formation, those layers lying directly on the harder petrified
reef. We label the Sphinx geological layers Member I,
Member II, and Member III after the work of geologist K. Lal
Gauri (K.L. Gauri, Geoarchaeology, 1995).
The lowest stratum of the statue is the hard, brittle rock
of the ancient reef, Member I. This layer rises to a height
of 12 feet at the Sphinx’s rump and only two to three
feet at the paws.
Most of the Sphinx body is cut into Member II, seven layers
that alternate softer and harder as they rise in elevation.
Member III, from which the neck and head are carved, is softer
at the neck and harder at the head. This is good building
stone, which is why most of it was quarried away. Member III’s
durability explains the remarkable preservation of the Sphinx’s
face while the statue’s body has been ravaged by weathering.
One popular theory about an older age for the Sphinx states
that an Old Kingdom tomb cut from the “exact same layers
as the Sphinx” shows a pattern of weathering that is
different than that of the Sphinx quarry walls. The theory posits
that the Sphinx and the exterior of the tomb of Debehen (contemporary
with Menkaure, 2490-2472 BC) should have weathered exactly
the same unless the Sphinx was older and was weathered by
water during a wetter period.
In fact, the tomb of Debehen is some 418 meters (1371 feet)
west-southwest of the Sphinx and approximately 27 meters (88.5
feet) higher in elevation; it’s not in the same series
of layers. The difference in weathering is due to different
physical properties of the rock and to different conditions
of the environment, not the age of the monuments.
Long-term deterioration
Until recent years, the Sphinx was still disintegrating. In the 1980s, two sizeable
stones fell from the statue: masonry veneer from the left
hind paw in 1981 and a large piece of bedrock from the right
shoulder in 1988.
On any windy day, you can watch large flakes of limestone
blow off the walls of the Sphinx quarry. The Supreme
Council of Antiquities’ decade-long restoration in the
1990s was only the latest of the repairs to the Sphinx that
began at least in the New Kingdom (1550-1070 BC).
If the Sphinx erodes so rapidly, there’s no requirement
to set an age older than 4,500 years to explain its present
state of deterioration. Aside from the geology, we can present
other evidence that ties the Sphinx
to Pharaoh Khafre’s building program at Giza.
(See also, Hawass and Lehner, "The Sphinx: Who built it and why?,")
Archaeology, Sept/Oct 1994, pp. 30.
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