Nothing personal, but I have a problem with several of your statements.
Firstly, mammalian partenogenesis in the Bronze age is unfathomable. It's only recently been intentionally accomplished after five hundred year's accumulation of scientific knowledge, and only in a mouse and a rabbit. If this is, in fact, the only known record of human partenogenesis (and in mythology, it's not), there still is no verifiable proof of the event outside of a heavily redacted book that has undergone multiple translations, and whose source material is non-existant thus far. It is also noteworthy that from that time to this, as cultures across the world have become increasingly advanced and literate, there hasn't been another reported case...
Secondly, the ancient Egyptians did not seek knowledge of their gods in the pyramids. The pyramids were the burial structures *of* gods made flesh. Heavily armed guards and priests kept watch over many for decades after the death of the inhabitants, and maintained the funerary complexes daily, providing food and wine for the Pharaoh, accepting gifts on his behalf, and acting as an intermediary. These were not Bronze age tourist attractions.
Firstly, mammalian partenogenesis in the Bronze age is unfathomable. It's only recently been intentionally accomplished after five hundred year's accumulation of scientific knowledge, and only in a mouse and a rabbit. If this is, in fact, the only known record of human partenogenesis (and in mythology, it's not), there still is no verifiable proof of the event outside of a heavily redacted book that has undergone multiple translations, and whose source material is non-existant thus far. It is also noteworthy that from that time to this, as cultures across the world have become increasingly advanced and literate, there hasn't been another reported case...
Secondly, the ancient Egyptians did not seek knowledge of their gods in the pyramids. The pyramids were the burial structures *of* gods made flesh. Heavily armed guards and priests kept watch over many for decades after the death of the inhabitants, and maintained the funerary complexes daily, providing food and wine for the Pharaoh, accepting gifts on his behalf, and acting as an intermediary. These were not Bronze age tourist attractions.