Just watched a mostly tedious but every-now-and-then interesting (bit like one of FourWind's posts ;-) programme on BBC4 about how indigenous rocks influenced the builders of ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome (don't know if the programme got around to discussing Stonehenge because I didn't watch it to the end). Anyway, I wasn't aware that the Giza pyramids are constructed from calcium carbonate rock - same sort of rock from which Silbury is constructed. Now, you can tell me I'm a mad old fool but we have Silbury constructed from the same type of rock as the pyramids and built just a few years before them; we have Silbury constructed as a five-stepped 'pyramid' and we have similar stepped pyramids at Saqqara (are they also constructed from calcium carbonate?). We also have the place name of Kennet for the area around Silbury (the name Kennet is linked etymologically to the word cunt and is remakably similar to the Egyptian word meaning the 'fertile region'.
All this may be coincidence of course - then again it may not.