Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "stoney"
Date: 09 Feb 2006 02:06:14 PM
Object: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/
Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922
Updated: 2:57 p.m. ET Feb. 9, 2006
CAIRO, Egypt - American archaeologists have uncovered a pharaonic-era
tomb in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings, the first uncovered there since
King Tutankhamun’s in 1922, Egypt’s antiquities chief announced.
The 18th Dynasty tomb included five mummies in intact sarcophagi with
colored funerary masks along with more than 20 large storage jars still
with their with pharaonic seals intact, Zahi Hawass, head of the Supreme
Council of Antiquities, said in a statement Wednesday.
Still unknown is who was the owner of the tomb. U.S. archaeologist Kent
Weeks, who was not involved in the discovery but has seen photographs of
the tomb’s interior, said its appearance suggested it did not belong to
a king.
“It could be the tomb of a king’s wife or son, or of a priest or court
official,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday.
No matter, its discovery shatters the nearly century-old perception that
there was nothing left to discover in the Valley of the Kings, where it
had long been believed that the 62 previously known tombs were all there
was, he said.
Weeks made the last major discovery in the valley. In 1995, he opened a
previously known tomb and found it was far larger than expected: more
than 120 chambers, which he determined were tombs for sons of the
pharoah Ramses II.
The newly discovered tomb is a single chamber, meaning it was likely
intended for one mummy, he said. Other sarcophagi — or even all of them
— may have been put in later, Weeks said.
In later dynasties, high priests fearing grave robbers took mummies from
their original sites and stashed them elsewhere. Even after the
pharoanic era, mummies were moved either to protect them or to hide
them, he said.
Hawass did not specify who was believed buried in the tomb. The
antiquities chief was scheduled to visit the site Friday to announce
more details.
A University of Memphis team of archaeologists led by Otto Schaden found
the tomb 12 feet below the ground, buried under rubble and stones 15
feet from Tut’s tomb, Hawass said. The statement didn’t say when the
tomb was found.
Inside the rectangular tomb, the five wooden sarcophagi were surrounded
by the jars, which appeared placed haphazardly, suggesting the burial
was completed quickly, Hawass said.
The 18th Dynasty, from around 1500 B.C. to 1300 B.C., was the first
dynasty of the New Kingdom, the pharaonic empire than lasted until
around 1000 B.C. and made its capital in Thebes — the present day city
of Luxor, 300 miles south of Cairo. The Valley of the Kings was used as
a burial ground throughout the New Kingdom, though contrary to its name
not all the tombs are of kings.
The new tomb will be called KV63, adding to the previously known sites
labeled from KV1 to KV62, which is the tomb of Tutankhamun, uncovered by
Howard Carter in 1922. KV5 is the tomb of Ramses II’s sons.
“It clearly proves that the Valley of the Kings is still not exhausted,”
Weeks said. “There are probably more tombs to be found in it.”
© 2006 The Associated Press
--
Fundies and trolls are cordially invited to
shove a wooden cross up their arses and rotate
at a high rate of speed. I trust you'll
be 'blessed' with a cornucopia of splinters.
.

User: "Michael Gray"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 07 Feb 2006 06:22:04 AM
On Thu, 09 Feb 2006 12:06:14 -0800, stoney <stoney@the.net> wrote:
- Refer: <s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com>

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922

Updated: 2:57 p.m. ET Feb. 9, 2006

CAIRO, Egypt - American archaeologists have uncovered a pharaonic-era
tomb in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings, the first uncovered there since
King Tutankhamun’s in 1922, Egypt’s antiquities chief announced.

The 18th Dynasty tomb included five mummies in intact sarcophagi with
colored funerary masks along with more than 20 large storage jars still
with their with pharaonic seals intact, Zahi Hawass, head of the Supreme
Council of Antiquities, said in a statement Wednesday.

Still unknown is who was the owner of the tomb. U.S. archaeologist Kent
Weeks, who was not involved in the discovery but has seen photographs of
the tomb’s interior, said its appearance suggested it did not belong to
a king.

“It could be the tomb of a king’s wife or son, or of a priest or court
official,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday.

No matter, its discovery shatters the nearly century-old perception that
there was nothing left to discover in the Valley of the Kings, where it
had long been believed that the 62 previously known tombs were all there
was, he said.

Weeks made the last major discovery in the valley. In 1995, he opened a
previously known tomb and found it was far larger than expected: more
than 120 chambers, which he determined were tombs for sons of the
pharoah Ramses II.

The newly discovered tomb is a single chamber, meaning it was likely
intended for one mummy, he said. Other sarcophagi — or even all of them
— may have been put in later, Weeks said.

In later dynasties, high priests fearing grave robbers took mummies from
their original sites and stashed them elsewhere. Even after the
pharoanic era, mummies were moved either to protect them or to hide
them, he said.

Hawass did not specify who was believed buried in the tomb. The
antiquities chief was scheduled to visit the site Friday to announce
more details.

A University of Memphis team of archaeologists led by Otto Schaden found
the tomb 12 feet below the ground, buried under rubble and stones 15
feet from Tut’s tomb, Hawass said. The statement didn’t say when the
tomb was found.

Inside the rectangular tomb, the five wooden sarcophagi were surrounded
by the jars, which appeared placed haphazardly, suggesting the burial
was completed quickly, Hawass said.

The 18th Dynasty, from around 1500 B.C. to 1300 B.C., was the first
dynasty of the New Kingdom, the pharaonic empire than lasted until
around 1000 B.C. and made its capital in Thebes — the present day city
of Luxor, 300 miles south of Cairo. The Valley of the Kings was used as
a burial ground throughout the New Kingdom, though contrary to its name
not all the tombs are of kings.

The new tomb will be called KV63, adding to the previously known sites
labeled from KV1 to KV62, which is the tomb of Tutankhamun, uncovered by
Howard Carter in 1922. KV5 is the tomb of Ramses II’s sons.

“It clearly proves that the Valley of the Kings is still not exhausted,”
Weeks said. “There are probably more tombs to be found in it.”

© 2006 The Associated Press

Cooool...
.

User: "Lörd Ph˙ltęr"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 10 Feb 2006 07:49:22 AM
stoney <stoney@the.net> had me ROTFL with:
news:s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922

Fucking HELL Stoney, NOW the repugs are gonna go lookin for oil there...
--
Lörd Ph˙ltęr
Alt.Atheism #1938
Denizen of Darkness #44 & AFJC Antipodean Attaché
http://www.jesusneverexisted.com
.
User: "Olrik"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 10 Feb 2006 10:47:22 PM
wrote:

stoney <stoney@the.net> had me ROTFL with:
news:s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922


Fucking HELL Stoney, NOW the repugs are gonna go lookin for oil there...

They probably already have...
--
Olrik
aa #1981
Qualified SMASH member
EAC Chief Food Inspector, Bacon Division
.

User: "Robibnikoff"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 10 Feb 2006 08:08:24 AM
"Lörd Ph˙ltęr" <phylter@hsotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9766DDB92357Fcogitoergosum@61.9.191.5...

stoney <stoney@the.net> had me ROTFL with:
news:s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun's in 1922


Fucking HELL Stoney, NOW the repugs are gonna go lookin for oil there...

SNORT!
Dang, at least it was only water <reaches for napkin>
--
Robyn
Resident Witchypoo
#1557
.

User: "stoney"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 10 Feb 2006 04:45:41 PM
On Fri, 10 Feb 2006 13:49:22 GMT, "Lörd Ph˙ltęr" <phylter@hsotmail.com>
wrote in alt.atheism

stoney <stoney@the.net> had me ROTFL with:
news:s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922


Fucking HELL Stoney, NOW the repugs are gonna go lookin for oil there...

I know....those jars are going to come up missing.
--
Fundies and trolls are cordially invited to
shove a wooden cross up their arses and rotate
at a high rate of speed. I trust you'll
be 'blessed' with a cornucopia of splinters.
.
User: "Michael Gray"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 07 Feb 2006 07:58:20 PM
On Fri, 10 Feb 2006 14:45:41 -0800, stoney <stoney@the.net> wrote:
- Refer: <1s5qu1pc3v4sg6a709hjv1oinu7ee6auuk@4ax.com>

On Fri, 10 Feb 2006 13:49:22 GMT, "Lörd Phÿltêr" <phylter@hsotmail.com>
wrote in alt.atheism

stoney <stoney@the.net> had me ROTFL with:
news:s28nu1516a9sh5j0gpetdshuqqpmj5sa9d@4ax.com:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun’s in 1922


Fucking HELL Stoney, NOW the repugs are gonna go lookin for oil there...


I know....those jars are going to come up missing.

Perhaps that's where the WMDs are??
.



User: "Mike Painter"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 10 Feb 2006 01:15:59 PM
stoney wrote:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun's in 1922

Here's the BBC link. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4700032.stm
The side bars are interesting also and one leads to this
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1024779.stm which shows how easy
it was to align the pyramids with true north - for a while.
"Kate Spence is from the University of Cambridge. She developed her theory
while trying to explain the deviations in the alignment of the bases of many
pyramids from true north. "
.
User: "stoney"

Title: Re: Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings 11 Feb 2006 11:28:00 AM
On Fri, 10 Feb 2006 19:15:59 GMT, "Mike Painter"
<mddotpainter@sbcglobal.net> wrote in alt.atheism

stoney wrote:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11252094/

Intact tomb found in Egypt's Valley of Kings
First such discovery in the area since Tutankhamun's in 1922


Here's the BBC link. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4700032.stm

One of the sidebars at the article below leads to:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/325290.stm
Thursday, 22 April, 1999, 12:01 GMT 13:01 UK
Prehistoric Moon map unearthed

The side bars are interesting also and one leads to this
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1024779.stm which shows how easy
it was to align the pyramids with true north - for a while.
"Kate Spence is from the University of Cambridge. She developed her theory
while trying to explain the deviations in the alignment of the bases of many
pyramids from true north. "

Wednesday, 15 November, 2000, 20:59 GMT
Pyramids lined up with the stars
By BBC News Online science editor Dr David Whitehouse
Ancient Egyptian astronomers aligned the pyramids due north by using two
stars that circle the celestial polar point.
Nearly 4,500 years ago, each star was about 10 degrees from the
celestial pole which lay directly between them. When one star was
exactly above the other in the sky, astronomers could find a line that
pointed due north.
But the alignment was only true for a few years around 2,500 BC. Before
and after that time, the stars deviated from the north-south line and
anyone using the stars to plot a direction would have made errors.
And it is these mistakes that a British Egyptologist now believes can be
used to estimate very accurately when the pyramids were built. Her
theory suggests that the Great Pyramid at Giza was constructed within 10
years of 2,480 BC.
'Indestructible' stars
Kate Spence is from the University of Cambridge. She developed her
theory while trying to explain the deviations in the alignment of the
bases of many pyramids from true north.
She believes the ancients may have used a pair of fairly bright stars,
which in 2,467 BC lay precisely along a straight line that included the
celestial pole.
"We know that the ancient Egyptians were extremely interested in the
night sky, particularly the circumpolar stars," she told the BBC.
"These circle around the North Pole, and as you can always see them, the
Egyptians always referred to them as 'The Indestructibles'.
"As a result, they became closely associated with eternity and the
king's afterlife. So that after death, the king would hope to join the
circumpolar stars - and that's why the pyramids were laid out towards
them."
Ancient astronomy
The north-finding stars were Kochab, in the bowl of the Little Dipper
(Ursa Minor), and Mizar, in the middle of the handle of The Plough or
Big Dipper (Ursa Major).
An Egyptian astronomer would have held up a plumb line and waited for
the night sky to slowly pivot around the unmarked pole as the Earth
rotated.
When the plumb line exactly intersected both stars, one about 10 degrees
above the invisible pole and the other 10 degrees below it, the sight
line to the horizon would aim directly north.
However, the Earth's axis is unstable and wobbles like a gyroscope over
a period of 26,000 years. Modern astronomers now know that the celestial
north pole was exactly aligned between Kochab and Mizar only in the year
2,467 BC.
Either side of this date, the ancient astronomers trying to find true
north would lose some accuracy.
Writing in the journal Nature, Kate Spence shows that the orientation
errors of earlier and later pyramids faithfully track the slow drift of
Kochab and Mizar with respect to true north.
And because the error in the Kochab-Mizar alignment can be readily
calculated for any date, the error in each pyramid's orientation
corresponds to a period of several years.
Owen Gingerich, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, said: "Spence has come up with an ingenious
solution to a long-standing mystery."
/end
--
Fundies and trolls are cordially invited to
shove a wooden cross up their arses and rotate
at a high rate of speed. I trust you'll
be 'blessed' with a cornucopia of splinters.
.



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