Manawatu Standard

Discovery ‘goldmine of informatio­n’

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Archaeolog­ists in Egypt stumbled upon a discovery dating back to more than 2,500 years ago near Egypt’s famed pyramids at an ancient necropolis south of Cairo.

The discovery which includes a mummificat­ion workshop and a shaft, used as a communal burial place, is located at the Saqqara necropolis of Memphis, the first capital of ancient Egypt. Memphis, a Unesco World Heritage Site, and its vast necropolis are home to a wide range of temples and tombs as well as the three renowned Giza pyramids.

The latest find, announced at a press conference yesterday, belongs to the Saite-persian Period, from 664-404 B.C. The site, which lies south of the Unas pyramid, was last excavated in 1900.

In the mummificat­ion workshop, an embalmer’s cachette holding a large collection of pottery vessels, bowels and measuring cups were found.

Archaeolog­ists believe the findings will reveal more about the oils used in the mummificat­ion process in the 26th Dynasty.

‘‘We are in front of a goldmine of informatio­n about the chemical compositio­n of these oils,’’ said Ramadan Hussein, the head of the German-egyptian mission, at the press conference.

Among the artifacts found were fragments of mummy cartonnage­s, canopic cylindrica­l jars and marl clay and faience cups.

Many will be displayed in the under-constructi­on Grand Egyptian Museum, the first phase of which is expected to be inaugurate­d later this year.

Archaeolog­ists also found a gilded silver mask on the face of a mummy in a badlydamag­ed wooden coffin. The mask, the first to be discovered since 1939, belongs to a priest.

‘‘The finding of this mask could be called a sensation,’’ Hussein said.

‘‘Very few masks of precious metals have been preserved to the present day, because the tombs of most Ancient Egyptian dignitarie­s were looted in ancient times.’’

Down the 30-meter-deep shaft is a host of burial chambers carved into the bedrock lining the sides of two hallways.

There lie several mummies, wooden coffins and sarcophagi.

‘‘It’s only the beginning,’’ added Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled al-anani. He told reporters that the sites will likely yield more discoverie­s after further excavation. - AP

 ?? AP ?? A photograph­er films a gilded silver mummy mask found on the face of the mummy of the second priest of Mut - part of the latest find at an ancient necropolis near Egypt’s famed pyramids.
AP A photograph­er films a gilded silver mummy mask found on the face of the mummy of the second priest of Mut - part of the latest find at an ancient necropolis near Egypt’s famed pyramids.

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