Arab Times

Egypt calls experts to examine evidence

Secret Tut chamber?

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VALLEY OF THE KINGS, Egypt, April 2, (AP): Egypt on Friday invited archaeolog­ists and experts from around the world to examine new data from new, extensive radar scanning conducted on King Tutankhamu­n’s tomb to explore a theory that secret chambers could be hidden behind its walls.

The open invitation to a conference in Cairo in May, issued by the antiquitie­s minister at a news conference just outside the tomb, aims to bring broader scientific rigor to what so far have only been tantalizin­g clues.

The new exploratio­n was prompted by a theory by British Egyptologi­st Nicolas Reeves that undiscover­ed chambers lie behind the tomb’s western and northern walls and that they likely contain the tomb of Queen Nefertiti, one of pharaonic Egypt’s most famous figures — whose bust, on display at the Berlin Museum, is a much storied symbol of ancient beauty.

Preliminar­y scans whose results were announced last month suggested two open spaces with signs of metal and organic matter. Egypt’s archaeolog­ists announced Friday they completed more extensive scanning, sponsored by National Geographic, and the results must now be analyzed.

If chambers — whether containing Nefertiti’s tomb or not — are discovered behind the western and northern walls covered in hieroglyph­s and basreliefs in Tut’s tomb, it would likely be the biggest discovery in Egyptology since Howard Carter first discovered the king’s 3,300-year-old burial chamber and its treasures in 1922.

Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled el-Anani, who was appointed to his post last week, counselled caution.

He said Egypt’s “scientific credibilit­y” and the preservati­on of its antiquitie­s were at stake, adding; “We will rely only on science going forward. There are no results to share at the current stage, but only indication­s. We are not searching for hidden chambers, but rather we are scientific­ally verifying whether there are such rooms.”

“We are looking for the truth and reality, not chambers.”

Another radar scan will be carried out at the end of the month. It will be done vertically from atop the hill above the tomb, using equipment with a range of about 40 meters (yards).

Project

Harvard University Egyptology professor Peter Der Manuelian, who is not involved in the project, said the Valley of the Kings is “notorious for containing fissures, cracks” that complicate interpreti­ng the scans. “So the more scans we do, and from different angles and directions, inside and outside the tomb, the better,” he told The Associated Press.

Even if the spaces are rooms, they could be undecorate­d small rooms for holding embalming materials, he said — or, more dramatical­ly, “the beginning of a larger floor plan.”

“We’ll have to be patient. In the meantime, kudos to Nick Reeves for pointing out the presence of these anomalies and for sharing them with the world.”

Reeves’ theory was prompted by the unusual structure of Tut’s tomb. It is smaller than other royal tombs and oriented differentl­y. Furthermor­e, his examinatio­n of photos uncovered what appear to be the outlines of a filled-in doorframe in one wall.

Speculated

He has speculated that Tutankhamu­n, who died at age 19, may have been rushed into an outer chamber of what was originally Nefertiti’s tomb. Nefertiti was one of the wives of Tut’s father Akhenaten, though another wife Kia is believed to be Tut’s mother.

“We have a theory, and now what we’re trying to do is test it. And, I , if I am right, fantastic, if I am wrong, I’ve been doing my job, I’ve been following the evidence trail, and seeing where it leads,” Reeves told the AP.

El-Anani said Egyptologi­sts and Valley of the Kings experts will discuss on May 8 the findings of the scans in a previously scheduled conference devoted to King Tut to be held at Egypt’s new national museum near the Giza Pyramids outside Cairo. There, they can discuss the findings. The outcome, he said, will guide what course of action Egypt takes.

The Valley of the Kings was one of the main burial sites for ancient Egypt’s pharaohs, located among the desert mountains across the Nile River from Luxor, the site of the monumental temples of Thebes, one of the pharaonic capitals.

Tut’s was the most intact tomb ever discovered in Egypt, packed with well-preserved artifacts. But he was a relatively minor king ruling for a short period at a turbulent time.

Nefertiti was the primary wife of the Pharaoh Akhenaten, who unsuccessf­ully tried to switch Egypt to an early form of monotheism. Akhenaten was succeeded by a pharaoh referred to as Smenkhare. Reeves believes Smenkhare and Nefertiti are the same person, with the queen simply changing her name during her rule.

Not long after Tut died in 1323 B.C., his family was overthrown by a general, ending the 18th Dynasty that had been in power for 250 years.

John Darnell, professor of Egyptology at Yale University, said Tut’s tomb is “somewhat anomalous due to its small size ... But the question is: Was Tutankhamu­n’s tomb small, or do we have only a portion of a larger tomb?”

The latest scans were carried out over 12 hours along five different levels of the walls, producing 40 scans. The data will be analyzed by US-based experts, but the results would not be known for at least another week.

“Technology is beginning to open doors that were permanentl­y locked, or seemed permanentl­y locked or maybe we did not know it existed,” said Terry D. Garcia, chief science and exploratio­n officer for National Geographic. “It is creating a revolution ... and it is going to result in the 21st century being the greatest in exploratio­n in the history of mankind and we are just scratching the surface.”

 ??  ?? Tourists walk outside King Tutankhamu­n’s tomb at the Valley of the Kings, near Egypt’s southern city of Luxor on March 31, 2016. (Inset top): One of Egypt’s famed King Tutankhamu­n’s golden sarcophagu­s is displayed at his tomb in a glass case at the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, Egypt on April 1. (Inset center): Egyptian Antiquitie­s Minister, Khaled el-Anani, speaks during a press conference outside King Tutankhamu­n’s tomb at the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, Egypt on Friday. (Inset above): The north wall of King Tutankhamu­m’s burial chamber at his tomb at the Valley of the Kings of Luxor, Egypt.
Tourists walk outside King Tutankhamu­n’s tomb at the Valley of the Kings, near Egypt’s southern city of Luxor on March 31, 2016. (Inset top): One of Egypt’s famed King Tutankhamu­n’s golden sarcophagu­s is displayed at his tomb in a glass case at the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, Egypt on April 1. (Inset center): Egyptian Antiquitie­s Minister, Khaled el-Anani, speaks during a press conference outside King Tutankhamu­n’s tomb at the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, Egypt on Friday. (Inset above): The north wall of King Tutankhamu­m’s burial chamber at his tomb at the Valley of the Kings of Luxor, Egypt.

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