The Sun (Malaysia)

Unlocking the pyramids

> Egyptologi­sts are employing cutting-edge technology to help demystify these ancient structures

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FROM the Giza pyramids ( below) to the pharaonic tombs of Luxor, Egypt’s ancient monuments are holding onto mysteries which researcher­s now aim to unravel with cutting-edge technology.

For more than 200 years since Napoleon Bonaparte landed in Egypt with a retinue of scholars who laid the groundwork for modern Egyptology, experts have used science to unlock the secrets of the country’s ancient treasures.

In the 21st century, the scientists have been using electronic devices and chemical testing to date artefacts.

Chemical testing still requires small samples, but advanced techniques coming into use are meant to be non-invasive so as not to damage the ancient relics.

ScanPyrami­ds is among the most ambitious of the projects to demystify the Khufu Pyramid near Cairo, the only surviving monument from the ancient Seven Wonders of the World.

It has employed infrared thermograp­hy and muography – a technique that records images using muon particles – in its quest.

The project had announced last October that the massive pyramid may contain undiscover­ed recesses.

“All the devices we put in place are designed to find where the cavity is located. We know there is one, but we’re trying to find out where,” said Mehdi Tayoubi, president of the HIP Institute heading the ScanPyrami­ds project.

The muon devices include chemical emulsion instrument­s from Japan’s University of Nagoya, electronic sensors from the KEK Japanese Research Laboratory, and muon telescopes from the French Atomic Energy Commission.

The results are then compared with infrared and 3D images.

Some archaeolog­ists have pinned hopes on the sophistica­ted technology to locate the burial place of the legendary queen Nefertiti, the wife of King Akhenaten. British Egyptologi­st Nicholas Reeves believed the queen’s remains were hidden in a secret chamber in the tomb of Tutankhamu­n, in the southern Valley of the Kings. In 2015, archaeolog­ists scanned the tomb with radar hoping for clues. Both Reeves’ theory and the inconclusi­ve results have been dismissed by other Egyptologi­sts. One of them, Egypt former antiquitie­s minister Zahi Hawass, said that an adept of the sun god Aton would never have been allowed to be buried in the Valley of the Kings.

Now, a team from Politecnic­o University in Turin, Italy, intends to give it another shot.

This time, the team will employ tomography – a method used in medical scans – and magnetomet­ry, which measures magnetic fields.

Elsewhere, Egyptologi­sts are undertakin­g a project to nail down the chronology of Egypt’s ancient dynasties more precisely.

The French Institute of Eastern Archaeolog­y (IFAO) in Cairo has a dating laboratory that the researcher­s are putting to use for the project.

“The chronology of ancient Egypt is not clearly defined. We use a relative chronology,” said Anita Quiles, head of research at the IFAO. “We refer to reigns and dynasties but we do not know exactly the dates.”

The investigat­ion, which involves chemical testing, is expected to take several years.

But Egyptologi­sts say that science cannot replace archaeolog­ists and their work on the ground.

“It is important to have science in archaeolog­y,” said Hawass.

“But it is very important not to let scientists announce any details about what they found unless it has been seen by Egyptologi­sts.” – AFP

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 ??  ?? Quiles (centre) and local staff at the dating laboratory in IFAO in Cairo working to give a more precise chronology of Egypt’s ancient dynasties.
Quiles (centre) and local staff at the dating laboratory in IFAO in Cairo working to give a more precise chronology of Egypt’s ancient dynasties.

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