Giza Plateau News
New Dates for Egypt's Pharaohs PDF Print E-mail
Written by Michael Balter   
Thursday, 17 June 2010 22:47

New Dates for Egypt's Pharaohs

on June 17, 2010 2:02 PM

 

Just when did Egyptian pharaohs such as King Tut and Rameses II rule? Historians have heatedly debated the exact dates. Now a radiocarbon study concludes that much of the assumed chronology was right, though it corrects some controversial dates and may overturn a few pet theories.

"This is an extremely important piece of research that shows clearly that historical dating methods and radiocarbon dates are compatible for ancient Egypt," says Kate Spence, an archaeologist at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom.

 

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Grand Museum Opens Conservation Section PDF Print E-mail
Written by AP   
Monday, 14 June 2010 14:31

WORLD

First stages of Egypt's new museum

completed, including state-of-the-art

conservation center

Published June 14, 2010

| Associated Press

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt's massive new museum for its famous antiquities now has a power plant, a fire station and its own conservation center, and over the next two years it will become home to some 100,000 artifacts, officials said Monday.

 

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Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx PDF Print E-mail
Written by Evan Hadingham, Smithsonian magazine   
Monday, 01 February 2010 00:00

After decades of research, American archaeologist Mark Lehner has some answers about the mysteries of the Egyptian colossus

When Mark Lehner was a teenager in the late 1960s, his parents introduced him to the writings of the famed clairvoyant Edgar Cayce. During one of his trances, Cayce, who died in 1945, saw that refugees from the lost city of Atlantis buried their secrets in a hall of records under the Sphinx and that the hall would be discovered before the end of the 20th century.

In 1971, Lehner, a bored sophomore at the University of North Dakota, wasn’t planning to search for lost civilizations, but he was “looking for something, a meaningful involvement.” He dropped out of school, began hitchhiking and ended up in Virginia Beach, where he sought out Cayce’s son, Hugh Lynn, the head of a holistic medicine and paranormal research foundation his father had started. When the foundation sponsored a group tour of the Giza plateau—the site of the Sphinx and the pyramids on the western outskirts of Cairo—Lehner tagged along. “It was hot and dusty and not very majestic,” he remembers.

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Part II: Entrance to Underworld found beneath Egyptian Pyramids ? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Will Hunt, Archeology News Examiner   
Thursday, 10 December 2009 00:00

The drama at Giza thickens. Andrew Collins at the "entrance to the Egyptian underworld" Zahi Hawass, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Activities, recently stated that an all-Egyptian excavation team would be exploring the tomb which British author Andrew Collins claims connects to a large natural cave. The cave, Collins has claimed, may be the basis for the ancient Egyptian mythological underworld.

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New Tomb Found in Saqarra PDF Print E-mail
Written by BBC News   
Monday, 31 May 2010 19:17

The team is looking for a sarcophagus like this one discovered 100 years ago

A lost ancient Egyptian tomb has been rediscovered by archaeologists in the desert sands south of Cairo. The 3,300-year-old tomb is believed to belong to a mayor of the ancient capital of Memphis.

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