Showing posts with label North Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Africa. Show all posts

Archaeologists post research data from Sudan online


Graves, small huts or stone-lined sleeping places from antiquity and the Middle Ages: the "Wadi Abu Dom Itinerary" archaeological project being undertaken at the University of Münster’s Institute of Egyptology and Coptology is now putting its data online, gathered between 2009 and 2016 during field research in Sudan. Academics, as well as anyone in the general public who is interested, can use a browser-based geoinformation system (WebGIS) to take a look at the findings.

Archaeologists post research data from Sudan online
Squares lined with stones and filled with gravel, and with mats or palm leaves as a bed, served as sleeping
places in the Bayuda Desert in Sudan. The large number of dots shows the high frequency of these beds
[Credit: Münster University/W.A.D.I.; screenshot]
"By providing free access to the data, our aim is not only to meet today’s expectations as regards making research transparent", explains project leader Prof. Angelika Lohwasser from the Institute of Egyptology and Coptology. "What we are also hoping for is a rapid and uncomplicated exchange of data." The WebGIS was developed in collaboration with the Institute of Geoinformatics and is currently also being used by Münster University archaeologists in the excavations at Doliche, in modern Turkey, which are being undertaken by the Asia Minor research unit.

A comprehensive field inspection, as well as aerial surveys of the riverbank areas of the dried-up Wadi Abu Dom river system in the Bayuda Desert in Sudan – rivers which only sporadically contain water – were all carried out as part of the "Wadi Abu Dom Itinerary" research project. In doing so, the team of twelve mapped all the structures of cultural and historical relevance visible on the surface of the terrain. All archaeological findings are shown as geospatial point data and area data in Web GIS and arranged by category. In addition, users can access further information for all the findings, and, in many cases, photos too.

Archaeologists post research data from Sudan online
Anyone interested can take a look at various pictures, including rock formations which, as can be seen
 in this photo, depict cattle [Credit: Münster University/W.A.D.I.; screenshot]
Digital working methods were already playing an important role during the field research. The project team recorded the archaeological data while on the terrain, using small computers and a mobile GIS. This not only speeded up the work process, but also made scientific evaluation work easier.

Not only academics, but also non-specialists who are interested can temporarily upload their own data into the application and compare them with those from the "Wadi Abu Dom Itinerary" project. This is a fast, uncomplicated way of seeing whether, and in what form, the relevant archaeological findings have already been recorded by the Münster team of researchers. "In addition to an easy link-up with research projects both at home and abroad", says Angelika Lohwasser, "what we’re hoping for is public involvement. Anyone anywhere in the world who is interested, who has visited Sudan as a tourist or who is exploring these remote areas with the aid of programmes such as Google Earth, can compare any structures they have found which might be of archaeological relevance with the results gathered by the specialists. If they are not sure about something, they can contact us and – in the sense of ‘people’s science’, in the best sense of the term –  help us to complete our picture of the cultural history of Sudan."

Source: University of Münster [May 24, 2018]

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt


An Egyptian Archaeological Mission from the Supreme Council of Antiquities has uncovered Parts of a huge red brick building during excavations carried out at San El-Hagar archaeological site at Gharbia Governorate.

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt
Credit: Ministry of Antiquities
Dr. Ayman Ashmawy, Head of the Ancient Egyptian Antiquities explains that the discovered building most probably is a part of a bath dating back to the Graeco-Roman era; it is about 16 meters long, and its measure 3.5 x 1.80 meters.

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt
Credit: Ministry of Antiquities
The Mission would complete its work during the coming seasons to reveal more parts of the building and its function.

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt
Credit: Ministry of Antiquities
Dr. Ashmawy continues that the mission also found pottery vessels, terracotta statues, bronze tools, a stone fragment engraved with hieroglyphs and a small statue of a ram.

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt
Credit: Ministry of Antiquities
On his part Dr. Saeed Al-Asal Head of the mission said that the most important discovered artifacts is a gold coin of Ptolemy III, which was made in the reign of Ptolemy IV in memory of his father.

Graeco-Roman baths discovered in Egypt
Credit: Ministry of Antiquities
The diameter of the coin is 2.6 cm and weighs about 28 gr. on one of the coin’s faces is decorated with a portrait of Ptolemy III wearing the crown and the other side bears the Land if Prosperity surround with the name of the king.

Source: Ministry of Antiquities [May 23, 2018]

Earliest version of our alphabet possibly discovered


The earliest example of our alphabet — a possible mnemonic phrase that helped someone remember "ABCD" — has been discovered on a 3,400-year-old inscribed piece of pottery from ancient Egypt, a scholar believes.

Earliest version of our alphabet possibly discovered
One side of the inscribed 3,400-year-old piece of pottery may show an ancient forerunner to our alphabet sequence
[Credit: copyright Nigel Strudwick. No reproduction without permission]
Three of the words start with the ancient equivalent of B, C and D, creating what may be a mnemonic phrase.

Thomas Schneider, a professor of Egyptology and Near Eastern Studies at the University of British Columbia, reported the discovery in a paper published recently in the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. This discovery "would be the first historical attestation of 'our' alphabet sequence," he told Live Science in an email.

Modern-day scholars sometimes call the early ancestor of our ABCD alphabet sequence the "abgad" sequence, because this phrase mentions some of the first letters of the early version of our alphabet. Until this discovery, the oldest example of this sequence had only dated back about 3,200 years, Schneider wrote in his paper.

The alphabet that we use today is derived from that used by the Phoenicians, a civilization that flourished between roughly 3,500 and 2,300 years ago in the Eastern Mediterranean. They used what scholars call a Semitic language, a term that refers to a branch of languages that trace their origins to the Middle East, each sharing some similar words. The early forerunner to our alphabet was written in Semitic languages. Few texts that are written in Semitic languages date back 3,400 years or more, however.

Earliest ABCDs?

A team of archaeologists from the Cambridge Theban TombsProject discovered the inscribed piece of pottery in 1995 in a tomb that belonged to an Egyptian official named Sennefer, and recently Schneider studied and deciphered it. While the text is written in hieratic — a form of Egyptian hieroglyphic writing — "all [the] words appear to be of foreign linguistic origin" and are mostly Semitic, wrote Schneider in his paper.

One side of the pottery piece contains a series of Egyptian hieroglyphic symbols that represent the words "bibiya-ta" (a word that can mean "earth snail"), "garu" (a word that can mean "dove") and "da'at" (a word that can mean "kite"), Schneider wrote in his paper. More than 3,000 years ago, the "g" would have represented the sound that "c" does today, Schneider told Live Science. This means that the first letter of each of these words is the ancient equivalent of "BCD."

There are symbols in front of these three words that are harder to interpret, but they could spell out "elta'at" (a word that can mean "gecko" or "lizard"), Schneider wrote in his paper.

It's possible that all the signs together formed the phrase "and the lizard and the snail, and the dove and the kite …" wrote Schneider in the paper — a phrase that may have helped the person who wrote the text to remember the proper order of the ancient forerunner of today's alphabet.

Another alphabetic sequence

The other side of the inscribed piece of pottery also contains a series of Semitic words written in hieratic, Schneider said. They spell out the words "hahāna lāwī ḥelpat mayyin leqab." The first letters of the first four words in that series — the letters "hlhm" — represent the first few letters of another ancient alphabetic sequence, one that never became as popular as the ancient forerunner to our alphabet.

These words form a phrase that means, "to make pleasant the one who bends reed, water [according] to the Qab." The "qab" is a unit of measurement that equals about 1.2 liters, Schneider wrote. This phrase likely helped the person who wrote this inscription to remember the first few letters of this alphabetic sequence, Schneider said.

Ben Haring, a senior university lecturer in Egyptology at Leiden University, was the first to recognize the "hlhm" sequence on this pottery piece and published a paper on it in 2015 in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies.

Semitic alphabet practice?

Whoever wrote these inscriptions 3,400 years ago may have been trying to remember the start of both alphabetic sequences, Schneider said. Sennefer was an official who dealt with Egyptian foreign affairs and likely understood the Semitic languages that were used in the Eastern Mediterranean, Schneider said.

When Sennefer's tomb was being constructed, perhaps the scribes helping to build the tomb were trying to learn the languages, and one of them wrote these words down as a practice exercise, Schneider told Live Science.

Schneider's article was recently published, and it remains to be seen how scholars will react to his findings.

Haring, who identified the "hlhm" sequence, said that he welcomes Schneider's work, but is cautious about the idea that the other side of the pottery piece bears evidence of the ancient forerunner to our modern alphabet sequence. A major problem with research into this piece of pottery is the lack of texts written in Semitic dating back 3,400 years, Haring said. This means that when scholars analyze the words, they have to use Semitic texts from later periods to understand them, even though their meanings could have been different 3,400 years ago, Haring said.

When Haring published his "hlhm" finding in 2015, he published it as a suggestion — even he wasn’t convinced of his own discovery at the time. He said that since that time, his finding has received widespread acceptance among scholars. It remains to be seen if Schneider's finding will receive the same acceptance.

Author: Owen Jarus | Source: LiveScience [May 16, 2018]

This article was originally published on Live Science. Read the original article

Roman-era temple discovered in Egypt's Siwa Oasis


Egypt says archaeologists have uncovered the remains of a temple dating back to the second century.

Roman-era temple discovered in Egypt's Siwa Oasis
Workers examining the remains of a temple dating back to the second century, in the country's western desert,
some 50 km west of Siwa Oasis, Egypt [Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities]
The Antiquities Ministry said Thursday that the temple, which dates back to the reign of Roman Emperor Antoninus Pius, was found near the Siwa Oasis in the western desert. It includes the foundations of a large limestone building.

Roman-era temple discovered in Egypt's Siwa Oasis
Archaeologists examine a limestone block with Greek inscription found among the remains of a temple
dating back to the second century [Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities]
Roman-era temple discovered in Egypt's Siwa Oasis
Detail of limestone block with Greek inscription [Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities]
Abdel-Aziz al-Dimeiry, head of the archaeological mission, said they found a five-meter (yard) long limestone painting bearing Greek inscriptions and decorated with the sun disc surrounded by cobras.

Roman-era temple discovered in Egypt's Siwa Oasis
The limestone block with Greek inscription [Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities]
He says the painting, which is believed to be part of the temple's entrance, was found in good condition and will undergo restoration.

Source: Associated Press [May 10, 2018]

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara


An Archaeological Mission from Cairo University working in Saqqara has uncovered a tomb of the Great Army General in the period of Ramsses II, which named “Iwrhya”.

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
Dr. Ola El-Aguizy the Head of the mission and Professor of Egyptology at Cairo University announced.

She explains that the discovery was carried out in the last excavation season 2017/2018, which was yielded a very interesting and important discovery in the New Kingdom necropolis south of the Causeway of Unas in Saqqara.

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
She continues that this tomb is probably dated to both the reigns of Sethi I and Ramesses II. It is still not fully excavated, but has already given us a lot of material testifying to the high status of its owner and his family.

The owner of the tomb is a high army General, and High steward of the domain of Amun, High steward of the estates of Ramesses II in the domain of Amun (the Ramesseum) Urkhya . His name appears on the tomb together with that of his son “Yuppa” and his grand-son “Hatiay”; the latter occupying a very significant position in the inscriptions on the blocks found on the walls still in place. He has began his military career during the reign of Sethi I and reached the highest positions in the Egyptian court during the reign of Ramesses II.

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
Dr. El-Aguizy, pointed out that the tomb seem to follow the style of the contemporary tombs in the area: forecourt – statue room with adjacent plastered vaulted storehouses, perystile court and western chapels which are still not excavated.

This high officia—from foreign origin-was among the many foreigners who settled in Egypt and succeeded to reach high positions in the Egyptian court in the New Kingdom.

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
The remaining scenes on the walls of the statue room and on the blocks found buried in the sand showed very interesting and quite unusual scenes of every day life activities which seem to be related to a great extent to the military career of its owner and the foreign relations with neighboring countries: Mooring boats taking down their loads of Canaanite wine jars.

A block also discovered in the sand, probably detached from the northern wall shows quite an exceptional scene of an infantry unit and charioteers crossing a waterway with crocodiles. The preliminary study of this scene proved that it represents the eastern boarders of Egypt with its fortified walls.

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
The scene has only one parallel represented on the outer north wall of the hypostyle court of the Karnak temple in Thebes showing Sethi I coming back from his victorious campaign against the Shasu Bedouins and entering Egypt through the same waterway with crocodiles. The remains of such fortified walls were actually found lately By Mohamed Abdel Maksoud and his team working on the site known as Tell Heboua I and II; on the Pelusian branch of the Nile, in Eastern Qantara (North Sinai).

The archaeological discoveries in this area (Qantara) has also proved that there was an active daily life in this garrison: Wine cellars, livestock the scenes on the walls

Tomb of great Ramesses II era general discovered in Saqqara
Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities
All the scenes of this tomb are quite exceptional and its artistic features are very characteristic to the time of Sethi I and that of Ramesses II; a fact that proves that this tomb has been constructed over different phases.

The fact that the names of many members of the family of Iwrhya: his son Yuppa and his grandson Hatyay are very prominent in the tomb might suggest that it might be a family tomb. This could not be surely attested except after the excavations of its sanctuary and its shaft.

Source: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities [May 08, 2018]

Scientists find 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia using orbiting eye


Chinese scientists recently discovered 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia dating to ancient Rome using Chinese space-based remote sensing technology.

Scientists find 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia using orbiting eye
The map showing 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia [Credit: Xinhua]
The archaeological sites are located in three Tunisian provinces - Gafsa, Tataouine and Medenine - Tunisian Culture Minister Mohamed Zine El-Abidine said at a recent news conference.

The discoveries include two Roman forts, three giant water basins, an irrigation system, a cemetery and three fortified Roman military roads lined with walls and watchtowers.

It is the first time Chinese remote-sensing technology has been used to locate archaeological sites in other countries, said Wang Xinyuan, a researcher from the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Remote Sensing and Digital Earth.

Wang, a leader of the effort, said a team of Chinese, Tunisian, Italian and Pakistani scientists found the sites under a project called the Digital Belt and Road.

"The project is monumental in improving coordination and cooperation between Chinese and foreign scientific communities," he said.

Scientists find 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia using orbiting eye
Scientists jointly conducting the archaeological investigation [Credit: Xinhua]
The new sites shed light on how the ancient Roman military defended its southern borders and supported its logistics, Wang said. Tunisia was also part of the Maritime Silk Road and home to many major Roman ports, hence the sites will allow better understanding of ancient trade routes and ecological change, he said.

Bai Guangming, a cultural counselor from the embassy of the People's Republic of China in Tunisia, said China's advanced remote sensing technologies will provide great scientific support for strengthening cultural exchanges between countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative.

Remote sensing refers to photography, infrared imaging, lasers and other methods to gather information from an object or natural phenomena without making physical contact.

It has been widely used in the military and most Earth science disciplines, including geology, hydrology and ecology.

Scientists find 10 new archaeological sites in Tunisia using orbiting eye
Scientists jointly conducting the archaeological investigation [Credit: Xinhua]
In 1906, Lieutenant Philip Henry Sharpe of the British Royal Engineers pioneered the use of aerial photography to study ancient monuments by taking the first aerial shots of Stonehenge from a balloon.

"Remote sensing technology provides a nonintrusive yet extremely accurate method of examining fragile archaeological sites, and it saves time, money and manpower because less field work is needed," Wang said.

Remote sensing technologies boomed in the 1960s with the introduction of satellite-and aircraft-based technologies that allow scientists to collect even more abstract data such as temperature, wind speed and humidity over a greater area.

"With these data, scientists and preservationists can formulate more accurate and effective plans to repair or protect archaeological sites," Wang said. "Remote sensing is a unique and effective way of finding obscured artifacts in the wild."

Source: China Daily [May 06, 2018]

New survey confirms no hidden Nefertiti chamber in Tutankhamun's tomb


After almost three months of study, a new geophysics survey has provided conclusive evidence that no hidden chambers exist adjacent to or inside Tutankhamun’s tomb in the Valley of the Kings.

New survey confirms no hidden Nefertiti chamber in Tutankhamun's tomb
Tutankhamun's tomb in the Valley of Kings in Luxor, Egypt [Credit: Nasser Nuri/Reuters]
Mostafa Waziri, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, announced the results, adding that the head of the Italian scientific team carrying out the research,

Francesco Porcelli of the Polytechnic University of Turin, is to provide all the details of the ground penetrating radar (GPR) studies during his speech to be delivered on Sunday evening at the ongoing Fourth Tutankhamun International Conference.

Waziri said that a scientific report was submitted on Sunday morning to the Permanent Committee for Ancient Egyptian Antiquities by Porcelli and his team, which included experts from the nearby University of Turin and from two private geophysics companies, Geostudi Astier (Leghorn) and 3DGeoimaging (Turin), who collected GPR data from the inside of Tutankhamun’s tomb in February 2018.

According to the report, which Ahram Online has obtained, Porcelli said that the GPR scans were performed along vertical and horizontal axes with very dense spatial sampling. Double antenna polarisations were also employed, with transmitting and receiving dipoles both orthogonal and parallel to the scanning direction.

Porcelli asserted that the main findings are as follows: no marked discontinuities due to the passage from natural rock to man-made blocking walls are evidenced by the GPR radargrams, nor there is any evidence of the jambs or the lintel of a doorway.

Similarly, the radargrams do not show any indication of plane reflectors, which could be interpreted as chamber walls or void areas behind the paintings of the funerary chamber.

“It is concluded, with a very high degree of confidence, that the hypothesis concerning the existence of hidden chambers or corridors adjacent to Tutankhamun’s tomb is not supported by the GPR data,” Porcelli said in the report.

This is the third GPR survey to be conducted inside the tomb in recent years. It was designed to stop the controversy aroused after the contradictory results of two previous radar surveys to inspect the accuracy of a theory launched in 2015 by British Egyptologist Nicholas Reeves, who suggested that the tomb of queen Nefertiti could be concealed behind the north and west wall paintings of Tutankhamun’s burial chamber.

The theory was supported by former minister of antiquities Mamdouh Eldamaty, who agreed to conduct two GPR surveys. The first was conducted by a Japanese professional who asserted with 95 percent certainty the existence of a doorway and a hall with artefacts.

The second radar survey was carried out with another high-tech GPR device by an American scientific team from National Geographic, who rejected the previous Japanese results and asserted that nothing existed behind the west and north wall of Tutankhamun's burial chamber.

To solve the difficulties encountered by the two preceding surveys and provide a conclusive response, the current antiquities minister, Khaled El-Enany, who took office in March 2016, decided to discuss the matter at the second International Tutankhamun Conference, which was attended by a group of pioneer scholars and archaeologists who decided to conduct a third GPR analysis to put an end to the debate.

Author: Nevine El-Aref | Source: Ahram Online [May 06, 2018]