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 Post subject: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 23 May 2011 2:54 pm 
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http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/05/ ... lic-egypt/


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 Post subject: Re: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 27 May 2011 5:07 am 
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Thanks Aliengod ....very awesome news

I hope we get more pictures...I saw a bee on the one in the article

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 Post subject: Re: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 20 Jun 2012 7:23 pm 
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New news about the Great Pyramid ( although not really any news included :| ). Some synchronicity here for you cj :D
Quote:
Looming over desert sand on the bank of the River Nile, the 4,500-year old Great Pyramid of Giza is the only surviving relic of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world.

Yet despite being visited by millions of tourists every year, and poked and prodded by modern-day archaeologists armed with the latest robot technology, the giant monument - built over 20 years as a tomb for Egyptian pharaoh Khufu (known as Cheops in Greek) - still holds tightly onto many of its secrets.

Day-trippers from Cairo who brave long ticket queues, hawkers and ill-tempered camels to explore inside often complain that they are rewarded with little more than a guided tour of an ill-lit, cramped and overcrowded passageway.

But much of the vast structure remains out of bounds to the visiting public as work continues to reveal hidden doors, secret chambers and painted hieroglyphs which give a tantalising glimpse into the ancient world.

The Great Pyramid was built in around 2570BC by gangs of up to 200,000 peasant workers, slaves and engineers who between them raised six million tons of limestone and granite blocks - weighing 2 tons each - to an original height of 146 metres.

The oldest and largest of the three pyramids at Giza, it was the tallest building in the world until Lincoln Cathedral was completed in 1300, and while it has lost six metres to erosion over the millennia it remains a stunning monument to human endeavour.

Victorian explorers revived interest in unraveling the pyramid's many enigmas. Their enthusiastic, if amateurish, exploits have since been superseded by scientists working under the supervision and control of Egyptian authorities.

Theories abound from the outlandish (two copper fittings found at the end of a recently mapped tunnel are power-points for alien technology) to the prosaic (they are merely ornamental). Some claim that the mythical Hall of Records - a great library of hidden treasures - lies in catacombs which riddle the ground below.

The most recent exploration - named the Djedi project after a mystic apparently consulted by the pyramid's original architects - was led by a team from Leeds. They used a bendy "micro-snake" camera that can see around corners to examine two mysterious shafts which lead from one of the three burial chambers to highly-polished stone doors. Images sent back revealed hieroglyphs written in red paint and unexplained lines scratched into the stone.

Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs, described the doors as the pyramid's "last great mystery" hinting that they could lead to a secret room which has remained hidden for thousands of years.

But the Djedi team's research was halted by the civil unrest which led to the fall of President Hosni Mubarak last year and, with the political situation still hanging in the balance, their full findings have yet to be released.

In conspiracy-thriller ‘The Da Vinci Code’, Dan Brown's character Robert Langdon wondered aloud "if any of Harvard's revered Egyptologists had ever knocked on the door of a pyramid and expected an answer”.

Egypt must resolve its own modern-day political tangle before he, and the rest of the world, can finally find out.

From :-
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/secrets-of-the ... 20523.html
Regards
Nic


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 Post subject: Re: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 20 Jun 2012 10:54 pm 
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Joined: 22 Sep 2008 3:15 pm
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http://news.discovery.com/history/pyram ... 10526.html

http://news.discovery.com/history/great ... 11209.html


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 Post subject: Re: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 21 Jun 2012 12:25 am 
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Joined: 13 Jan 2009 3:29 am
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Location: Texas
BULLDOGNIC wrote:
New news about the Great Pyramid ( although not really any news included :| ). Some synchronicity here for you cj :D
Quote:
Looming over desert sand on the bank of the River Nile, the 4,500-year old Great Pyramid of Giza is the only surviving relic of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world.

Yet despite being visited by millions of tourists every year, and poked and prodded by modern-day archaeologists armed with the latest robot technology, the giant monument - built over 20 years as a tomb for Egyptian pharaoh Khufu (known as Cheops in Greek) - still holds tightly onto many of its secrets.

Day-trippers from Cairo who brave long ticket queues, hawkers and ill-tempered camels to explore inside often complain that they are rewarded with little more than a guided tour of an ill-lit, cramped and overcrowded passageway.

But much of the vast structure remains out of bounds to the visiting public as work continues to reveal hidden doors, secret chambers and painted hieroglyphs which give a tantalising glimpse into the ancient world.

The Great Pyramid was built in around 2570BC by gangs of up to 200,000 peasant workers, slaves and engineers who between them raised six million tons of limestone and granite blocks - weighing 2 tons each - to an original height of 146 metres.

The oldest and largest of the three pyramids at Giza, it was the tallest building in the world until Lincoln Cathedral was completed in 1300, and while it has lost six metres to erosion over the millennia it remains a stunning monument to human endeavour.

Victorian explorers revived interest in unraveling the pyramid's many enigmas. Their enthusiastic, if amateurish, exploits have since been superseded by scientists working under the supervision and control of Egyptian authorities.

Theories abound from the outlandish (two copper fittings found at the end of a recently mapped tunnel are power-points for alien technology) to the prosaic (they are merely ornamental). Some claim that the mythical Hall of Records - a great library of hidden treasures - lies in catacombs which riddle the ground below.

The most recent exploration - named the Djedi project after a mystic apparently consulted by the pyramid's original architects - was led by a team from Leeds. They used a bendy "micro-snake" camera that can see around corners to examine two mysterious shafts which lead from one of the three burial chambers to highly-polished stone doors. Images sent back revealed hieroglyphs written in red paint and unexplained lines scratched into the stone.

Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs, described the doors as the pyramid's "last great mystery" hinting that they could lead to a secret room which has remained hidden for thousands of years.

But the Djedi team's research was halted by the civil unrest which led to the fall of President Hosni Mubarak last year and, with the political situation still hanging in the balance, their full findings have yet to be released.

In conspiracy-thriller ‘The Da Vinci Code’, Dan Brown's character Robert Langdon wondered aloud "if any of Harvard's revered Egyptologists had ever knocked on the door of a pyramid and expected an answer”.

Egypt must resolve its own modern-day political tangle before he, and the rest of the world, can finally find out.

From :-
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/secrets-of-the ... 20523.html
Regards
Nic


Nic that was priceless :lol: :lol: :lol:
TCJ wrote:
http://news.discovery.com/history/pyramids-hieroglyphs-robot-mystery-110526.html

http://news.discovery.com/history/great ... 11209.html

Thanks TCJ for the links
Amazing what is behind door number two

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 Post subject: Re: Egypt opens 6 new tombs...
PostPosted: 21 Jun 2012 1:30 am 
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Joined: 22 Sep 2008 3:15 pm
Posts: 1566
:!:

Quote:
April 2, 2012....It's getting ugly in Egypt for the flamboyant former minister of state for antiquities Zahi Hawass.
According to Egyptian News site ahramonline: "Zahi Hawass, the former minister of state for antiquities faces charges of breaking Egypt's antiquities law when he agreed to display rare Egyptian objects in Australia and the US.: But that's not all, the charges filed today include misuse of public funds and collaborating with former Mubarak officials in the theft of Egyptian antiquities: "The Public Funds Prosecution office also received other charges accusing Hawass of wasting public money and exposing Egyptian antiquities to stealing in collaboration with former regime members."

According to the New York Daily News: Hawass, had a "close relationship with the former president's wife, Suzanne Mubarak, and her nonstate organization." According to ahramonline the accusations center on Hawass' sale of "state-owned artifacts to raise money for Suzanne Mubarak’s association."


http://www.montysworldonline.com/2012/0 ... minal.html


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