4300-year-old pyramid discovered
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Archaeologists have discovered a new pyramid under the sands of Saqqara, an
ancient burial site that remains largely unexplored and has yielded a string of
unearthed pyramids in recent years, Egypt's antiquities chief announced Tuesday.
The 4,300-year-old monument most likely belonged to the queen mother of the
founder of Egypt's 6th Dynasty, several hundred years after the building of the
famed Great Pyramids of Giza, the country's antiquities chief Zahi Hawass said
as he took media on a tour of the find.
The discovery is part of the sprawling necropolis and burial site of the
rulers of ancient Memphis, the capital of Egypt's Old Kingdom, about 12 miles
(19 kilometers) south of Giza.
All that remains of the pyramid is a square-shaped 16-foot (5-meter) tall
structure that had been buried under 65 feet (25 metres) of sand.
"There was so much sand dumped here that no one had any idea there was
something buried underneath," said Hawass.
Hawass' team has been excavating at the location for two years, but he said
it was only two months ago when they determined that the structure, with sides
about 72 feet (22 metres) long, was the base of a pyramid. They also found parts
of the pyramid's white limestone casing - believed to have once covered the
entire structure - which enabled them to calculate that the complete pyramid was
once 45 feet (14 metres) high.
The pyramid is the 118th discovered so far in Egypt. "To find a new
pyramid is always exciting," said Hawass, "and this one is magical. It
belonged to a queen."
Hawass said he believes the pyramid belongs to Queen Sesheshet, who is
thought to have played a significant role in establishing the 6th Dynasty and
uniting two branches of the feuding royal family. Her son, Teti, is believed to
have ruled for around 20 years until he was possibly assassinated, a sign of the
time's turbulence.
Evidence of the identification is still indirect. The pyramids of Teti's two
wives, already discovered 100 years ago and in 1994 respectively, lie next to it
as part of the burial complex alongside the collapsed pyramid of Teti himself.
The Egyptian team is still digging and is two weeks from entering the burial
chamber inside the pyramid, where Hawass hopes they will find proof of its owner
- a sarcophagus or at least an inscription of the queen.
Finding anything more would be next to impossible, as robbers in antiquity
looted the pyramid, Hawass added, pointing to a gaping shaft on the structure's
top that remains a testament to the thieves' actions.
Although evidence of the queen's existence was found elsewhere in Egypt in
inscriptions and in a papyrus document - a medical prescription to strengthen
the queen's thinning hair - the site of her burial was not known.
The find is important because it adds to the understanding of the 6th
Dynasty, which lasted from 2,322 B.C. to 2,151 B.C. It was the last dynasty of
the Old Kingdom, which spanned the 3rd millennium B.C. and was the first peak of
pharaonic civilization.
Saqqara is most famous for the Step Pyramid of King Djoser, built in the 27th
century B.C.
Only a third of the Saqqara complex been explored so far, and recent digging
has turned up a number of key finds.
The last new pyramid found there three years ago is thought to belong to the
wife of Teti's successor, Pepi I.
In June, Hawass' team unveiled a "rediscovery" at Saqqara - a
pyramid believed to have been built by King Menkauhor, an obscure pharaoh whose
pyramid was first discovered in 1842 by German archaeologist Karl Richard
Lepsius. But desert sands later covered the pyramid and archaeologists were
unable to find Menkauhor's resting place until three months ago.
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