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| Part of the remains of an ancient Egyptian pyramid discovered near the bent pyramid of King Snefru in Dahshur, some 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of Cairo (AFP Photo/HO) |
Cairo (AFP)
- The remains of an Egyptian pyramid built around 3,700 years ago have been
discovered near the well-known "bent pyramid" of King Snefru, the
antiquities ministry announced on Monday.
The pyramid
from the 13th dynasty was found in Dahshur's royal necropolis, some 30
kilometres (20 miles) south of Cairo, it said.
"An
alabaster... block engraved with 10 vertical hieroglyphic lines" was among
the finds, the ministry said, citing Adel Okasha, director general at the
necropolis.
It said
granite lintel and stone blocks were discovered that would show more
"about the internal structure of the pyramid".
Excavation
is still in its early stages and the size of the pyramid has not yet been
established.
Blocks of
stone and the beginning of a corridor which were discovered can be seen in
photos provided by the ministry.
The
corridor "leads to the interior of the pyramid, extended by a ramp and the
entrance to a room", the ministry said.
"All
the discovered parts of the pyramid are in very good condition and further
excavation is to take place to reveal more parts," it said.
Egypt, home
of one of the world's earliest civilisations, boasts 123 ancient pyramids, Zahi
Hawass, former head of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, told AFP.
Hawass, who
took part in the last discovery of a new pyramid in Egypt in 2008 at Saqqara,
just south of Cairo, said the remnants in Dahshur appeared to indicate that the
monument belonged to "a queen buried near her husband or her son".
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A block
engraved with lines of hieroglyphics found among the remains of an
ancient
Egyptian pyramid discovered in Dahshur, some 30 kilometres (20 miles)
south of
Cairo (AFP Photo/HO)
|
"The
hope now is to find any inscription which can reveal the identity of the owner
of this pyramid. To find the name of a previously unknown queen would be an
addition to history," the archaeologist said.
Egypt's
ancient treasures include the world-famous Pyramids of Giza, constructed around
4,500 years ago.
The Khufu
pyramid, or Great Pyramid, is the largest of the three in Giza, standing at 146
metres (480 feet tall), and the only surviving structure of the seven wonders
of the ancient world.
Khufu and
Khafre in Giza along with the Bent and Red pyramids in Dahshur are part of
Operation ScanPyramids, with teams scanning the structures in search of hidden
rooms and cavities.
The project
to unearth still hidden secrets of the pyramids applies a mix of infrared
thermography, radiographic imaging and 3D simulation -- all of which the
researchers say are non-invasive and non-destructive.
In October
last year, the team announced that two additional cavities had been found in
the Great Pyramid after another scan a year earlier found several thermal
anomalies.
At a
conference in 2015 dedicated to King Tutankhamun and his world-famous golden
funerary mask, Egyptian authorities said new technology was needed to determine
whether his tomb contains hidden chambers which a British archaeologist
believes could contain Queen Nefertiti's remains.
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