Showing posts with label Archaeology-News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Archaeology-News. Show all posts

16 Fun Facts About The GREAT PYRAMID

 
The best Great Pyramid facts on the web! Did slaves build the pyramids? How many stones were used? Were there mummies in them? You'll be amazed when you read this post.

The Great Pyramid of Giza is one of the most impressive buildings in all of human history. It's so old that it's really hard to get your head how long it's been around. It's even harder to picture some architect coming up with the idea in the first place--and then getting all those people to build it. I'm sure glad they did. We're still talking about it today!

16 Fascinating Pieces of Great Pyramid Trivia


1. How many stones make up the Great Pyramid? 
Approximately 2.3 million stones.


2. How big is each stone? 
Each stone weighed around 2.5 tons, although they varied in size. Not every stone was identical.


3. Who built the Great Pyramids of Egypt?
Rulers or kings of ancient Egypt. We call these kings 'pharaohs'. The biggest, the Cheops or Great Pyramid was built by Pharaoh Khufu.

The actual labor was done by architects, stone cutters, stone haulers, carpenters, overseers, artists, priests, and more.

These builders had an enormous support crew: bread bakers, cooks, beer brewers, launderers, barbers, basically a small village of people.


4. How tall is it?

The ancient monument is 450 feet tall. To put this in modern terms, it's around the same height as a 45-story apartment or office building.

By comparison, the Statue of Liberty is 300 feet. The tallest dinosaur (the Sauroposeidon), stood at 58 feet.

By the way, the sides of the pyramid are each over a quarter mile long. So if you walked around it once, you would travel more than a mile!


5. How much does it weigh?

5,750,000 tons (5,216,308,000 kilograms). It sure looks like it, too. That's a lot of rock.

Let's break it down mathematically:
The building is constructed of approximately 2.3 million blocks of limestone. Each block weighs around 2.5 tons (2267.96 kilograms). So 2,300,000 x 2267.96 = 5,216,308,000 kilograms (5,750,000 tons). In other words, it weighs around 12 billion pounds.


BONUS FACT
It is the 3rd heaviest man-made object in the world.
The heaviest is the Great Wall of China, and the 2nd heaviest is the Three Gorges Dam in China.


6. Did slaves build the pyramids?


For years, people were sure slaves built the pyramids. However, this has turned out to be untrue. In fact, men were hired and paid wages. Writings and other evidence has been found to back this up.

Also, the workers were buried in sacred graves--right next to the monumental structure. This was a great, great honor, and showed how much they were valued and respected.


7. How did the pyramid builders get paid?
Money wasn't used in those days. It didn't exist yet. Instead, goods were bartered in exchange for work.

The construction crew would have been paid in rations like meat, bread, and beer. The laborers could then turn around and barter these 'wages' for other things. Also, they were provided with healthcare, a place to live, access to priests, and much more.


8. How long did it take to build them? 
It took around 30 years and 10,000 men to build Khufu's Cheops pyramid. The workers labored hard and their remains show this. We can actually tell by looking at their mummified bones that the work was very tough.




9. Were there mummies in the pyramids?

It's probable that at one time in history, they contained mummies. The pyramids are believed to be giant tombs designed to hold a pharaoh's remains. Yet we can't know for certain. It's possible that they were built for reasons that were sacred to the ancient Egyptians and remain a mystery to us.


10. Who was buried in the Great Pyramid?

The famous Cheops monument was built for Pharaoh Khufu. However, we have no idea where Khufu's mummy is, or if he was ever buried in the King's Chamber. It's likely that raiders broke into the pyramid before modern explorers arrived on the scene.

That's Khufu's heavy stone sarcophagus (coffin) pictured above. Was it ceremonial? Or did it hold his mummy at one point in time? We simply don't know. It's not shaped like a mummy, that's for sure.

Here's something interesting: look closely at the photo--you might think it's ancient writing on the wall. In fact, it's modern graffiti!


11. Has a mummy ever been found in a pyramid?
No.
No mummy has ever been found inside a pyramid.


12. What did they put inside the pyramids?


Not only was Khufu's mummy 'gone', but archaeologists also found no treasure inside the huge structure. Contrast that with the picture above of the grave goods found in King Tut's secret tomb in the Valley of the Kings.


Ancient Egyptians believed that you could take things with you to the next life. They packed their burial sites as though they were moving house, or going on a very long vacation. It's possible that Khufu's pyramid contained all manner of things such as:
And much, much more Whatever was stored inside is long gone. It's sad to think it has all disappeared with the sands of time.


13. Was there really a boat at Khufu's pyramid?


On the bright side, explorers found one incredible treasure at Giza. It was sealed inside a pit at the base of the pyramid complex. It's the solar ship seen above.

The funerary ship is the oldest ship in existence, and was so well built that it's been called "a masterpiece of woodcraft". If placed in the water today, you could actually ride in it.

No one knows the real purpose of this boat, also called a solar barge, but it's believed to be a ritual vessel used to carry the deceased pharaoh across the heavens, with the help of the Egyptian sun god, Ra.

The boat is 143 feet (44m) long and 19.5 feet (6m) wide.


14. Can you go inside them?



Khufu's pyramid has multiple chambers and shafts inside.

How many rooms does it have? Three (3) that we know about. They are as follows:

The King's Chamber (where the sarcophagus is located, see Fact #10). You can reach the King's Chamber via the Grand Gallery, which is an impressive feat of architecture that also serves as a structural purpose. It spreads out the building's weight so that the building doesn't collapse onto the King's Burial Chamber.
The Statue Chamber (most often referred to as the Queen's Chamber, but that's a mistake. No queen was buried here).
The Subterranean or Underworld Chamber. The purpose of this subterranean room remains a mystery.
A fourth, mysterious chamber has been identified using modern imaging techniques, but there is no way to access it at present.


15. What is written inside the King's Chamber in the Great Pyramid?
In fact, nothing was written inside the King's Chamber. Recently, however, several hieroglyphs were found on the floor of the Statue Chamber/Queens Chamber. They are written in red paint. They have been identified as mathematical figures left behind by the builders.



16. Are there still mysteries to discover? 
Yes! There are still many mysteries to discover. For example: what's the inaccessible chamber found recently via modern imaging? Are there underground passages that we're not yet aware of? Do hidden passages lead to secret underground rooms? Was it really just a burial tomb, or did the building's design have a larger spiritual purpose? Is it possible there's undiscovered treasure inside?

There's no doubt that the world will continue to ask questions and try to find answers. Maybe that's why it's called one of the Seven Wonders Of The World.


Top 16 Great Pyramid Facts

It's made of 2.3 million stones
The stones weigh around 2.5 tons each
Pharaoh Khufu built the Great Pyramid
It's 450 feet tall
It weighs 5,750,000 tons
Slaves did not build the pyramids
The workers were paid in goods and services
It took around 30 years to build
Uncertain if pyramids were ceremonial, not burial
Khufu may once have been buried inside
No mummy has ever been found in one
Burial goods were probably housed inside
A boat was found in a pit at the base
You can go inside the Great Pyramid
Nothing is written in the King's Chamber
There are still mysteries to be solved

DISCOVERY: Has Queen Nefertiti's Tomb Been Found?

Watch this amazing video slideshow from Amazing World News to get all the latest news behind the possible discovery of Queen Nefertiti's tomb.

DISCOVERY: "Lady of the Jewels" Mummy Found Under Collapsed Roof

Turns out there's still more to discover of ancient Egypt. Even some spectacular finds.

Spanish archaeologists have uncovered something unexpected: while cleaning several tombs beneath that of Tuthmosis III, a caved in roof was hiding a mummy no one had noticed before. A large boulder had rolled down to cover the area with debris. When the archaeologists cleared it away, they found an untouched coffin!

Inside the coffin lay the completely destroyed ruins of a female mummy, yet her jewels were in tact. These included:
  • a golden necklace and pendant in the shape of a shell
  • two golden bangles for her arms
  • silver bracelets for each ankle
For now, her name is unknown. She's assumed to be from an elite family that lived during the Middle Kingdom (2137-1781 B.C.) She's being called "The Lady of the Jewels"

For more information and photos, visit: Discovery.com


DISCOVERY: Child Mummy Makes It Through Customs

These days at busy airports, travelers are experiencing an array of challenges. For this girl, there was no exception.

The 2,100-year-old mummy of young girl has finally cleared U.S. Customs after a delay of several days. Curators at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium were worried about the mummy remaining in a non-climate controlled area. Mummies are extremely delicate.

Their fears turned out to be unwarranted. Fortunately, the child mummy is in perfect condition. The small girl wears a fascinating burial mask that includes glass eye implants.

The girl died when she was nine years old, yet she is very small--around the size of a typical four-year-old. Just how and why she died may soon be revealed after the mummy makes a special visit to St. Mary's Medical Center in West Palm Beach. Details of the scan will be revealed Oct. 16.

It is no surprise that this mummy, discovered in Egypt in 1889, holds a special fascination for children.

Are you in South Florida? Be sure and make a visit:

"Afterlife: Tombs & Treasures of Ancient Egypt" is on display from Today through April 18 at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, 4801 Dreher Trail North, West Palm Beach. Tickets cost $19.95 for adults who are not members of the museum. For information, call the science center at 561-832-1988.

DISCOVERY: Ancient Tomb Discovered In Egypt Contains About 50 Mummies From ‘Royal Entourage’

Here's some incredibly exciting ancient Egypt news: 


Egyptologists have uncovered the remains of at least 50 people inside an ancient tomb in Valley of the Kings close to the city of Luxor.

The tomb, which dates back to the 18th dynasty kings who ruled Egypt during the 14th century BC, is believed to house several children and family members of two pharaohs. Known as tomb KV 40, the necropolis has been excavated by Egyptologists from the University of Basel for the past three years. The mummified remains may shed light on its occupants.

Want to know more? Read about it in more depth here: Ancient Egyptian Tomb Found With 50 Mummies From ‘Royal Entourage’ 

• • •

In more discovery news, a new tomb has been found with the bones of a long lost pharaoh:


"the necropolis of an entire forgotten dynasty."




Woseribre Senebkay cartouche
The Cartouche of newly discovered
pharaoh Woseribre Senebkay
Just when it seems little remains to discover of ancient Egypt, an amazing new find has come to light.

Researchers are thrilled to have found a new tomb with the bones of a long lost pharaoh named Woseribre Senebkay still inside.

Tomb robbers may have looted most of the tomb's original contents, but there is still much to be excited about. They found the pharaoh's funeral mask. His bones were in still the tomb, and scientists have pieced the ancient king back together again.

How do we know this pharaoh's name? Take a look at the picture on the left. It's a cartouche, which is a protective symbol placed around the hieroglyphs of the pharaoh's name. The hieroglyphics spell out who he is: Pharaoh Wosiribre Senebkay.

There is still so much to learn from this new discovery. That's what makes it exciting.

According to Joseph Wagner who works with the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, this doesn't simply represent the discovery of one ancient ruler. Instead, it reveals "the necropolis of an entire forgotten dynasty."

Replica of King Tut's Tomb to Open in Egypt

King Tut mask
A. R. Williams
National Geographic

Published October 23, 2013

Visitors to the Valley of the Kings in Egypt will soon be touring a replica of King Tut's tomb rather than the real thing. The installation of an exact copy is now scheduled to begin in January 2014, with an opening to the public expected in April.

>Read More on NationalGeographic.com: Replica of King Tut's Tomb to Open in Egypt

DISCOVERY: Lost Egyptian City Found



Watch the video below and be amazed as a diver swims around fallen pieces of an ancient civilization.

The lost city was called Heracleion by the Greeks, and Thonis by the Egyptians and is believed to be 1,200 years old.

Dr. Franck Goddio, an underwater archaeologist, is the man who found this amazing discovery.

Why did Heracleion/Thonis end up under water? What could have happened to hide this city for so long? A natural disaster?

No one knows for certain, and perhaps we never will.






DISCOVERY: Lost Egyptian Pyramids Found...Using Google Maps?

Discovery of 4 mounds and 1 triangular plateau. 
How's this for cool? Researchers may have found 2 new pyramids in Egypt, according to Discovery News.

But they didn't find them through an archaeological dig, like you might expect.

Instead, they found them using Google Earth.

Over the past decade, Google Earth's satellites have been busy snapping pictures of the earth's surface from space. It turns out that man-made structures are very noticeable from the sky. They tend to have straight lines, not normally found in the natural world.

On This Day: King Tut's Tomb Discovered

Image: King Tut's sarcophagus
King Tut's Tomb Opened

It was on this day, November 26, 1922, that British archeologists Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon entered Tutankhamen's tomb. They were the first living beings to look upon the teenage Pharaoh's burial sarcophagus in 3,000 years.

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