Αρίστος έγραψε: 29 Μαρ 2025, 16:25
fonfon έγραψε: 29 Μαρ 2025, 15:48
https://virtualhawara.com/
https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=AH%2F ... abOverview
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... _at_Hawara
Αυτά είναι που δεν αφήνουν οι αιγύπτιοι να γίνει έρευνα.Μια ζωή παραμυθάς ο Αρίστος.
The entrance to the pyramid is today flooded to a depth of 6 metres as a result of the waters from the Abdul Wahbi canal (an offshoot of the Bahr Yussef canal), which flows around two sides of the site and passes within 30m of the pyramid.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawara
Due to sustained irrigation water flow under the pyramid and labyrinth site, the archaeological site has become abandoned and is exhibiting signs of severe deterioration. This water flow has developed over the past century with the water level now approximately 5 meters below the topographic surface, and about 7 meters above the lower corridor level. There is an international effort to implement a sustainable conservation strategy and dewatering of the site. It is imperative to understand the level of underground water table, using remote sensing to record water levels and thermal conditions of the acquifer material and hydraulic properties within the chambers and in the Pyramid substructure. There is an urgent need to document and diagnose existing condition and use the latest Virtual Heritage Technologies to produce scenario conservation and recovery models, before any conservation or dewatering work can commence.
Oι αρχαιολογοι που παρεθεσα αποδιδουν την ευθυνη για τη ματαιωση της ανασκαφης εξ ολοκληρου σε αδικαιολογητη αρνηση της αιγυπτιακης κυβερνησης.
.
Ποιοι είναι ακριβώς οι αρχαιολόγοι;
In 2008,[30] archaeologists working on the Mataha Expedition made a discovery beneath the sands, as revealed by researcher Ben Van Kerkwyk. The results of the expedition were published in 2008 in the NRIAG scientific journal, and the research results were presented at a public conference at Ghent University, attended by Belgian media. However, the discovery was quickly silenced, as the Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (Egypt) suspended all further communication about the discovery due to Egyptian National Security sanctions.[31]
According to Van Kerkwyk:
The remains of the labyrinth have been discovered in the sandy areas south of the pyramid. The first to find real evidence of this was the great Flinders Petrie, who, in the late 19th century, discovered the remains of a massive stone foundation, over 300 meters wide, about four meters beneath the sand. He concluded that these were the remains of the labyrinth's foundation, and that the structure itself had been quarried and destroyed long ago.
However, new evidence gathered today challenges his conclusion, and it now seems likely that what Petrie found was not the foundation, but part of the roof or cover. These same areas were scanned in 2008 using ground-penetrating radar by the Mataha Expedition, a collaboration between Egyptian authorities and Ghent University (Belgium) and funded by contemporary artist Louis De Cordier. The results of this expedition clearly indicate the presence of ordered, grid-like structures deep within the sand, at levels much deeper than those Petrie excavated. While this expedition was carried out with the full cooperation and authorization of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, the official results and conclusions of this legitimate scientific study have never been published.[32]
Το παραπάνω κομμάτι αναπαράγουν από εδώ και από εκεί χωρίς παραπάνω στοιχεία.Τα ονόματα δε που αναφέρονται δεν τους λες και επιστήμονες.Όντως αν πρόκειται για τους παραπάνω δίκιο έχουν να μην ασχοληθούν παραπάνω οι αιγυπτιακές αρχές.
Τα παραπάνω είναι του 2008.
Τα δικά μου είναι του 2020 και η έρευνα τους δημοσιεύτηκε το 2022.Συνεργάστηκαν οι παρακάτω φορείς
Nottingham Trent University (Collaboration, Lead Research Organisation)
UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS (Collaboration)
National Research Institute Of Astronomy & Geophysics (Collaboration)
Ministry of State of Antiquities (Collaboration)
Mohamed Gamal Abdelmonem (Principal Investigator)
Gad El-Qady (Co-Investigator)
Gehan Selim (Co-Investigator)
Barbara Pierscionek (Co-Investigator)
Mohamed ElGabry (Co-Investigator)
Antony Pidduck (Co-Investigator)
Amin Al-Habaibeh (Co-Investigator)
Abbas Ali (Co-Investigator)
Το πρόβλημα που υπάρχει στην περιοχή έχει να κάνει με το νερό.
Τα υπόλοιπα είναι ιστορίες για αγρίους.