- The first remains of ancient Egyptian seagoing ships
ever to be recovered have been found in two caves on Egypt's Red Sea coast,
according to a team at Boston University in the US.
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- The team also found fragments of pottery at the site,
which could help resolve controversies about the extent of ancient Egyptian
trade voyages. But details of the newly disclosed finds remain sketchy.
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- Kathryn Bard, who co-led the dig with Italian archaeologists
in December 2004, has revealed to the Boston University weekly community
newsletter that the team found a range of items - including timbers and
riggings - inside the man-made caves, located at the coastal Pharaonic
site of Wadi Gawasis.
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- According to the report, pottery in the caves could date
at least some of the artefacts to a famous 15th century BC naval expedition
by Queen Hatshepsut to the mysterious, incense-producing land of Punt.
This voyage is depicted in detailed reliefs on Queen Hatshepsut's temple
on the west bank of the Nile, near modern-day Luxor.
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- Bard declined to speak to New Scientist. But the find
is exciting, says John Baines, professor of Egyptology at the University
of Oxford, UK, who has been in contact with Bard. "These finds put
flesh on what we might have imagined," he says. Gold and ebony
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- The pottery finds include items the Italian researchers
think could be from Yemen - a potential candidate for the modern identity
of Punt. The ancient Egyptians sourced a variety of exotic wares in Punt,
including gold, ebony and incense.
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- "The Yemeni pottery is very interesting because
it was suspected that there were contacts across the Red Sea - and this
proves that there were," Baines says.
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- The naval artefacts included two curved cedar planks
which might have been parts of steering oars. But linking these to Queen
Hatshepsut's famous voyage might be a little too specific, he says.
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- "Kathryn [Bard] has told me the pottery is early
New Kingdom, and we know of no other expedition to Punt in that period,
so it is a reasonable guess. But we also have to bear in mind that almost
everything from antiquity is lost, so there could well have been other
voyages."
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- It is not clear exactly why the artefacts were sealed
up inside the caves. But it is possible that they were offerings to the
Egyptian gods. "That sounds very plausible to me, not least because
previous excavations found a structure made of stone anchors that could
again be some sort of thanks-offering," says Baines.
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- The team plans to return to the caves in December 2005
to continue their excavations.
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- http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7190
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