Between the hectic work at the end
of the season and the terrible internet connection, I wasn’t able to post about
our final results for the season. So in the next few days, I’ll write about
where things stand and our plans for next season.
Our most dramatic result was in the
burial chamber of the pyramid. After two years of work, and about 250 tons of sand
removed by hand, we came down on a big granite slab, about 10 feet (3.3
meters) long that was aligned between the door and the “stele niche” in the back
of the burial chamber.
|
Granite slab when first cleaned (Jaffar Madani of El Kurru village at left) |
Would this be the inscribed stele that would finally
give us the name of the king who built the pyramid?
Well, we cleaned off the stone and
it was pretty roughly finished. So we thought maybe on the other face…so we looked underneath, but the space was too confined for us to see.
|
Me and Mahmoud Suliman Bashir, my Sudanese friend and colleague
(and the project's Inspector from the Department of Antiquities)
trying to see under the stele |
So we got all our strongest guys and turned it so it was vertical.
And that face was unfinished too! Here's what I thought about that:
When we excavated the rest of the
room, the granite slab turned out to be resting right on an unfinished sandstone "coffin bench" that was originally intended to support the coffin of the king. But the rest of the room was completely empty, showing that the pyramid burial chamber
was NEVER USED!
|
Granite slab on top of the coffin bench, with the beginnings of the "stele niche" at the back wall |
We had more indications that the pyramid was also unfinished above ground. Next post!