Researchers report that cracks formed after the 1994 flood have widened, letting rainwater infiltrate kv62 and fostering mold that eats away its 3300-year-old frescoes.
Tutankhamun's tomb collapse risk grows as cracks, fungi, and humidity threaten the ancient site, prompting urgent expert warnings.
The Daily Mail newspaper reported earlier on Tuesday, that the 3,300-year-old tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh may collapse due to the threat of flooding ...
A disaster could strike at any moment, and if the Valley of the Kings is to be preserved, action must be taken before it is ...
The powerful gods of ancient Egypt are having a get-together on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. That would be at the ...
According to research published in Nature's npj Heritage Science journal, Professor Sayed Hemeda of Cairo University's Department of Preservation of Architectural Heritage has identified structural ...
"Divine Egypt," a new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, features nearly 250 artifacts representing the rich ...
Maynard Owen Williams was National Geographic's first foreign correspondent, and in 1923 he was on hand for an event the ...
A once-in-a-decade exhibition of ancient deities — many are goddesses — ranging over more than 3,000 years, from monumental ...
In “Dinner With King Tut,” Sam Kean shows how experimental archaeology can recreate the stinky, slimy, and tasty parts of ...
Author Sam Kean writes about how experimental archaeology engages the senses and offers an intimate look into ancient history ...