Monday, November 23, 2015

Have you found the lost tomb of Nefertiti? – Blasting News

This year, the prestigious archaeologist Nicholas Reeves has published a detailed report which details a startling theory that could lead to discovery of the lost tomb of Nefertiti . The basis of their argument is based on the images obtained by the Spanish company Virtual conservation and restoration of Heritage Factum Arte, in which evidence was found to believe that something is hidden behind the walls of the tomb of one of the Pharaohs more known to the public, Tutankhamen.

In 2009, the company Factum Arte carried out a shooting inside the tomb of Pharaoh child to carry out the reconstruction of an exact replica that allows the visit and is located in the Valley of the Kings. From these high-quality images in which it is recorded to the smallest detail inside the tomb, Reeves has identified some cracks in the north wall that he associated with a door to connect with another tomb, presumably that of Nefertiti.

In theory Reeves confirmed, this discovery would be the largest since the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun himself would be speaking as a never desecrated burial to be in the exact condition as it was 3,300 years ago after the burial of the queen.

The shocking discovery Reeves gives a clear indication of the high capacity of new technologies research and knowledge as well as for the conservation and preservation of heritage, as the cracks that have led to the development of the thesis put forward by the English archaeologist have not been observed before or during studies in situ inside the tomb itself. Only irregularities have been observed thanks to the high quality obtained by the short-range scanner and the enormous precision of the work carried out by the Spanish company.

According to the theory Reeves never found the tomb of the Egyptian queen would find hidden behind the sealed door in the north wall of the tomb of who is supposed to be his son, the pharaoh Tutankhamun. We not take long to know the truth because the Department of Antiquities of Egypt has already authorized the study area using radar.

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