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  2. Stone quarries of ancient Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_quarries_of_ancient...

    Rock temples cut directly in the rocks at the Silsileh quarrying site, near Aswan. The stone quarries of ancient Egypt once produced quality stone for the building of tombs and temples and for decorative monuments such as sarcophagi, stelae, and statues. [1] These quarries are now recognised archaeological sites.

  3. Geology of Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Egypt

    The geology of Egypt includes rocks from Archaean - early Proterozoic times onwards. These oldest rocks are found as inliers in Egypt’s Western Desert. In contrast, the rocks of the Eastern Desert are largely late Proterozoic in age. Throughout the country this older basement is overlain by Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks.

  4. Sabu disk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabu_disk

    The Sabu disk is an ancient Egyptian artifact from the First Dynasty, c. 3000 to 2800 BC. It was found in 1936 in the north of the Saqqara necropolis in mastaba S3111, the grave of the ancient Egyptian official Sabu after whom it is named. The function and meaning of the carefully crafted natural stone vessel are unclear.

  5. Alabaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alabaster

    Egyptian alabaster has been worked extensively near Suez [8] and Assiut. [8] This stone variety is the "alabaster" of the ancient Egyptians and Bible and is often termed Oriental alabaster, since the early examples came from the Far East. The Greek name alabastrites is said to be derived from the town of Alabastron in Egypt, where the stone was ...

  6. Rosetta Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosetta_Stone

    Jean-François Champollion announced the transliteration of the Egyptian scripts in Paris in 1822; it took longer still before scholars were able to read Ancient Egyptian inscriptions and literature confidently. Major advances in the decoding were recognition that the stone offered three versions of the same text (1799); that the Demotic text ...

  7. Unfinished obelisk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unfinished_obelisk

    The unfinished obelisk is nearly one-third larger than any ancient Egyptian obelisk ever erected. If finished it would have measured around 41.75 metres (137.0 ft) [1] and would have weighed nearly 1,090 tonnes (1,200 short tons). [3]

  8. Tura, Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tura,_Egypt

    Tura (Egyptian Arabic: طرة Tora IPA: [ˈtˤoɾˤɑ], Coptic: ⲧⲣⲱⲁ, Ancient Greek: Τρωια or Τρωη [1]) was the primary quarry for limestone in ancient Egypt. [2] The site, which was known by the ancient Egyptians as Troyu or Royu, is located about halfway between modern-day Cairo and Helwan. [3]

  9. Elkab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elkab

    Elkab consists of prehistoric and ancient Egyptian settlements, rock-cut tombs of the early Eighteenth Dynasty (1550–1295 BC), remains of temples dating from the Early Dynastic period (3100–2686 BC) to the Ptolemaic Kingdom (332–30 BC), as well as part of the walls of a Coptic monastery.