That is unknown sorry.
the Winged Victory of Samothrace
It is on the roof of the Treasury, the first building you come to. Climb the winged statue to the right of the guards. You can jump onto the roof.
Nike.
The statue you may be thinking about is known as 'Winged Victory' and is a sculpture of Nike the goddess of victory.
The Winged Victory of Samothrace
In ancient Greece (1 o'clock, 328 BC), the winged statue is to the right of the first building (the Treasury). Jump to the top, then onto the roof, to find the phonograph for Thomas Edison (9 oclock, 1877 AD).
== == The famous statue of Zeus at Olympia, created by the sculptor Pheidias, one of the seven wonders of the Ancient World The majestic statue of Athena, at Parthenon, in Athens Acropolis also a Pheidias work. Iniochos of Delphi a bronze statue exposed at the Delphi Museum. The statue of Hermes of Praxitelis exposed at the museum of Olympia The statue of Winged Victory of Samothace exposed in Louvre The statue of Aphrodite of Milos exposed also in Louvre
The Statue of Zeus at Olympia is one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
the statue of the winged victory of samothrace is headless maybe broken by earthquake or other nature disasters, war, or maybe because the statue were abandoned too long. the head probably smashed into hundred of pieces and scattered, or steal by someone who found it (if the head still in good condition, not broken, it will be a good news for everyone)
At Ancient Greece (1 o'clock, 328 BC), climb on the winged statue just to the right of the building. The phonograph is on the roof. Take it back to Thomas Edison (9 o'clock, 1877 AD).
Because it is the statue of Zeus!
The Pegasus was the winged horse of ancient Greece. It was not real.