Well huge amounts of gold objects eg. statues, jewlery, coffins, death masks, etc.
They also believed that the gods skin was gold, so gold was a sign of being immortal and godly.
Actually, it was gold they traded for salt. The africans (believe it or not) valued salt more than gold. It could be used for flavoring and preserving foods.
Egyptians traded for ALOT of things.. gold , turquoise papyrus ( a type of plant used to make paper-like substances ex- small boats , baskets , and of course paper. ) and copper.
It was used for plpows and jewelery and also they traded it......also did you know that copper is 8 tumes the amount of gold
ancient Egyptians first used gold in coffins. they put it in coffins to give the soul peace and let the soul live in harmony in heaven. it was used as a good reason and still is sometimes.
There is no evidence that the Ancient Hebrews used or made soap. The Ancient Egyptians invented a form of soap, but there's no mention of it in the Torah.
Egyptians did not make gold, they found it and carved to were they used it on sacred things, such as tomb stones, ect.
the ancient egyptians used metals, gold and wood for their tools they are like the cavemen but the cavemen never had gold
Egyptians used gold currency The earliest money that we know about was made of pure gold and dates back to the 3rd millennium BC in Egypt. The gold had standardised weights and values.
Egyptians used gold currency The earliest money that we know about was made of pure gold and dates back to the 3rd millennium BC in Egypt. The gold had standardised weights and values.
they used wood they did not have pillows
They had money. They used hard coinage. Gold/Silver/Bronze (specie)
uh they used them for trading and stuff so they payed the shippers with them. Gold rings Yeah. Awesome I am awesome Iamawesome.com.net.org
Actually, it was gold they traded for salt. The africans (believe it or not) valued salt more than gold. It could be used for flavoring and preserving foods.
There is evidence that it was first used in Ancient Egypt. The Egyptians made paper from the papyrus plant, as far back as 5000 years ago.
There is evidence that they used the rubble to backfill the quarries from where the stone used to build the pyramid was cut.
Faience, gold, glass, silver, bone, ivory, wood etc.
The term Double Eagle is used only for $20 gold coins. This is a 1982 G.W. Commemorative Half Dollar. Unfortunately the gold plating killed the numismatic collectible value of the coin. It is now only valued for the silver it contains.