People found a underground passage and they digged it up and then they found some stairs :)
Egyptian Pharoahs are buried in the Valley of the Pharoahs, and not in pyramids as is popularly believed.
no temples are like burial tombs
The Egyptians built tombs to keep and protect mummies they would also decorate the insides with hieroglyphics and make traps for trespassers.
The ancient tombs of Egyptian kings were pyramids. Egyptian pharaohs were first mummified, then put in a sarcophagus (a thing like a coffin) and then the more important pharaohs were buried in the center of the pyramids.
Honey
miguel is the new pharoah
Many paintings from Ancient Egypt have been found near the Valley of Kings in Luxor. However, many are also found in the tombs of the pharaohs.
Still edible honey was found in the tombs of the Pharoahs - it's the only food which doesn't spoil (so much for the dates on the jars) but as you've found, it does crystalize. You can warm it either in the microwave or stand the jar in hot water to make it runny an lighter again and it is still safe to eat.
People found a underground passage and they digged it up and then they found some stairs :)
Yes. Provided it is kept in a sealed container, and its water content is less than 20 per cent, honey will keep indefinitely. It may crystallise, but all honey will do that eventually. Honey has been found in Egyptian tombs, sealed in jars some three thousand years ago -- and it was still edible.
sometimes the hieroglyphics would be in tombs to warn or try to intimidate people that adventure into the tomb or to scare off tomb raiders.
A:Mercury (Hg) was the element which was discovered.
Egyptian Pharoahs are buried in the Valley of the Pharoahs, and not in pyramids as is popularly believed.
i hate answers.com
Mercury, also known as liquid metal, has been found in Egyptian tombs. It was used for various purposes in ancient Egypt, such as in religious rituals and for its perceived magical properties. However, exposure to mercury can be hazardous to health.
A prominent feature of Egyptian worship was belief in an afterlife. This belief found expression in the practice of embalming the dead and in the erection of huge tombs to honor them.