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The find reflected the fact that the area was used for burials in both the Old Kingdom and 2,000 years later when these mummies were buried. The lid of the limestone sarcophagus opened Wednesday had been broken in antiquity
-- likely by workers carrying it down into the chamber -- and resealed with mortar, Hawass said, tracing the crack. Hawass added that he plans to scan the mummy soon, a complicated process that requires the mummy to be removed from the tomb. He believes there could be gold amulets inside meant to "help the deceased in the afterlife," a common practice in pharaonic times. Also Wednesday, Hawass opened another sarcophagus in the storeroom, a wooden coffin with an inscription in hieroglyphics on the lid that exposed another mummy, but stopped short of opening a third, also a wooden one, because of its poor condition. All eight sarcophagi in the storeroom are believed to hold mummies, said Abdel Hakim Karar, chief archaeologist of Saqqara but so far only three were opened. The first sarcophagi was opened Monday. Excavations at Saqqara have been going on for 150 years, uncovering a necropolis of pyramids and tombs dating mostly from the Old Kingdom but also tombs from as recently as the Roman era. In November, Hawass announced the discovery of a 4,300 year-old pyramid at Saqqara
-- the 118th in Egypt, and the 12th to be found at this site. In December, two new tombs were found near the current mummies' discovery. According to Hawass, only 30 percent of Egypt's monuments have been uncovered, with the rest still under the sand.
[Associated
Press;
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