Reporting:
Hawass discovered the missing part of a broken limestone block a few months ago in a storeroom at el Ashmunein, a village on the west bank of the Nile some 150 miles south of Cairo.
Once reassembled, the slab has become "an accurate piece of evidence that proves Tut lived in el Amarna with Akhenaten and he married his wife, Ankhesenamun," while living in el Amarna, Hawass said...
Can this be true?
Or is this just an excuse not to do DNA studies?
Hawass discovered the missing part of a broken limestone block a few months ago in a storeroom at el Ashmunein, a village on the west bank of the Nile some 150 miles south of Cairo.
Once reassembled, the slab has become "an accurate piece of evidence that proves Tut lived in el Amarna with Akhenaten and he married his wife, Ankhesenamun," while living in el Amarna, Hawass said...
Can this be true?
Or is this just an excuse not to do DNA studies?
More reports:
Mummified Fetuses May Be King Tut's Kids
Zahi Hawass latest video on archaeology and returning antiquities to Egypt, his quest:
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