Posted on 09/29/2015 12:38:02 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Astonishingly, the papyri were written by men who participated in the building of the Great Pyramid, the tomb of the Pharaoh Khufu, the first and largest of the three colossal pyramids at Giza just outside modern Cairo. Among the papyri was the journal of a previously unknown official named Merer, who led a crew of some 200 men who traveled from one end of Egypt to the other picking up and delivering goods of one kind or another. Merer, who accounted for his time in half-day increments, mentions stopping at Tura, a town along the Nile famous for its limestone quarry, filling his boat with stone and taking it up the Nile River to Giza. In fact, Merer mentions reporting to the noble Ankh-haf, who was known to be the half-brother of the Pharaoh Khufu and now, for the first time, was definitively identified as overseeing some of the construction of the Great Pyramid. And since the pharaohs used the Tura limestone for the pyramids outer casing, and Merers journal chronicles the last known year of Khufus reign, the entries provide a never-before-seen snapshot of the ancients putting finishing touches on the Great Pyramid.
(Excerpt) Read more at smithsonianmag.com ...
Merer's logbook, including mention of pyramid ('Horizon of Khufu')
Wadi el-Jarf papyri in situ, photo by G. Pollin
Fascinating. And makes sense.
I wonder if any of the prior civilizations ever came close to creating some kind of long range communication.
I guess the answer is obviously no.
Note: this topic is from . Just a re-ping.
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