Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)

The summer was a hot and somnolent one in Egypt this year, and as usual, during the hot season, most archaeological activities ceased. An exception was made for the removal of three temples in the northern stretch of Lower Nubia, where the high water of the Aswan reservoir covers the monuments for t...

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spelling oai:localhost:123456789-1182022-03-26T23:13:19Z Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961) The summer was a hot and somnolent one in Egypt this year, and as usual, during the hot season, most archaeological activities ceased. An exception was made for the removal of three temples in the northern stretch of Lower Nubia, where the high water of the Aswan reservoir covers the monuments for the greater part of the year, only receding in the very hottest months of the summer. This year, in the baking heat that afflicts Upper Egypt and Nubia in the summer, engineers and work gangs of the Antiquities Department laboured for two months to dismantle and remove the small temples at Debud, Tafa, and Qertassi. These are all built-in masonry and are small enough so that the blocks can be numbered as removed, to be loaded on barges, and carried away for re-erection outside the zone to be flooded by the High Dam's reservoir. The work was done in good time, despite the torrid heat, and represents the first real step in the salvage problem with which the world's Egyptologists are so concerned. 2021-12-23T13:50:21Z 2021-12-23T13:50:21Z 1961-03 Journal https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/118 en application/pdf American Research Center in Egypt
institution My University
collection DSpace
language English
description The summer was a hot and somnolent one in Egypt this year, and as usual, during the hot season, most archaeological activities ceased. An exception was made for the removal of three temples in the northern stretch of Lower Nubia, where the high water of the Aswan reservoir covers the monuments for the greater part of the year, only receding in the very hottest months of the summer. This year, in the baking heat that afflicts Upper Egypt and Nubia in the summer, engineers and work gangs of the Antiquities Department laboured for two months to dismantle and remove the small temples at Debud, Tafa, and Qertassi. These are all built-in masonry and are small enough so that the blocks can be numbered as removed, to be loaded on barges, and carried away for re-erection outside the zone to be flooded by the High Dam's reservoir. The work was done in good time, despite the torrid heat, and represents the first real step in the salvage problem with which the world's Egyptologists are so concerned.
format Journal
title Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
spellingShingle Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
title_short Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
title_full Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
title_fullStr Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
title_full_unstemmed Newsletter, Number 41 (March, 1961)
title_sort newsletter, number 41 (march, 1961)
publisher American Research Center in Egypt
publishDate 2021
url https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/118
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