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Record conservation study of Tutankhamun's tomb solves mystery and raises new questions

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A scientific team conducts conservation work on Tutankhamun’s burial chamber in 2016. Solvent Red 207

Record conservation study of Tutankhamun's tomb solves mystery and raises new questions

From microbial 'freckles' to sticky dust, conservators have solved some problems in the pharaoh's 3,300-year-old funerary monument, but raised new concerns in the process.

When Howard Carter unsealed the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922, he set off a series of discoveries that would capture the imagination of the world and set off an enduring love affair with the brightly painted 3,300-year-old burial chamber of the boy king and his golden treasures. Almost a century later, a team of scientists has now completed the most significant scrutiny of the tomb to date: a decade-long project of painstaking study and conservation that has solved some mysteries but also raised new questions about the future of one of the world’s most famous ancient monuments.

A symposium in Luxor this week details the overall results of the project, undertaken jointly by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities and

Record conservation study of Tutankhamun's tomb solves mystery and raises new questions

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