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News Archaeologists uncover hidden 2,000-year-old tomb which could be key to solving centuries old mystery

Georgina Cutler

Guest Reporter
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A 2000-year-old tomb has been discovered in the Unesco world heritage site of Petra which archaeologists say could solve ancient mysteries about the city.

The joint US-Jordanian archaeological team located the tomb underneath Petra’s famous sandstone structure - the Treasury - which was featured in films such as Steven Spielberg’s Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.



It is believed that the 12 well-preserved human skeletons were socials elite due to their tomb’s central position within the city.

The team also discovered bronze, iron and ceramic artefacts.


A skeleton and The Treasury in Petra


According to Dr Pearce Paul Creasman, executive director of the American Center of Research, more relics are expected to be found following a more thorough excavation.

An age-old theory suggests the Treasury was home to the pharaoh’s treasure because its of structural beauty and a decorative stone urn above the entrance.

Today, archaeologists suspect the Treasury was a tomb built by Aretas IV, a Nabataean king who ruled from roughly 9BC to 40AD.

The latest discovery supports the theory, as it is believed that the tomb predates the Treasury itself.

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The team dated the tomb to the first century BC using luminance dating, "which tells you the last time certain soils saw the sunlight", Creasman said.

He added: "It is rare to find a tomb with human remains in Petra.

"So when you do find one, that becomes extremely valuable."

Creasman hopes the new findings could give hints about the Nabataeans - who were first recorded in 312BC when they withstood an attempted invasion by Antigonus I Monophthalmos (Antigonus the One-Eyed), a former general of Alexander the Great.



The Treasury

"They just appear in the historical record and then it goes over a hundred years before we read about them in text again,” he said.

"By which time they have this fully-fledged society and Petra is being built in the sense that we know it today."

"This is going to help us learn more about a shared, regional past. The Nabateans were a multicultural trading society who only worked because they united as a people. I hope they might be able to teach us something today."

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