The opening of space is described as frozen in time. It was intact for 3300 years.
A rare intact burial cave containing dozens of late Bronze Age artifacts from the time of the Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II has been discovered in Israel. Untouched burial archaeologists found in Palmachim National Park, writes the Daily Mail.
The site is said to have remained largely untouched for 3,300 years and contains bronze vessels, jugs, pottery and military equipment. It was found by accident when a mechanical excavator crashed into the roof of a structure on the beach.
“This find happens once in a lifetime. It’s not every day you see an Indiana Jones scene,” said archaeologist Eli Yannay.
The burial chamber is carved into the rock in the shape of a square, with the vault supported by a pillar.
Among the finds were very small vessels containing few precious substances and bronze arrowheads.
According to Yannai, there are many different things in this place that are supposed to serve the dead in the afterlife.
“The fact that these people were buried with weapons, including full arrows, shows that these people could have been warriors, maybe they were guards on ships – maybe that’s why they got of ships from around the area. Authorities believe that this burial site may have served a family or clan. However, not much can be said about the corpses. The fact that these people were buried with weapons , including full arrows, show that these people could have been warriors,” the experts concluded.
Recall that early archaeologists in Georgia discovered a 1.8 million-year-old tooth belonging to an ancient human species.
Scientists have found the remains of a fish with an age of 380 million years
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Source: korrespondent
