(Photo courtesy of Jaen's University)
The wooden sarcophagus was unearthed by 
archaeologists at the necropolis of Qubbet 
el-Hawa in Aswan, Egypt. Believed to contain the body of a person of 
some rank, it boasts extraordinarily delicate features, well-preserved by the 
sands of time.
The piece was found by a team from the 
University of Jaen, in Spain, who have been carrying out digs at the site since 
2008. Since starting a fresh excavation in January, 
they have also discovered 20 mummies and uncovered a tomb dating from around 
1830BC. The dig is being led by Professor Alejandro Jiménez Serrano, who is working 
alongside 16 staff from Jaen, as well as universities in Granada and 
London. He said that his team came from a number of 
different disciplines which allowed a broad focus.
It had also allowed them 'to develop new 
techniques such as RTI or scanning in 3D which helps read hieroglyphic texts with greater accuracy,' he 
added. The team had already found two smaller tombs 
in earlier digs. 
Qubbet el-Hawa necropolis was in 
use from 2250BC and provided a last resting place for some of the country's most 
important officials. 
A string of 40 tombs cut into a rocky cliff 
face, the burial ground also forms one of the best vantage points of the city of 
Aswan.

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