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Experience Egypt from Home: Tomb of Menna
Tomb of Menna
The Tomb of Menna (TT69)
is one of the most visited and best preserved of the small 18th Dynasty
elite tombs in the Theban necropolis, yet it was previously never
systematically recorded or fully documented. Constant visitation over a
long period and deteriorating environmental conditions had taken their
toll on the painted interior.
The Tomb of Menna Project, led by Melinda Hartwig from Georgia State University (an ARCE research supporting member)
began in 2006 with a feasibility study recording the existing
conditions in the tomb chapel. This led to an action plan for
documentation, conservation, protection, and publication of the chapel.
From 2007-2009, four major phases were undertaken. In the first phase,
the tomb and its environs were surveyed to create the first exact plan
of the chapel and its surroundings. The second phase joined
high-resolution digital images with an extensive net of measured points
taken inside of the tomb to create an exact plan of the mural and
ceiling decoration. Archaeometry, including XRF, RAMAN spectrometry, and
colorimetry, was done in the third phase to aid conservators and art
historians in their analysis of the tomb. These state-of-the-art
portable techniques non-invasively documented the physical and chemical
properties of the painting and its substrate. Conservation comprised the
fourth phase, and included stabilization, intervention, and the final
presentation of the painted wall decoration. The tomb was given a new
wooden floor and rail system, LED lighting and a bilingual information
panel in Arabic and English.
Visit the virtual Tomb of Menna
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