An archaeologist in Britain believes that his team may have found the second grave of Egypt belonging to King Thutmose II.
The potential to find only days after Dr Piers lityland Discovery has been announced In the first grave of a Pharaoh since Tutankhamun revealed in a century ago.
Dr Lithland told the observer He suspected that this second site would hold Pharaoh’s mummified body.
Archaeologists believe that the first tomb was not six years after a funeral, because of a flood, and moved for a second.
Dr. Litherland thought of the second grave under a 23-meter (75 ft) man-made hole in a mountain of western valleys of western necropolis valleys near the city of Luxor.
The first is located behind a waterfall, and is thought to have a consequence.
When the Egyptologists seek for the initial grave, they found a posthumus inscription that indicates the content that can be transferred to a second location nearby, by the wife of Thutmose II and Hal-sister hatshapput.
The British-Egyptian team has already worked to find the grave by hand, after tunnel testing it is considered “very dangerous”.
“We need to get the whole thing for another month,” said Dr Lithern.
The crew found the first grave in an area associated with the ladies of the royal women, but when they entered the tomb they found it was decorated – the sign of a Pharaoh.
“The ceiling part is not intact: a blue painted ceiling with yellow stars in the graves of kings,” as Dr. Liteherland.
He told the The BBC Newshiur program Last week he felt overwhelmed in search.
“The emotions of coming in these things is just one of the extraordinary compassion because if you have experienced something you can’t take,” he said.
Thutmose II is the most well-known husband in the Queen Hatshepsut, regarded as one of Egypt’s greatest Pharaohs and one of some Pharaoh women who ruled his own right.
Thutmose II is Tutankhamun ancestors, whose reign is believed to be from about 1493 to 1479 BC. Tutankhamun’s tomb was found in British archaeologists in 1922.