Lost Kingdom of the Black Pharaohs

El Kurru and other sites in ancient Napata (modern Sudan) are featured in an 84 minute documentary called “Lost Kingdom of the Black Pharaohs,” available for streaming in the US at this link: https://www.sciencechannel.com/tv-shows/lost-kingdom-of-the-black-pharaohs/full-episodes/lost-kingdom-of-the-black-pharaohs Let us know what you think!

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New exhibit at Kelsey Museum, Ann Arbor

Director Geoff Emberling and head of Conservation Suzanne Davis have collaborated on a new museum exhibit at the Kelsey Museum in Ann Arbor. The exhibition focuses on graffiti at the site of El Kurru. Link to the exhibit website here.

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Life in the Field, North Sudan

Figure 1 – The main street in Kurru in the early morning hours before work. Waleed’s shop, where we buy snacks and supplies but most importantly bottled water, is on the left less than 100m from our front door and the barber shop, painted green, is right across the street! 14 Dec 2018 Gregory Tucker…

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Magnetic Gradiometry at Jebel Barkal

Figure 1 – Collecting magnetic data on our first day of survey at Jebel Barkal (photo by Abdelbaki Salahadin Mohamend). 7 Dec 2018 Gregory Tucker This week for the #fieldworkfriday I would like to share with you a bit of where I am and what I’m doing in the field. This month I’ve come to…

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Welcome!

We have a new gate at El Kurru to welcome visitors. From the main road to Karima, it’s now clearer how to enter the site. Put up in January, it reaffirms El Kurru’s place as part of the Jebel Barkal UNESCO World Heritage Site. The new pise wall that the gate is part of also…

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Cultural Heritage in Sudan: Karmakol

As we try to integrate Cultural Heritage into our archaeological project, it’s worth seeing what others in the area are doing. A group called the Swiss Initiative is dedicated to creating and supporting cultural projects in “conflict countries.” They have a project Karmakol, not far from our site (we’re near Karima). Here’s their website. In…

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Offseason work

Our project is in the middle of our offseason; we’ve written a report on some of our work that will appear in the journal Sudan & Nubia. A little plug for this journal–it’s the best way to find out about the latest archaeological work in Sudan, it’s in color, and it costs $28 per year….

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Excavating a Pyramid (film clip)

(guest post by Jack Cheng, our draftsman, artist, and my friend and colleague for almost 20 years!) In excavating the pyramid at El Kurru, we calculated that about 100 tons of fill had been deposited in just the last room (similar amounts were removed from the first two rooms in last season). Some of the…

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