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Journal of Archaeological Science, 2011
This paper presents the results of a geoarchaeological study undertaken in Upper Egypt, in the western part of the Karnak Temples complex. The geoarchaeological approach helps to better understand the fluvial dynamics of the Nile in the proximity of the Pharaonic site during the late Holocene.
Ghilardi, Matthieu, Boraik, M.
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This paper presents the results of a geoarchaeological study undertaken in Upper Egypt, in the western part of the Karnak Temples complex. The geoarchaeological approach helps to better understand the fluvial dynamics of the Nile in the proximity of the Pharaonic site during the late Holocene.
Ghilardi, Matthieu, Boraik, M.
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2022
Periodico di Mineralogia, Vol. 91 No. 1 (2022)
Marey Mahmoud, Hussein Hassan +1 more
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Periodico di Mineralogia, Vol. 91 No. 1 (2022)
Marey Mahmoud, Hussein Hassan +1 more
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2020
This paper presents an accurate structural reconstruction in 3D of the Hypostyle Hall at the ancient Egyptian temple complex of Karnak. Numerous reconstructions have already been produced, but they are approximations and seek to show what the Hall might have looked like.
I. A. Liarte Fernando +2 more
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This paper presents an accurate structural reconstruction in 3D of the Hypostyle Hall at the ancient Egyptian temple complex of Karnak. Numerous reconstructions have already been produced, but they are approximations and seek to show what the Hall might have looked like.
I. A. Liarte Fernando +2 more
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Pharaonic power and architectural labor investment at the Karnak Temple Complex, Egypt
2019This chapter discusses the background of the architecture and labor of ancient Egypt, as well as Karnak’s place within this historical context. It examines three specific facets of pharaonic rulership: time, warfare, and administrative centralization.
Megan Drennan, Michael J. Kolb
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2010
The Karnak temple complex is located on the east bank of the River Nile, about 2.5 km north of Luxor, Upper Egypt. The main building materials used in its construction are sandstones, the so-called “Nubian Sandstone”, collected from the Gebel el-Silsila area in south-western Egypt (Fitzner et al. 2003).
H. H. M. Mahmoud +2 more
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The Karnak temple complex is located on the east bank of the River Nile, about 2.5 km north of Luxor, Upper Egypt. The main building materials used in its construction are sandstones, the so-called “Nubian Sandstone”, collected from the Gebel el-Silsila area in south-western Egypt (Fitzner et al. 2003).
H. H. M. Mahmoud +2 more
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Since its construction during the Ramesside Period, the Hypostyle Hall at the Temple of Amun-Re at Karnak has stood as a monument to the ingenuity, wealth, and power of Ancient Egyptian civilisation. For modern visitors, the complexity and grandeur of the Hall stands as a physical testament to the scope and limits of human thought.
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Toilets first, temples second: adopting heritage in neoliberal India
International Journal of Heritage Studies, 2021Lynn M Meskell
exaly

