Vol.08.p.069
Diary Transcription:
microfilm: begin page 69
Sunday, December 13, 1914 (continued)
into the excavations. There must have been ten thousand (10,000) on the pyramid plateau.
But the excavation could not be continued and no appreciable progress was made during the morning except plain dirt lifting.
Monday, December 14, 1914
Day of rest for the men.
Fine weather - yesterday and today.
The lowest layer of the floor of offering room G 5110 was thick with fragments of alabaster statues of Khafre. The sand for a meter above this was very hard packed. The upper part of the hard-packed sand was fire blackened. From this room the alabaster fragments lay scattered in all directions, as far as the edge of the terrace east of G 5230, but the chief deposit outside the room of G 5110 was at the northeast corner of mastaba G 5110. Southwards between G 5110 and G 5210 the ground is not yet excavated.
The room of G 5110 has been partially destroyed by the quarrymen who took the casing. Before the room was removed, they saw at x the hole into the serdab [ILLUSTRATION]. The limestone was weakened by a fire built against the face of the wall and the serdab hole enlarged, but not enough to permit entrance. The roof was removed before the statues were got out. The sand in the serdab was fire blackened, hard packed and contained fragments of alabaster statues and of limestone reliefs. This damage was not recent. I would assign it to the period of Arabic plundering (about 1200 A.D.) at the latest. The reliefs so far as indicated and preserved are all offering scenes. The name of the owner is [GLYPHS] [Duaenre]. The reliefs on south end of east wall are
microfilm: end page 69
Details
- ID
- HUMFA_Vol.08.p.069
- Alternate IDs
- Vol.08.p.069; HUMFA_Vol.08.p.069
- Department
- Harvard University-Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition
- Classification
- Documentation-Expedition diary pages
- Entry Date
- 12/13/1914; 12/14/1914
- Title
- Vol.08.p.069
- Credit Line
- Harvard University–Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition
