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DR. CREASMAN:
I start off by saying,
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"Hey, who wants to goscuba dive a pyramid in the Sahara?"
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And see what the reaction is.
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♪♪
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As an archeologist,am I curious to open up a tomb,
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and look and see what's inside?
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Absolutely, I am.
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But no one's done anythingquite like this.
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♪♪
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How do you excavate tombsin the desert underwater?
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Sudan has an incredibleand long history.
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For hundreds of years,
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people have been focusingon the really big,
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well-preserved monuments of Egypt,
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and overlooked what is today Sudan.
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You have pyramids.
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You have burial chambers thatare probably unexcavated.
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You have dozens of kings,
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dozens and dozens of queensand princesses and princes.
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To have the opportunity to go inand excavate these things
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is really incredible.
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ROMEY: Aah! Oh, look at that!
Look at that, look at that!
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That's gold! (laughs)
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DR. CREASMAN: Every time you go diving,
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you're putting yourself at risk.
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We are using surface-supplied air.
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It's one less thing to deal with:
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having a big tank on your back
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in a confined environment where
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you're not entirely surehow sturdy the walls are.
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DR. CREASMAN:
Just so we're all clear on the plan.
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We go down to the chute.
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Hold onto the chute,
take a couple of deep breaths
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and just hang out there.
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Good to go?
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Let's do it!
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And right as I hit the water,
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as the cold water starts toinfiltrate into my wetsuit,
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I look up and start tohave this thought about,
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"Okay, this is somebody's burial place.
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"This is a place to be respected.
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A place to be learned from.
A place to understand."
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And it just registers.
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(breathing through apparatus)
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♪♪
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NARRATOR: This watery graveis the 2,000 year old burial place
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of a Nubian king named Nastasen.
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DR. CREASMAN: Tombs give us time capsules.
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Glimpses into the historyof a people and place.
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NARRATOR:
Archeologist Pearce Paul Creasman
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is hoping to learn moreabout who Nastasen was,
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and the ancient world around him,
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from the secrets his pyramid still holds.
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More than nine meters above the dive,
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site inspector Fakhri Hassan
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and underwater archeologist Kristin Romey
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are positioned to receive buckets of mud
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sent up from the tomb floor.
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ROMEY: The goal of this season
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is to really begin to excavate
the burial chamber of Nastasen.
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(breathing through apparatus)
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That requires moving a lot of material
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out of the burial chamber to be examined.
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♪♪
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NARRATOR: Each bucket holdsa promise to reveal new clues
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about the king,and how he was laid to rest.
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ROMEY: So while we have divers
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down in the tomband pulling up the buckets,
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the sieving needs to be done topside,
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because we can't allowthis material to dry out.
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Just in case there's something
particularly fragile,
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because it'll... it could literally
just turn to dust.
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♪♪
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Looking for gold, and bones,
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and anything that should not
be in normal sediment.
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ABDALLAH:
I have water if you want.
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ROMEY: Okay, I think this is good.
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-ABDALLAH: Enough?
-ROMEY: But, um...
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Yeah, I think this is enough.
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Aah! Bingo!
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Five minutes in, and we already hit gold.
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It's gold foil,
so imagine like aluminum foil
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that's been crinkled over time.
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It's paper thin.
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It's almost like tissue paper.
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Tissue paper made of gold.
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This is good.
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ABDALLAH: Good luck.
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ROMEY: Yep, good luck.
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Thank you, Nastasen!
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NARRATOR: To the archeologists,
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the early find of gold is a good sign
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they're on the right track.
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Even more exciting
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is what they discover next.
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ROMEY: Oh! (laughs)
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Hey, Fakhri!
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-ABDALLAH: What?
-ROMEY: Who is this?
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NARRATOR: A figurine, called a shabti,
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is traditionally carved inthe buried king's likeness.
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ABDALLAH: This may be, maybe... Nastasen.
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Because it's the same face...
but we will see.
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We will study to make a comparison.
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-ROMEY: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
-We will see.
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ROMEY: That's wonderful.
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ABDALLAH: Yeah, that's wonderful.
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ROMEY: Yeah, that's a good one.
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ABDALLAH: Yeah, that's a good one. Yeah.
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This is new information
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that lets us understand our history more.
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This site is important
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because it's one of the royalcemeteries of Kush.
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This is one of the most
ancient kingdoms of Sudan.
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NARRATOR:
Beginning more than 4,000 years ago,
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the kingdom of Kush ruledmuch of the Nubian desert,
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including what's now Northern Sudan.
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♪♪
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From 650 to 300 BC,
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the Kushites buried their royaltynear Napata,
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the heart of their dynasty
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at its most powerful point in history.
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Nuri is one of the mostimportant burial grounds in this region,
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situated at the 4th cataract of the Nile.
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DR. CREASMAN: There were more than
80 burials of kings, queens,
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princes, and princesses
here at Nuri alone.
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There are only about300 or 400 pyramids total
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in all of Egypt and Sudan.
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And for so many of themto be concentrated at this one place,
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that is incredible.
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This must have been the creme de la creme
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of the culture and society at the time.
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NARRATOR: Starting in 1913,
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American archeologist George Reisner
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excavated many Kush burial sites,
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discovering the tombsof its most prominent kings.
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ROMEY: Reisner was the first archeologist
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to excavate at Nuri.
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He really put Nuri on a map.
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NARRATOR: He and his teammoved from pyramid to pyramid,
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but they began to run into a problem...
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water.
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When the men arrived
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at what's now knownto be Nastasen's tomb,
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they found it partially flooded,
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and with one of the chambers collapsed.
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ROMEY: Reisner, from what I understand,
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sent a very reluctant workerinto this dark tomb.
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And from what it seems like,this worker kind of
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ran into the burial chamber,
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hastily dug a hole,
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pulled out a couple shabtis
to confirm it was indeed Nastasen,
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and then they got out of there.
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DR. CREASMAN: They wanted to learnwhose tomb it was.
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They ultimately got a couple shabtis
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that had the king's name on it,Nastasen, but other than that,
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no one has been, as near as we can tell,
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no one's even been in this tomb
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since Nastasen was buried there.
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(goat bleats)
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NARRATOR: In the centuriessince Nastasen was laid to rest,
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the Nile river basin has risen at Nuri.
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Climate change, industrial agriculture,
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and construction of dams have changedthe levels of the water,
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flooding many of the tombs.
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It's these waters that mayhave saved the rich burials
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from a common fate.
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ROMEY:
Of course, the problem with pyramids
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is that they're big targets.
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They say, "Hey, there's a big pile of loot
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buried underneath me. Come get it."
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Even in ancient times,
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these tombs were beingplundered left and right.
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However, at Nuri it seems thatthese chambers were untouched,
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because the water rose.
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DR. CREASMAN: It becomesexceedingly more difficult to get to.
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Being underwater makes itoff limits to most of humanity.
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NARRATOR: In 2018,
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Pearce Paul Creasman launchedhis first expedition
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to open Nastasen's tomb.
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He invited underwaterarcheologist Kristin Romey
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to join him.
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ROMEY: I've done shipwrecks,I've been in caves,
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but I think there is nothing,
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nothing in the world that compares
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to diving in a tomb under a pyramid
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in a desert in Sudan. Nothing.
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For the first time goinginto a tomb and not knowing,
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I really could not haveexpected better conditions,
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because the water levelwas not extremely high.
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NARRATOR: The water levelschange from year to year,
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but it was immediatelyapparent why the pyramid
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had spooked Reisner's team.
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The groundwater from the Nile had risen
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into all three chambersof Nastasen's tomb.
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The smallest first chamberwas completely submerged.
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The roof of the second chamber collapsed
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at some point in antiquity,
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creating an extra air pocket.
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The third and final chamber is wherethe king would have been buried,
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surrounded by treasures for the afterlife.
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But for Pearce Paul and Kristin,
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braving the flooded chambers paid off.
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ROMEY:
I think the big moment of realization
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of what we actually had
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in Nastasen's pyramid
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was when Pearce Paul led meto the third chamber in the back,
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and we were just wavingour flashlights around,
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and he pointed to this littleniche in the back wall,
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and the flashlight caught onlittle bits of gold in the niche,
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left there for centuriesand centuries and centuries.
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It was incredible.
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And when I realized thatthere was just like gold lying around,
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that this is an untouched burial.
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DR. CREASMAN: If anybody had beenin that tomb to rob it,
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stands to reason they'd have taken
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the gold shiny stuff offof the shelf at eye level.
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NARRATOR: The untouched treasure is a hint
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that something else could bein the burial chamber.
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Something even rarer than gold.
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DR. CREASMAN: In the middle ofthe third chamber,
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there's a large mound.It's got stones all around it,
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and it is very convenientlyabout the size of a person.
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It's about six feet longand about three feet wide,
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and then a pile around it.
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NARRATOR: This season, a year later,
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Pearce Paul is hoping touncover the burial,
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and learn whether Nastasenis still inside.
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DR. CREASMAN: Pyramids in general,
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don't often retaintheir intended occupants.
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It's actually exceedingly rare
to find a pyramid
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with the person in it.
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♪♪
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ROMEY:
If you're looking at, really kind of
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untouched royal burialsin this part of the world,
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the last really big one was abouta century ago. It was Tut.
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And he was really a
relatively minor pharaoh
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in the bigger scheme of things.
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Tut's famous because he's
got an untouched tomb.
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Nastasen, on the other hand,
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there's all sorts ofmajor political upheaval
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in the ancient world that he's part of.
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Being able to excavate
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the untouched royal tomb of Nastasen,
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I think is going to be
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an immense wealth of information.
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DR. CREASMAN: Nuri is one of
the most intensive concentrations
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of pyramids anywhere in the world,
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across any culture and civilization.
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(camel grunts)
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DR. CREASMAN: In Sudan, in fact,
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there are more pyramids than in Egypt,
255
00:13:29,417 --> 00:13:32,667
and this is a thing that peopledon't think of very often.
256
00:13:35,250 --> 00:13:39,291
NARRATOR: Kush and Egypt havea long, interwoven history,
257
00:13:39,375 --> 00:13:42,792
one that is just beginningto be more fully understood.
258
00:13:45,375 --> 00:13:48,000
ROMEY: Most of what we knowin the history books
259
00:13:48,083 --> 00:13:49,291
about the Kingdom of Kush,
260
00:13:49,375 --> 00:13:52,125
comes from the perspectiveof the Egyptians,
261
00:13:52,208 --> 00:13:54,000
because the Egyptians had writing.
262
00:13:54,083 --> 00:13:57,500
And the Egyptians
wrote everything down. Everything.
263
00:13:57,583 --> 00:13:59,125
They pushed a
phenomenal amount of paper,
264
00:13:59,208 --> 00:14:01,208
we would say in today's world.
265
00:14:02,083 --> 00:14:05,875
And we are fortunate to havea lot of those records.
266
00:14:05,959 --> 00:14:09,667
But those records frameeveryone outside of Egypt
267
00:14:09,750 --> 00:14:13,667
as somehow not equal to, or lesser than.
268
00:14:15,417 --> 00:14:17,667
History is written by
the victors, the one percent.
269
00:14:17,750 --> 00:14:20,333
And archeology tells
the story of the underdogs.
270
00:14:20,417 --> 00:14:22,166
The other 99 percent.
271
00:14:22,834 --> 00:14:26,792
The best way to really verifyor disqualify a historical account
272
00:14:26,834 --> 00:14:28,333
is to look for the facts on the ground.
273
00:14:28,417 --> 00:14:30,375
Sometimes it jives with the history books,
274
00:14:30,458 --> 00:14:31,959
and sometimes it doesn't.
275
00:14:34,291 --> 00:14:36,709
NARRATOR: ArcheologistGeoff Emberling has excavated
276
00:14:36,792 --> 00:14:38,583
many important Kush monuments,
277
00:14:38,667 --> 00:14:41,875
uncovering its past brick by brick.
278
00:14:41,959 --> 00:14:44,375
DR. EMBERLING: We know that from
the very first moment that Kush
279
00:14:44,458 --> 00:14:48,959
appears in history, around 2000 BC,
it was powerful.
280
00:14:50,417 --> 00:14:53,875
It was so powerful thatthe Egyptians at that time
281
00:14:53,959 --> 00:14:56,375
built a series of fortressesalong the Nile
282
00:14:56,458 --> 00:14:59,875
to protect themselvesagainst the military power of Kush.
283
00:15:01,542 --> 00:15:03,875
NARRATOR:
From its prime position on the Nile,
284
00:15:03,959 --> 00:15:07,291
the Kush empire controlledtrade routes from the south
285
00:15:07,375 --> 00:15:11,417
up to Egypt, transporting ivory,leopard skins,
286
00:15:11,500 --> 00:15:13,834
precious stones, and gold.
287
00:15:13,917 --> 00:15:15,792
DR. EMBERLING: They had
the connections with inner Africa
288
00:15:15,875 --> 00:15:19,291
that could bring these exotic
products all the way to Egypt,
289
00:15:19,375 --> 00:15:21,291
and to the wider Mediterranean world.
290
00:15:21,375 --> 00:15:22,625
ROMEY: They were the go-betweens,
291
00:15:22,709 --> 00:15:25,166
and they became very,very rich and powerful
292
00:15:25,250 --> 00:15:27,583
off being in that position.
293
00:15:28,834 --> 00:15:32,250
NARRATOR: Egypt relied on Kushite goldfor their elaborate burials...
294
00:15:34,375 --> 00:15:38,291
and fierce Kushite warriorsto supplement Egyptian armies.
295
00:15:39,125 --> 00:15:41,625
Eventually the Kushitesgained so much power
296
00:15:41,709 --> 00:15:44,333
the Egyptians saw them as a threat,
297
00:15:44,417 --> 00:15:47,041
and invaded their neighbors to the south.
298
00:15:48,709 --> 00:15:52,250
For the next 400 years,Kush was controlled by Egypt.
299
00:15:54,542 --> 00:15:56,625
In the beginning, the Egyptians imposed
300
00:15:56,709 --> 00:15:58,583
their gods and temples on Kush.
301
00:15:59,333 --> 00:16:02,583
ROMEY: They were taking
the elites of Kushite society
302
00:16:02,667 --> 00:16:04,750
and giving them Egyptian educations.
303
00:16:05,750 --> 00:16:07,500
NARRATOR: But the Kushiteseventually became
304
00:16:07,583 --> 00:16:11,041
even more devout spiritual followersthan their conquerors.
305
00:16:11,125 --> 00:16:14,291
Even as the Egyptian empirebegan to lose strength
306
00:16:14,375 --> 00:16:16,792
and withdraw in 1100 BC,
307
00:16:16,875 --> 00:16:19,250
the Kushites continuedbuilding their tombs
308
00:16:19,333 --> 00:16:21,208
in the shapes of pyramids.
309
00:16:22,583 --> 00:16:24,542
The jewelry found inside the burials
310
00:16:24,625 --> 00:16:27,792
makes clear theirdevotion to Egyptian gods.
311
00:16:29,041 --> 00:16:31,792
ROMEY: We know that by
at least, at the bare minimum,
312
00:16:31,875 --> 00:16:34,750
by the 8th century BC,
Kush is on the rise.
313
00:16:34,834 --> 00:16:38,875
They have thrown off the shacklesof their Egyptian colonizers,
314
00:16:38,959 --> 00:16:41,792
but they do retain some Egyptian elements.
315
00:16:41,875 --> 00:16:43,583
NARRATOR: For the center of their kingdom,
316
00:16:43,667 --> 00:16:45,625
the Kushites took over a place
317
00:16:45,709 --> 00:16:48,458
full of spiritual significanceto the Egyptians.
318
00:16:49,542 --> 00:16:51,208
A stunning sandstone butte
319
00:16:51,291 --> 00:16:54,417
rising high above the desert landscape.
320
00:16:54,500 --> 00:16:57,959
Jebel Barkal, or "sacred mountain."
321
00:17:00,125 --> 00:17:02,792
From here, the Kush kingswere able to control
322
00:17:02,875 --> 00:17:05,333
an increasingly extensive territory.
323
00:17:07,208 --> 00:17:10,959
DR. EMBERLING: Ultimately, that riseof power led to the Kushites
324
00:17:11,041 --> 00:17:12,917
being able to conquer all of Egypt.
325
00:17:13,000 --> 00:17:16,000
And that's historically just remarkable.
326
00:17:17,959 --> 00:17:20,041
NARRATOR: For nearly a hundred years,
327
00:17:20,125 --> 00:17:24,917
a succession of five Kushite kingsruled all of Egypt.
328
00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:26,750
From Napata, their capital,
329
00:17:26,834 --> 00:17:31,041
they controlled more area thanany other Egyptian pharaohs,
330
00:17:31,125 --> 00:17:34,959
stretching from modern-dayKhartoum to the Mediterranean.
331
00:17:37,041 --> 00:17:38,834
One of these Kushite Kings,
332
00:17:38,917 --> 00:17:41,250
a renowned warrior named Taharqa,
333
00:17:41,333 --> 00:17:44,250
established Nuri as a royal cemetery.
334
00:17:45,375 --> 00:17:47,834
DR. EMBERLING: In many ways,Taharqa was the most notable
335
00:17:47,917 --> 00:17:49,417
25th dynasty king.
336
00:17:50,041 --> 00:17:52,625
The cemetery that he established at Nuri
337
00:17:52,709 --> 00:17:55,583
became the royal burial ground for Kush
338
00:17:55,667 --> 00:17:57,000
for over 300 years.
339
00:17:57,083 --> 00:17:59,458
So, he became the ancestor
340
00:17:59,542 --> 00:18:01,125
that the succeeding kings of Kush
341
00:18:01,208 --> 00:18:03,250
wanted to connect themselves to.
342
00:18:04,667 --> 00:18:06,750
NARRATOR: Kings like Nastasen,
343
00:18:06,834 --> 00:18:10,959
who Pearce Paul is hopingmay still lie inside his tomb.
344
00:18:11,750 --> 00:18:14,625
I would like to find
evidence of Nastasen himself.
345
00:18:14,709 --> 00:18:18,458
I'm not saying I want to
come up face to face with him
346
00:18:18,542 --> 00:18:22,291
in the middle of
the third chamber, um, in the dark,
347
00:18:22,375 --> 00:18:25,834
but it'd be an experience.
348
00:18:31,500 --> 00:18:33,041
NARRATOR: When Pearce Paul's team
349
00:18:33,125 --> 00:18:35,250
begins their second season of excavation,
350
00:18:35,333 --> 00:18:38,458
they find Nastasen's tombin an unexpected,
351
00:18:38,542 --> 00:18:40,667
and unnerving condition.
352
00:18:40,750 --> 00:18:42,792
ROMEY: The morning of the first dive,
353
00:18:42,875 --> 00:18:44,667
I'll admit I was apprehensive.
354
00:18:44,750 --> 00:18:46,625
This was a completely different situation
355
00:18:46,709 --> 00:18:48,458
than it was last season.
356
00:18:49,583 --> 00:18:51,667
DR. CREASMAN: We were all really surprised
357
00:18:51,750 --> 00:18:54,250
about how much water was in there.
358
00:18:54,333 --> 00:18:57,125
The water table was
considerably lower last year.
359
00:18:58,083 --> 00:19:01,709
This year we are now workingwith at least 15 feet more
360
00:19:01,792 --> 00:19:03,375
vertical of water.
361
00:19:08,333 --> 00:19:10,667
NARRATOR: Last season, the teamattempted to pump the water
362
00:19:10,750 --> 00:19:12,917
out of the burial chambers,
363
00:19:13,000 --> 00:19:15,709
but the water pressure coming fromthe outside of the walls
364
00:19:15,792 --> 00:19:18,834
puts the tomb at great risk of collapsing.
365
00:19:18,917 --> 00:19:20,709
DR. CREASMAN: When we tried to pump,
366
00:19:20,792 --> 00:19:22,625
it was just like a faucet running,
367
00:19:22,709 --> 00:19:25,208
and there's a hundred different faucetscoming through the walls.
368
00:19:25,291 --> 00:19:27,375
I don't think it's worth the risk.
369
00:19:27,458 --> 00:19:30,083
It's more like putting a
paper bag in the ocean,
370
00:19:30,166 --> 00:19:32,875
and then trying to take
the water out of the paper bag.
371
00:19:32,959 --> 00:19:34,500
What do you think's gonna happen?
372
00:19:34,583 --> 00:19:36,166
The rest of the water is gonna rush in
373
00:19:36,250 --> 00:19:38,000
and try and...
And it will crumple the bag.
374
00:19:39,834 --> 00:19:41,583
Regardless of whether or not
375
00:19:41,667 --> 00:19:44,000
we were able to safely and comfortably
376
00:19:44,083 --> 00:19:48,000
pump it dry and dig it, it's still a tomb.
377
00:19:48,083 --> 00:19:50,959
We don't want it to be a tombfor more than one person.
378
00:19:51,041 --> 00:19:53,041
Nastasen's plenty.
379
00:19:53,625 --> 00:19:55,375
SCHNEIDER:
So you're coming in as well?
380
00:19:55,458 --> 00:19:56,709
ROMEY: I'm coming in as well.
381
00:19:56,792 --> 00:20:01,250
Okay. So, today we're actually
gonna do excavation work.
382
00:20:01,333 --> 00:20:03,166
Dave is gonna be on the outside.
383
00:20:03,250 --> 00:20:05,875
-ROMEY: Okay.
-Manning hoses, air,
384
00:20:05,959 --> 00:20:07,458
emergency whatever.
385
00:20:07,542 --> 00:20:09,291
And I will go in first.
386
00:20:09,375 --> 00:20:11,041
If we touch hands, I might squeeze once.
387
00:20:11,125 --> 00:20:12,750
If you squeeze once, it means okay.
388
00:20:12,834 --> 00:20:14,625
If you do multiple squeezes,
389
00:20:14,709 --> 00:20:16,750
I'm gonna pull you out through that chute.
390
00:20:16,834 --> 00:20:19,583
ROMEY: Even though I kind oflaid awake the night before,
391
00:20:19,667 --> 00:20:21,000
kind of running through my head,
392
00:20:21,083 --> 00:20:22,500
okay, you go down to this staircase.
393
00:20:22,583 --> 00:20:23,792
This is the way you enter the tomb.
394
00:20:23,875 --> 00:20:25,208
Then you hit chamber one, chamber two.
395
00:20:25,291 --> 00:20:27,083
And I'm walking myself through it.
396
00:20:27,166 --> 00:20:28,834
I knew that regardless of how many times
397
00:20:28,917 --> 00:20:29,959
I was looping that through my head,
398
00:20:30,041 --> 00:20:32,125
it was not gonna be what
I was going to encounter.
399
00:20:32,208 --> 00:20:33,625
-You'll be standing.
-Okay. So I bring in
400
00:20:33,709 --> 00:20:34,834
an empty bucket in,
401
00:20:34,917 --> 00:20:36,750
and I write down the number of...
402
00:20:36,834 --> 00:20:37,917
DR. CREASMAN:
The empty bucket on the next line.
403
00:20:38,000 --> 00:20:38,959
ROMEY: ...The empty bucket on
the next line.
404
00:20:39,041 --> 00:20:41,000
And then you figure out if it's A, B, C.
405
00:20:41,625 --> 00:20:43,166
NARRATOR: By carefully keeping track
406
00:20:43,250 --> 00:20:45,291
of where each of the buckets comes from,
407
00:20:45,375 --> 00:20:47,417
Pearce Paul will be able to match up
408
00:20:47,500 --> 00:20:50,000
any objects they find inside
409
00:20:50,083 --> 00:20:52,208
to specific areas of the tomb.
410
00:20:52,291 --> 00:20:54,041
My bucket came from, you know,
411
00:20:54,125 --> 00:20:55,458
the northwest corner of that...
412
00:20:55,542 --> 00:20:57,041
NARRATOR: Piecing together the burial,
413
00:20:57,125 --> 00:21:00,125
and laying clues to whereNastasen's remains might be.
414
00:21:00,208 --> 00:21:01,750
-ROMEY: Okay.
-Does that make sense?
415
00:21:01,834 --> 00:21:03,166
Understood, okay.
416
00:21:03,250 --> 00:21:04,500
DR. CREASMAN:
The biggest problem is gonna be panic.
417
00:21:04,583 --> 00:21:06,041
ROMEY: Of course,
that's always what it is.
418
00:21:06,125 --> 00:21:07,417
You know, if something happens.
419
00:21:07,500 --> 00:21:10,417
SCHNEIDER: Claustrophobia and panic
are your biggest concerns.
420
00:21:10,500 --> 00:21:13,500
DR. CREASMAN: Yeah.
If you're inside and you are panicking,
421
00:21:13,583 --> 00:21:14,959
-get to the air pocket.
-SCHNEIDER: Mm-hmm.
422
00:21:15,041 --> 00:21:17,417
-If you're by the front door, get out.
-Yeah.
423
00:21:17,500 --> 00:21:20,959
Um, but get to the air pocket,
sit and wait.
424
00:21:21,041 --> 00:21:22,542
Someone will come to you
425
00:21:22,625 --> 00:21:24,291
if you don't feel like
you can get out on your own.
426
00:21:24,375 --> 00:21:25,834
It's not easy.
427
00:21:25,917 --> 00:21:27,750
You know, when you're topside,
428
00:21:27,834 --> 00:21:30,959
you're in this brilliant, you know,
Sudanese sun,
429
00:21:31,041 --> 00:21:32,959
and you've got the desert stretching
430
00:21:33,041 --> 00:21:34,417
as far as you could see.
431
00:21:34,875 --> 00:21:37,542
And you walk down thisceremonial staircase,
432
00:21:37,625 --> 00:21:39,834
and it gets progressivelydarker and colder,
433
00:21:39,917 --> 00:21:41,750
and darker and colder.
434
00:21:41,834 --> 00:21:44,667
And once you're down in there,you're in another world.
435
00:21:44,750 --> 00:21:48,166
And it's a little bit scary, to be blunt.
436
00:21:48,250 --> 00:21:51,959
♪♪
437
00:21:59,542 --> 00:22:02,333
DR. CREASMAN: Okay. Kristin,
you're going to be on this line.
438
00:22:03,291 --> 00:22:05,166
-ROMEY: Okay?
-DR. CREASMAN: Yeah.
439
00:22:08,041 --> 00:22:09,250
Fire 'em up.
440
00:22:14,083 --> 00:22:16,875
(engine whirring)
441
00:22:22,500 --> 00:22:25,291
(oxygen blowing)
442
00:22:25,375 --> 00:22:28,917
♪♪
443
00:22:53,709 --> 00:22:55,709
ROMEY: The minute thatyour head goes underwater
444
00:22:55,792 --> 00:22:58,458
and you start pulling yourselfthrough that steel chute
445
00:22:58,542 --> 00:23:00,041
into the chamber,
446
00:23:00,125 --> 00:23:03,166
and you kind of realizethe gravity of what's going on.
447
00:23:03,250 --> 00:23:06,041
And then you realize thatthe visibility's shot.
448
00:23:09,458 --> 00:23:12,291
You have to kind of navigate your waythrough that first chamber
449
00:23:12,375 --> 00:23:14,750
to get into the air pocketin the second chamber.
450
00:23:14,834 --> 00:23:18,959
And it's just like every sense is 110%.
451
00:23:19,041 --> 00:23:21,417
You are just wired andjust trying to figure out
452
00:23:21,500 --> 00:23:23,208
what's gonna happen next.
453
00:23:27,542 --> 00:23:29,917
(air bubbles)
454
00:23:32,500 --> 00:23:34,834
ROMEY: So you're going in with 19 now?
455
00:23:35,834 --> 00:23:38,542
-DR. CREASMAN: 19A.
-ROMEY: 19A, you got it.
456
00:23:41,000 --> 00:23:43,083
DR. CREASMAN:
All right. See you in a few minutes.
457
00:23:43,208 --> 00:23:44,542
(indistinct chatter)
458
00:23:47,333 --> 00:23:48,625
ROMEY: 10:30.
459
00:23:48,709 --> 00:23:50,291
NARRATOR: Kristin notes the time,
460
00:23:50,375 --> 00:23:53,750
to track how long Pearce Paulis working in the third chamber.
461
00:23:57,208 --> 00:23:59,208
If he's gone more than a few minutes,
462
00:23:59,291 --> 00:24:01,750
she'll have to go in and try to find him.
463
00:24:01,834 --> 00:24:03,583
ROMEY: We know that the second chamber
464
00:24:03,667 --> 00:24:06,583
of the burial suite beneath the pyramid
465
00:24:06,667 --> 00:24:09,291
has already collapsedat some point in history.
466
00:24:09,375 --> 00:24:10,917
And so there's no reason why
467
00:24:10,959 --> 00:24:12,750
other parts of that tomb can't collapse.
468
00:24:16,291 --> 00:24:19,291
(breathing through apparatus)
469
00:24:22,458 --> 00:24:27,667
♪♪
470
00:24:36,083 --> 00:24:38,500
DR. CREASMAN: When we first gotback here from last year,
471
00:24:38,583 --> 00:24:40,750
the water was crystal clear.
472
00:24:40,834 --> 00:24:42,917
We came in into the tomb
473
00:24:43,000 --> 00:24:44,875
and came up, we thoughtthere was an air pocket,
474
00:24:44,959 --> 00:24:46,792
the water was so clearthat we just hit our heads
475
00:24:46,875 --> 00:24:49,166
and looked up and saw our bubblesgoing against the roof.
476
00:24:49,250 --> 00:24:51,333
What's... What's going on here?
477
00:24:51,458 --> 00:24:52,792
It was phenomenal.
478
00:24:54,000 --> 00:24:55,834
NARRATOR: At first,Pearce Paul could clearly
479
00:24:55,917 --> 00:24:57,709
make out familiar landmarks...
480
00:24:57,792 --> 00:25:00,959
The niche that had housed flakes of gold.
481
00:25:03,542 --> 00:25:06,417
Decorative blocks cut from stone,
482
00:25:06,500 --> 00:25:08,250
and the burial itself,
483
00:25:08,333 --> 00:25:11,875
a mound of rocks that maystill hold Nastasen's remains.
484
00:25:13,041 --> 00:25:16,333
But now, the visibilityis next to nothing.
485
00:25:16,417 --> 00:25:18,458
DR. CREASMAN: Because of the rockfalls,because of the collapses,
486
00:25:18,542 --> 00:25:20,458
because of the sandsthat have blown into it,
487
00:25:20,542 --> 00:25:23,083
as soon as you start gettingin there, you start stirring it up,
488
00:25:23,166 --> 00:25:24,709
and very quickly once we start working,
489
00:25:24,792 --> 00:25:26,000
it's zero visibility.
490
00:25:26,083 --> 00:25:28,458
It's as if you're doing it blindfolded,
491
00:25:28,542 --> 00:25:31,250
sometimes upside down,
492
00:25:31,333 --> 00:25:34,041
and you're just trying to do
the best you can
493
00:25:34,125 --> 00:25:35,875
to understand the situation,
494
00:25:35,959 --> 00:25:37,625
and make this mental map.
495
00:25:47,166 --> 00:25:49,792
ROMEY: You are tryingto find important things
496
00:25:49,875 --> 00:25:52,709
solely by touch.
497
00:25:52,792 --> 00:25:56,125
You cannot use your eyes,
you cannot use any other sense
498
00:25:56,208 --> 00:25:58,667
but your touch and your mental memory.
499
00:25:58,750 --> 00:26:01,291
(breathing through apparatus)
500
00:26:06,792 --> 00:26:09,834
(breathing through apparatus)
501
00:26:19,834 --> 00:26:21,166
DR. CREASMAN: Wow.
502
00:26:24,583 --> 00:26:26,041
This is a shabti.
503
00:26:26,125 --> 00:26:28,208
It's buried with the king.
504
00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:33,917
And it's a person to help him
in the afterlife,
505
00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:36,125
so he doesn't have to
deal with the drudgery
506
00:26:36,208 --> 00:26:37,917
of day-to-day work.
507
00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:39,959
(compressed air release)
508
00:26:42,458 --> 00:26:44,083
SCHNEIDER: I like that it's painted.
509
00:26:44,166 --> 00:26:45,834
DR. CREASMAN: Yeah. It's great!
510
00:26:45,917 --> 00:26:47,792
Incredible condition.
511
00:26:53,542 --> 00:26:55,750
(engine rumbling)
512
00:27:00,875 --> 00:27:03,458
-MAN: Thank you.
-DR. CREASMAN: You're welcome.
513
00:27:03,542 --> 00:27:06,000
(engine rumbling)
514
00:27:10,417 --> 00:27:12,417
DR. CREASMAN: The season so far,I'm most proud of that
515
00:27:12,500 --> 00:27:14,583
we get out of the tomb every day safely.
516
00:27:14,667 --> 00:27:16,583
Uh, that is number one.
517
00:27:17,709 --> 00:27:20,542
Number two, I really dothink we're making progress.
518
00:27:20,625 --> 00:27:22,291
I think we're learning more every day.
519
00:27:22,375 --> 00:27:24,667
We're getting informationthat makes this worth it.
520
00:27:31,667 --> 00:27:34,208
So, there's a major gapin our understanding
521
00:27:34,291 --> 00:27:36,917
in the transition of this one kingdom,
522
00:27:37,000 --> 00:27:38,625
the people of Napata.
523
00:27:38,709 --> 00:27:42,250
After hundreds of years of
burying their kings here,
524
00:27:42,333 --> 00:27:43,625
they just stop.
525
00:27:45,834 --> 00:27:48,458
Nastasen falls at a reallyimportant time for us.
526
00:27:48,542 --> 00:27:51,166
He is the last king buried at Nuri.
527
00:27:52,125 --> 00:27:54,041
Why do they stop?
528
00:27:54,125 --> 00:27:57,125
Why do they then move from oneplace to another, to another?
529
00:27:57,208 --> 00:27:58,375
Who makes those decisions?
530
00:27:58,458 --> 00:28:00,000
Because you don't bury yourself.
531
00:28:00,458 --> 00:28:04,583
(people speaking indistinctly)
532
00:28:10,750 --> 00:28:12,792
DR. EMBERLING: The 4th century BC in Kush
533
00:28:12,875 --> 00:28:15,166
was a little bit of a turbulent time,
534
00:28:15,250 --> 00:28:17,166
and we see this ina number of different ways,
535
00:28:17,250 --> 00:28:20,959
including the locations of royal burials.
536
00:28:21,083 --> 00:28:23,542
A king's decision about
where to build his pyramid
537
00:28:23,625 --> 00:28:25,792
probably had a lot of different
538
00:28:25,875 --> 00:28:27,375
motivations behind it.
539
00:28:27,458 --> 00:28:29,792
NARRATOR:
To investigate these motivations,
540
00:28:29,875 --> 00:28:33,000
and what could havecaused this tumultuous time,
541
00:28:33,083 --> 00:28:36,250
archeologists Geoff Emberlingand Sami Elamin
542
00:28:36,333 --> 00:28:39,458
are turning their attentionfrom the elite to the ordinary.
543
00:28:39,542 --> 00:28:42,625
♪♪
544
00:28:42,709 --> 00:28:45,375
Nearby the royal templethat hosted coronations
545
00:28:45,458 --> 00:28:47,917
for a long line of kings and pharaohs,
546
00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:50,417
Geoff and his colleaguesare unearthing a town
547
00:28:50,500 --> 00:28:53,959
that hasn't seen daylightin thousands of years.
548
00:28:54,041 --> 00:28:57,542
DR. EMBERLING:
I've always loved digging settlements.
549
00:28:57,625 --> 00:29:00,417
I'm always just interestedin how everybody lived,
550
00:29:00,500 --> 00:29:03,291
and not just how the kings lived.I don't know,
551
00:29:03,375 --> 00:29:06,458
I kind of don't trust those people,
those kings.
552
00:29:06,542 --> 00:29:09,000
(laughs) And I would
rather be able to tell history
553
00:29:09,083 --> 00:29:13,709
in a way that included
all of us and all of them.
554
00:29:13,792 --> 00:29:17,083
(indistinct chatter)
555
00:29:19,834 --> 00:29:21,709
NARRATOR: Geoff has beenexcavating royal temples
556
00:29:21,792 --> 00:29:24,750
and burials aroundJebel Barkal for 14 years.
557
00:29:26,542 --> 00:29:28,208
But he'd always wondered
558
00:29:28,291 --> 00:29:30,083
where the people who built the structures
559
00:29:30,166 --> 00:29:32,208
and supported the elite lived.
560
00:29:32,333 --> 00:29:33,250
(people speaking indistinctly)
561
00:29:33,333 --> 00:29:35,500
He knew there musthave been a town nearby,
562
00:29:36,291 --> 00:29:38,625
long ago buried under the sand.
563
00:29:39,875 --> 00:29:42,834
DR. EMBERLING: Those are the kinds ofquestions that keep me going
564
00:29:42,917 --> 00:29:44,709
as an archeologist.
565
00:29:44,792 --> 00:29:47,250
What is it that we don't know
566
00:29:47,333 --> 00:29:48,959
that's under our feet?
567
00:29:55,166 --> 00:29:58,959
NARRATOR: As building walls,streets, and alleys emerge from the sand,
568
00:29:59,041 --> 00:30:01,625
Geoff and his team canbegin to piece together
569
00:30:01,709 --> 00:30:04,667
what this ancientcity would have looked like.
570
00:30:04,750 --> 00:30:06,125
DR. EMBERLING: Yeah.
571
00:30:07,959 --> 00:30:09,542
NARRATOR: In the shadow of Jebel Barkal,
572
00:30:11,625 --> 00:30:13,917
at least 10 large buildingswould have been anchors
573
00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:15,709
to different neighborhoods,
574
00:30:15,792 --> 00:30:18,000
dividing the city into districts.
575
00:30:18,583 --> 00:30:21,125
Homes are organized into city blocks,
576
00:30:21,208 --> 00:30:23,959
an early indication of urban planning.
577
00:30:24,041 --> 00:30:26,625
What happened inside the homesmay give a glimpse
578
00:30:26,709 --> 00:30:29,417
into how prosperous the peopleof Napata actually were.
579
00:30:32,458 --> 00:30:34,750
The section of the cityGeoff is excavating
580
00:30:34,834 --> 00:30:37,667
seems to have been organizedaround a big building,
581
00:30:37,750 --> 00:30:40,000
with smaller structures around it.
582
00:30:40,083 --> 00:30:42,583
We're looking at
the outer wall of this building.
583
00:30:42,667 --> 00:30:44,375
It goes down, it turns a corner,
584
00:30:44,458 --> 00:30:49,000
and so the... the building is extending
off in this direction.
585
00:30:50,041 --> 00:30:52,375
We're hoping to find whatever it is
586
00:30:52,458 --> 00:30:56,000
that they were doingand making in this building,
587
00:30:56,083 --> 00:30:59,000
and you can't predictwhat that's going to be.
588
00:30:59,709 --> 00:31:03,458
But we expect that underneath
our feet goes down centuries,
589
00:31:03,542 --> 00:31:05,375
if not 1,000 years.
590
00:31:06,667 --> 00:31:10,417
There's a series of roomsin between these walls.
591
00:31:10,500 --> 00:31:13,125
And then, that's the outside
of the building
592
00:31:13,208 --> 00:31:14,792
where the pile of sand is,
593
00:31:14,875 --> 00:31:18,458
and that's where we start to find objects
594
00:31:18,542 --> 00:31:21,375
that were related
to the use of the building.
595
00:31:21,458 --> 00:31:24,667
That's where the,frankly, the garbage was,
596
00:31:24,750 --> 00:31:26,834
and that's what tells uswhat people were doing here.
597
00:31:28,750 --> 00:31:30,417
NARRATOR: One of the town garbage pits
598
00:31:30,500 --> 00:31:32,583
indicates an ancient storeroom,
599
00:31:32,667 --> 00:31:35,583
which would have kept food,oils, and other essentials.
600
00:31:36,250 --> 00:31:39,583
Centuries later,the tossed away lids and labels
601
00:31:39,667 --> 00:31:43,000
that sealed the jars revealmore than meets the eye.
602
00:31:43,750 --> 00:31:46,291
BRAHE: Literally we found
thousands of sealings
603
00:31:46,375 --> 00:31:50,208
in the pit here,
which is very interesting.
604
00:31:50,291 --> 00:31:54,166
And I will pull one out here which
was excavated this season here.
605
00:31:55,583 --> 00:31:59,500
It's made of clay and it's a jar stopper.
That's on the top of the jar.
606
00:31:59,583 --> 00:32:03,667
You have cloth beneath and we have this
lump of clay above
607
00:32:03,750 --> 00:32:05,917
in order to close the jar.
608
00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:09,208
And when you have done that, you will
take your golden ring like this one here
609
00:32:09,291 --> 00:32:14,041
and you will stamp the jar stopper
with your... with your ring
610
00:32:14,125 --> 00:32:16,250
in order to preserve the sealing here.
611
00:32:16,333 --> 00:32:20,041
So, if you look closely through the
magnifier you will be able to see
612
00:32:20,125 --> 00:32:22,458
the seal impression once in a while.
613
00:32:22,542 --> 00:32:24,667
NARRATOR:
Each town official had his own ring,
614
00:32:24,750 --> 00:32:26,375
with its own unique image,
615
00:32:26,458 --> 00:32:28,875
a personalized seal to verify oversight
616
00:32:28,959 --> 00:32:32,166
and responsibilityfor the contents inside.
617
00:32:32,250 --> 00:32:35,500
But we have a nice example,
one of the other sealings here.
618
00:32:35,583 --> 00:32:39,542
If you look closely here, you can see
you have this elongated figure here
619
00:32:39,625 --> 00:32:42,041
and we think actually it's
lion head over here.
620
00:32:42,125 --> 00:32:46,333
And you can see the half ring over here
as well. That's another sealing as well.
621
00:32:46,417 --> 00:32:48,625
That would be the head of
the crocodile, we think.
622
00:32:48,834 --> 00:32:50,834
(speaking indistinctly)
623
00:32:51,041 --> 00:32:54,000
NARRATOR: For Geoff,the seal impressions are evidence
624
00:32:54,083 --> 00:32:56,250
of a complex economic system,
625
00:32:56,333 --> 00:32:58,667
that may help reconstructthe royal power structure
626
00:32:58,750 --> 00:32:59,917
at Jebel Barkal.
627
00:33:01,959 --> 00:33:04,208
As the team digs deeper,
628
00:33:04,291 --> 00:33:06,542
they'll reach older layers of the town,
629
00:33:06,625 --> 00:33:10,291
and even more ancient cluesas to how society operated.
630
00:33:12,041 --> 00:33:14,333
DR. EMBERLING: This season,we've got down to probably
631
00:33:14,417 --> 00:33:16,041
the 3rd century BC.
632
00:33:16,125 --> 00:33:19,041
So, probably the next
level down is going to be
633
00:33:19,125 --> 00:33:21,250
the time of Nastasen.
634
00:33:22,291 --> 00:33:26,000
And it's very possible thatwe might find seal impressions
635
00:33:26,083 --> 00:33:27,583
with names of kings.
636
00:33:27,667 --> 00:33:29,917
Maybe even names of kingswe don't know about.
637
00:33:30,959 --> 00:33:35,166
So there are possible waysthat we could fill in that history.
638
00:33:35,250 --> 00:33:37,375
Of course, we can't guarantee
that we'll find those,
639
00:33:37,458 --> 00:33:39,291
but they're here somewhere.
640
00:33:41,291 --> 00:33:42,959
NARRATOR: Soon after Nastasen's reign,
641
00:33:43,041 --> 00:33:44,917
around 315 BC,
642
00:33:45,542 --> 00:33:48,417
the Kushites moved their centerof political power
643
00:33:48,500 --> 00:33:49,792
away from Napata.
644
00:33:52,291 --> 00:33:55,208
The forces behind this shiftremain a mystery,
645
00:33:55,291 --> 00:33:58,000
but the archeologistsare beginning to rule out
646
00:33:58,083 --> 00:33:59,792
one major possibility.
647
00:33:59,875 --> 00:34:02,417
DR. CREASMAN: You can getindications of how prosperous
648
00:34:02,500 --> 00:34:05,667
a time and place was based onthe burials of people, right?
649
00:34:05,750 --> 00:34:07,959
Especially the burials of your kings.
650
00:34:08,041 --> 00:34:11,917
If the most powerful and importantperson in your society
651
00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:14,375
is buried in a very modest way,
652
00:34:14,458 --> 00:34:17,709
it would suggest that either
there is a cultural shift
653
00:34:17,792 --> 00:34:20,625
of some kind toward this sort of modesty,
654
00:34:20,709 --> 00:34:23,000
or that the resources weren't available.
655
00:34:23,083 --> 00:34:25,542
Nastasen's tomb isn't that.
656
00:34:25,625 --> 00:34:27,667
There are pretty goodindications that he had
657
00:34:27,750 --> 00:34:30,375
all of the needs and equipmentsand resources
658
00:34:30,458 --> 00:34:31,792
that a king would have,
659
00:34:31,875 --> 00:34:34,041
and that he was well-equipped
for the afterlife.
660
00:34:34,583 --> 00:34:36,083
ROMEY: Good morning. How are you?
661
00:34:36,166 --> 00:34:37,458
-DR. CREASMAN: Good, how are you doing?
-ROMEY: Good.
662
00:34:37,542 --> 00:34:39,125
DR. CREASMAN:
We had a pretty good day yesterday.
663
00:34:39,208 --> 00:34:40,750
ROMEY: Yeah? How good of a day?
664
00:34:40,834 --> 00:34:41,959
Pretty good.
You want to come see?
665
00:34:42,041 --> 00:34:43,417
ROMEY: Yeah, I do.
666
00:34:45,333 --> 00:34:47,583
DR. CREASMAN:
We got some interesting things out.
667
00:34:57,083 --> 00:35:00,250
ROMEY: Oh, wow. (chuckles) Yeah.
668
00:35:00,375 --> 00:35:02,166
(people speaking indistinctly)
669
00:35:03,583 --> 00:35:04,917
DR. CREASMAN: So...
670
00:35:05,000 --> 00:35:06,500
-I think...
-It's still got some gold on it.
671
00:35:06,583 --> 00:35:07,667
It would have been gold-leafed.
672
00:35:07,750 --> 00:35:09,041
-Yep.
-It's got some more here
673
00:35:09,125 --> 00:35:10,542
and once we have it cleaned,
674
00:35:10,625 --> 00:35:12,291
more will come off underneath.
675
00:35:12,375 --> 00:35:13,458
That's gorgeous.
676
00:35:13,542 --> 00:35:14,959
DR. CREASMAN:
If this is what we think it is,
677
00:35:15,041 --> 00:35:18,291
I'm only aware of one other reallyprominent example of this.
678
00:35:18,375 --> 00:35:20,709
So, it makes it an essential discovery.
679
00:35:20,792 --> 00:35:26,417
Have you seen the Hemén
680
00:35:26,500 --> 00:35:29,375
and Taharqa statuette in the Louvre?
681
00:35:29,458 --> 00:35:31,500
-ROMEY: Yes.
-DR. CREASMAN: It's got Taharqa sitting,
682
00:35:31,583 --> 00:35:33,458
making offerings to the bird god?
683
00:35:33,542 --> 00:35:35,709
I think that's what this is.
684
00:35:35,792 --> 00:35:37,875
So there should be a little statue
685
00:35:37,959 --> 00:35:40,709
-of Nastasen making offerings.
-ROMEY: ...offerings.
686
00:35:41,458 --> 00:35:43,375
So, we need to go find
687
00:35:43,458 --> 00:35:45,291
-the pair of Nastasen.
-ROMEY: Nastasen.
688
00:35:45,375 --> 00:35:47,250
Okay, that's the mission.
689
00:35:47,333 --> 00:35:49,625
-Yep.
-The mission taken on here.
690
00:35:49,709 --> 00:35:51,250
Wow.
691
00:35:51,333 --> 00:35:53,917
♪♪
692
00:35:54,000 --> 00:35:56,125
NARRATOR: Over the next few days,
693
00:35:56,208 --> 00:35:59,250
the team pulls an increasing amountof evidence from the tomb,
694
00:35:59,333 --> 00:36:01,333
pointing to a burial of a king
695
00:36:01,417 --> 00:36:04,625
who wanted to be revered and remembered.
696
00:36:04,709 --> 00:36:06,458
ROMEY: All righty, we've got another box.
697
00:36:06,542 --> 00:36:08,500
-LEA KHOLMEYER: Okay.
-ROMEY: For eight, bucket is eight.
698
00:36:10,667 --> 00:36:12,709
(singing in native language)
699
00:36:14,625 --> 00:36:16,792
MOHAMMAD: Okay. Okay.
700
00:36:16,875 --> 00:36:18,125
ROMEY: Shabti. All right.
701
00:36:18,208 --> 00:36:20,250
-Yeah, and charcoal.
-Charcoal.
702
00:36:20,333 --> 00:36:21,917
-Yeah.
-Okay.
703
00:36:23,333 --> 00:36:26,166
NARRATOR: Bits of charcoalcould be evidence of a burnt offering
704
00:36:26,250 --> 00:36:27,834
made at the time of the burial.
705
00:36:27,917 --> 00:36:29,291
ROMEY: I've got more charcoal here.
706
00:36:29,375 --> 00:36:31,291
-I've got a good amount of charcoal.
-MOHAMMAD: Charcoal.
707
00:36:32,125 --> 00:36:35,542
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh!
708
00:36:35,625 --> 00:36:37,000
-ROMEY: Whoa!
-Yeah!
709
00:36:37,083 --> 00:36:38,542
That's the biggest
piece of gold I've seen!
710
00:36:38,625 --> 00:36:40,667
-Biggest piece of gold. Yeah.
-(indistinct chatter)
711
00:36:41,500 --> 00:36:43,917
(water running)
712
00:36:47,625 --> 00:36:50,542
NARRATOR: Gold foil thatwould have covered objects
713
00:36:50,625 --> 00:36:52,375
like the statue of the falcon god.
714
00:36:52,458 --> 00:36:53,625
-Beautiful.
-I win?
715
00:36:53,709 --> 00:36:55,083
-No, you win.
-Yes, you do win.
716
00:36:55,166 --> 00:36:56,667
-KHOLMEYER: You win.
-(laughter)
717
00:36:56,750 --> 00:37:01,041
MOHAMMAD: Yep. Gold, gold.
That piece of gold.
718
00:37:01,125 --> 00:37:02,417
ROMEY: Oop, more gold.
719
00:37:03,166 --> 00:37:04,625
KHOLMEYER: Here I'm leaving you a gift.
720
00:37:04,709 --> 00:37:06,709
-(Romey laughs)
-KHOLMEYER: It's the bag.
721
00:37:06,792 --> 00:37:09,083
-Day of gold.
-Day of gold.
722
00:37:09,166 --> 00:37:11,291
-Ah, there's some more right there.
-Yeah. Yeah.
723
00:37:11,375 --> 00:37:13,375
Day of gold.
724
00:37:13,458 --> 00:37:15,792
(indistinct chatter)
725
00:37:21,583 --> 00:37:24,500
KHOLMEYER:
Oh, hey. The biggest bone I've found yet.
726
00:37:24,583 --> 00:37:25,959
ROMEY: Oh, yeah.
727
00:37:26,667 --> 00:37:29,417
DR. CREASMAN: As we get closer tothe central parts of the tomb,
728
00:37:29,500 --> 00:37:33,000
we started to find pieces
of bone that are darkened.
729
00:37:33,083 --> 00:37:36,375
And yes, this could be fromhaving been burned or charred,
730
00:37:36,458 --> 00:37:39,709
but this can be what happensto bones underwater.
731
00:37:41,458 --> 00:37:43,875
ROMEY: See that, what,
is that leather maybe, or... ?
732
00:37:43,959 --> 00:37:45,792
-DUSABLON: Here?
-ROMEY: It's in the mud.
733
00:37:47,458 --> 00:37:48,458
DUSABLON: Yeah.
734
00:37:51,208 --> 00:37:53,542
ROMEY: Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
More leather.
735
00:37:57,709 --> 00:37:59,333
Yeah, that's leather.
736
00:37:59,417 --> 00:38:01,333
-KHOLMEYER: Okay, that's beautiful.
-ROMEY: Yeah.
737
00:38:01,417 --> 00:38:03,959
DR. CREASMAN: We got out what we thinkare some pieces of leather,
738
00:38:04,041 --> 00:38:05,834
and if these are pieces of leather,
739
00:38:05,917 --> 00:38:09,166
that would be consistentwith the types of burials
740
00:38:09,250 --> 00:38:11,542
from this time and place,in which they might have been
741
00:38:11,625 --> 00:38:14,709
put on or wrapped in a hide mat.
742
00:38:16,542 --> 00:38:19,875
If that's what this is,
then it's another good indication
743
00:38:19,959 --> 00:38:22,291
that yeah, the king was, or is, here.
744
00:38:25,333 --> 00:38:26,458
(indistinct chatter)
745
00:38:26,625 --> 00:38:29,166
NARRATOR:
With each day of discovery at Nuri,
746
00:38:29,250 --> 00:38:32,792
Pearce Paul is getting closerto honing in on what might be
747
00:38:32,875 --> 00:38:36,417
the burial, and body, of king Nastasen.
748
00:38:36,500 --> 00:38:37,959
DR. CREASMAN: As of today,
749
00:38:38,041 --> 00:38:40,041
the tomb looks something like this.
750
00:38:40,125 --> 00:38:44,333
You've got the niche up here. The entry.
751
00:38:44,417 --> 00:38:46,291
So this is the third chamber.
752
00:38:48,500 --> 00:38:52,417
We have some... a very large slab.
753
00:38:52,500 --> 00:38:55,458
I think this is a fall from the roof.
754
00:38:55,542 --> 00:38:58,041
Now, yesterday, because
we moved a lot of the blocks
755
00:38:58,125 --> 00:39:01,667
from inside the burial chamber,
things got a lot clearer.
756
00:39:01,750 --> 00:39:04,083
What we have is a basically flat tabletop.
757
00:39:04,166 --> 00:39:07,792
It feels like... It's so--
It's so shockingly flat.
758
00:39:07,875 --> 00:39:09,917
It feels intentional.
759
00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:13,458
But this piece is big enough
so that when I'm laying
760
00:39:13,542 --> 00:39:15,959
on top of it with my
arms and legs spread out,
761
00:39:16,041 --> 00:39:18,875
I can barely touch the corners
of all four at the same time.
762
00:39:18,959 --> 00:39:20,208
So it's massive.
763
00:39:20,291 --> 00:39:23,667
NARRATOR: Through his findsand careful mapping of their locations,
764
00:39:23,750 --> 00:39:25,709
Pearce Paul is able to reconstruct
765
00:39:25,792 --> 00:39:28,792
what he'd be seeing inthe tomb if the water were clear,
766
00:39:28,875 --> 00:39:32,166
centered around the areawhere Nastasen may lie.
767
00:39:32,250 --> 00:39:34,041
DR. CREASMAN: So you have a big slabin the middle of the room.
768
00:39:34,125 --> 00:39:35,875
There's one rock left here,
769
00:39:35,959 --> 00:39:38,333
one piece standing up against the wall.
770
00:39:38,417 --> 00:39:41,083
This fell after the burial,
771
00:39:41,166 --> 00:39:44,667
because there is a shabtistuck under the corner of it.
772
00:39:44,750 --> 00:39:48,333
So the shabtis are actuallylined up along two walls.
773
00:39:48,417 --> 00:39:51,291
We found a bunch of them in place here.
774
00:39:51,375 --> 00:39:54,208
And then they've beenalong the wall like this,
775
00:39:54,291 --> 00:39:56,875
every couple of inches all the way down.
776
00:39:56,959 --> 00:39:59,208
The falcon deity was over here,
777
00:39:59,291 --> 00:40:01,583
and it wasn't directly on the floor.
778
00:40:01,667 --> 00:40:04,500
And through out of herewe got bone fragments,
779
00:40:04,583 --> 00:40:07,834
and we got what looks to bebig patches of leather.
780
00:40:07,917 --> 00:40:10,125
If the king is in there,it makes sense for him to be
781
00:40:10,208 --> 00:40:13,458
in the middle of the room,and so he should be underneath this slab.
782
00:40:13,542 --> 00:40:15,125
Progress has been great.
783
00:40:15,208 --> 00:40:18,208
The goal had been to... to complete
the excavation this season.
784
00:40:18,291 --> 00:40:19,583
I don't think we'll make it,
785
00:40:19,667 --> 00:40:21,875
in part because we're finding too much,
786
00:40:21,959 --> 00:40:24,125
which is a terrible and
wonderful problem to have.
787
00:40:24,208 --> 00:40:25,792
If you think of it in some ways,
788
00:40:25,875 --> 00:40:27,917
archeology is kind of like
789
00:40:28,000 --> 00:40:31,000
trying to figure out
an ancient crime scene, right?
790
00:40:31,083 --> 00:40:32,458
Everybody's dead.
791
00:40:32,542 --> 00:40:34,458
Nobody can speak for themselves.
792
00:40:34,542 --> 00:40:37,166
And all you have is
the physical evidence around it.
793
00:40:37,250 --> 00:40:39,333
But instead of spent shotgun shells,
794
00:40:39,417 --> 00:40:42,166
you've got pottery and inscriptions,
795
00:40:42,250 --> 00:40:45,458
and all these wonderful pieces of puzzle
796
00:40:45,542 --> 00:40:48,333
that you really have topatiently put together.
797
00:40:48,417 --> 00:40:50,917
Gosh, look at the visibility.
I can even see bubbles
798
00:40:50,959 --> 00:40:52,750
-in there on occasion.
-DR. CREASMAN: I know. So, you know...
799
00:40:52,834 --> 00:40:54,417
NARRATOR: Pearce Paul and Kristin
800
00:40:54,500 --> 00:40:57,500
review some of the footageof Nastasen's tomb
801
00:40:57,583 --> 00:41:01,125
to assess whether there'sa possibility he's still inside.
802
00:41:01,208 --> 00:41:02,542
-...had been gilded...
-ROMEY: Mm-hmm.
803
00:41:02,625 --> 00:41:04,333
...that then got squished...
804
00:41:04,417 --> 00:41:05,959
NARRATOR: The rockfalls in the tomb
805
00:41:06,041 --> 00:41:08,166
block them from getting a clear picture.
806
00:41:08,250 --> 00:41:10,583
But it could also be a stroke of luck.
807
00:41:10,667 --> 00:41:12,750
How many... How many falls
you think you got there?
808
00:41:12,834 --> 00:41:14,083
At least two.
809
00:41:14,166 --> 00:41:16,417
What I'm hoping is is that
the things coming down
810
00:41:16,500 --> 00:41:18,750
from the ceiling, yes,
they crush some stuff,
811
00:41:18,834 --> 00:41:21,041
-but they also push it out.
-...from in. Yeah.
812
00:41:21,125 --> 00:41:24,750
We found some shatteredparts of bone, probably human.
813
00:41:24,834 --> 00:41:28,333
-We found gold leaf, we found leather.
-ROMEY: Mm-hmm.
814
00:41:28,417 --> 00:41:30,792
-DR. CREASMAN:
We found a little statuette of a deity.
815
00:41:30,875 --> 00:41:32,417
ROMEY: So essentially, you're dealing with
816
00:41:32,500 --> 00:41:34,500
a tomb tsunami, in some sense.
817
00:41:34,583 --> 00:41:36,250
DR. CREASMAN:
Yes. It's great, because I think
818
00:41:36,333 --> 00:41:39,250
the likelihood is high
that there's more there, there,
819
00:41:39,333 --> 00:41:41,375
because it's protected.
820
00:41:41,458 --> 00:41:42,875
-ROMEY: Mm-hmm.
-Smushed, but protected.
821
00:41:42,959 --> 00:41:46,000
DR. CREASMAN:
I can imagine that this gigantic slab
822
00:41:46,083 --> 00:41:49,375
has prevented anybody else
since that event occurred
823
00:41:49,458 --> 00:41:51,917
from doing anything to get to
whatever is underneath it...
824
00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:53,625
-Yeah.
-...which is in the center of the room,
825
00:41:53,709 --> 00:41:55,208
-which is where all these burials are.
-Which is...
826
00:41:55,291 --> 00:41:57,166
Yes. Which is where Nastasen
827
00:41:57,250 --> 00:41:59,000
-should be if he's in there.
-DR. CREASMAN: Should be. Yeah.
828
00:41:59,083 --> 00:42:00,667
ROMEY: Now we just have to figure out...
829
00:42:00,750 --> 00:42:03,458
DR. CREASMAN: What's the technical
way to do it, if at all,
830
00:42:03,542 --> 00:42:05,000
which is also one of the questions.
831
00:42:05,083 --> 00:42:06,667
Is this a thing that we can do today,
832
00:42:06,750 --> 00:42:08,542
or is it a thing that we leave
to someone else in the future?
833
00:42:10,500 --> 00:42:13,417
ROMEY: For immediate gratification,that's disappointing,
834
00:42:13,500 --> 00:42:15,917
because you've got a big rock in the way.
835
00:42:16,000 --> 00:42:19,041
But for our long term prospects,it's really intriguing.
836
00:42:19,125 --> 00:42:21,709
We may have Nastasen
still inside that tomb.
837
00:42:21,792 --> 00:42:23,792
NARRATOR: After Nastasen's reign,
838
00:42:23,875 --> 00:42:26,166
and the mysterious move from Napata,
839
00:42:26,250 --> 00:42:28,917
the Kushites began a new era.
840
00:42:29,000 --> 00:42:31,000
While still prosperous for centuries,
841
00:42:31,083 --> 00:42:33,500
the kingdom's power wouldnever again extend
842
00:42:33,583 --> 00:42:37,083
as far as it had when it ruled Egypt.
843
00:42:38,500 --> 00:42:42,166
DR. CREASMAN: It is a reallyengaging time in human history
844
00:42:42,250 --> 00:42:44,166
and it's these foundations,
845
00:42:44,250 --> 00:42:45,500
these things that we look back
846
00:42:45,583 --> 00:42:47,250
in our own history books and say,
847
00:42:47,333 --> 00:42:50,083
"Gosh, these are important
events in our world, too."
848
00:42:50,166 --> 00:42:52,375
(drone whirring)
849
00:42:52,458 --> 00:42:54,542
NARRATOR: For nearly 2,000 years,
850
00:42:54,625 --> 00:42:56,500
temples were built and rebuilt
851
00:42:56,583 --> 00:42:58,291
at the foot of Jebel Barkal.
852
00:42:59,750 --> 00:43:02,917
While the mountain's centerof power didn't last forever,
853
00:43:03,000 --> 00:43:05,375
its spirit endures today.
854
00:43:05,458 --> 00:43:08,583
DR. EMBERLING:
These places and these kings of Kush
855
00:43:08,667 --> 00:43:12,417
are still really significantin modern Sudan,
856
00:43:12,500 --> 00:43:14,667
but it's beyond just history.
857
00:43:14,750 --> 00:43:18,375
It's a very rich connectionthat Sudanese have to these places.
858
00:43:19,834 --> 00:43:21,959
They all know about theirhistorical importance,
859
00:43:22,041 --> 00:43:24,709
but they're alsoa part of their daily lives.
860
00:43:24,792 --> 00:43:27,709
ELAMIN: The people are very connectedto the mountain itself initially.
861
00:43:27,792 --> 00:43:32,000
But in the recent years with thewave of archeological discoveries,
862
00:43:32,083 --> 00:43:35,500
the people have become more interested
in the history and in the antiquities,
863
00:43:35,583 --> 00:43:37,125
and they now ask a lot of questions
864
00:43:37,208 --> 00:43:40,834
about the antiquities and the
history and the civilization as well.
865
00:43:42,333 --> 00:43:45,000
DR. EMBERLING:
One thing that archeology teaches us
866
00:43:45,083 --> 00:43:47,333
as we look over the centuries is that
867
00:43:47,417 --> 00:43:49,250
things really do go wrong.
868
00:43:49,333 --> 00:43:51,083
Cultures do collapse,
869
00:43:51,166 --> 00:43:53,458
civilizations disappear.
870
00:43:55,000 --> 00:43:56,750
One of the things I take
871
00:43:56,834 --> 00:43:59,208
from studying archeology and history,
872
00:43:59,291 --> 00:44:04,458
is that the decisions thatwe make really matter.
70541
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