Pharaoh Tutankhamun died at only 18 years old.
When Egyptologist Howard Carter and his team found Tutankhamun’s tomb in the Valley of the Kings on November 4, 1922, they were unprepared to see a huge and exceptionally rare treasure at the site. The pharaoh rests in peace.
At that time, scientists were unaware that the facts were accurate, clouded with materials from… space.
The desert crystal is identical to the gemstone in a brooch discovered in the tomb of King Tut.
Scientists from the East still have important puzzles to solve this mystery.
Certainly, scientists know that silicon is known from the Libyan Desert Glass formed about 28 million years ago when a meteorite collided with atmosphere and exploded over the Earth, dated back to an explosion in the air over the Earth about 28 million years ago. The impact of this explosion heated the sand beneath the desert to a temperature of about 2,000 degrees Celsius.
This heated sand formed desert glass and the material was later used to create King Tut’s scarab pin.
No less interesting and beautiful is King Tut’s dagger.`
Dagger of King Tut
Researchers from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, the Polytechnic University of Milan, and the University of Pisa used X-ray scanning technology to examine the metal composition of the knife. They discovered that blade preserves very well, especially when buried with owner, high nickel content with traces of cobalt and phosphorus.
Scientists and scholars in the field came together. In 2000, fragments of the Kharga meteorite were found on the Mars Matrouh plateau in Egypt.
The dagger is said to be one of the most notable treasures unearthed from King Tut’s tomb. According to AP reports.