App Store Logo

Still Life

Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute

Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute

June 27, 2009

All ages seek out moments to enjoy campus wildlife, greenery

All ages seek out moments to enjoy campus wildlife, greenery

June 25, 2009

Music at Penn's Woods returns

Music at Penn's Woods returns

June 20, 2009

Arboretum holds open house

Arboretum holds open house

June 19, 2009

'Dining Room' set to open

'Dining Room' set to open

June 11, 2009

Summer slower at University Park

Summer slower at University Park

June 9, 2009

Faculty member photographs Colbert visit to troops

Faculty member photographs Colbert visit to troops

June 9, 2009

Special Olympics 2009 under way

Special Olympics 2009 under way

June 5, 2009

Student interns go through journalism 'boot camp'

Student interns go through journalism 'boot camp'

June 1, 2009

2009 Trash to Treasure sale a success

2009 Trash to Treasure sale a success

May 30, 2009

University Park Airport conducts full-scale disaster drill

University Park Airport conducts full-scale disaster drill

May 27, 2009

Featured Video

Mobile unit seeks to bridge gap in healthcare access

Mobile unit seeks to bridge gap in healthcare access

Penn State nursing simulation lab is unveiled

Penn State nursing simulation lab is unveiled

Commencement ceremonies 2009 (time lapse)

Commencement ceremonies 2009 (time lapse)

Graduate goodbyes  2009

Graduate goodbyes 2009

Penn State names new laureate

Penn State names new laureate

Penn State's creamery, from the cow to the cone

Penn State's creamery, from the cow to the cone

Penn State joins  EPA's Sustainability Partnership

Penn State joins EPA's Sustainability Partnership

Evolution-proof insecticides may stall malaria forever

Evolution-proof insecticides may stall malaria forever

Geological feature key to finding, protecting tombs

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Philadelphia, Pa. – A 42-year-old method for finding water, monitoring pollution and helping with tunneling may also be a way to locate and protect tombs in the Valleys of the Kings and Queens and other burial sites in Egypt, according to Penn State researchers.

The idea that fracture traces could bare some connection to the rock cut tombs found in Egyptian valleys came to Katarin A. Parizek as she toured Egypt. K. Parizek, the daughter of Richard R. Parizek, professor of geology and geo-environmental engineering at Penn State, is a digital photographer, graphic designer and geologist. In 1992, on a Nile cruise to the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, she recognized the geological structures.

"Many of the tombs were in zones of fracture concentration revealed by fracture traces and lineaments," says K. Parizek, an instructor in digital photography. "I knew that these fractures were what Dad used to find water or to plan dewatering projects."

Fracture traces are the above-ground indication of underlying zones of rock fracture concentrations. In 1964, Laurence H. Lattman and R. Parizek published a paper on fracture traces that indicated where increased weathering and permeability occurred and where people could drill wells more efficiently. These fracture traces can be between 5 and 40 feet wide, but average about 20 feet, and can be as long as a mile.

An initial study in Egypt showed that some tomb passages and resting chambers were aligned along these fracture zones, suggesting that the builders knew that these locations had less resistant rocks and easier digging. The Parizeks presented their report on Oct. 22 at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Philadelphia, on recent work in the area.

More extensive surface and subsurface mapping confirmed the idea that the builders knew what they were doing. The tomb builders placed the entrances to their tombs in valley bottoms or receding depressions on the cliffs where the crumbling stone would hide the tombs. These tombs, built between 1500 and 1000 B.C., usually have a long entry hall leading to a burial chamber. They may have additional rooms for equipment and provisions and other storage areas. Tomb walls are often plastered and painted. The tombs are usually built sloping downward or actually have vertical shafts. To date, 63 tombs are identified in the Valley of the Kings with tomb 63 located in February 2006.

"Katarin predicted that the location of still to be discovered tombs might be determined using the fracture-trace method," R. Parizek said. "The discovery of KV-63 showed the correlation between tombs and fracture traces."

While locating previously unidentified tombs is a worthy endeavor, perhaps even more important is preserving the tombs. Many of these are open for viewing by the public and are the responsibility of the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities. Maintaining the tombs is a complex and complicated job.

While it does not often rain in the desert, when it does, water pours off hills and runs over the land and into the wadis –- valleys. Paving of parking lots, roads and paths to allow tomb visitors increases the flooding. Even though Egyptians build barriers at the tomb entrances, water often flows into the tunnels, causing irreversible damage to the tombs.

The open entrances, however, are not the only way water enters the tombs. Water finds the fracture concentrations beneath the fracture traces and seeps into the ground. If tombs are built along or below the traces, eventually water insinuates itself through the fractured rock and enters the tombs. Water can ruin even undiscovered, unopened tombs in this way.

"If we can map the fracture traces and their associated fracture zones above and below ground, then we can see how to divert water so that it not only misses the tomb entrances, but also bypasses the permeable areas of the traces," says R. Parizek.

Water entering tombs through the fractured rock also causes major damage to roofs and pillars in the tombs. The researchers note that even without water, the pillars and roofs are more unstable on fracture zones. With water, the limestone rock weakens and breaks off. Because of these rock stability problems, tombs are closed for fear of injury to visitors.

"What they need to do is channel water along the pavement, away from the pathways that otherwise lead into the tombs," says K. Parizek. "Keep flow away from the tombs."

Additional photos are available at http://www.psu.edu/ur/2006/kingsphotos.htm online.

Newswires you might enjoy