ONE of Tutankhamun's famous daggers was made of a meteoric iron that literally came from space, says a new study into the composition of the iron blade from the sarcophagus of the boy king.
And the metal came from a meteor that struck the desert west of Alexandria in pre-historic times.
Tutankhamun
was buried with several weapons, including two daggers. One was a
golden ceremonial dagger and the other had an iron blade. Both had
golden sheaths.
While
archaeologists knew that one of the blades was iron, there was no way
of knowing where that cutting-edge alloy had come from at such an early
date in history.
But
now, using non-invasive, portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry, a
team of Italian and Egyptian researchers have confirmed that the iron of
the dagger placed on the right thigh of King Tut's mummified body a has
meteoric origin.
The
team, which include researchers from Milan Polytechnic, Pisa University
and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, detailed their results in the journal
Meteoritics and Planetary Science.
The
weapon, now on display at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, was described
in 1925 by Howard Carter, who three years before had discovered the
treasure-packed tomb, as "a highly ornamented gold dagger with crystal
knob."
Made
of non-rusted, homogeneous metal, the finely manufactured blade
features a decorated gold handle. It is completed by a gold sheath
garnished with a floral lily motif on one side and with a feathers
pattern on the other side, terminating with a jackal's head.
Now dramatic technological improvements have allowed the researchers to determine the composition of the blade.
"Meteoric
iron is clearly indicated by the presence of a high percentages of
nickel," main author Daniela Comelli, at the department of Physics of
Milan Polytechnic, told Discovery News.
Indeed, iron meteorites are mostly made of iron and nickel, with minor quantities of cobalt, phosphorus , sulfur and carbon.
While
artifacts produced with iron ore quarrying display 4 percent of nickel
at most, the iron blade of King Tut's dagger was found to contain nearly
11 percent of nickel. Further confirmation of the blade's meteoric origin came from cobalt traces.
"The
nickel and cobalt ratio in the dagger blade is consistent with that of
iron meteorites that have preserved the primitive chondritic ratio
during planetary differentiation in the early solar system," Comelli
said.
Comelli and colleagues also investigated the possible source of the iron blade.
"We
took into consideration all meteorites found within an area of 2,000 km
in radius centered in the Red Sea, and we ended up with 20 iron
meteorites," Comelli said.
"Only
one, named Kharga, turned out to have nickel and cobalt contents which
are possibly consistent with the composition of the blade," she added.
The meteorite fragment was found in 2000 on a limestone plateau at Mersa Matruh, a seaport some 150 miles west of Alexandria.
Earlier, experts determined that the Ancient Egyptians used meteoric iron for beads as early as 5,000 years ago ... long before the Iron Age began. The EGYPTIAN SPACE BEADS have been the subject of intense study.
It has also been long known that the Ancient Egyptians used METEOR GLASS in their jewellery.
The meteorite fragment was found in 2000 on a limestone plateau at Mersa Matruh, a seaport some 150 miles west of Alexandria.
Earlier, experts determined that the Ancient Egyptians used meteoric iron for beads as early as 5,000 years ago ... long before the Iron Age began. The EGYPTIAN SPACE BEADS have been the subject of intense study.
It has also been long known that the Ancient Egyptians used METEOR GLASS in their jewellery.
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