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Egypt Denies Imminent Risk to Tutankhamun’s Tomb After Study Flags Cracks and Fungal Damage

Officials cite recent checks with Getty experts to say the 3,300-year-old site is stable.

Overview

  • A Cairo University paper reports a spreading fissure across the entrance and burial chamber ceilings, with Esna shale under stress and rainwater ingress increasing long-term structural risk.
  • Researchers describe rising humidity and persistent fungal growth degrading murals, linking the deterioration to a 1994 flash flood that soaked the tomb.
  • Lead author Sayed Hemeda urges mitigation such as regulating internal humidity, targeted reinforcement, reducing overburden above the tomb, and installing removable supports.
  • Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities says reports of an impending collapse are untrue, citing recent inspections with Getty Conservation Institute experts and stating the murals are not in danger.
  • Coverage by international outlets amplified the study’s alarming findings, while the dispute between researchers and Egyptian authorities remains unresolved and no emergency plan has been announced.