About The Giza Archives |  
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The Old Kingdom Giza Necropolis (dating from about  2500 BCE) is the site of thousands of tombs, temples, and ancient  artifacts. With this Web site the Giza Archives Project staff seeks to provide a  comprehensive online resource for scholarly research on Giza. 
The single  longest-running Giza excavation took place between 1902 and 1947,  undertaken jointly by Harvard  University and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA). Directed  by George A. Reisner, the "Harvard–MFA  Expedition" unearthed thousands of Giza artifacts, and amassed the  largest archaeological documentary archive of any Giza expedition. This  archive is housed primarily in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and, to a  lesser extent, at Harvard University. 
With the generous support of  the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the MFA has made  major strides since 2000 toward preserving and making this Giza archive  available online. With the addition of excavation archives from other  expeditions (1903-present) and institutions (in Berkeley, Berlin, Cairo,  Hildesheim, Leipzig, Philadelphia, Turin, and Vienna), the Giza  Archives Project Web site aims to become the world's central repository  for the archaeological history of the site. |  
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| The  Giza Necropolis, looking southeast across the Western Cemetery;  photograph © Marcello Bertinetti/Archivio White Star |  | 
 
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The present Web  site contains eight basic categories of materials, many of which derive  from the original Harvard–MFA Expedition. 
- about 3,810 tomb  and monument records
 
- about 34,000 black-and-white  excavation photographs taken between 1902 and 1942, as well as more  recent color images
 
- about 21,163 ancient object  records (finds)
 
- about 2,800 records on ancient  Egyptians at Giza, as well as modern invidividuals related to the site
 
- about 3,105 HU-MFA Expedition Diary pages in English, with  another 4,000 Arabic diary pages (and translations) in preparation
 
- about 10,000 maps and plans, ranging from entire Giza  cemeteries to individual burial shafts, with another 7,000 illustrations  in preparation
 
- about 400 books and articles on Giza (a  digital Library  of PDF files), presently being linked directly to tomb, object, and  people records
 
- about 4.463 pages of unpublished  manuscripts by George Reisner, with additional documents in preparation
 
- experiments in Interactive  Web technologies, such as zoomable satellite photos and 1,400  360-degree panoramic views of the site using Quicktime Virtual Reality  (QTVR).
 
 The Giza Archives Project is a work in progress  that will evolve to better serve the scholarly community. We strive to  resolve inconsistencies and discrepancies in the original excavation  records and numbering schemes, and look forward to learning of mistakes,  solutions, and suggestions from our Web users. Please see the Contact  page for details on how communicate with Giza Archives Project staff. 
Additional  archaeological materials, old and new, published and unpublished,  black-and-white and color, are in preparation. Please see the News  section of this Web site for periodic updates. |  
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 | G 2099, serdab, limestone  statues (39-1-16, 39-1-17, 39-1-18, 39-1-19) in situ, looking southeast;  January 21, 1939 (B9039) |  | 
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