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Theban Desert Road Survey/Yale Toshka Desert
Survey
Within
a broad concession bounded essentially by the Girga Road to the north
and the region of Aniba to the south, the Theban Desert Road Survey
(TDRS) and Yale Toshka Desert Survey (YTDS) explore the caravan routes
of the Western Desert, principally those connecting the Thebaïd
with Kharga Oasis, the small oases of the Nubian Western Desert,
and points beyond. The sites within the concessions of the TDRS and
YTDS range from remote prehistory through the early modern period.
Many of the sites reveal evidence of important interactions between
Nilotic and Saharan groups during the formative phases of the Egyptian
Predynastic Period (e.g. Wadi el-Hôl, Rayayna, Nuq’ Menih,
Kurkur Oasis). Other sites preserve important information regarding
the use of the desert routes during the Protodynastic and Pharaonic
Periods, particularly during periods of political and military turmoil
in the Nile Valley (e.g. Gebel Tjauti, Wadi el-Hôl).
Ceramic material, often in astonishing
abundance (e.g. the caravansaries of Gebel Qarn el-Gir, the Wadi
el-Hôl, and Gebel Roma’), occurs alongside considerable
epigraphic material, primarily in the form of rock inscriptions (e.g.
Gebel Tjauti, Wadi el-Hôl, Dominion Behind Thebes, Rayayna,
Bir Nakheila). The remains along the route connecting Thebes with
Kharga Oasis (Gebel Antef, Gebel Roma, Wadi el-Hôl, Gebel Qarn
el-Gir, Abu Ziyar, Tundaba, etc.) in particular allow for an often
complex reconstruction of the Nilotic administration’s approach
to the oases, and of the economic interactions of the Nile Valley
and Kharga Oasis, particularly from the time of the early Middle
Kingdom. Within the oasis of Kharga, the TDRS has investigated important
desert passes, sites of predynastic and pharaonic activity associated
with the routes of the Western Desert, and has already uncovered
evidence of four millennia of activity at the site of Gebel Ghueita,
overlooking routes through and connected with the Bulaq Pass.
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Brief History of the Expeditions
According to Major Ralph Bagnold, erstwhile desert explorer and founder
of the Long Range Desert Group, exploring the desert hinterland of
the Nile Valley meant that "it was within one's power at any
time to step right off the map." (Libyan
Sands: Travel in a Dead World [London, 1935], p. 137). Although the desert is now to
a great extent mapped, and well imaged through remote sensing, one
may yet walk off the archaeological map with relative ease. In many
ways the work of the TDRS began with such a walk in 1991, and the
subsequent growth of the project was to a great extent due to the
persistence of Deborah Darnell. Limited in time and funding during
the initial seven field seasons, the TDRS began greatly to increase
in scope when the expedition acquired the aegis and support of Yale
University in 1998. At the same time, responding to a request for
assistance from the Supreme Council for Antiquities and a former
director of the American Research Center in Egypt, we expanded the
extent of our activities with the YTDS, a logical extension of our
study of the desert roads of the southern Thebaid.
Along with Egyptologists and students at Yale University, the TDRS/YTDS also employs a wilderness medicine specialist who advises on health and safety issues, as well as providing information on medical aspects of our archaeological work. In addition to
having benefited from a number of grants and private donations, the
expeditions receive the indispensable support of the William K. and
Marilyn M. Simpson Endowment for Egyptology of the Department of
Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations of Yale University.
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