Ombo


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Murder at Kom Ombo


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THE PROFESSOR Dr. Jamie Madison- very beautiful, very brilliant, and very, very rich- but once out of her comfort zone, is she a match for the charismatic Inspector Al Saladan? THE INSPECTOR Henri- shrewd and capable, he's called upon to investigate the brutal murder of an American tourist...but he hasn't bargained on falling in love with the headstrong professor Madison.... ...and a supporting cast of characters with questionable pasts - and mysterious presents: ...handsome Richard Whitsome, an aging Lothario who meets his gruesome end at the ancient Egyptian temple of Kom Ombo. His wife, Marion, has always bailed him out of his peccadilloes- until now.... ....the David Nivenish Sam and his glib wife, Liz- and their secrets.... ....the Santa Barbara socialites- are they hiding behind a façade or just plain weird? ....the old woman- at eighty, she chain smokes, guzzles whiskey- and packs a pistol.... ....young, fragile, hauntingly beautiful Tamara- why did she leave the Church? ....a good, American blue collar couple with violence in their past and uncertainty in their present.... ....all meet in the searing heat of Egypt in a murder mystery that tests young Jaime Madison's faith in her emotional self, her newfound friends, and the meaning of truth itself.




Pharaonic Inscriptions from the Southern Eastern Desert of Egypt


Book Description

The University of Minnesota Eastern Desert Expedition had its beginnings in 1975, when co-authors George (Rip) Rapp, T. H. Wertime, and J. D. Muhly visited cassiterite (tin ore) mines in the southern Eastern Desert of Egypt. Near the farthest west of these mines, they were shown a group of pharaonic inscriptions by M. F. el-Ramly of the Egyptian Geological Survey and Mining Authority. The inscriptions were photographed, and the photos were given to an Egyptologist to translate. Much later, in 1991, senior author Russell D. Rothe read about the photos in a footnote in an unrelated article. After obtaining copies of the photos from Rapp, he translated the inscriptions with the help of co-author William K. Miller and others. Over the next decade, Rothe, Rapp, and Miller traversed the 60,000-sq.-km area between the Nile and the Red Sea, mostly on foot, photographing inscriptions and systematically surveying the entire region. The results of their investigations of the inscriptional remains found in this vast, mountainous desert are here published for the first time; the corpus will be an important addition to our knowledge of the range and scope of the activities of the ancient Egyptians, especially outside the Nile Valley.



















Nile Reservoirs


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