Egypt invites expert behind new theory on Nefertiti's tomb

1FILE - In this Oct. 15, 2009 file photo, a 3,300-year-old bust of Queen Nefertiti is seen at the New Museum, in Berlin, Germany.
2Egypt's Antiquities Ministry announced Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, that it is inviting an Egyptologist behind a theory that the tomb of Queen Nefertiti may be located behind King Tutankhamun's 3,300-year-old tomb in the famed Valley of the Kings.
3British-educated expert Nicholas Reeves has been invited to Cairo in September to debate his theory with Egyptian colleagues.
4CAIRO (AP) - An Egyptologist behind a new theory that ancient Queen Nefertiti's tomb may be hidden behind King Tutankhamun's 3,300-year-old tomb in the famed Valley of the Kings has been invited to come to Cairo to debate his ideas, Egypt's Antiquities Ministry said Wednesday.
5The ministry said Britain-educated Nicholas Reeves will have the opportunity to discuss his theory with Egyptian colleagues in September.
6A joint expedition to Luxor, where the 18th Dynasty King Tut's tomb is located, could be on the agenda, the ministry said.
7There was no immediate response from Reeves, whose theory has attracted a lot of attention on the Internet and social media but has not been officially reviewed by peers.
8Reeves argues that Tut, who died at the age of 19, may have been rushed into an outer chamber of what was originally the tomb of Nefertiti.
9He claims high-resolution images of what is known as King Tut's tomb include linear traces underneath plastered surfaces of painted walls, showing there could be two unexplored doorways, one of which leading possibly to Nefertiti's tomb.
10He also argues that the design of King Tut's tomb suggests it was built for a queen, rather than a king.
11DNA testing in 2010 has provided strong evidence suggesting that Tut's father was likely the Pharaoh Akhenaten, who introduced an early form of monotheism.
12The testing also brought a new discovery, that Tut's mother was Akhenaten's sister.
13Still, some archaeologists believe the two were cousins and that their similar DNAs were the product of generations of marriages between close relatives - and that Nefertiti, Akhenaten's chief wife, may in fact have been Tut's mother.
14Reeves has not responded to an email from The Associated Press requesting an interview.
15Aidan Dodson, an Egyptologist at the University of Bristol, is skeptical.
16"The observations are very interesting, the possibility that there are hidden chambers behind those walls is a reasonable suggestion, but it's the jump to Nefertiti (being) behind the door that I would find somehow problematic," said Dodson.
17"There's absolutely no example of anyone ever doing that to a tomb."
18Dodson told the AP that he is leaning toward the theory that Nefertiti is indeed Tut's mother.
19Ancient Egyptian tombs had very little information about a dead pharaoh's lineage and tomb writings contained more information on beliefs about the afterlife.
20Willeke Wendrich, a professor of Egyptian Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said "many uncertainties around the succession" at the time of Akhenathen and Tutankhamun remain.
21"Finding a presumably intact tomb would provide extremely important information," Wendrich said.