Egypt mummies: New tombs found in Minya

News imageAFP Egyptian mummiesAFP

Fifty mummies dating back to the Ptolemaic era (305-30BC) have been found by Egyptian archaeologists, the antiquities ministry says.

The mummies, of which 12 were children, were found in four burial chambers 9m (30ft) deep in the Tuna El-Gebel site in Minya, south of the capital Cairo.

Some were wrapped in linen, others were in stone coffins or wooden sarcophagi.

Their identities were unknown, officials said, but they were likely to have held important positions.

News imageReuters Tuna El-Gebel siteReuters
The Tuna El-Gebel site is in Minya, to the south of Cairo
News imageAFP mummies wrapped in linen with sarcophagi fragmentsAFP
Fragments of sarcophagi were on some of the mummies
News imageAFP partially uncovered skull of a mummy found in MinyaAFP
Among the discoveries was this partially uncovered skull wrapped in linen
News imageAFP The mummies found in MinyaAFP
Children were among the mummies found
News imageAFP mummies in stone coffinsAFP
Some of the mummies were in stone coffins
News imageAFP artefact fragments on display in MinyaAFP
Egypt's antiquities minister said the newly discovered tombs may have been a familial grave for a well-off middle class family