
An undated handout picture made available on 12 April 2010 by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities shows a sarcophogus unearthed by an Egyptian archaeological mission at a site in Bahariya Oasis, Egypt. The one-metre-long gypsum sarcophogus that has been found in one of 14 recently discovered Graeco-Roman tombs dating to the third century BC, portrays a lady dressed in Roman robes and contained the mummy of woman or girl who died about 2,300 years ago. The tombs were found as a result of excavation works in an area allocated for the construction of a youth centre for Al-Hara village at Bahariya Oasis, near Bawiti city. EPA/EGYPTIAN SUPREME COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES / HO EDITORIAL USE ONLY

An undated handout picture made available on 12 April 2010 by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities shows a sarcophogus unearthed by an Egyptian archaeological mission at a site in Bahariya Oasis, Egypt. The one-metre-long gypsum sarcophogus that has been found in one of 14 recently discovered Graeco-Roman tombs dating to the third century BC, portrays a lady dressed in Roman robes and contained the mummy of woman or girl who died about 2,300 years ago. The tombs were found as a result of excavation works in an area allocated for the construction of a youth centre for Al-Hara village at Bahariya Oasis, near Bawiti city. EPA/EGYPTIAN SUPREME COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES / HO EDITORIAL USE ONLY

An undated handout picture made available on 12 April 2010 by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities shows a gold fragment decorated with a scene of the four sons of the ancient Egyptian god Horus, unearthed alongside a sarcaphogus by an Egyptian archaeological mission at a site in Bahariya Oasis, Egypt. The one-metre-long gypsum sarcophogus that has been found in one of 14 recently discovered Graeco-Roman tombs dating to the third century BC, portrays a lady dressed in Roman robes and contained the mummy of woman or girl who died about 2,300 years ago. The tombs were found as a result of excavation works in an area allocated for the construction of a youth centre for Al-Hara village at Bahariya Oasis, near Bawiti city. EPA/EGYPTIAN SUPREME COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES / HO EDITORIAL USE ONLY

An undated handout picture made available on 12 April 2010 by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities shows an Egyptian worker brushing dust off of a sarcophogus unearthed by an Egyptian archaeological mission at a site in Bahariya Oasis, Egypt. The one-metre-long gypsum sarcophogus that has been found in one of 14 recently discovered Graeco-Roman tombs dating to the third century BC, portrays a lady dressed in Roman robes and contained the mummy of woman or girl who died about 2,300 years ago. The tombs were found as a result of excavation works in an area allocated for the construction of a youth centre for Al-Hara village at Bahariya Oasis, near Bawiti city. EPA/EGYPTIAN SUPREME COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES / HO EDITORIAL USE ONLY

An undated handout picture made available on 12 April 2010 by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities shows a anthropoid mask made of plaster, unearthed alongside a sarcaphogus by an Egyptian archaeological mission at a site in Bahariya Oasis, Egypt. The one-metre-long gypsum sarcophogus that has been found in one of 14 recently discovered Graeco-Roman tombs dating to the third century BC, portrays a lady dressed in Roman robes and contained the mummy of woman or girl who died about 2,300 years ago. The tombs were found as a result of excavation works in an area allocated for the construction of a youth centre for Al-Hara village at Bahariya Oasis, near Bawiti city. EPA/EGYPTIAN SUPREME COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES / HO EDITORIAL USE ONLY