On a continent that has long attracted western expeditions, a wave of young people are now exploring sites

A late morning in Khartoum. Inside a low, dusty building in the centre of the Sudanese capital, there are crates of artefacts, a 7ft replica of a 2,000-year-old stone statue of a Nubian god, and students rushing through the corridors. Outside is noisy traffic, blinding sunlight and both branches of the Nile.

Heading down one staircase are Sabrine Jamal, Nadia Musa, Athar Bela and Sabrine al-Sadiq, all studying archaeology at Khartoum University. Not one of them is older than 24 and they see themselves as pioneers, breaking new ground on a continent that has long attracted western expeditions, specialists and adventurers but whose own archaeologists have received less attention overseas.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Jürgen Klopp angrily rejects claim that five substitutes rule favours Liverpool

Manager used extra replacements in win at Internazionale ‘It is absolutely not…

Trump to appear in court on Thursday as lawyer hints defense will focus on free speech – live

John Lauro appeared on NBC News, claiming four criminal charges over efforts…

Thousands show loyalty to Thai king amid anti-monarchy protests

Yellow-clad supporters cheered King Maha Vajiralongkorn during a tribute to his late…

What is UK scheme to take Ukraine refugees without family ties?

Full details are still being drawn up but individuals, families, charities or…