The Saqqara Digging Diaries 2025 - Fourth Week

 

Last Days in Saqqara: Closing to Begin Again

Autumn has officially arrived here in Saqqara. Work now begins with the sun already high, but the atmosphere has changed: the intense heat of the past weeks has given way to a steady breeze and clouds scattered across the horizon. At times, it almost feels like it might rain.

It’s time to wrap up the excavation. After weeks of fieldwork, the tasks remain the same, but the rhythm shifts - it’s no longer about uncovering, but about checking, completing, and putting things in order.

The archaeological investigation, carried on until the very last days, allowed us to reach the level of Yuyu’s chapel and confirm a hypothesis made in 2023: the wall we had previously seen in section does not actually belong to the chapel, as we once thought, but to another, earlier structure against which Yuyu’s chapel was later built. Once this was established, it was time to secure the area: some sections were covered, others protected with fabric and sand, to preserve what had been uncovered. Every gesture serves both to conserve and to prepare the ground for the next mission.

Meanwhile, all the finds discovered during the excavation - catalogued, drawn, and documented day by day - are being checked one by one to ensure nothing has been overlooked, and then carefully stored in the magazine. Every step is recorded, so that anyone in the future who wishes to locate the finds from the 2025 mission will be able to navigate the storage system with ease.

Photographic documentation of all the mission’s materials is also being completed - from the smallest objects to ceramic fragments - and especially of Yuyu’s chapel, in order to finalize the epigraphic work carried out on site. Another key goal is to “bring home” the full record of what has been done: 3D models of the excavated areas, topographic surveys, photographs, stratigraphic notes. All this data will form the foundation for upcoming remote studies - including those focused on ceramics and wooden artifacts analyzed during the mission.

These are days of almost feverish activity. There’s a constant fear of running out of time - of leaving something unfinished, forgetting an important detail, or not completing a drawing or survey. Every detail matters, and every action, even the smallest, seems to carry extra weight. Yet time, in these moments, seems to move faster than ever. We work until the very end - checking forms, labeling boxes, and putting tools away. And when everything is finally in order, there comes that special silence that marks the end of fieldwork: we did it. There’s a deep sense of shared accomplishment - the awareness that every result stems from collective effort, and that each person has left a mark, visible or invisible, on the story of this mission.

Then comes the final day. It’s time for goodbyes - always a mix of joy and melancholy. Collaborators are thanked, notebooks are closed, and tools that for weeks have felt like extensions of our hands are packed away. We look around one last time, trying to fix in memory every detail of the site - the sun, the sand, the pyramids, the landscape.

Leaving the excavation means stepping away from a routine that, day after day, has become home: the rhythms, the faces, the repeated gestures that give shape to shared work. Farewells come with hugs, handshakes, and promises to meet again soon. Then, as tradition dictates, the storage doors are sealed - the field season is officially over. And with that gesture, somewhere between melancholy and satisfaction, another chapter of the mission comes to a close.

But our work doesn’t end here. Everything the excavation has revealed must now be studied and interpreted. It’s a quieter but decisive phase, in which fieldwork transforms into scientific knowledge.

Every end of a season is also a new beginning: a time for reflection, but above all, for preparation. The questions raised by the ground still await answers - and it will be the work of the coming months, and the next mission, to find them.

A heartfelt thank you to all the colleagues, collaborators, and friends who have been part of this team and made this mission possible- and to you, the reader, for following our work.

Until next year, inshallah.

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The Saqqara Digging Diaries 2025 - Third Week