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Egyptian archaeologists find sandstone sphinx in temple at Aswan

Egyptian archaeologists draining water from a temple in the southern city of Aswan have uncovered a sandstone sphinx likely dating to the Ptolemaic era, the antiquities ministry said on Sunday, Reuters reports.

The Sphinx, a mythical being with the head of a human and the body of a lion, was discovered at the Kom Ombo temple, where two engraved sandstone reliefs of King Ptolemy V had also recently been found, the ministry said in a statement.

Ptolemaic rule spanned about three centuries until the Roman conquest in 30 BC.

Read: Egypt seeks detailed report on artifacts at Brazil’s burnt museum

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