Have they found Egyptian artifacts in the Red Sea?

This is a story that has been circulating in public for a long time. For years, people have claimed that there is physical evidence for the biblical exodus still to be found in the depths of the Red Sea. Some people are even bold to say that they even found the evidence. The truth is, this has never been 100% confirmed. Most recently, 2 months ago, another group of biblical researchers claimed that they found human remains and ancient Egyptian weapons corresponding with the event mentioned in the bible.

Have they found Egyptian artifacts in the Red Sea?

A team of underwater archeologists that was searching for ancient ships and artifacts from the Bronze age told Egypt’s Antiquities Ministry officials that they found a large amount of really old human bones and artifacts. They found the items in the Gulf of Suez, 1.5 kilometers offshore from the modern city of Ras Gharib. Furthermore, the researchers claim that these are the remains of a large Egyptian army, probably dating from the 14th century BC.

According to some sources, the team of archeologists have managed to find more than 400 separate skeletons so far, together with hundreds of pieces of metal and armor. It is said that there are also remains of two war chariots beneath the sea. The team thinks there could be 5,000 more skeletons to be found. They suggest that this place was once a dry land where a vast army has died.

The khopesh blade pictured below is thought to belong to a wealthy and important figure. The team of archeologists claims that it was found near one of the submerged chariots.

After reviewing the recent evidence, many biblical scholars believe that this underwater site could be connected to the Exodus. The bodies are stuck in clay and rock. This indicates that they maybe died in a mudslide or a huge tidal wave. The researchers also think that this area was dry land in the time when their deaths occurred. The fact that there was no ancient boat remains found in the area supports this idea.

The vast amount of skeletons could mean that a huge ancient army tried to pass here, but it was annihilated by an unknown force. Most of the scholars who believe in the biblical stories consider this as a firm proof for the Red Sea Crossing event. According to the Exodus account, Moses held out his staff and the Red Sea was parted by God. The Israelites walked on dry ground and crossed the sea, followed by the Egyptian army. Moses again moved his staff once the Israelites had crossed and the sea closed again, drowning the whole Egyptian army.

Whatever the truth may be, the “Red Sea Crossing” is considered to be of more symbolic importance than a real historical event. Mainstream archaeology thinks that there are not enough  solid facts which can prove this event really happened. This most recent discovery looks very promising to those who support the idea of the Red Sea crossing, but still there is much more research that needs to be done, before scientists can really prove anything. This is just a small scratch on the surface of the whole story about this ancient event, or legend.

Archaeologists have discovered Pharaoh's chariot and the bones of horses and men under the Red Sea.

Origin

On 24 October 2014, the web site World News Daily Report (WNDR) published an article reporting that chariot wheels and the bones of horses and men had been discovered at the bottom of the Red Sea, thereby supposedly proving archaeological proof of the Biblical narrative about the escape of the Israelites from the Egyptians. According to the Book of Exodus, God parted the Red Sea long enough for the Moses-led Israelites to walk across it on dry ground, but closed the waters up again upon the pursuing Egyptian army and drowned them all:

Egypt’s Antiquities Ministry announced this morning that a team of underwater archaeologists had discovered that remains of a large Egyptian army from the 14th century BC, at the bottom of the Gulf of Suez, 1.5 kilometers offshore from the modern city of Ras Gharib. The team was searching for the remains of ancient ships and artefacts related to Stone Age and Bronze Age trade in the Red Sea area, when they stumbled upon a gigantic mass of human bones darkened by age.

The scientists lead by Professor Abdel Muhammad Gader and associated with Cairo University’s Faculty of Archaeology, have already recovered a total of more than 400 different skeletons, as well as hundreds of weapons and pieces of armor, also the remains of two war chariots, scattered over an area of approximately 200 square meters. They estimate that more than 5000 other bodies could be dispersed over a wider area, suggesting that an army of large size who have perished on the site.

However, if one is looking for news of an important scientific or historical discovery, World News Daily Report is not the place to look. WNDR is fake news site whose disclaimer notes that the site’s articles are satirical in nature:

World News Daily Report is a news and political satire web publication, which may or may not use real names, often in semi-real or mostly fictitious ways. All news articles contained within worldnewsdailyreport.com are fiction, and presumably fake news. Any resemblance to the truth is purely coincidental, except for all references to politicians and/or celebrities, in which case they are based on real people, but still based almost entirely in fiction.

Despite WNDR’s framing of the alleged “discovery” as recent and newly announced, reports of divers finding chariot wheels and the like under the Red Sea are a hoax that has been promulgated for many years now.

The WNDR article’s use of language such as “this morning” and its claims that a team of “underwater archeologists” in Egypt responsible for the discovery were planning to recover more artifacts from the site reinvigorated interest in the long-discredited rumor, but those details were not only fabricated, they had simply been recycled from past claims and infused with more recent dates. In October 2015, the equally dubious web site Disclose.TV once again jump-started the phony rumors by republishing the year-old fake WNDR article.

What has been found under the Red Sea?

Archaeologists excavating a Roman-era synagogue at the site of Huqoq, Israel, have uncovered two new panels of a mosaic floor with instantly identifiable subjects—Noah's ark, and the parting of the Red Sea during the Israelite exodus from Egypt.

Is there archeological evidence for the crossing of the Red Sea?

No archaeological, scholar-verified evidence has been found that supports a crossing of the Red Sea.

Are there human bones in the Red Sea?

Two human skeletons were recently uncovered, their bones positioned besides pottery and Egyptian scarabs. As archaeological sites go, it is clearly a stepchild to the more sought-after digs in other parts of the country that have revealed treasures of pharaonic times.

What have archaeologists recently discovered in Egypt?

Archaeologists excavating in Abusir, south of Cairo near Saqqara, Egypt, have discovered the ruins of what may be one of the four lost Ancient Egyptian “sun temples”. Abusir is a necropolis of the Old Kingdom period that served as one of the main cemeteries for the Ancient Egyptian capital of Memphis.