JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. This content downloaded from 128.122.253.212 on Tue, 14 Apr 2015 15:57:12 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and ConditionsTHE EGYPTIAN EXPEDITION THE EXCAVATIONS AT LISHT THE PYRAMID OF SE'N-WOSRET I THE excavations of the Egyptian Expedition during the last season took place at Lisht, where the clearing of the South Pyramid, that of Se'n-Wosret I, was continued. The program for the season's work was simply to clear the area around the entrance on the north side of the pyramid and the entrance itself, and thus to complete the investigation of the pyramid proper and of the royal inclosure.Our experience during the season of 193 -1932 had shown us that we need not expect anything in the nature of tombs in the Inner Court of the royal precinct-the narrow area lying between the pyramid and the inner, limestone inclosure wall.' There seemed, therefore, to be no reason in favor of making any extensive clearance of this area, and the arguments against it were strengthened by the fact that very high mounds lay on the north side of the pyramid in the form of spurs, projecting from the general slump of the pyramid and surrounding the entrance (fig. i). These were the piles of debris, not unlike those cast up by any burrowing animal, left by the successive diggers who had penetrated into the underground passages and chambers of the pyramid-first the plunderers of antiquity, then the earlier excavators of the present era, whose funds did not permit the removal of the debris to any distance from the immediate site of their operations.We, too, had to be careful in the matter of expense and did not feel justified in clearing away the huge mounds, especially as we did not hope for much more, as a result of our labors, than an accurate plan of the entrance.2 We therefore determined to make a 2 The burial chamber of the king is inaccessible, for owing to the rising of the bed of the Nile during forty centuries, it is now permanently flooded by subsoil water.