from the site :
Gizmodo
 
 
Archaeologists Think Hidden Imperial Tomb May Be Too Deadly to Explore
 
Jesus  Diaz  


After discovering a _secret palace_ 
(http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/747660.shtml)  hidden  in China's first 
emperor massive burial complex, Chinese 
technicians are  nervous. Not because Qin Shi Huang's tomb is the most 
important archeological  discovery since Tutankhamun, but because they believe 
his burial place is full  of deadly traps that will kill any trespassers. Not 
to talk about deadly  quantities of mercury.  
The secret courtyard-style palace tomb is a mind-numbing discovery. 
Situated  in the heart of the Emperor's 22-square-mile (56-square-kilometer) 
mortuary  compound guarded by more than 6,000 (and counting) full-size statues 
of  
warriors, musicians and acrobats, the buried palace is 2,263 by 820 feet 
(690 by  250 meters). It includes 18 courtyard houses overlooked by one main 
building,  where the emperor is supposed to be. The palace—which has already 
been partially  mapped in 3D using volumetric scanners—occupied a space of 
6,003,490 cubic feet  (170,000 cubic meters). That's one fourth the size of 
the Forbidden City in  Beijing—for just one tomb. 
Experts believe that the 249-foot-high (76-meter) structure covered with 
soil  and kept dry thanks to a complex draining system, hides the body of the 
emperor  and his courtiers. Nobody knows what's the state of their bodies, 
but one of the  leading archeologists believes that they are most likely 
destroyed by  now.

 
What probably are intact are the countless treasures that—according to the  
ancient scrolls that describe the emperor's long lost burial site—fill the  
interior of the tomb. And perhaps the deadly traps guarding them too. 
Deadly traps?
Talking to Spanish newspaper _El  Pais_ 
(http://cultura.elpais.com/cultura/2012/12/17/actualidad/1355732987_248820.html)
 , the archeologists working at 
the excavation said that "it's like  having a present all wrapped at home, 
knowing that inside is what you always  wanted, and not being able to open 
it." But, at the same time, nobody wants to  be the first to get inside 
because of the mausoleum's dangerous traps—they're  detailed in the same texts 
that recount its abundant riches. 
It's not clear if the traps are really there, even while many texts 
describe  them. There are no reports of traps in any tombs in any ancient 
culture. 
_According  to Emily Teeter_ 
(http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2217/were-ancient-tombs-really-booby-trapped)
 —University of Chicago's Oriental 
Institute's curator of  Egyptian and Nubian antiquities—traps are a legend as 
much as curses: 
I am really sorry to report that if curses are out, then there is really  
nothing devious. Hollywood has turned standard architectural features like  
sliding portcullis blocks, shafts, and sand filled chambers into objects of  
horror. Sorry that the Egyptians were not more evil.
So what about the giant stone ball that chases Indy at the beginning of  
Raiders of the Lost Ark? Well, the ball exists, _says  the expert in Central 
American archaeology Dr. Winifred Creamer_ 
(http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2217/were-ancient-tombs-really-booby-trapped)
 : 
Costa Rica definitely has those big stone balls. The balls had ceased to be 
 made by the time of the first Spanish explorers, and remained completely  
forgotten until they were rediscovered in the 1940s. Many of the balls were  
found to be in alignments, consisting of straight and curved lines, as well 
as  triangles and parallelograms. One group of four balls was found to be 
arranged  in a line oriented to magnetic north. This has led to speculation 
that they  may have been arranged by people familiar with the use of magnetic 
compasses,  or astronomical alignments.

 
Sadly, it seems those giant balls weren't part of any traps. Maybe. 
But let's assume that the Chinese were more evil awesome  than the 
Egyptians or Central American cultures, and that they really installed  booby 
traps 
that triggered deadly crossbows in the emperor's tomb. Even if the  old 
Chinese texts are correct, they might now still work after two thousand  years. 
Perhaps the mechanisms are so rusty that the bolts won't fire. Maybe the  
wood and the cords used the in the traps have long since been destroyed by  
bacteria. 
Chinese historian Guo Zhikun argues the contrary. He is one of the main  
experts on Qinshihuang's burial site, and says that it's very possible that 
the  traps are still active. He claims that the use of chrome in the figures 
may  indicate that the traps received a similar protective treatment. He is 
sure that  "the artisans who built the traps installed crossbows that will 
fire if any  thief tries to get inside." 
Even if the traps don't work, there is still the matter of the high, deadly 
 concentration of mercury inside the tomb. On-site measurements indicate  
dangerous levels, which may come from another feature described in the 
srolls:  Imperial engineers created large rivers of quicksilver inside the 
tomb. 
So much  that the level of mercury inside could be deadly for any unprotected 
 adventurers. 
The Chinese government hasn't decided what to do with the hidden complex 
yet.  The authorities will wait for some time because they believe that, with 
the  current technology, you can't get inside the tomb without destroying 
some of its  contents. Good

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