A CLEVER team of archaeologists have unearthed a trio of ancient tombs which all belonged to a peculiar set of Egyptians.
The three ornate burial sites date back more than 3,500 years and were discovered in the Dra Abu el-Naga necropolis in the southern Egyptian city of Luxor.
The team who analysed the tombs were quickly able to uncover who each belonged to due to the names and titles of the owners being found through inscriptions inside.
One of the tombs, which was found mostly destroyed, belonged to Amum-em-Ipet, from the Ramesside period.
Another was used to bury a man called Baki as the third was used for the body of a person named only as S.
Both of these individuals worked as regular supervisors in the time around 1550BC.
Baki worked as a supervisor of the grain silo, while