Egypt has announced the discovery of the remains of a Greco-Roman temple in North Sinai.
In a statement issued by the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said that an Egyptian archaeological mission unearthed the remains of a temple for Zeus at the site of Tell el-Farama in North Sinai.
Secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt, Mustafa Waziri said the location of the temple was determined after excavators found remains of a huge gate on the surface of the earth at the site.
The gate consisted of two pink granite columns, each about 8 meters long and 1 meter thick, in addition to a granite lintel that was installed at the top of the gate, Waziri added.
Meanwhile, the head of the Egyptian Antiquities Sector at the Supreme Council of Antiquities, Ayman Ashmawy, said the temple was built of mud bricks on a raised platform.
The Greco-Roman Period in Egypt (332 BC -395 AD) marks the end of Persian rule over Egypt.