People have lived in the Nile Delta region for thousands of years, and it has been intensively farmed for at least the past five thousand years. The delta was a major part of Lower Egypt, and many archaeological sites are located in and around the region. Artifacts belonging to ancient sites have been found on the delta's coast. The
Rosetta Stone was found in the delta in 1799 in the port city of Rosetta (an anglicized version of the name
Rashid). In July 2019 a small Greek temple, ancient granite columns, treasure-carrying ships, and bronze coins from the reign of
Ptolemy II, dating back to the third and fourth centuries BC, were found at the sunken city of
Heracleion, colloquially known as Egypt's Atlantis. The investigations were conducted by Egyptian and European divers led by the underwater archaeologist
Franck Goddio. They also uncovered a devastated historic temple (the city's main temple) underwater off Egypt's north coast. In January 2019, archaeologists led by
Mostafa Waziri working in the Kom Al-Khelgan area of the Nile Delta discovered tombs from the
Second Intermediate Period and burials from the
Naqada II era. The burial site contained the remains of animals,
amulets and scarabs carved from
faience, round and oval pots with handles, flint knives, broken and burned pottery. All burials included skulls and skeletons in the bending position and were not very well-preserved.
Ancient branches of the Nile , according to
James Rennell (1800) Records from ancient times (such as by
Ptolemy) reported that the delta had seven
distributaries or branches, (from east to west): • the
Canopic (also called the Herakleotic, Agathodaemon) ====
George of Cyprus list ==== Source: • Alexandrian (Schedia canal) • Colynthin (Canopic) •
Agnu (Rosetta) • Parollos (
Burullus) • Chasmatos (
Baltim) • Tamiathe (Damietta) • Tenese (
Tinnis) Modern Egyptologists suggest that in the Pharaonic era there were at a time five main branches: • the Pelusiac • the Sebennytic • the Canopic • the Damietta • the Rosetta The first three have dried up over the centuries due to
flood control,
silting and changing relief, while the last two still exist today. The
Delta used to flood annually, but this ended with the construction of the
Aswan Dam. ==Population==