One (as yet not publicly unidentified) of these three sandstone heads of an Amarna princess has been reported as missing from the Egyptian Museum.
Photo from Antiquities Missing from Egypt report, Penn Cultural Heritage Center
Partially filling the information vacuum about exactly what objects have gone missing during the chaotic situation in Egypt, the Penn Cultural Heritage Center at the University of Pennsylvania has published a list with photographs of objects that have been officially reported as missing by Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities.
The value-added is that these objects are now compiled in one place (rather than in Zahi Hawass‘ partial, fragmentary reports), along with descriptions, photographs (where possible) and bibliographic data, provided by the Penn Center’s own
research.
In addition, two very helpful CultureGrrl readers have informed me that the mystery name (which I published yesterday in Arabic) for the seventh reported candidate to replace Hawass as Egypt’s head of antiquities is Hassan Salim.