Saqqara Bird
The Saqqara Bird is a bird-shaped artefact made of sycamore wood, discovered during the 1898 excavation of the Pa-di-Imen tomb in Saqqara, Egypt. It has been dated to approximately 200 BCE and is now housed in Cairo’s Museum of Egyptian Antiquities. The Saqqara Bird has a wingspan of 180 mm (7.1 in) and weighs 39.12 g (1.380 oz).
This great scientific discovery was made when a pharaonic tomb was discovered in 1898 next to the pyramid of Saqqara, and inside the tomb, there was a wooden structure in the form of an aeroplane.

With the development of modern science and by studying this structure again at the hands of the Egyptian scientist Khalil Masiha, it was completely confirmed that this structure does not resemble the structures of birds, the wings are straight, as well as the rear, as it has no legs like birds. He is the god of wind and air at the pharaohs.