<P> In close proximity is the burial of Tutankhamun . This is perhaps the most famous discovery of modern Western archaeology . It was discovered here by Howard Carter on November 4, 1922, with clearance and conservation work continuing until 1932 . This was the first royal tomb to be discovered that was still largely intact, although tomb robbers had entered . And until the excavation of KV63 on 10 March 2005, it considered the last major discovery in the valley . The opulence of his grave goods notwithstanding, Tutankhamun was a relatively minor king, and other burials probably had more numerous treasures . </P> <P> In the same central area as KV62 and KV63, is KV64, a radar anomaly believed to be a tomb or chamber announced on 28 July 2006 . It is not an official designation, and the actual existence of a tomb at all is dismissed by the Supreme Council of Antiquities . </P> <P> The nearby tomb of Horemheb, (KV57) is rarely open to visitors . But it has many unique features and is extensively decorated . The decoration shows a transition from the pre-Amarna tombs to those of the 19th dynasty tombs that followed . </P> <P> The Nineteenth Dynasty saw a further standardisation of tomb layout and decoration . The tomb of the first king of the dynasty, Ramesses I, was hurriedly finished due to the death of the king and is little more than a truncated descending corridor and a burial chamber . However, KV16 has vibrant decoration and still contains the sarcophagus of the king . Its central location makes it one of the more frequently visited tombs . It shows the development of the tomb entrance and passage and of decoration . </P>

How many tombs are there in the valley of the kings