It was discovered in 1906 by Edward R. Ayrton excavating on behalf of Theodore M. Davis, and contained the robbed burial of the Eighteenth Dynasty noble Amenemipet called Pairy.
The floor was covered in 6 inches (15 cm) of debris including broken objects, coffin fragments with yellow on black decoration, pieces of a wooden chair, sherds of white-washed pottery, and a mud seal bearing the inscription 'Amun hears good praises.
'[1] The unwrapped and broken mummy of the owner of the tomb was found thrown to one side; Ayrton describes him as "tall and well-built.
"[1] The presence of three inscribed mud bricks wrapped in resin-coated fabric and fragments of a fourth (so-called magical bricks), along with a number of wooden ushabti allowed him to be identified as the vizier and mayor of Thebes, Amenemipet.
[1] The tomb was part of the Pacific Lutheran University Valley of the Kings expedition’s work in 2009.