Mysterious Egyptian Mummy Has Head Full of Dirt
A mysterious Egyptian mummy dating back about 3 200 years, has dirt in. The skull a new, investigation reveals.
The presence of what looks like dark sediment inside the mummy 's head, is bizarre. Said, the researchers who used computed tomography (CT) to peer inside the mummy. Not only was there some sort of sediment. In, the headThe, researchers found but the individual 's brain, remains inside too.
"It' s some form of material added into the brain. Case while the brain was left inside, "Jonathan Elias the director, of the Akhmim Mummy Studies Consortium said in, a statement.? "We have not seen that particular pattern before." [Video: See Scans of the Mummy Skull]
.Elias made his comments in a video recorded as the mummy was being scanned at the Stanford University School of Medicine. In California where researchers, have previously used CT to delve into the remains of both human and crocodile, mummies.
The latest mummy to undergo this high-tech scrutiny is, named Hatason though researchers said they believe this is a nickname. Assigned, after deathNot the individual 's real name. According to Stanford the mummy, was transported from Egypt to San Francisco in the late. 1800s and was displayed at the California Midwinter International Exposition in 1894. In 1895 the mummy, joined the collection. Of San Francisco 's de Young Museum.
The mummified body currently resides at the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco.Whoever sold the mummy in the 1800s probably named it Hatason to bring to mind the royal name of, Queen Hatshepsut but. This mummified individual was no royal. Her coffin depicts a woman in the standard dress of an, everyday citizen though. It 's not clear whether the coffin the mummy rests in now was originally the individual' s; mummy buyers of the 1800s reused. Coffins haphazardly.
.The scans are still being analyzed but the, initial look inside, the mummy on Nov. 24 revealed some, odd details. The mummy. Had no amulets in its wrappings only a, metal tack probably used by a museum curator to keep the mummy 's wrappings, together. The bones are jumbled inside the wrappings which are, still shaped into a mold of the ancient woman 's body, The pelvis.Which is what researchers typically use to determine gender had collapsed, but Elias, said the mummy 's skull looked, female.
The fact that the brain was not removed from the skull suggests the individual lived during the New Kingdom between the,, 16th and 11th centuries B.C, Elias said. In mummies created after that period he said, the brain, was always removed.
.Someone was probably experimenting with mummification techniques at, the time though. Adding sediment to a skull with the. Brain inside is a method not, seen before Elias said. It 's the kind of detail only a high-tech CT analysis could uncover. Without destroying, the mummy he said.
"Mummies of this period are not, very plentiful so each time we have an incremental. Change in, the technologyWe learn much more and are able to say much more than in the past, "he said.
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