Thursday, November 01, 2007

3000 year old mummy scanned

London Free Press (Daniela Simunac)

Secrets that had been kept under wraps for nearly 3,000 years were unravelled in seconds when an Egyptian mummy underwent a CT scan at a London hospital.

The mummy slowly entered the state-of-the-art scanner at Victoria Hospital Monday night.

About a dozen researchers from different fields watched the mummy's skeletal image emerge on a computer screen. The image is shown at right.

"That's a nice spine. It's in pretty good shape," said Gayle Gibson of the Royal Ontario Museum.

The scan showed the mummy was four-foot-nine. The average height for women in 950 BC, when the mummy is believed to have died, was just under five feet, Gibson said.

Men were, on average, about five-foot-three.

The mummy lived at a "hard time" when there were invasions, changing dynasties and droughts, she said.

The mummy's gender will be determined during the next few months, said Andrew Nelson, a University of Western Ontario anthropologist.

The brain wasn't removed through its nostrils -- as it was often done in the mummification process -- but the organs were removed, typical of that time, he said.



See the above page for the full story.

No comments: