Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Features

Animal Mummies
National Geographic
A.R. Williams
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/11/animal-mummies/williams-text
Extract:
In 1888 an Egyptian farmer digging in the sand near the village of Istabl Antar uncovered a mass grave. The bodies weren't human. They were feline—ancient cats that had been mummified and buried in pits in staggering numbers. "Not one or two here and there," reported the English Illustrated Magazine, "but dozens, hundreds, hundreds of thousands, a layer of them, a stratum thicker than most coal seams, ten to twenty cats deep." Some of the linen-wrapped cats still looked presentable, and a few even had gilded faces. Village children peddled the best specimens to tourists for change; the rest were sold in bulk as fertilizer. One ship hauled about 180,000, weighing some 38,000 pounds, to Liverpool to be spread on the fields of England.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is not a comment about this, but an article on your fav subject - http://heritage-key.com/blogs/malcolmj/archaeovideo-prehistoric-paintings-swimmers-and-beast-gilf-kebir

Tass

Scrabcake said...

I would just like to say that the first picture is probably the Gazelle buried with Isetemkheb (the earlier one? I always get the millions of Isetemkhebs confused) in the Deir el Bahri royal mummy cache. I didn't know it had its own coffin! How sweet!