Egyptian mummy's secrets revealed at hi-
tech laboratory
By Sean Coughlan
BBC News education and family correspondent
Scientists at a leading laboratory in the United
States are using a cutting-edge form of X-ray to
scan inside an Egyptian mummy that has never
been unwrapped since its excavation a century
ago.
This is the first time that such a high intensity
synchrotron X-ray will have been used on a
mummy, with the aim of producing an extremely
detailed three-dimensional analysis of the body and
any other objects hidden below the linen bindings.
This is also an unusual mummy, because not only
has the body been preserved, but so too has a
portrait of the child's face.
This mummy, from a collection on the campus of
Northwestern University in Chicago, is believed to
contain the body of a five-year-old girl, who died
about 1,900 years ago.
'Mummy portraits'
Not only was her body mummified, her portrait was
painted and placed on top of the cloths wrapped
tightly around her.
It's one of only about 100 such "portrait mummies"
known to exist intact, with the Egyptian process of
mummification being accompanied by the Roman
style of portraying the dead.
The painting provides an unusually intimate image
of how the girl once looked - and the scanning
project is trying to reveal much more about her life
and death, without disturbing any of the layers of
cloth around her body.
Marc Walton, research professor of materials at the
McCormick School of Engineering at Northwestern,
told the BBC it's "quite emotional when one realises
how young this child was at the time of her death".
Prof Walton says the investigation so far suggests
that she had been "relatively healthy and that she
didn't have any blunt force trauma that could
explain her death".
He says that the most likely cause of death was a
disease such as malaria or measles.
Intense light
The mummy had been excavated in 1911 by the
English archaeologist, Sir William Flinders Petrie, in
Hawara in Egypt, and was brought the following
year to a college in Chicago.
Since then, the mummy has been put on display
and appeared in exhibitions, but has been left
intact, unlike many that were cut open.
But this year, for the first time, researchers have
begun looking inside.
In the summer, the mummy was taken from its
current home, the Garrett-Evangelical Theological
Seminary, on the Northwestern University campus,
and brought to a hospital in Chicago for a
preliminary CT scan.
Then last week, the mummy was brought to the
Argonne National Laboratory, a top research centre
operated by the University of Chicago for the US
Department of Energy.
The mummy became the first to be examined using
synchrotron X-rays. This process sends narrow
beams of intense light to map any structures below
the surface.
Medical researchers want to examine the bone
tissue and teeth. The investigation is at an early
stage, but there are also questions about what
seems to be an object inside the skull, presumably
after the brain was removed as part of the
mummification.
Analysing ancient bone
Prof Walton says it seems to be "pooled resin from
the embalming process" which has settled in the
back of the skull.
The researchers are hoping that this will tell them
something about the positioning of the body and
the process of mummification.
There are also signs of some kind of wire around
the head and feet.
But Prof Walton suggests these might be modern
pins, rather than ancient artefacts, perhaps inserted
after or during the excavation in 1911.
"We are still trying to understand their exact
purpose in holding together the wrappings," he
says.
The synchrotron X-rays will allow researchers to
look at the interior structure of anything inside the
mummy in a much more detailed way than other
forms of scanning, says Prof Walton.
The US Department of Energy says the "ultra-bright,
high-energy" X-ray beams, produced at its
laboratory, can examine structures and materials at
a nanotechnology level "where scale is measured in
billionths of a metre".
"The thing that is of interest to me most personally
is the bone that is present," said Prof Stuart Stock
from the Feinberg School of Medicine at
Northwestern University.
'Paint the eyes softer'
"This is the mummy of a five-year-old child. We're
interested from a medical perspective in the quality
of the bone. Has this bone changed with time? We
can start to build up a database of how ancient
bone compares to modern bone," said Prof Stock.
He is hoping to find much more than from a
conventional CT scan. "We want to know what
materials are present and this will tell us
something about the processes used to prepare the
mummy, and things that had been done later to
stabilise the mummy."
They also want to know more about the young child
below all of these historical layers.
Taco Terpstra, assistant professor of history at
Northwestern, says about half of children at that
time did not live to their 10th birthday.
Prof Walton says that the girl's portrait and a
"relatively lavish burial" suggests that "she must
have had an elite status within the village".
He is curating an exhibition at the Block Museum at
the university showing these lifelike mummy
portraits.
It's called, Paint the Eyes Softer: Mummy Portraits
from Roman Egypt, with the title taken from an
instruction written in Greek on the back of one of
these pictures, that told the artist to "paint the eyes
softer".
Now this young, solemn face, looking back from an
ancient civilisation, is being investigated by the
most ultra-modern technology.
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