Archaeologists and hospital staff in England have been working together. Theyâve CT scanned an ancient Egyptian mummyâs head that was discovered in an English attic.
In the 1820s a 2,700-year-old Egyptian mummy was shipped as a souvenir to someone in Ramsgate, a seaside town in the district of Thanet in East Kent, England. Following the death of the homeowner, his brother donated the head in its glá´ss display case to the Canterbury Museums and Galleries collection, reports Kent Online .
Charting Ancient Corpses
Craig Bowen is galleries collections and learning manager at the Canterbury Museum . He told press that the mummyâs head was âfound by a man who inherited it from his brother, who got it from a âDr Coatesâ sometime in the early/mid twentieth century.â
The 2020 X-rays taken at Canterbury Christ Church University determined the mummy was an adult female. But now, a detailed CT scan has revealed a volume of new data about the individual before she died. CT scans , or âcomputerized tomographyâ, involves taking a series of X-ray images taken from different angles around a body. A supercomputer then marries the cross-sectional images (slices) together producing a hi-resolution map of the scanned body.
Brainless In The Afterlife
The new CT scans were undertaken by James Elliott , a lecturer in diagnostic radiography at Canterbury Christ Church University and senior radiographer at Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust . Elliott says in a report on his website, Paleoimaging.com that the new scans provide âa huge amount of information, everything from dental status, pathologies, method of preservation as well as helping our estimations of age and SŃx.â
The scans revealed the womanâs brain had been removed. This means she had visited a Per-Nefer, or âhouse of beautyâ after death. This was where the first part of purification and mummification procedures and rites occurred. Traditionally, embalmers used hammers and chisels to access the brain through the nasal bone, through which they inserted an iron hook and slowly pulled out the brain matter. The remains were scooped out by spoon and the cranial cavity was washed with water.
Craig Bowen said it was ironic that ancient Egyptians believed that a personâs mind âwas held in their heart and had little regard for the brainâ. He also added that CT scans are showing âgreat variabilityâ in how brains were removed.
Details of the Ancient Egyptian Revealed By Mummy Head Scan
The CT scans revealed that the womanâs tongue was very well preserved, and that her teeth were well worn. The former stands testimony to the well-developed methodology of the ancient preservers while the latter indicates the woman had a life-long diet of coarse foods.
According to a report in Kent Online âa tubing of unknown materialâ was found trapped within the mummyâs left nostril. And the same material was identified in the spinal canal. The origins and composition of these blockages are currently unknown, and they might be modern, perhaps Victorian.
Craig Bowen says this project is part of a larger aim to preserve the head and allow it to be displayed in conservation grade packaging for public viewing. The team plans on using their newly acquired CT scanning data to create a three-dimensional replica of the womanâs head. Furthermore, they will also attempt to reconstruct the womanâs face in 3D âwithout exposing the actual artifact,â said Bowen.