CT Scans Reveal Hidden Objects Inside Ancient Egyptian Mummies
Researchers used CT and X-ray scans to identify the boy’s age and sex and found a possible papyrus on his chest, officials said.
- Polish scientists recently utilized high-resolution CT scanning to examine a 2,000-year-old Egyptian child mummy housed at the Archdiocesan Museum in Wroclaw, revealing previously unknown details about his life and burial practices.
- Cardinal Adolf Bertram brought the remains to the city in 1914 as part of a private collection; documentation for the mummy was lost during the Second World War, leaving its origins unknown until recent analysis.
- Analysis of dental development confirmed the deceased was a boy who died around age eight, while scans showed his brain was extracted through the nasal cavity during mummification, revealing typical Egyptian burial practices.
- Imaging detected a mysterious object resting on the boy's chest; lead author Professor Agata Kubala believes it may be a papyrus containing the child's name, raising intriguing questions about his identity.
- Developing methods to safely examine the object without damaging fragile cartonnage remains a priority, as Kubala emphasized, "This is not the end of the research." Further work is expected to yield additional findings.
11 Articles
11 Articles
For more than a century, the mummy of an eight-year-old Egyptian child remained as one more piece within the collection of the Archdiocesan Museum in Wrocław (Breslavia), Poland, without revealing the secrets it kept under its linen structure.After an exhaustive scientific analysis initiated in 2023 by the University of Breslavia, under the direction of Professor Agata Kubala, an unpublished finding caught the attention of the international arch…
2,300-Year-Old Egyptian Mummies Reveal New Details Through Advanced CT Scans
The 2,300-year-old mummy known as “Bashiri.” Credit: Vania Teofilo / CC BY-SA 3.0 Researchers at Semmelweis University have used a cutting-edge CT scanner to examine 2,300-year-old Egyptian mummy remains, providing the most detailed look yet inside the ancient bodies. The scans were conducted at the university’s Medical Imaging Center using a photon-counting CT system. This advanced technology produces highly precise images. It allows scientists…
Next-gen CT scanner yields new clues from 2,300-year-old Egyptian mummies
Researchers in Budapest have used a cutting-edge medical imaging system to peer inside Egyptian mummy remains estimated to be more than two millennia old, producing unprecedented detail that earlier technology could not capture.
It’s a bird! It’s a head! No, it’s a mummified foot.
Not every mummy is treated equally. While the traditional image conjures a well-preserved, carefully wrapped ancient Egyptian body inside an elaborately decorated tomb, there are many more examples of partial and poorly prepared remains. These especially delicate specimens are difficult for scientists to even document, much less analyze in sufficient detail. Take a collection of mummy fragments housed at the MNMKK Semmelweis Museum of Medical Hi…
After more than a century, and through non-invasive studies, experts managed to partially reconstruct the identity of an eight-year-old child
Next-generation CT scanner reveal new details inside 2,300-year-old Egyptian mummy remains
Egyptian mummy remains were examined at Semmelweis University's Medical Imaging Center (OKK). The archaeological finds arriving from the Semmelweis Museum of Medical History, Hungarian National Museum Public Collection Center (MNMKK) were analyzed using the institution's newest CT scanner equipped with a photon-counting detector. Thanks to state-of-the-art imaging technology, highly detailed images have been captured that were previously unavail…
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