X-ray scans unravel mystery of 3,000-year-old Egyptian ‘locked mummy’

By The Independent (Science) | Created at 2024-10-29 22:05:37 | Updated at 2024-11-05 23:17:31 1 week ago
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X-ray scans have finally unravelled the mystery of how a famous ancient Egyptian “locked mummy” was placed inside a coffin with seemingly no entry point.

Out of the over dozen Egyptian mummies housed in Chicago’s Field Museum, the one of an aristocrat Chenet-aa who lived 3,000 years ago has stood out in particular due to her strange burial procedure.

Soon after her death, her body seems to have been prepared for the afterlife by enclosing it in a peculiar paper mache-like box with no hint of a visible seam.

This left modern-day researchers perplexed about how her remains were placed inside, creating what they call a “locked-mummy mystery”.

Researchers at the Field Museum scan a mummified individual displayed in the Inside Ancient Egypt exhibition

Researchers at the Field Museum scan a mummified individual displayed in the Inside Ancient Egypt exhibition (Chicago Field Museum)

Now CT X-ray scans of the coffin have thrown light on the wrappings that have helped preserve Lady Chenet-aa’s remains for more than 3,000 years.

“You can start to see that there’s a seam going down the back and some lacing,” JP Brown, senior conservator of anthropology at the Field Museum said.

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The latest analysis revealed that the mummy was stood upright and then the cartonnage coffin was softened with humidity till it became flexible enough to mould around the body.

Then a slit was made at the back from head to foot, opened up, and the wrapped body was lowered down, researchers say.

The slit was then closed by a seam and a wood panel pegged in place at the feet to keep everything together, they say.

Researchers scan Field Museum mummy

Researchers scan Field Museum mummy (Chicago Field Museum)

Scans also revealed that Lady Chenet-aa was in her 30s or early 40s at the time of her death 3,000 years old.

She seems to have lost several teeth due to the food she ate containing grains of sand that were tough on the enamel.

Inside the coffin, her mummified remains also had supplementary eyes placed in her eye sockets to ensure they came with her to her afterlife.

Researcher analyses composite scan of mummy

Researcher analyses composite scan of mummy (Chicago Field Museum)

“The Ancient Egyptian view of the afterlife is similar to our ideas about retirement savings. It’s something you prepare for, put money aside for all the way through your life, and hope you’ve got enough at the end to really enjoy yourself,” Dr Brown explained.

“The additions are very literal. If you want eyes, then there needs to be physical eyes, or at least some physical allusion to eyes,” he said.

The research, according to scientists, is an indication of the new kinds of information CT scans can tell us about ancient mummies preserved in coffins.

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