Ancient Egyptians Unearthed In 1615 Is ‘Virtually’ Opened Thanks To CT Scan

The insides of Egyptian mummies found in 1615 have been revealed for the first time.

Scientists were able to peer inside the ancient coffins without opening them thanks to a few CT scans.

Two of the coffins were found 400 years ago in a rock cut tomb at the Saqqara necropolis in Egypt.

Only three of these coffins are known to still exist and the third one was also found at Saqqara at a later date.

They're known as 'stucco-shrouded portrait mummies' because the outside of the coffin supposedly depicts what the people inside looked like when they were alive.

One contains a male and the other two contain females, one of which is a teenager girl.

These mummies were unusual because they were placed on wooden boards, wrapped in decorative shrouds and then covered in plaster on which a whole-body portrait and gold was added.

CT scans showed that the teenage girl mummy was definitely buried with all of her organs inside.


That includes the brain, which was often removed during standard mummification.

Researchers think all of the mummies may have been left with their organs inside, which then decayed.

Both women were buried wearing multiple necklaces and all of the coffins contained artefacts that Egyptians may have thought were useful in the afterlife.

These include coins that might have been intended for paying Charon, a god believed to carry souls across the river.

All the mummies date to the late Roman period in Egypt, which was around 30 BCE to CE 395.

It's thought they were all fairly wealthy when they were alive.

The two famous mummies found together in Saqqara were X-rayed before in the 1980s but the CT scans revealed much more.

For example, we now know the woman died in her 30s and was around 4'11".

She is also thought to have suffered with arthritis.

The teenage girl died between the ages of 17 and 19 and had a benign tumour in her spine.

The male was around 5'4" inches, died around the age of 25 and had some quite bad dental issues.

The teenage mummy is on display at the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, Cairo, Egypt.

The other two can be found at an exhibition in Dresden in Germany.

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Source: The Sun, Plus One
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