Egypt has “digitally unwrapped” the mother of famed Pharaoh Amenhotep I, revealing its secrets and techniques for the primary time because it was found in 1881 with out disturbing his funerary masks.
Thanks to the superior digital 3D imagery, researchers unearthed new mummification methods used for the pharaoh whose rule dates again greater than 1,500 BC.
The research was led by Sahar Saleem, a professor of radiology at Cairo University, and the famend Egyptologist Zahi Hawass, a former antiquities minister, the tourism and antiquities ministry stated in a press release Tuesday.
“Saleem and Hawass used advanced X-ray technology, CT (computed tomography) scanning, as well as advanced computer software programs to digitally unwrap the mummy of Amenhotep I in a safe non-invasive method without the need to touch the mummy,” it stated.
“The Egyptian study revealed for the first time the face of King Amenhotep I, his age, health condition, in addition to many secrets about the mummy’s unique mummification and reburial.”
Analysis confirmed Amenhotep I used to be the primary pharaoh to be mummified with arms crossed and the final to not have had his mind faraway from the cranium.
The tomography scan revealed the pharaoh, who carried out a number of navy campaigns throughout his 21-year rule, had died on the age of 35, apparently of harm or sickness.
The mummy found in Luxor, southern Egypt, is the one one to not have had its tight bands unrolled by archaeologists, in an effort to protect the masks and garlands of flowers that encompass it like hair.
The identical technique of “technical unwrapping”, as described by Saleem, revealed in 2012 the “harem conspiracy” during which Ramses III had his throat slit, a conspiracy hatched by a spouse looking for to have her son on the throne reasonably than the first-born of a rival.
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