Experts examining new images of one of the Hancock Museum?s oldest residents, the mummy Bakt Hor Nekht, have started to reveal some of their findings.
The 3000 year old mummy, dating from 1070?712 BC, was examined during a recent Computerised Tomography (CT) scan at Newcastle General Hospital on Thursday August 31.
X-rays were beamed through the mummy at regular intervals while moving 360 degrees to create a remarkably precise three-dimensional image.
This non-invasive technique has allowed experts to zoom in on areas of interest and break down the images for analysis. The spectacular results promise to yield new information that could reveal who she was, how old she was when she died and provide insights into the mummification process revealing the objects she was mummified with.
?Working with staff from the hospital we have been able to establish that Bakt Hor Nekht has a full set of teeth, including her wisdom teeth, which can help us estimate how old she was when she died,? explained Gill Scott, an Egyptologist at the Hancock Museum.
The scans also revealed a series of amulets made from a variety of different materials positioned across the body together with the material placed in the eye sockets of the mummy.
?False eyes were placed over the eyelids which were thought to provide the dead with vision in the afterlife,? said Gill. ?An unusual substance appears to be covering the mummy?s teeth which will need further examination.?
The last time the mummy was under such close examination was in 1991 when it underwent its first CT scan. Since then advances in modern technology mean that the museum is now able to find out much more without damaging the fragile mummy, which lies within an inner coffin made from cartonnage (layered papyrus) which was then placed in a wooden sycamore coffin.
?More detailed investigation of the scans still needs to be undertaken as there are over 800 images to sift through,? added Gill, ?but we hope this will provide us with even more information to build up a better picture of her life and death?.
The research at the Hancock will help staff inform their understanding of Ancient Egypt at a time when the museum is planning the development of its new Egyptian display as part of the £26 million Great North Museum project, due to open in 2006. Hancock Museum, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne (temporarily closed)
Barras Bridge, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, NE2 4PT, Tyne & Wear, England T: 0191 222 6765 Closed: The Hancock Museum closed its doors to the public on Sunday 23 April 2006 to begin its transformation as part of the Great North Museum project - an exciting and innovative world-class visitor attraction designed for the 21st century. The new Museum opens in 2009.
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Modern medicine reveals secrets of a middle-class mummy By Paul Stokes (Filed: 14/09/2006)
Modern medical advances are being used to unlock the secrets of a middle class Egyptian woman who lived and died 3,000 years ago.
The mummified remains of Bakt Hor Nekht, encased in a linen and plaster inner coffin, were bought at a local market and brought to Britain in 1820. Now a full Computerised Tomography (CT) scan at Newcastle General Hospital is yielding a wealth of information.
Bakt Hor Nekht was 5ft tall and had a full set of teeth, including wisdom teeth, and no signs of arthritis or bone disease, which suggests she was between 21 and 35 when she died. A substance found on her teeth may have been painted on as a cosmetic exercise after her face was damaged during embalming.
Gill Scott, an Egyptologist at the Hancock Museum, Newcastle upon Tyne, said: "It was very important, when the soul was separated from the body, for it to recognise the face after death."
The non-invasive scans also revealed jewellery created from a variety of materials positioned across the body. One amulet, the symbol of resurrection in the form of the winged scarab, is on the top of her chest and another to the left side of the stomach over the embalming incision areas.
False eyes, possibly made from alabaster or shells, were placed over her eyelids and were thought to provide the dead with vision in the afterlife. Miss Scott, a member of York University's mummy research group, said: "We think she was probably the equivalent of today's middle class because she was buried in a tomb and her cartonnage [layers of fibre or papyrus] is quite elaborate and the outer coffin of sycamore wasn't cheap."
Bakt Hor Nekht was found in a tomb at Gourneh in Thebes (now Luxor) and dates from around the 21st to the 22nd dynasties of ancient Egypt. The mummy will be moved to the Segedunum Roman Fort, the last outpost of Hadrian's Wall, at the end of the month as part of the new Land of the Pharaohs exhibition. It will also form part of the £26 million Great North Museum project which is due to open in 2009.
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Interesting. I wonder what "reconstructions" on her might depict.
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