|
|
|
Uploaded: Thursday, August 20, 2009, 6:54 AM
Stanford may unwrap mysteries of mummy
2,000-year-old Egyptian priest to be scanned with high-tech imaging equipment
|
A 2,000-year-old mummy thought to have been a young Egyptian priest will be examined at Stanford University today in an effort to determine what the man looked like and what kind of material he was wrapped in, according to university officials.
Radiologists will use computed tomography, or CT, scans to see through the mummy's dressings.
The scans will enable scientists to create three-dimensional images of the body from the inside out, which in turn will be used to build a clay construction of the man's face, university officials said.
The mummy is believed to be that of Iret-net Hor-irw, a minor priest from the east bank of the Nile River in Egypt. Based on X-rays done in the 1970s, authorities think he died in his mid-20s from unknown causes, university officials said.
The mummy will be on display at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco through the summer of 2010.
Today's scanning will take place at 1:30 p.m. in the basement of the Grant Building on the Stanford University medical campus.
— Bay City News Service
|
|
| Comments
|
Posted by A Noun Ea Mus, a resident of the Professorville neighborhood, on Aug 20, 2009 at 1:47 pm I have a suggestion for any pranksters.....when the face is reconstructed....Alfred E Newman! "What Me Rot?"
|
|
Posted by Walter_E_Wallis, a resident of the Midtown neighborhood, on Aug 20, 2009 at 4:57 pm Walter_E_Wallis is a member (registered user) of Palo Alto Online If they find the cause of death, who do they sue?
|
|
|
| |

2007 Awards from the California
Newspaper Publishers Association
Palo Alto Weekly
First Place
Local News Coverage
Local Breaking-News Story
Feature Story
Second Place
Feature Story
Environmental Reporting
Sports Coverage
General News Photo
Photo Essay
Freedom of Information
The Almanac
First Place
Environmental Reporting
Editorial Pages
Lifestyle Coverage
Second Place
Environmental Reporting
Mountain View Voice
Second Place
General Excellence
Editorial Comment
Front-Page Design
|
|
|