The ancient Egyptian mummy known as the “Mysterious Lady” has fascinated researchers and the public alike, thanks in large ...
The history of medicine is filled with remedies that, viewed through a modern lens, seem perplexing, misguided or downright ...
A new study debunks the long-held mystery that an ancient Egyptian mummy, known as the "Mysterious Lady," was pregnant or had ...
For example, they can inspect the mummy's DNA to study its genealogy, X-ray its bones for injuries or congenital malformations, examine its stomach contents to learn something about the person's ...
The mummy was not scientifically studied for over ... In a second study, the research team proposed that the reason no fetal bones could be clearly identified was that the mother's uterus lacked ...
Figure 1: Map of northern Chile, showing locations of study fields from which mummy bones and blood samples of contemporary Andean people were collected (boxed area, right, enlarged at left).
For example, the lower body contains bones from perhaps the tail and dorsal fins of a Sciaenidae fish, while the mummy’s jaw was that of a carnivorous fish. But they found no major bones in the ...
A recent international study led by archaeologist Kamila Braulińska from the University of Warsaw challenged previous claims ...
A new book by the artist Dorothy Cross tells the remarkable story of Cecil, UCC’s Egyptian mummy, and his return home ...
An ancient Egyptian woman thought to have been pregnant and dying of cancer was actually just embalmed with a technique that mimicked these diagnoses, researchers have concluded, settling a four-year ...