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    ‘Screaming Woman’ mummy probably died in agony over 3,000 years ago

    By Talker News,

    16 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0tXOEi_0ulbXcru00
    The Screaming Woman mummy. (Sahar Saleem via SWNS)

    By Stephen Beech via SWNS

    A mummy known as the "Screaming Woman" may have died in agony 3,500 years ago, suggests new research.

    The Egyptian woman was embalmed with expensive imported ingredients - suggesting her expression was caused by pain rather than poor embalming, say scientists.

    In Deir Elbahari near Luxor, the site of ancient Thebes, In 1935, an archaeological expedition excavated the tomb of Senmut, the architect and overseer of royal works – and reputedly, lover – of the famed queen Hatschepsut.

    Beneath Senmut's tomb, they found a separate burial chamber for his mother Hat-Nufer and other, unidentified relatives.

    In that chamber they found a wooden coffin holding the mummy of an elderly woman, wearing a black wig and two scarab rings in silver and gold.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3elT07_0ulbXcru00
    Professor Sahar Saleem with the "Screaming Woman" mummy. (Sahar Saleem via SWNS)

    But what struck the archaeologists was the mummy's expression : with the mouth wide open, as if locked in a scream. They dubbed her the 'Screaming Woman'.

    Now, Egyptian researchers have used the most advanced scientific techniques to examine the Screaming Woman and learn about her life and death.

    Professor Sahar Saleem, of Cairo University , said: "We show that she was embalmed with costly, imported embalming material.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0Javoz_0ulbXcru00
    (Sahar Saleem via SWNS)

    "This, and the mummy's well-preserved appearance, contradicts the traditional belief that a failure to remove her inner organs implied poor mummification."

    Until 1998, the Screaming Woman had been kept at Kasr Al Ainy School of Medicine in Cairo, where in the 1920s and 1930s researchers studied many royal mummies, including Tutankhamun.

    The mummy was subsequently moved to the Cairo Egyptian Museum at the request of the Ministry of Antiquities.

    Since 1935, the mummy’s coffin and rings have been displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of New York.

    In the new study, published in the journal Frontiers in Medicine, Saleem used CT scans to "virtually dissect" the mummy and estimate her age, identify pathologies, and state of preservation.

    Saleem and her colleagues also used advanced techniques including scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and x-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) to identify the materials.

    The team found that the mummy was still in good condition - even 2,500 years after its burial.

    The investigation enacted 89 years after the discovery of the mummified woman shows her unwrapped, lying supine with her legs extended and her hands folded above the groin.

    She was missing several teeth – likely lost before death, as there was evidence of bone resorption, which happens when a tooth comes out and the socket is left to heal. Other teeth were broken or showed signs of attrition.

    Saleem said: “Teeth lost during life may have been extracted.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2SOaCv_0ulbXcru00
    The Screaming Woman in the CT scan. (Sahar Saleem via SWNS)

    "Dentistry had originated in ancient Egypt, with Hesy Re the first recorded physician and dentist in the world.”

    From 2D and 3D CT images, Saleem estimated that the Screaming Woman had been 1.54 meters (5ft) tall.

    From the morphology of the joint between the two pelvic bones, which smoothens with age, the CT images estimated that she was around 48 years old at the time of her death.

    Saleem said she had suffered from mild arthritis of the spine, as evident from the presence of osteophytes or ‘bone spurs’ on the vertebrae.

    The research team found no embalming incision, which was consistent with the discovery that the brain, diaphragm, heart, lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys, and intestine were still present.

    That was a surprise, as the classic method of mummification in the New Kingdom included the removal of all such organs except the heart.

    Analysis of her skin showed that the Screaming Woman had been embalmed with juniper and frankincense, costly materials that had to be imported into Egypt from the Eastern Mediterranean and East Africa or Southern Arabia, respectively.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1HuOtP_0ulbXcru00
    The mummy wearing her two-part wig. (Sahar Saleem via SWNS)

    Her natural hair had been dyed with henna and juniper while the long wig, made from fibers from the date palm, had further been treated with quartz, magnetite, and albite crystals, probably to stiffen the locks and give them the black color favored by ancient Egyptians because it represented youth.

    Saleem said: “These findings support the ancient trade of embalming materials in ancient Egypt.

    "The expedition led by Queen Hatshepsut brought frankincense from Punt, possibly Somalia in Africa.

    "The tomb of Tutankhamun also contained frankincense and juniper."

    She said there was no obvious cause of death.

    The rarity of the embalming material seemed to rule out the possibility that the mummification process had been careless and that the embalmers had simply neglected to close her mouth.

    Saleem said: “The mummy's screaming facial expression in this study could be read as a cadaveric spasm, implying that the woman died screaming from agony or pain."

    She explained that cadaveric spasm is a rare form of muscular stiffening, usually associated with violent deaths under extreme physical conditions and intense emotion.

    Saleem added: “The Screaming Woman is a true ‘time capsule’ of the way that she died and was mummified."

    The post ‘Screaming Woman’ mummy probably died in agony over 3,000 years ago appeared first on Talker .

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