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GE Healthcare: CT Scanning of Ancient Egyptian Mummies at Bowers Museum Uncovers New Evidence of Early Embalming Techniques; Noninvasive Technology Virtually ''Unwraps'' Mystery of Mummies in Life and Death.


SANTA ANA Santa Ana, city, El Salvador
Santa Ana (sän'tä ä`nä), city (1993 pop. 129,873), W El Salvador. It is the second largest city in the country and the commercial and processing center for a sugarcane, coffee, and cattle region.
, Calif. -- In conjunction with its new exhibition, Mummies: Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism. , the Bowers Museum The Bowers Museum is a museum in Santa Ana, California, in Orange County. It has existed for nearly 70 years, although its purpose and collections have considerably changed over that time.  has conducted the largest collection of CT scans ever performed on Egyptian mummies

The Bowers Museum, a team of local radiologists and international curators, and GE Healthcare GE Healthcare is a $18 billion (USD) unit of General Electric (GE). It employs more than 46,000 people worldwide and is headquartered in Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom. GE Healthcare is the first GE business segment headquartered outside the United States. , a unit of General Electric Company (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
:GE), announced today the results of computed tomography Computed tomography (CT scan)
X rays are aimed at slices of the body (by rotating equipment) and results are assembled with a computer to give a three-dimensional picture of a structure.
 (CT) scans of six ancient Egyptian mummies from the renowned collections of the British Museum British Museum, the national repository in London for treasures in science and art. Located in the Bloomsbury section of the city, it has departments of antiquities, prints and drawings, coins and medals, and ethnography. . The mummies are the focus of the Bowers Museum's upcoming landmark exhibition, Mummies: Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt, which opens April 17, 2005.

As a result of CT scans performed yesterday at Bowers Museum, radiologists discovered that the adult mummy of a Roman man, possibly from Thebes, who lived approximately 140-180 AD, was buried with all of his internal organs. Dr. M. Linda Sutherland, Fellow of the Bowers Museum and Member of the Board of Directors and Partner of Moran, Rowan & Dorsey (MRD MRD or mrd
abbr.
minimal reacting dose
), Inc., a diagnostic radiology group in Orange County, Calif., believes this is possible evidence of early embalming embalming (ĕmbä`mĭng, ĭm–), practice of preserving the body after death by artificial means. The custom was prevalent among many ancient peoples and still survives in many cultures.  practices.

"Based on the CT scans we performed, we believe this male was embalmed with some type of fluid containing a metal," said Sutherland. "In the images we were able to see high-density spots in his brain, liver and muscles. I believe this new information will help challenge the conventional wisdom of ancient embalming techniques."

The scans performed at the Bowers Museum represent the largest collection of CT scans ever performed on Egyptian mummies. Researchers plan to use the images to determine how these people lived, their age, their overall health, cause of death, and how they preserved their bodies. The whole-body scans of the six mummies will continue to be reviewed and interpreted by MRD Inc. radiologists and British Museum curators.

CT scans and X-rays have been performed on mummies in the past, yet none have employed the advanced technology that was utilized at the Bowers Museum, according to Bowers Museum President Peter Keller.

"At last, the public has had a glimpse into what lies beneath the linen wrappings of these mummies and the ancient practices that have preserved these human remains through the centuries," said Keller.

CT scanning CT scanning
Computer tomography scanning is a diagnostic imaging tool that uses x rays sent through the body at different angles.

Mentioned in: Apraxia
 and virtual reality imaging involves acquiring a number of cross-sectional images, or "slices" of the body. Those images are then fed into a workstation that enables radiologists and researchers to see the images in 3-D.

"GE's state-of-the-art CT equipment is enabling noninvasive, high-resolution, three-dimensional views of these ancient treasures," said Gene Saragnese, Vice President and General Manager of the GE's Global Functional and Computed Tomography (FCT FCT Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia (Portuguese University)
FCT Fundamentals of Computation Theory
FCT Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation) 
) business. "GE is proud to donate the use of our equipment to facilitate this historic event, which is enabling researchers to shed new light on the life and times of our ancient ancestors."

The mummies scanned by GE's LightSpeed CT include:

Mummy of Shepenmehyt

Shepenmehyt ("Shep") was from Thebes and lived in the 26th Dynasty, about 600 BC. She was a lady of the house or married women who played a musical instrument known as a "sistrum sis·trum  
n. pl. sis·trums or sis·tra
A percussion instrument of ancient Egypt, Sumeria, and Rome consisting of metal rods or loops attached to a metal frame.
" during rituals in the temple of Amun-Re. "Shep" died of unknown causes between the ages of 25 and 40. Her elaborate coffin suggests she came from a high-ranking family. The CT scans provided amazing clarity of the different layers of her mummification mummification /mum·mi·fi·ca·tion/ (mum?i-fi-ka´shun) the shriveling up of a tissue, as in dry gangrene, or of a dead, retained fetus.

mum·mi·fi·ca·tion
n.
 process. There are images of her skull that demonstrate intricate vascular groove markings.

Mummy of a Child

Infant Mummy from Hawara, living around 50 AD and was found in a group of five mummies with painted "portraits." The infant died of unknown causes, and was previously believed to be 18 months old. The new CT scans uncovered dental forensics See computer forensics.  that age the infant between 4- and 5-years-old. The infant was placed post-mortem in the cartonage case with a broken neck and spine. The radiologists believe the child was buried in a case that was too small for his or her body.

Mummy of a Man

Mummy of an unidentified man from the Roman Period, about 140-180 AD, probably from Thebes. Unlike the other mummies, the CT scan found that all of the man's organs were intact. High-density spots on the man's brain, liver and musculature musculature /mus·cu·la·ture/ (mus´kul-ah-cher) the muscular apparatus of the body or of a part.

mus·cu·la·ture
n.
The arrangement of the muscles in a part or in the body as a whole.
 throughout his body are indications that the man was embalmed with a type of liquid containing metal.

Mummy of Tjayasetimu

Tjayaasetimu ("TJ") from Thebes lived in the 22nd Dynasty, about 900 BC. She was a woman of high rank and was a singer of the interior of Amun. This meant that she provided music or singing during temple rituals at the temple of the God Amun. Singers were required to remain celibate. "TJ" died at age 12 of unknown causes. The CT scans found "TJ" in outstanding condition. The CT images showed a large abdominal incision created to remove her organs.

Mummy of the Padiamenet

Padiamenet ("Padi") was from Thebes and lived in the 25th Dynasty, about 700 BC. He worked as an attendant and doorkeeper at the temple of the God "Re" at Thebes. His father, Usermose, held the same job. "Padi" died in his 30s and left one son, who is in a Brussels museum collection. The CT scans showed "Padi's" chest was crushed, perhaps at the time of burial. Radiologists uncovered a wooden pole in "Padi's" chest that had not been detected by earlier X-ray exams.

Mummy of Irthorru

Irthorru ("Thor") lived in the city of Akhmin, the cult center of the fertility God, "Min," where he was a priest during the 26th dynasty, about 600 BC. Because his father, Ankhwennefer, was "Second Prophet" of the God, it is suggested that "Thor" came from an important family. CT scans uncovered elaborate trappings of his mummy, including beading beading,
n the scribing of a shallow groove (less than 0.5 mm in width or depth) on a cast that outlines the major connector. It is used to transfer the design to the investment cast and ensure tissue contact of the major connector.
 on his cartonage case. The scanner was able to virtually "take off" the death mask to reveal two large beads on "Thor's" forehead. He died between the ages of 40 and 50 of unknown causes.

The electronic press kit for Mummies: Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt is available at: http://www.bowers.org/mummies/PressKit.pdf.

Bowers Museum is a world-class institution of art that has organized some of the biggest and most culturally significant exhibits in history, including Secret World of Forbidden City, Dead Sea Scrolls Dead Sea Scrolls, ancient leather and papyrus scrolls first discovered in 1947 in caves on the NW shore of the Dead Sea. Most of the documents were written or copied between the 1st cent. B.C. and the first half of the 1st cent. A.D.  and Tibet: Treasures from the Roof of the World. The Bowers is the first museum in the U.S. to sign an exclusive long-term agreement with The British Museum to showcase its most famous exhibits, including Queen of Sheba Queen of Sheba

sultry Biblical queen who visits Solomon. [O.T.: I Kings 10]

See : Beauty, Sensual
: Legend and Reality and Mummies: Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt. For more information, go to www.bowers.org or call 714-567-3600.

GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies that shape a new age of patient care. GE Healthcare's expertise in medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, disease research, drug discovery and biopharmaceuticals is dedicated to detecting disease earlier and tailoring treatment for individual patients. GE Healthcare offers a broad range of services to improve productivity in healthcare and enable healthcare providers to better diagnose, treat and manage patients with conditions such as cancer, Alzheimer's and cardiovascular diseases.

GE Healthcare is a $14 billion unit of General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) that is headquartered in the United Kingdom. Worldwide, GE Healthcare employs more than 42,500 people committed to serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more than 100 countries. For more information about GE Healthcare, visit http://www.gehealthcare.com.
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