Researchers
build
model
of
Egyptian
mummy's
face
without
unwrapping
Posted
Sept.
1,
2004
Courtesy
The
American
Journal
of
Roentgenology
and
World
Science
Staff
A
new
medical
scanning
technology
was
used
for
the
first
time
to
produce
a
detailed
three-dimensional
model
of
the
face
of
an
Egyptian
man
who
lived
nearly
3,000
years
ago
--
without
having
to
go
through
the
potentially
damagine
process
of
unwrapping
his
mummified
corpse,
researchers
say.
The
team
of
Italian
physicians,
anthropologists
and
forensic
scientists
imaged
the
completely
wrapped
mummy
of
an
artisan
named
Harwa,
which
had
been
on
display
at
the
Egyptian
Museum
in
Torino,
Italy.
Using
an
imaging
technology
called
multidetector
computed
tomography,
or
 |
| Credit:
American
Journal
of
Roentgenology |
MDCT,
they
created
3D
images,
which
were
then
reconstructed
to
create
all
the
features
of
the
mummy's
face.
A
physical
plasticine
and
nylon
model
was
sculpted
based
on
the
3D
image.
The
facial
reconstruction
revealed
Harwa
to
be
45
years
old
at
the
time
of
his
death
and
was
detailed
enough
to
reveal
a
mole
on
his
left
temple.
"The
only
other
way
to
have
gotten
the
information
we
got
from
MDCT
would
have
been
to
unwrap,
destroy
and
otherwise
alter
the
conservation
of
the
bandages
and
the
mummy,"
said
Federico
Cesarani,
MD,
of
the
Struttura
Operativa
Complessa
di
Radiodiagnostica
in
Asti,
Italy,
and
lead
author
of
the
study.
CT
is
a
noninvasive
imaging
method
that
can
provide
data
such
as
skull
dimensions
and
dehydrated
soft
tissue
arrangement
for
3D
reconstructions
of
the
skull
and
body
while
preserving
the
mummy.
"MDCT
provides
thin
slices--up
to
0.6
mm--in
a
single-shot
acquisition
and
in
a
very
short
time,
which
permits
high-resolution
3D
reconstructions,"
said
Dr.
Cesarani.
He
and
his
colleagues
published
the
research
in
the
September
2004
issue
of
the
American
Journal
of
Roentgenology.
According
to
the
author,
the
technique
of
facial
reconstruction
is
important
for
forensics,
anthropology
and
medicine.
"Police
use
it
for
identifying
bodies,
anthropologists
to
learn
more
about
individuals
in
ancient
societies
and
medicine
can
learn
about
the
diseases
that
afflicted
ancient
peoples,"
said
Dr.
Cesarani.
For
the
lifelike
Harwa
facial
reconstruction,
the
researchers
avoiding
guessing
at
the
hair,
beard
and
the
color
tones
of
the
skin.
They
were
also
unable
to
determine
just
how
fatty
Harwa's
face
was
when
he
was
alive,
since
fat
does
not
leave
signs
in
the
skull,
as
do
muscle
and
skin.