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1700-year-old Egyptian mummy found with no heart

A 1,700-year-old Egyptian mummy found with an intact brain, but no heart has a plaque on her abdomen that may have been intended to ritually heal her, scientists say.

Updated on: Apr 08, 2014 01:58 AM IST
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A 1,700-year-old Egyptian mummy found with an intact brain, but no heart has a plaque on her abdomen that may have been intended to ritually heal her, scientists say.

HT Image
HT Image

The mummy belongs to a woman who died between age 30 and 50, researchers said after examining the body with CT scans.

Like many Egyptians, she is said to have had terrible dental problems. To remove her organs, the embalmers created a hole through her perineum and removed her intestines, stomach, liver and even her heart, researchers said.

Spices and lichen were spread over her head and abdomen, and she was wrapped and presumably put in a coffin; her final resting place was likely near Luxor.

The embalmers put two thin plaques similar to cartonnage (a plastered material) on her skin above her sternum and abdomen.

Researchers said this is something that may have been intended to ritually heal the damage the embalmers had done and act as a replacement, of sorts, for her removed heart, ‘LiveScience’ reported.

The mummy and its coffin, now at the Redpath Museum at McGill University in Montreal, were purchased at Luxor in the 19th century.

 
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