
June 24,
2005 |
MGH
helps ID a mummy
Curators at the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) Department of Egyptology had
an unusual dilemma — how could they obtain important information
about a wrapped mummified head in their collection? The 4,000 year-old
head, which in life belonged to an Egyptian named Djehutynakht, had been
at the MFA following excavation from a looted tomb in 1915. Although assumed
to belong to Djehutynakht, some of the Egyptologists questioned whether
the mummy might be that of his wife, who was buried in the same tomb,
and asked Paul Chapman, MD, a neurosurgeon at the MGH and a member of
the MFA's visiting committee, for his help. Chapman contacted the hospital's
Radiology Department to set up a series of tests that would help determine
the mummy's state of preservation as well as gain important information
about the mummification process. The curators also hoped to obtain information
about the individual's life and death, including gender and evidence of
possible disease or trauma.
On June 13 a group from the MFA arrived
with the mummy's head — packed in a blue cardboard box — at
the hospital's imaging center on Ellison 2. Once x-rays revealed that
the skull
was remarkably intact, the mummy was taken to the CT scanner where it
underwent a series of scans. There was palpable tension in the room as
the first images appeared, cloudy at first, and then popping up on the
monitor with astounding clarity — revealing that the brain was missing.
MFA
conservator Pam Hatchfield with the mummy's head
Rajiv Gupta, MD,
PhD, was the MGH radiologist who scanned the mummy. "We won't be
able to determine today for certain whether the mummy is a male or female,"
he said. "It does have a delicate look to it, which makes me think
it is a woman." The
completed CT scans were sent to the hospital's 3-D Imagining Service where
director Gordon Harris, MD, and his team of 3-D technologists worked to
fine tune the images into 3-D face and head images to recreate how the
mummy looked when alive. A second series of CT scans also were completed
at the Ultra-High Resolution Volume CT scanner at CNY, which is capable
of observing details finer than a human hair. Those scans — and
results — will be available to the museum at a later date.
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