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Secrets From The Tomb

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Author(s)

Jeff Haessler

New technology is allowing scientists to take another look at mummies that are 3,000-years-old

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They are some of the most popular exhibits at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.

鈥淧eople love mummies. The Egyptian mummies are a really exciting part of the听,鈥 says 91桃色 alumna Michele Koons.

Koons says thanks to the rigorous听听at the 91桃色, she was well prepared when she went on to Harvard to get her PhD. Now she鈥檚 the curator of archaeology at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.

This spring Koons partnered with the 91桃色 in hopes of learning more about two 3,000-year-old female mummies. Using a CT scanner at Children鈥檚 Hospital, she hopes to find out who the women were, how they lived and how they died.

鈥淭he mummies were scanned in the 1990s, and we decided to scan them again this past April because the technology has advanced so much,鈥 Koons says.

These were people, and we do need to keep that remembrance of humanity about them. Michele Koons (M.A. '06), Denver Museum of Nature and Science

Bonnie Clark, associate professor of anthropology, and Keith Miller, associate professor of听听at 91桃色, collaborated to make it all happen.

鈥淚 decided to contact Bonnie Clark because I knew Bonnie had been working with XRF technology and looking at the chemical composition of stone tools, and she had borrowed some materials from the collection here,鈥 Koons says.

Clark explains: 鈥淗e (Dr. Miller) approached me one time at a faculty mixer and said, 鈥業f I got a portable X-ray florescent instrument, could you use it to analyze artifacts?鈥 I was like, 鈥楢bsolutely! Fantastic! Let鈥檚 make this happen!鈥欌

鈥淚 come in with the expertise in culture and artifact analysis. And he (Miller) brings in the side of the chemistry and what the instrument is really doing,鈥 explains Clark.

It鈥檚 an example of the interdisciplinary work happening at 91桃色. 鈥淭his is a dream come true,鈥 says Farah Taylor, a master鈥檚 student at 91桃色鈥檚听. 鈥淚 myself have multiple interests, and my studies are very interdisciplinary. It鈥檚 really great to see the finished product of the whole team with people who come from different backgrounds and have different interests. Putting all of that passion and knowledge in to the same project.鈥

New information from the scanning has not been revealed as of yet, but the research continues. Through it all, Koons says it鈥檚 important to remember these aren鈥檛 just mummies. 鈥淭hese were people, and we do need to keep that remembrance of humanity about them. I really do feel privileged and respectful of those women.鈥

Mummies