Tales Mummies Tell
FACT: Sand in their bread caused serious tooth problems for the ancient Egyptians, peasants and pharaohs alike.
FACT: Skull surgery was commonly performed by the Inca Indians of Peru.
FACT: A thick soup made of grain and seeds was a typical winter meal in Denmark during the Iron Age.
How can we be so sure of what ancient life was like? Largely because mummies have begun to "talk" to scientists. X-rays allow scientists to study mummies that have never been unwrapped! The shape of the face appears, and resemblances may establish family relationships. In the bones of a mummy, medical scientists can read age at death, signs of disease, fractures that healed. Teeth yield information about diet and health. Sometimes a mummy offers a surprise: an Egyptian mummy is found to have two skulls; another, long thought to be the child of a high priestess, turns out to be a baboon. Sometimes a mummy tells a moving story: examination of a girl's mummy shows she lived her short life in considerable pain; a man's mummy, with broken bones and slit throat, proves he met a violent death.
Generously illustrated with photographs ranging from the gruesome to the starkly beautiful, Tales Mummies Tell is a remarkable account of mummies — intriguing talebearers from the past and of the ways scientists unlock their secrets.
- Author
- Patricia Lauber
- Format
- paperback
- Pages
- 118
- Publisher
- Scholastic Inc.
- Language
- english
- ISBN
- 9780590464086
- Genres
- history, reference, egypt
- Release date
- 1992
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