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Embalming

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发表于 2026-5-8 17:16:29 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
Thread: The Art and Science of Embalming — From Ancient Pharaohs to Modern Labs  
📜 OP: The 70-Day Recipe That Defied Decay Egyptian mummification was not born overnight. The most elaborate method, used for royals and high officials from around 1550 to 664 BCE, is considered the gold standard [18†L4-L7]. The entire ritual took about 70 days.
The process began with a ceremonial wash using water from the Nile, and sometimes even wine. Then came the extraction: using a long metal hook inserted through the nostril, embalmers liquefied and removed the brain (which was thrown away, as it was deemed useless). However, the heart was left untouched inside the body, as Egyptians believed it was the center of intelligence and emotion [18†L8-L13].
Next, a small incision was made on the left side of the torso to remove the lungs, stomach, liver, and intestines. These vital organs were embalmed separately and stored in Canopic jars, each guarded by one of the four Sons of the god Horus. If you couldn't afford the jars, the organs were simply wrapped and put back into the body [18†L8-L13].
💡 Quick Fact: The kidneys were surprisingly usually left inside the chest cavity [19†L8-L10].
 楼主| 发表于 2026-5-8 17:23:16 | 显示全部楼层
🧂 [Reply 1] Step-by-Step: Natron, Resin, and Amulets Once the cavities were empty, the real science began.
Step 1: Dehydration (40 days)
The body was stuffed and completely covered in Natron. This is not just table salt—it is a natural salt mixture containing sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium chloride, and sodium sulfate. Natron is hygroscopic (it sucks up water), which stopped the wet decay of the body. It also saponified the fatty tissues, turning them into a soap-like substance that sealed the skin [19†L14-L23].
Step 2: Stuffing and Oiling
After 40 days, the natron was removed. The cavities were now filled with a variety of materials: linen, sawdust, herbs, and sometimes even fragrant spices like cinnamon, myrrh, and frankincense. Remarkably, in the case of Ramesses IV, embalmers stuffed onions into his eye sockets and ears—possibly to give the eyes a realistic appearance and to provide antibacterial protection [19†L26-L38].
Step 3: The Wrapping Ritual
The body was then anointed with oils and resins (often coniferous or pistacia), and the wrapping began. Within the layers of linen, embalmers placed a variety of amulets: the Wedjat Eye (Eye of Horus) for protection, and a Heart Scarab placed directly over the chest inscribed with spells from the Book of the Dead to keep the heart light during the final judgment [18†L18-L27].
 楼主| 发表于 2026-5-8 17:25:51 | 显示全部楼层
🖼️ [Reply 2] What the Scans Reveal (2026 Updates)

Modern paleoradiology is uncovering secrets without unwrapping a single bandage. Within months of X-rays being discovered in 1895, researchers had already imaged an Egyptian mummy [7†L23-L24]. Today, we use hospital-grade CT scanners.

In April 2026, researchers at Semmelweis University in Budapest secretly scanned 2,300-year-old remains at midnight (literally after patient hours). Using photon-counting CT detectors, they discovered that one mysterious "bundle" thought to be a severed head was actually a mummified human foot [10†L28-L36].
CT scans now allow us to diagnose ancient diseases with eerie precision. In February 2026, Vanderbilt University researchers published a study revealing that severe cavities and gum disease were incredibly common in Egyptian mummies—and they were directly linked to hardened arteries and cardiovascular disease, similar to modern health patterns [8†L16-L24].

👑 Tutankhamun Update: Radiologist Frank Rühli has warned against over-interpreting the boy king. Scans show a 19-year-old in poor condition. Notably, the famous left knee fracture is suspiciously "open"—but Rühli reminds us we don't know if that happened 3,500 years ago... or if it was caused by excavators in the 1920s trying to pry jewelry loose [7†L30-L38].
 楼主| 发表于 2026-5-8 17:28:25 | 显示全部楼层
⚱️ [Reply 3] The Saqqara Workshop Discovery (2025–2026)

Sometimes you find the mummy. Sometimes you find the factory.

In 2023, archaeologists revealed two massive mummification workshops at Saqqara—one for humans, one for animals—dating to the 26th Dynasty (around 664–525 BC) [22†L4-L8][1†L27-L32]. This discovery turned embalming from a vague religious ritual into a visible, industrial-scale business.

Inside, researchers found 31 ceramic vessels, many of them dramatically still labeled describing their contents. Using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (a way to analyze chemical residues), a 2023 Nature study identified the exact chemical recipes:

•  Antiu (often translated as "myrrh") was actually a mixture of coniferous oils or tars.

•  Sefet ("sacred oil") was a special unguent mixed with plant additives [11†L38-L47].   

The workshop also revealed that Saqqara imported materials from far away—Pistacia resin from the Mediterranean, Dammar and Elemi from tropical forests—proving that Egyptian embalmers were connected to a huge, sophisticated trade network [11†L38-L42].

"Priest-embalmers were professional entrepreneurs who offered burial packages for every budget," noted Egyptologist Ramadan Hussein [22†L35-L37].
 楼主| 发表于 2026-5-8 17:31:35 | 显示全部楼层
🗺️ [Reply 4] Not Just Egypt: The Oldest Mummies Are in Chile

While we obsess over pharaohs, the oldest known artificial mummies come from a totally different continent.

The Chinchorro culture lived along the coast of the Atacama Desert in modern-day northern Chile between 7,000 and 1,500 BCE. Their mummification ritual is roughly 2,000 years older than the oldest Egyptian examples. The oldest Chinchorro mummy currently recorded dates to around 5050 BCE [15†L11-L17][4†L19-L22].

Unlike the Egyptians, who reserved mummification for the elite, the Chinchorro mummified nearly everyone: men, women, children, and even unborn infants. They removed the organs, filled the skeletons with wood, mud, and clay, and often modeled artificial faces—complete with eyes, noses, and mouths—out of black clay [16†L22-L40].

Interestingly, archaeologists believe the Chinchorro may have started mummifying their dead due to arsenic poisoning in their freshwater sources, which caused high rates of miscarriages and stillbirths. By preserving their lost children, they were coping with tragedy—holding onto loved ones who had to leave too soon [16†L28-L34].
 楼主| 发表于 2026-5-8 17:44:06 | 显示全部楼层
📚 Sources: •  Australian Museum. How were ancient Egyptians mummified? web.archive.org.au [18†L0-L41]  
•  Compound Interest. The Chemistry of Mummification, 2016. www.compoundchem.com [19†L0-L50]  
•  Rageot, M. et al. Biomolecular analyses enable new insights into ancient Egyptian embalming. Nature 614, 287–293 (2023). [11†L38-L47]  
•  Witt, A.A. et al. Imaging the past: Dental pathologies and cardiovascular disease in Egyptian mummified remains. Journal of the American Dental Association (2026). doi.org/10.1016/j.adaj.2025.11.013 [8†L6-L31]  
•  What mummies tell us: radiology, ancient medicine, and the secrets hidden in ice and sand. AuntMinnieEurope, April 2026. www.auntminnieeurope.com [7†L23-L38]  
•  Researchers Looked Inside Egyptian Mummies Without Unwrapping Them. VICE, April 2026. www.vice.com [10†L28-L44]  
•  Meet the Chinchorro mummies, the oldest ones in the world. Chile Travel, August 2023. chile.travel [15†L11-L17]  
•  Preserving the world's earliest mummies in Chile. The World (PRX), February 2025. theworld.org [16†L3-L45]  
•  The First Human Genome from Ancient Egypt Has Been Sequenced. Scientific American, July 2025. production.node.sciam.com [21†L4-L8]  
•  UBCO researchers apply body preservation technique to wood. UBC Okanagan News, November 2025. news.ok.ubc.ca [14†L5-L14]
发表于 2026-5-10 13:40:49 | 显示全部楼层
        This is such a comprehensive and engaging thread on the art and science of embalming—thank you so much for sharing!
        I was fascinated by how you broke down the ancient Egyptian process, from the 70-day ritual with natron dehydration to the use of spices, oils, and protective amulets. It really brings the tradition to life. The 2026 CT scan updates were also eye-opening; it’s incredible how modern technology is uncovering new secrets, from misidentified remains to links between dental disease and cardiovascular health, without disturbing the mummies.
        The Saqqara workshop discovery adds such a fresh perspective, showing embalming as an industrial-scale trade with global connections. And mentioning the older Chinchorro mummies in Chile was a great touch, expanding the conversation beyond Egypt. This thread perfectly blends ancient tradition with cutting-edge research, making it both informative and captivating to read!
发表于 2026-5-10 19:31:52 | 显示全部楼层
This is such an in-depth and fascinating deep dive into embalming history. I love how you break down the full mummification procedure, the chemical function of natron, modern paleoradiology discoveries, the industrial workshops at Saqqara, and the surprising origin of Chinchorro mummies. Well-researched with reliable sources, truly an impressive piece of popular science!
发表于 2026-5-10 21:48:44 来自手机 | 显示全部楼层

This is a fascinating post! It's incredible how advanced the ancient Egyptian embalmers were. What really stands out is that their process wasn't just ritualistic; it was surprisingly scientific for its time.
The way they used natron​ (that naturally occurring salt mixture) to dehydrate the body was genius—it essentially pickled the remains and prevented decay far more effectively than many later methods. It makes you wonder how much of their "magic" was actually early applied chemistry and medicine.
It also puts the obsession with "Kitchen mummies"​ (like the ones people tried to make at home in the 19th century) into perspective. Those DIY attempts usually failed miserably because they lacked the precise knowledge of salts, oils, and wrapping techniques the Egyptians perfected over thousands of years.
Did you know some of the tools and methods they used are still being studied by modern forensic scientists? It really blurs the line between ancient ritual and early science.
发表于 2026-5-10 22:13:10 | 显示全部楼层
Tutankhamun Update: Radiologist Frank Rühli has warned against over-interpreting the boy king. Scans show a 19-year-old in poor condition. Notably, the famous left knee fracture is suspiciously "open"—but Rühli reminds us we don't know if that happened 3,500 years ago... or if it was caused by excavators in the 1920s trying to pry jewelry loose
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