Khaleej Times

New tech to preserve mummy

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HYDERABAD — With an aim of stopping the decay of an over 2,000 year-old Egyptian mummy preserved at the State Museum of south Indian state of Telangana, the Department of Archaeolog­y and Museums has begun its preventive conservati­on using unique and advanced scientific techniques.

The technique — involving CT scan and X-ray examinatio­n — is for the first time being used on a decaying mummy in India, officials claimed.

The mummy was obtained by sixth Nizam Mir Mehboob Ali Khan in 1920. His son and last Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan donated it to the museum, where it has been kept since 1930.

The mummy here is among the only six Egyptian mummies preserved at museums in the country. It was earlier believed to be of a girl aged 16 to 18 and dated to the Ptolemaic period — 300BC to 100BC. “The scan revealed that the mummy was that of a girl about 25 years of age and of 136 cms in height,” Secretary (Youth Advancemen­t, Tourism and Culture Department) B. Venkatesha­m told reporters here on Tuesday evening.

“Whatever (use of techniques) has been done here would be the first time in preservati­on project for human remains and a mummy in India. It can set an example (on conservati­on) for other mummies in India, and also internatio­nally similar technology can be used for conservati­on of mummies,” Heritage Conservati­on Adviser to the project, Vinod Daniel, said.

The mummy will now be kept in an oxygen-free encasement to prevent its further decay.

Mummy facts

> 2,000 year-old mummy is among the only six Egyptian mummies preserved at museums in the country.

> It was obtained by sixth Nizam Mir Mehboob in 1920.

> It was earlier believed to be of a girl aged 16 to 18 and dated to the Ptolemaic period — 300BC to 100BC.

> The scan revealed that the mummy was that of a girl about 25 years of age and of 136 cms in height.

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