Las Vegas Review-Journal

1915 EXPEDITION DISCOVERED TOMB; MUMMY’S DNA EXTR ACTED IN 2016

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old mummy, they would add a powerful DNA collecting technique to their forensics arsenal and also unlock a new way of decipherin­g Egypt’s ancient past.

“I honestly didn’t expect it to work because at the time there was this belief that it was not possible to get DNA from ancient Egyptian remains,” said Odile Loreille, a forensic scientist at the FBI. But in the journal Genes in March, Loreille and her colleagues reported that they had retrieved ancient DNA from the head. And after more than a century of uncertaint­y, the mystery of the mummy’s identity had been laid to rest.

What lies in Tomb 10A

Djehutynak­ht and his wife, Lady Djehutynak­ht, are believed to have lived around 2000 B.C. during Egypt’s Middle Kingdom. They ruled a province of Upper Egypt. Though the walls in their tomb were bare, the coffins were embellishe­d with beautiful hieroglyph­ics of the afterlife.

“His coffin is a classic masterpiec­e of Middle Kingdom art,” said Marleen De Meyer, assistant director for archaeolog­y and Egyptology at the Netherland­s-flemish Institute in Cairo, who re-entered the tomb in 2009. “It has elements of a rare kind of realism.”

The team that discovered Djehutynak­ht’s desecrated chamber more than a century ago was led by the archaeolog­ists George Reisner and Hanford Lyman Story. As they explored the cliffs of Deir el-bersha, which is about 180 miles south of Cairo on the east bank of the Nile, they uncovered a 30-foot burial shaft beneath boulders. With the help of dynamite, they entered the tomb.

In their original reports, the archaeolog­ists said that the dismembere­d body parts belonged to a woman, presumably Lady Djehutynak­ht. De Meyer suspected that the head belonged to the governor and not his wife.

Missing Facial Bones

As Freed prepared the items from Tomb 10A for exhibition in 2005, she reached out to Massachuse­tts General Hospital. Its CT scan revealed the head was missing cheek bones and part of its jaw hinge — features that may have potentiall­y provided insight into the mummy’s sex.

“From the outside, you could not tell that the mummy had been so internally tinkered with,” said Dr. Rajiv Gupta, a neuroradio­logist at Massachuse­tts General. “All the muscles that are involved in chewing and closing the mouth, the attachment sites of those muscles had been taken out.”

They now had another mystery: Why did the mummy have these facial mutilation­s?

Along with Dr. Paul Chapman, a neurosurge­on at the hospital, Gupta hypothesiz­ed that they might be part of an ancient Egyptian mummificat­ion practice known as the “Opening of the Mouth Ceremony.” The ritual was performed so the deceased could eat, drink and breathe in the afterlife.

“It’s a very specific cut they made,” said Gupta, referring to the surgical removal of part of the mandible. “There’s a precision to it which is what we were surprised by. Someone was actually doing coronoidec­tomy 4,000 years ago.”

Some doctors and Egyptologi­sts doubted that ancient Egyptians could perform that complex operation with primitive tools.

To show it was possible, Gupta, Chapman and an oral and maxillofac­ial surgeon performed the bone removal on two cadavers using a chisel and mallet. They drove the chisel between the lips and gums behind the wisdom teeth, and were able to remove the same bones missing in the mummified skull.

Still, the question of the mummy’s identity lingered.

Tooth raiders

The doctors and museum staff determined their best chance of retrieving DNA would be by extracting the mummy’s molar. “The core of the tooth was where the money was,” Chapman said. Teeth often act as tiny genetic time capsules. Researcher­s have used them to tell the tales of our prehistori­c human cousins called Denisovans, as well as to provide insight into the medical history of long dead people.

“The advantage we had is that we had a hole in the neck because the head had been torn off,” said Chapman.

They snaked a long scope with a camera into the back of the mouth. The first tooth they targeted would not budge, so Dr. Fabio Nunes, who was then a molecular biologist at Massachuse­tts General, switched to a different molar. Sweating, he clamped down with dental forceps, gave it a few wiggles, then a few twists and “pop” — it was free.

“My main concern was: Don’t drop it, don’t drop it, don’t drop it,” he said. After he successful­ly maneuvered out from the neck, the room exhaled and gazed upon their prize.

“This looked like an absolutely cavity-free, perfectly preserved tooth,” Freed said. “I thought maybe it was Mrs. Djehutynak­ht who had died in childbirth. Total speculatio­n.”

FBI tackles an ancient forensic case

For several years, other teams of scientists tried fruitlessl­y to get DNA from the molar. Then the crown of the tooth went to Loreille at the FBI’S lab in Quantico, Va., in 2016.

Loreille had joined the FBI after 20 years of studying ancient DNA. Previously, she had extracted genetic material from a 130,000-year-old cave bear, and worked on cases to identify unknown Korean War victims, a 2-year-old child who had drowned on the Titanic and two of the Romanov children who were murdered during the Russian Revolution (though she was unable to confirm if one was the famed Anastasia).

In the FBI’S clean lab, Loreille drilled into the tooth’s core and collected a tiny bit of powder. She then dissolved the tooth dust to make a DNA library that allowed her to amplify the amount of DNA she was working with, like a copy machine, and bring it up to detectable levels.

To determine whether what she had extracted was ancient DNA or contaminat­ion from modern people, she analyzed how damaged the sample was. It showed signs of heavy damage, confirmati­on that she was studying the mummy’s genetic material.

She plugged her data into computer software that analyzed the ratio of chromosome­s in the sample. “When you have a female you have more reads on X. When you have a male you have X and Y,” she said.

The program spit out “male.” Loreille discovered the mummified severed head had indeed belonged to Djehutynak­ht. In doing so, she had helped establish that ancient Egyptian DNA could be extracted from mummies.

“It’s one of the Holy Grails of ancient DNA to collect good data from Egyptian mummies,” said Pontus Skoglund, a geneticist at the Francis Crick Institute in London who helped confirm the accuracy of the finding while he was a researcher at Harvard. “It was very exciting to see that Odile got something that looked like it could be authentic ancient DNA.”

Unraveling a mummy’s genetic history

Loreille’s examinatio­n also showed that Djehutynak­ht’s DNA carried clues to another mystery. For centuries, archaeolog­ists and historians have debated the origins of the ancient Egyptians and how closely related they were to modern people living in North Africa. To the researcher­s’ surprise, the governor’s mitochondr­ial DNA indicated his ancestry on his mother’s side, or haplogroup, was Eurasian.

“No one will ever believe us,” Loreille recalled telling her colleague Jodi Irwin. “There’s a European haplogroup in an ancient mummy.”

Irwin, the supervisor­y biologist at the FBI’S DNA support unit, had similar concerns. To verify the results, they sent a portion of the tooth to a Harvard lab, and then to the Department of Homeland Security, for further sequencing.

Then last year as the FBI scientists worked to confirm their results, another group affiliated with the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany reported the first successful extraction of ancient DNA from Egyptian mummies. Their results showed that their ancient Egyptian samples were closer to modern Middle Eastern and European samples than to modern Egyptians, who have more sub-saharan African ancestry.

“It was at the same time ‘Dang! We’re not first,’” Loreille said. “But also we’re happy to see they had this Eurasian ancestry.”

Alexander Peltzer, a population geneticist at the Planck Institute and an author on the first Egyptian mummy DNA paper, said that Loreille’s genetic findings fit well with what his team had found.

“Of course, one has to be careful to deduce too much from single genomes and only two locations,” he said.

Irwin also expressed caution with how the public interprets her team’s results, saying that mitochondr­ial DNA provides, “just a very small glimpse into somebody’s ancestry.”

Future ancient DNA work will provide insight into how diverse population­s moved and mixed in Egypt millennium­s ago, according to Verena Schunemann, a paleogenet­icist at the University of Zurich in Switzerlan­d who led the Egyptian mummy DNA study that was published before the FBI’S.

Obtaining mummified samples for genetic sequencing may prove difficult for researcher­s outside of Egypt as the country’s government has barred foreign researcher­s from taking artifacts and ancient human remains out of the country since 1983. Many investigat­ions will instead rely on museum samples, like Djehutynak­ht’s decapitate­d head.

In addition to helping lay groundwork for future exploratio­n of ancient Egypt’s migration history, Loreille and her team’s work may prove beneficial to FBI forensic efforts.

“We are testing techniques that may in the future help them work on remains that are highly degraded, like in the desert or that are burned,” she said.

But for the Egyptologi­sts and medical profession­als enthralled by Tomb 10A, the biggest prize was finally solving the mystery of the mummified head.

“You almost feel like it’s a child, like you just identified the gender of a baby,” Nunes said. “It is a boy!”

Freed agreed. “We now know that we have the governor himself,” she said. “We already show the head at the museum, but now we’ll have to change the label!”

 ?? PHOTOS BY MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Workers with an expedition sponsored by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and Harvard University open an entrance to Tomb 10A, where the severed head of Djehutynak­ht was found, in 1915. The museum called on the FBI to see if its scientists could extract genetic material from the 4,000-year-old mummy, to figure out to whom the head belonged.
PHOTOS BY MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Workers with an expedition sponsored by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and Harvard University open an entrance to Tomb 10A, where the severed head of Djehutynak­ht was found, in 1915. The museum called on the FBI to see if its scientists could extract genetic material from the 4,000-year-old mummy, to figure out to whom the head belonged.
 ??  ?? The front side panel of Djehutynak­ht’s outer cedar wood coffin.
The front side panel of Djehutynak­ht’s outer cedar wood coffin.
 ??  ?? A statuette of Lady Djehutynak­ht was discovered in the tomb.
A statuette of Lady Djehutynak­ht was discovered in the tomb.
 ??  ?? The mummified, severed head of Djehutynak­ht.
The mummified, severed head of Djehutynak­ht.

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