Girls are about 5 years old, 1.20 m tall, Egyptian. Scientists used X-rays to create amazing images. The girl died at a young age. The ...

Girls are about 5 years old, 1.20 m tall, Egyptian. Scientists used X-rays to create amazing images.
The girl died at a young age. The organs were removed, the body was marinated with flavoring, then rolled up the outer cloth, then covered with a layer of hard substance such as cardboard. The mummy is 2,000 years old, located in the Roicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose, California, USA. In the past few months, the mummy has been named Sherit (in ancient Arabic as "baby") and taken to NASA's National Biological Quantitative Center at Stanford, near Palo Alto. There, doctors and scientists - work with image experts from Silicon Graphics - learn about mummies. They used more than 60,000 high-tech X-ray images, 35 times more information, when they learned of King Tut's mummy in early 2005. The team assembled three-dimensional images. of this Egyptian girl.
Through pictures of bones, scientists determined that Sherit could walk normally and not have chronic illnesses. It is possible that the girl died of infection or poisoning of drinking water or food. About 50% of children in ancient Egypt suffered from it within 1 or 2 years of weaning.
Bone and teeth also help determine age: wisdom teeth have not yet grown. Gold mask demonstrates wealthy parents. Through hieroglyphs on the face in the sheath, hopefully scientists and archaeologists will soon find the mystery and identify the girl's name.
The girl died at a young age. The organs were removed, the body was marinated with flavoring, then rolled up the outer cloth, then covered with a layer of hard substance such as cardboard. The mummy is 2,000 years old, located in the Roicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose, California, USA. In the past few months, the mummy has been named Sherit (in ancient Arabic as "baby") and taken to NASA's National Biological Quantitative Center at Stanford, near Palo Alto. There, doctors and scientists - work with image experts from Silicon Graphics - learn about mummies. They used more than 60,000 high-tech X-ray images, 35 times more information, when they learned of King Tut's mummy in early 2005. The team assembled three-dimensional images. of this Egyptian girl.
Through pictures of bones, scientists determined that Sherit could walk normally and not have chronic illnesses. It is possible that the girl died of infection or poisoning of drinking water or food. About 50% of children in ancient Egypt suffered from it within 1 or 2 years of weaning.
Bone and teeth also help determine age: wisdom teeth have not yet grown. Gold mask demonstrates wealthy parents. Through hieroglyphs on the face in the sheath, hopefully scientists and archaeologists will soon find the mystery and identify the girl's name.
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