| Literature DB >> 31945091 |
Ester Oras1,2, Jaanika Anderson3, Mari Tõrv2, Signe Vahur1, Riina Rammo2, Sünne Remmer4, Maarja Mölder4, Martin Malve2, Lehti Saag5,6, Ragnar Saage2, Anu Teearu-Ojakäär1, Pilleriin Peets1, Kristiina Tambets5, Mait Metspalu5, David C Lees7, Maxwell V L Barclay7, Martin J R Hall7, Salima Ikram8,9, Dario Piombino-Mascali10.
Abstract
Two ancient Egyptian child mummies at the University of Tartu Art Museum (Estonia) were, according to museum records, brought to Estonia by the young Baltic-German scholar Otto Friedrich von Richter, who had travelled in Egypt during the early 19th century. Although some studies of the mummies were conducted, a thorough investigation has never been made. Thus, an interdisciplinary team of experts studied the remains using the most recent analytical methods in order to provide an exhaustive analysis of the remains. The bodies were submitted for osteological and archaeothanatological study, radiological investigation, AMS radiocarbon dating, chemical and textile analyses, 3D modelling, entomological as well as aDNA investigation. Here we synthesize the results of one of the most extensive multidisciplinary analyses of ancient Egyptian child mummies, adding significantly to our knowledge of such examples of ancient funerary practices.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31945091 PMCID: PMC6964855 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The two human mummies from the collections of the University of Tartu Art Museum.
A—older mummy (OM; KMM A 64); B—younger mummy (YM; KMM A 63).
List of samples collected from the two mummies.
| Sample ID | Sample description | Sample location | Weight (if applicable) | Type of analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OM S1 | Tooth | Upper left canine | aDNA, AMS, SIA | |
| OM S2 | Brownish residue | Left arm | 0.99 g | ORA |
| OM S3 | Textile thread | Abdominal cavity, lower abdomen stuffing | ORA, text | |
| OM S4 | Embalming material | Right side of the inner abdominal cavity | 99.5mg | ORA |
| OM S5 | Textile thread | Abdominal cavity | Text | |
| OM S6 | Brownish residue | Left hand | 1.00g | ORA |
| OM S7 | Black residue | Left foot, between the second and third toe | 1.00g | ORA |
| OM S8 | Black residue | Left foot big toe | 0.99g | ORA |
| OM S9 | Sinew/bone fibre? | Right foot, third toe | ID | |
| OM S10 | Embalming material | On the right ear | 24.5mg | ORA |
| OM S11 | Tooth | Upper right incisive (half) | SIA | |
| OM S12 | Textile | Back of the right lower arm | 79.6mg | ORA |
| OM S13 | Textile | Abdominal cavity | 210mg | AMS |
| OM S14 | Textile | Inner side of the right upper arm | 73.9mg | ORA |
| OM S15 | Embalming material | Inner surface of the removed abdominal skin | 18.8 mg | ORA |
| OM S16 | Textile | Abdominal cavity | 31.5 mg | ORA |
| OM S17 | Piece of skin | Piece of lip (removed during previous studies) | 7.2 mg | MicroB |
| OM S18 | Dust residue | Dust from the storage/exhibition box | 23.2 mg | MicroB |
| OM S19 | Textile | Beneath the body | Text | |
| YM S1 | Textile | Lower crown | Text | |
| YM S2 | Hair | Nape | 50mg | SIA |
| YM S3 | Textile | Under the left foot | Text | |
| YM S4 | Textile | Under the left foot | Text | |
| YM S5 | Hair | Nape | 101.6mg | AMS |
| YM S6 | Textile | Lower crown | Text | |
| YM S7 | Hair | Nape | 149mg | aDNA |
| YM S8 | Textile | Left side of the crown | Text | |
| YM S9 | Black residue from hair | Hair, crown | 1.00g | ORA |
| YM S10 | Nail | Fourth finger of the left arm | 11.8mg | ORA, SIA |
| YM S11 | Textile | Left ankle | 935mg | AMS |
| YM S12 | Textile | Textile from abdomen stuffing | Text | |
| YM S13 | Black residue | Left upper arm | 1.00g | ORA |
| YM S14 | Embalming residue | Left temple | 41.7mg | ORA |
| YM S15 | Soaked textile | Under right foot | 86.5mg | ORA |
| YM S16 | Hair | Nape | 1.00g | aDNA |
| T S1 | Textile | Textiles | Text | |
| T S2 | Textile | Textiles | Text | |
| T S3 | Textile | Textiles | Text | |
| T S4 | Textile | Textiles | Text | |
| T S5 | Cocoons (2), fragments of beetles | Exhibition coffin of the older mummy, between and underneath textile fragments | Ent | |
aaDNA—ancient DNA analysis, AMS—radiocarbon AMS dating, Ent—entomological analysis, ID—general identification, MicroB—microbiological analysis, ORA—organic residue analysis, SIA—stable isotope analysis, Text—textile analysis (microscopic, ATR-FT-IR as applicable).
AMS dates from the mummies.
The AMS dates were calibrated with the OxCal 4.3.2 [15], using the IntCal13 calibration curve [16] and rounded by ten.
| Sample ID | Dated material | 14C Age | Calibrated Age (2δ) | Lab no. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OM S1 | tooth (root) | 2181 ± 32 | 370–160 BC | UBA-35126 |
| OM S13 | textile | 2294 ± 31 | 410–230 BC | UBA-35127 |
| YM S5 | hair | 2122 ± 32 | 350–40 BC | UBA-35128 |
| YM S11 | textile | 2103 ± 26 | 200–50 BC | UBA-35130 |
Fig 2The calibrated dates of the two mummies and the OxCal4.3.2 combine model shows that the subjects were not buried at the same time.
Fig 3CT scan images of the mummies.
A—trans-nasal craniotomy in the form of an anterior skull base defect and solidified resin inside the skull of the older mummy; B—anterior skull base defect in the younger mummy; C—linear skin defect on the back of the left hand of the older mummy; D—torso of the younger mummy showing folded textiles inside the thoracic cavity, as well as textile bundles and a small oval object inside the abdomen.
Results of aDNA analysis from the two mummies.
| Sample type | ID | Human DNA | Clonality | Effectivity | Human reads (MQ>10) | Average coverage | Average read length | 5' C=>T | λ | δs | mtDNA hg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| tooth | OM-S1 | 0.17% | 32.43% | 0.06% | 23603 | 0,0004x | 50 bp | 4.87% | 50.36% | 17.64% | T2c1a |
| hair | YM-S7 | 2.41% | 58.27% | 0.08% | 31455 | 0,0005x | 45 bp | 7.38% | 56.01% | 38.86% | HV |
Fig 4Ancient DNA authentication.
Older mummy (OM S1, tooth root) on the left, younger mummy (YM S5, hair) on the right. A. DNA damage at the ends of fragments. Red line—C=>T substitutions; blue line—G=>A substitutions; orange line—soft-clipped bases. B. Read length distribution of sequencing reads mapped to the human reference sequence.
Fig 5Selection of ATR-FT-IR spectra of embalming and textile impregnating materials.
A—Material from the older mummy’s left foot (OM S7); B—Material from the older mummy’s abdominal cavity (OM S4); C—Material from the younger mummy’s hair (YM S9); D—Textile-impregnating material from the younger mummy (YM S3).
Materials used for the embalming of the mummies.
| Material | Older mummy (OM) KMM A 64 | Younger mummy (YM) KMM A 63 |
|---|---|---|
plant oil and/or animal fat resinous substance (mainly diterpenoids, low intensity of triterpenoids) polysaccharides (natural plant gum) aromatic compounds (e.g. phenolic acids: benzoic acid, cinnamic acid) coumarin carotenoids (traces) compounds connected to asphaltene, biochar proteinaceous material (traces) inorganic compounds (Na2SO4, CaCO3, Fe-containing compounds and silicates) plant oil and/or animal fat resinous substances (diterpenoid (Pinaceae resins?), triterpenoid (mastic) beeswax aromatic compounds (e.g. phenolic acids: benzoic acid) cholesterol inorganic compounds (Na2SO4, NaClO2, slight traces of silicates and CaCO3) | plant oil and/or animal fat resinous substance (Pinaceae resin?) ricinoleic acid aromatic compounds (e.g. phenolic acids: benzoic acid) proteinaceous material cholesterol inorganic compounds (silicates) carbohydrates (gum arabic, fruit tree extract?) inorganic compounds (silicates, CaCO3, some sulphates) plant oil and/or animal fat (?) resinous substance (Pinaceae resin?) proteinaceous material inorganic compounds (Fe-containing silicates (some ochre?), sulphates, carbonates, phosphates, Cl-containing compounds) | |
plant oil and/or animal fat wax resinous substances (?) inorganic compounds (CaCO3, silicates and some sulphates) plant oil and/or animal fat mineral oil resinous substances (?) inorganic compounds (carbonates, silicates) | plant oil and/or animal fat resinous substance (Pinaceae resin?) aromatic compounds (e.g. phenolic acids: benzoic acid) mineral oil (bitumen?) polysaccharides (pyranone, furanone (arabinofuranose) and derivatives cholesterol |
aATR-FT-IR: OM S2, OM S3, OM S4, OM S6, OM S7, OM S8, OM S10, OM S12, YM S1, YM S3, YM S4, YM S9, YM S10, YM S13, YM S14; GC-MS: OM S4, OM S10, YM S14, YM S15; ESI-FT-ICR-MS: OM S4, OM S10, YM S14, YM S4; SEM-EDS: OM S4, OM S7, YM S9, YM S10.
Fig 6ESI-FT-ICR-MS spectra with identified compounds.
A—sample OM S4; B—sample YM S4.
Fig 7Optical microscope photos of the sample OM S7 from the left foot toe area showing the white particles (sodium salts) under the embalming resin sample.
A—upper part, and B—lower part of the sample piece.
List of samples and analyses conducted on textile fragments.
| Sample ID | Context and description | Analyses |
|---|---|---|
| OM S3 | Tabby from abdominal cavity | TLM, PLM, ATR-FT-IR + PCA |
| OM S5 | Yarns from abdominal cavity | TLM, PLM, SEM |
| OM S19 | Tabby below the body | TLM, PLM |
| YM S1 | Tabby stuck on the base of the skull | TLM, PLM, ATR-FT-IR + PCA |
| YM S3 | Coarse tabby on the left leg | TLM, PLM, ATR-FT-IR + PCA |
| YM S4 | Fine tabby on the left leg | TLM, PLM, SEM, ATR-FT-IR + PCA |
| YMS6 | Tabby stuck on the base of the skull | TLM, PLM |
| YM S8 | Tabby on the left side of the skull | TLM, PLM |
| YM S12 | Tabby from the abdominal cavity | TLM, PLM |
| T S1 | Tabby with drawing | TLM, PLM, ATR-FT-IR + PCA |
| T S2 | Tabbies with seams | TLM, PLM |
| T S3 | Basket weave | TLM, PLM |
| T S4 | Tabby | TLM, PLM |
a TLM—transmitted light microscopy, PLM—polarised light microscopy, SEM—scanning electron microscopy, ATR-FT-IR + PCA—ATR-FT-IR spectroscopy and principal component analysis.
Fig 8ATR-FT-IR spectra of textile samples from mummy (YM S1) and pure linen for comparison.
Green boxes show the characteristic absorbance bands of cellulose-based fibres and the red box shows the area of spectrum that does not belong to fibres (could belong to embalming materials).
Fig 9Dislocations in a line reveal that flax fibres were not entirely separated from each other during the preparation process.
A—OM S5; SEM photo taken in Aalto University Nanomicroscopy Center; B—YM S12; TLM photo taken in the University of Tartu, Department of Archaeology.
Fig 10Cocoon remains recovered from the older mummy (KMM A 64) coffin.