Department of Anthropology, Social Science Centre, University of Western Ontario, 1151 Richmond St N, London, ON, Canada N6A 5C2.
Radiographics. 2012 Jul-Aug;32(4):1235-50. doi: 10.1148/rg.324125704.
As a nondestructive method of historical and anthropologic inquiry, imaging has played an important role in mummy studies over the past several decades. Recent technologic advances have made multidetector computed tomography (CT) an especially useful means for deepening the present understanding of ancient cultures by examining preserved human remains. In April 2011, three ancient Egyptian human mummies from the Redpath Museum of McGill University were examined with 320-section multidetector CT as part of the IMPACT Radiological Mummy Database project headquartered at the University of Western Ontario. Whole-body scanning was performed with a section thickness of 0.5 mm and a peak voltage of 120 kVp, and the raw CT datasets were postprocessed by using smooth body and high-resolution bone convolution filters. Two of the mummies were scanned at different energy levels (80 and 135 keV). The high-resolution CT scans revealed the details of mummification and allowed observations about the socioeconomic and health status of the human subjects based on both the mummification technique used and the appearance of the remains, particularly the bones and teeth. The paleopathologic information obtained from the scans confirmed some findings in studies performed in the same mummies in the late 19th and 20th centuries. The CT scans also demonstrated a high degree of variability in Egyptian mortuary practice, variability that is not generally recognized in the literature. Unusual features that were observed included a relatively uncommon retained heart in mummy RM2718, retained lungs in a mummy from which the heart had been extracted (RM2720), and a cartonnage plaque placed over the left abdomen of a mummy that had been eviscerated transperineally (RM2717).
作为历史和人类学研究的一种非破坏性方法,成像技术在过去几十年的木乃伊研究中发挥了重要作用。最近技术的进步使得多排螺旋 CT(MDCT)成为一种特别有用的手段,可以通过检查保存的人类遗骸来加深对古代文化的现有理解。2011 年 4 月,麦吉尔大学雷德帕斯博物馆的三具古埃及木乃伊作为 IMPACT 放射学木乃伊数据库项目的一部分,在安大略西部大学进行了 320 层 MDCT 检查。全身扫描的层厚为 0.5 毫米,峰值电压为 120 kVp,原始 CT 数据集通过使用平滑体和高分辨率骨卷积滤波器进行后处理。其中两具木乃伊在不同的能量水平(80 和 135 keV)下进行扫描。高分辨率 CT 扫描揭示了木乃伊化的细节,并根据所使用的木乃伊化技术和遗骸的外观,特别是骨骼和牙齿,观察到人类受试者的社会经济和健康状况。从扫描中获得的古病理学信息证实了在 19 世纪末和 20 世纪对同一木乃伊进行的一些研究中的发现。CT 扫描还显示了埃及丧葬习俗的高度变异性,而这种变异性在文献中通常没有得到承认。观察到的不寻常特征包括在 RM2718 木乃伊中相对罕见的保留心脏、从心脏被取出的木乃伊中保留的肺(RM2720),以及一个 cartonnage 斑块放置在一个已从会阴横切取出内脏的木乃伊的左腹部(RM2717)。