
Ryan Williams, a specialist in South American anthropology and curator at the Field, described how they developed this exhibit:
“We were loaned a portable CT scanner, and we’ve gotten very high resolution data about what’s wrapped in these bundles. We can tell things about the individuals who were buried – their age, their gender; we can tell about diseases that they had.”
Now, with CT scanners and other non-invasive technologies, we can start to get a very clear picture of what goes on inside a mummy’s outer layers without having to damage the mummy itself. As part of the exhibit, visitors can explore the insides of the mummies as well, through interactive touchscreens that let them move at their own pace through each piece of the preserved contents.
As wonderful as digital imagery is, the sense of touch needs more than just a screen to feel engaged. Since it would be both impossible and unwise to let each of the museum’s visitors touch the mummies, the CT scan data has been used to create the files necessary to 3D print reproductions of the various objects inside. These pieces, 3D printed in resin, let people have the physical contact with the mummies and their belongings that really helps to bring them alive to the imagination.
One of the mummies, a woman who was unintentionally mummified 7,000 years ago inside of a wrapping of goat fur and reeds, was found to have a beer mug in her possession. It is not uncommon for people from around the world and throughout time to have been buried with prized possessions or tokens that indicate the content of their lives. This beer mug is not a token given to an alcoholic, but rather most likely symbolic of the importance of beer as a form of both sustenance and wealth.
The Curator of Egyptology at the Field, James Phillips, explained:
“The Egyptians who worked on the building of the pyramids were paid in measures of beer. So beer was very important in Egypt.”
The mummies in this exhibit come not only from Ancient Egypt but also from Peru where the bodies were preserved because of the dry conditions of the Altiplano and so represent two very different approaches to the preparation and preservation of the bodies of the deceased.
And when I go, I will definitely want to take my beer mug with me. Discuss this story in the 3D Printed Mummy forum thread on 3DPB.com.