SYDNEY
(REUTERS) - Australian academics could help unlock mysteries around ancient
Egypt after discovering that a 2,500-year old coffin might contain the remains
of a prestigious mummy.
The
University of Sydney acquired the coffin 150 years ago and a series of
academics incorrectly classified it as empty. Their
error was only discovered by chance late last year when more recent academics
removed the lid to the coffin and discovered the tattered remains of a mummy. The
discovery offers scientists an almost unique opportunity to test the cadaver.
"We
can start asking some intimate questions that those bones will hold around
pathology, about diet, about diseases, about the lifestyle of that person - how
they lived and died," said Jamie Fraser, senior curator at the Nicholson
Museum at the University of Sydney. Whole
mummies are typically left intact, limiting their scientific benefits. Adding
to the potential rewards is the possibility that the remains are those of a
distinguished woman of an age where little is known, Fraser said.
Hieroglyphs
show the original occupant of the coffin was a female called Mer-Neith-it-es,
who academics believe was a high priestess in 600 BC, the last time Egypt was
ruled by native Egyptians.
"We
know from the hieroglyphs that Mer-Neith-it-es worked in the Temple of Sekhmet,
the lion-headed goddess," Fraser said. "There
are some clues in hieroglyphs and the way the mummification has been done and
the style of the coffin that tell us about how this Temple of Sekhmet may have
worked."