|
|
|
A
grisly forensic medicine museum in St. Petersburg (sptimes.ru)
"There are more than 300 museums in
St. Petersburg, but few are as fascinating, bizarre and downright grisly
as the Museum of Forensic Medicine. Located on the outskirts of the city,
here you will encounter mummified corpses, anatomical displays and models
describing fatal accidents and murders. The museum at the State Medical
Mechnikov Academy is not for the squeamish. Visitors are given an
intensive lesson on the history of forensic medicine and the chance to
explore one of the last taboos - death and the transitory nature of human
existence...."
|
|
VON HAGENS: TITLE CONTROVERSY
|
Famous
corpse artist is not a professor in Germany
(boston.com)
"A German anatomist whose exhibit
of preserved corpses sparked international controversy received reduced
fines Tuesday by a German administrative court for illegally using the
title 'professor.' The Heidelberg administrative court found Gunther von
Hagens guilty of misusing the title in four instances by not making it
clear that it was earned in China, not Germany. He was fined $140,000...."
|
|
After
mother dies natural death, man freezes her body to collect social security
checks (msnbc.com)
"A man told police he kept his
mother’s corpse in a basement freezer for more than four years while he
collected her Social Security checks, authorities said Monday. A body was
found encased in ice, in a sitting position. Philip Schuth, 52, told
police his elderly mother, Edith, died of natural causes in August 2000,
but that he didn’t tell anyone because he was afraid police would blame
him, according to documents filed in court Monday. He said his mother
years beforehand was attacked by a cat and her blood was on the walls in
the house they shared, and he feared police would think he killed her,
according to the documents...."
|
|
Curse
of Ötzi: A skeptic's view (independent.co.uk)
"Konrad
Spindler did not believe in curses. The professor of pre- and early
history at Innsbruck University was a rational man, believing in cause and
effect. He did not believe in spells cast by the ungrateful dead. But last
Sunday Professor Spindler died. The cause of death was complications
arising from multiple sclerosis, but that has not deterred those who claim
the professor was the latest victim of Ötzi the Iceman. Ötzi is dead
too, of course: he is one of the oldest and best preserved corpses in the
world. Since his tattooed body was discovered in 1991 on the Austria-Italy
border, it is said that Ötzi has steadily taken revenge on those who
disturbed him in his glacial grave, somehow causing them to die in
mysterious circumstances. So is there really a curse of the ice mummy? And
if so, who's next?..."
Summary:
Curse of the Ice Mummy (thesun.co.uk)
with photos
"The curse of
a frozen mummy is being linked to six deaths. Archaeologist Konrad Spindler
— the leading expert on the 5,700-year-old corpse — has become the
latest victim.... His other victims — and their grisly ends — are
detailed below. And now others involved with the iceman, named Oetzi after
the region where he was found, are trembling. Pathologist Dr Eduard Vigil,
who examined the mummy, said...."
The
latest Curse of Ötzi?: Scientist Konrad Spindler dies
(guardian.co.uk)
"He
had lain in his icy tomb on an Alpine glacier in northern Italy for 5,300
years, a perfectly preserved Stone Age warrior, complete with fur robes,
leather shoes and bow and arrow.
But since being found 14 years ago, five of the people who came in close
contact with Oetzi the Iceman have died, leading to the inevitable
question: is the mummy cursed? Konrad Spindler, head of the Iceman
investigation team at Innsbruck University, died on Monday, apparently
from complications arising from multiple sclerosis. But that has not
stopped his name being linked to a string of strange deaths related to the
mummy...."
|
|
Battle
of the best-preserved mummies: Xinjiang or Egypt? (xinhuanet.com)
"The mummies have been well
preserved in the Xiaohe Tomb Complex in the Lop Nur Desert in northwest
China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, experts said. 'The mummies were
unbelievably well preserved, even better than
the mummies in Egypt,' said Zhu Hong, director of the Frontier Archeology
Study Department of the Jilin University in northeastern China's Jilin
Province...."
|
|
Two
predynastic tombs with seven corpses discovered in Egypt
(fortwayne.com)
"Archaeologists digging in a
5,600-year-old funeral site in southern Egypt unearthed seven corpses
believed to date to the era, as well as an intact figure of a cow's head
carved from flint. The American-Egyptian excavation team made the
discoveries in what they described as the largest funerary complex ever
found that dates to the elusive five millenia-old Predynastic era, Egypt's
Supreme Council of antiquities said Wednesday.... Although the tomb and
its surroundings were severely plundered in antiquity, excavators
unearthed four bodies at one end of the tomb. The position of the corpses
suggests that they may belong to sacrificed servants or prisoners who were
buried at the foot of the grave, a common practice in the first
Dynasty.... A second tomb housed well-preserved remains of three adults as
well as textile and padding used to wrap the corpses before covering them
with thick matting."
|
MUMMY TOMBS
COMMENT:
At least four of
the seven "corpses" are described as well-preserved; the
condition of the other three is less clear. Stay tuned for
updates.
|
|
|
More on the stolen mummy
from the California Body Worlds exhibit Women
leave note about theft in exhibit guest book
(sanluisobispo.com)
"The suspects who stole a preserved
13-week-old fetus last month from an exhibit at the California Science
Center left behind a taunting note, police said Wednesday. The fetus was
part of a traveling display entitled Body Worlds 2: The Anatomical
Exhibition of Real Human Bodies. In the guest book containing comments by
viewers of the display, police found a one-line note that read: 'Amazing
... Although it'd be better had the 15-19 wk old fetus hadn't been
stolen.' It was signed 'Susan....' "
|
|
More on the Body
Worlds 2 opens at Great Lakes Science Center A
thoughtful review of the exhibit (usatoday.com)
"These life-like naked corpses
literally let it all hang out: the veins, the muscles, the bones,
everything. One is leaping downward to grab a soccer ball, another is
mounted on a bicycle, a third stands with his arms out sporting a big grin
and a white hat as though at any moment he'll break out in song. As
ghoulish as that sounds, record crowds are lining up to see dead people
— actual, preserved humans who in death have become rock stars of the
natural-history museum world — at Body Worlds exhibits at the Museum of
Science and Industry in Chicago and Great Lakes Science Center in
Cleveland. Both remain until September...."
|
|
Man
who stole medical school body parts to practice dissection sentenced to
two years in jail (cnn.com)
"A
morgue assistant accused of stealing body parts from a medical school so
he could practice dissections at home was sentenced to more than two years
in prison. David Lawrence Beale, 47, was arrested in 2003 after more than
150 pounds of decomposing body parts, including two heads, were found near
his Davis home. He pleaded no contest Monday to stealing human remains
from the medical center at the University of California at Davis and
possessing methamphetamine....."
|
|
DNA
tests of Silk Road mummies create controversy in China (khaleejtimes.com)
with photo
"After years of controversy and
political intrigue, archaeologists using genetic testing have proven that
Caucasians roamed China’s Tarim Basin 1,000 years before East Asian
people arrived. The
research, which the Chinese government has appeared to have delayed making
public out of concerns of fueling Uighur Muslim separatism in its
western-most Xinjiang region, is based on a cache of ancient dried-out
corpses that have been found around the Tarim Basin in recent decades.
... In the preface to the 2002 book, “Ancient Corpses of Xinjiang,”
written by Chinese archeologist Wang Huabing, the Chinese historian and
Sanskrit specialist Ji Xianlin soundly denounced the use of the mummies by
Uighur separatists as proof that Xinjiang should not belong to China...."
Silk
Road mummies to go on permanent display in new Urumqi museum beginning
October 1 (iol.co.za) with photos
"The Xinjiang ancient mummies found
along the legendary Silk Road are to go on permanent display at a new
museum scheduled to open this year to mark China's annexation of the
restive Uighur Muslim region.... Although the museum project began in
1999, work stopped in 2002 due to the corruption scandal.... "
Suggested reading:
|

|
The
Ancient Corpses of Xinjiang: The Peoples of Ancient Xinjiang and Their
Culture by Binghua Wang & others
The latest book about the
Silk Road mummies, published in China
|
|
 |
The
Mummies of Ürümchi by Elizabeth
Barber
Unknown to many people,
Caucasian mummies (dating from 2000 B.C.) have been found in western
China, and this book takes a thoughtful look at some of them. These
include Cherchen Man (the Man with Ten Hats, as Barber refers to him),
Cherchen Woman, two other women, and a three-month-old infant as well as
the Beauty of Loulan, among others. The best book on the subject. |
|

|
The
Tarim Mummies
by J. P. Mallory &
Victor Mair
For anyone
who wants to know more about the 500+ mostly-Caucasian mummies
found in this part of the world and expects the photos to go along
with it. A valuable resource. |
|
|
Mummies:
Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt
opens today in Santa Ana (artdaily.com)
"Among the peoples of the ancient
world, the Egyptians occupy a unique position with their approach to death
and the possibility of resurrection, particularly since so much of the
evidence that has survived over thousands of years comes from a funerary
context. The largest and most comprehensive collection of ancient Egyptian
funerary material outside of Cairo is housed at The British Museum. As
part of its joint venture with the British Museum, the Bowers Museum has
drawn upon this world-famous collection of mummies and funerary objects to
present Mummies: Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt…Treasures from
the British Museum, opening April 17, 2005...."
|
|
MUMMY SCIENCE: NEW
ZEALAND
|
CT-scan
at Auckland Museum reveals mummy's gender, occupation and name!
(nzherald.co.nz)
"An ancient
Egyptian at Auckland Museum has had the benefit of that most modern of
medical inventions, CT scanning, to help solve the mystery of her
identity. The name, gender, occupation and probable age of the mummy were
revealed during a four-year process to preserve the remains, which also
involved repositioning some of the bandages and building a special
low-oxygen display case.... The scan showed the mummy was a young woman,
aged between 20 and 30, who was part of a harem.... "
|
|
Fossil-mummies:
Pair of eggs with shells found inside oviraptor solve mystery of how
dinosaurs laid eggs (newscientist.com)
"The first dinosaur eggs found
complete with shells in the body of the mother has solved the
long-standing mystery of how dinosaurs laid their eggs. The evidence shows
they laid a clutch in a series of sittings, like birds, rather than all at
once like crocodiles and other living reptiles. The pair of eggs come from
a fossil found in the Jiangxi province of China which includes the pelvis
and part of a leg of an oviraptor - a two-legged dinosaur that roamed
between 100 and 65 million years ago...."
Additional
article (sciam.com)
|
|
MUMMY SCIENCE:
CALIFORNIA
|
As
exhibit prepares to open, first CT-scan image released
(msnbc.com)
"There's a unique meeting taking
place in southern California between ancient mummies and 21st
century medical technology. The mummies are getting their pictures taken
using the very latest techniques in C.T. scanning — the kind of thing
that's used to perform full body scans on living people.... The public
will be able to see the mummies and the computerized images starting
Sunday, April 17 at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana...."
CT-scan
of six mummies solves some mysteries (dailynews.com)
"This much experts know: One was a
priest from a wealthy family. Another was a young girl who sang during
religious rituals. A third was a child, buried in a finely carved wooden
coffin. But there is much more to learn about the six Egyptian mummies....
On Thursday, the researchers announced their initial findings. Dental
analysis showed the child previously thought to be about 18 months old was
at least 4 when its body was compressed to fit into a coffin. They also
found the body of a man from 700 B.C. had been crushed at the time of
burial and a wooden pole had been placed in his chest in an apparent
attempt to correct the problem...."
|
|
MUMMY SCIENCE: VATICAN CITY
|
Why
wasn't the Pope embalmed? (slate.com)
"...the unembalmed body of John
Paul II may have been partially preserved without being subjected to the
whole process. A full-scale embalming (which is most common in the United
States, New Zealand, and Australia) takes several steps. The embalmer
first disinfects the outside of the body, then inserts tubes into a major
artery and a major vein. Next, he pumps a mixture of fixatives, dyes, and
perfume into the artery using an "embalming machine" and flushes
blood and other fluids out through the open vein. Finally, he sucks gases
and liquids out of the abdominal and chest cavities through a long tube
and replaces them with more fixative. The pope's body did not go through
all these steps, but it's possible that his corpse was treated only in the
cavities or partially fixed with surface injections...."
Forensic
specialist provided alternative to embalming (latimes.com;
free registration required)
"...few events are more public, and
more momentous, to church faithful than the death of a pope, particularly
one as widely admired and well-traveled as this one. Yet the papal
afterlife has long been marked by intense Vatican secrecy, bitter
professional rivalries and occasional calamity. In centuries past, the
corpses of some pontiffs were set upon by mobs or looted for relics. Until
the beginning of the last century, the internal organs of popes were
preserved in jars and interred separately from their bodies, but Pope Pius
X, who considered the practice gruesome, put a halt to it before his own
death in 1914. John Paul's corpse ... did undergo [some type of temporary]
treatment to preserve it during public viewing...."
In
break with tradition, the Pope has not been embalmed (guardian.co.uk)
"As
morbid details go it was repulsive, but fascinating. And perhaps not quite
what it seemed. The Vatican's spokesman, Joaquin Navarro-Valls, told
journalists yesterday that the Pope had not been embalmed before his lying
in state in St Peter's Basilica, merely that his body had been
"prepared".
With the high spring temperatures in Rome, putting a corpse on display
without preservatives for four days might seem a high-risk strategy. There
are plenty of tales from history of exploding bodies (Henry VIII was
apparently quite spectacular) and disintegrating cadavers (Pius XII turned
black in 1958 and his nose fell off - and that was in October)...."
Additional
article (reuters.co.uk)
Additional
article (news.yahoo.com)
Additional
article (guardian.co.uk)
Related
article (azcentral.com)
Suggested reading:
|
 |
The
Deaths of the Popes: Comprehensive Accounts, Including Funerals, Burial
Places and Epitaphs by Wendy
J. Reardon
Provides
information on the deaths, funerals, and burial places of each pope and
antipope from St. Peter (Apostle) to John Paul I. Among some of the most
interesting are the deaths of Innocent X, who was almost gnawed by rats
because no one would bury him; Alexander VI, who was stuffed into an old
carpet and pummeled into his coffin; and Formosus, whose corpse was
physically put on trial. |
|

|
Saints
and Sinners: A History of the Popes, Second Edition
by Eamon Duffy
Encompasses the history of the papacy, from its beginnings nearly
two thousand years ago to the reign of Pope John Paul II. In this
edition, Duffy has revised and updated the final chapter on
twentieth-century Popes and added a supplement on the method by
which the next Pope will be elected. |
|

|
The
Bad Popes by Russell Chamberlin
Tells the story of seven men who ruled the
Church of Rome at seven critical periods in the 600 years leading up to
the Reformation. During this age of grandeur and corruption, popes led
armies, made love and war, conspired for power, and armed themselves with
the techniques of assassination and seduction while clothed with the
authority of the Church. Dramatic accounts of these papal bad boys
include: Urban VI, the wild man from Naples, whose grotesque savageries
widened and maintained the scandalous gap of the Great Schism; Alexander
VI, who brought to the See of Peter the intrigues of the Borgia; and
Clement VII, the unskillful fox, whose fall brought down Rome itself. |
|
|
20
years later, preserved remains of prisoner cast doubt on cause of death
(news.com.au)
"An Aboriginal widow has buried her
husband for the second time in 20 years, after a new autopsy threw doubt
over his cause of death. Surrounded by family, Letty Scott reburied her
husband Douglas Bruce Scott in a Townsville cemetery, after his body was
exhumed and an autopsy carried out in her quest for a review of a case she
is convinced had racial overtones. Mr Scott, 26, was found hanged in a
Darwin prison in July 1985, and a subsequent inquest found there were no
suspicious circumstances.... Mrs Scott today said the autopsy, conducted
on the weekend, showed her husband died a 'brutal death'...."
|
|
Body
Worlds 2 opens at Great Lakes Science Center in Cleveland on Saturday
(cleveland.com)
"The California Science Center in
Los Angeles wasn't sure what to expect when it opened the Body Worlds 2
exhibit in July. After years of traveling around Europe and Asia, the
display of skinless human bodies and parts was coming to the United States
for the first time. Body Worlds was wildly popular elsewhere, drawing more
than 16 million visitors, but criticism and controversy had followed it on
tour.... The Great Lakes Science Center in Cleveland, where the exhibit
opens Saturday, is not taking chances, either. It followed the California
institution's advice and assembled its own advisory panel...."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reconstructing
the past: Patent obtained for recovering degraded DNA from dinosaurs and
cold crime cases (yahoo.com)
"The US Patent Office issued Patent
# 6,872,552, 'A Method of Reconstituting Nucleic Acid Molecules' today to
Burt D. Ensley, Ph.D, Chairman of MatrixDesign, and CEO of DermaPlus, Inc.
The patent covers methods for recovering and reconstituting genes from
"degraded" DNA samples, and could allow scientists to reassemble
everything from prehistoric, extinct animals to unsolved crime scenes...."
|
|
Women
steal mummified exhibit in Body Worlds show
(nynewsday.com)
"The preserved remains of a
13-week-old fetus, part of a traveling international exhibit of human
bodies and body parts, was stolen from the California Science Center by
two young women captured on videotape, police said Tuesday. The women
appeared to wait for the crowd to thin at the round-the-clock exhibit
before one reached into a plexiglass case and took the 4-inch specimen
just before 3 a.m. Saturday, police said...."
|
|
DESTROYED?: HUMAN
BRAIN COLLECTION
|
NIH
ready to destroy rare human brain collection
(washingtontimes.com)
"The National Institutes of Health
may discard part or all of a rare collection that includes hundreds of
human brain samples from patients that suffered from a disorder similar to
mad cow disease -- unless another researcher or institution takes them on,
United Press International has learned. Several scientists said the
collection, which is held by the NIH's National Institute for Neurological
Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Md. ... is irreplaceable and could even
provide insight into treatments for the fatal disorder.... However, NIH
officials in control of the collection's fate told UPI the remaining
samples are of little scientific value and may be disposed of if
researchers outside the agency do not claim it.... The collection is badly
in need of organization and no one is certain how many brains or other
tissue samples it contains.... "
|
|
VON HAGENS: RUSSIAN
RETRIAL BEGINS
|
Twice
acquitted, Vladimir Novosyolov is tried for third time in Russian court
for sending cadavers and parts of brains to Vomn Hagens' Heidelberg
Institute of Plastination (kommersant.com)
"...In
October 2000, the large shipment of macro and micro anatomical parts
containing 51 bodies and 440 fragments of brains were exported to Germany.
After sending the first shipment, medics came to gather new material.
Dozens of bodies gathered from psychiatric hospitals, nursing homes,
tuberculosis centers were already kept in formaldehyde in the morgue of
the medical academy. But in that very moment, the prosecutor office showed
interest in the dealings. The investigators found six victims, relatives
of the dead. The remains of their loved ones were already either exported
to Germany or awaiting their turn. According to the victims, the forensic
bureau told them that their relatives had been cremated and they received
urns with ashes...."
|
|
Einstein's
brain, Beethoven's ears, Descartes' finger, Lincoln's blood and bones:
What are the ethics of preserving the newly dead and digging up the long
dead? (ohmynews.com)
"Pilferers cannot resist snipping
body parts. While Einstein was being autopsied, his ophthalmologist, Dr.
Henry Abrams, dropped by and filched Einstein's brown eyes as a keepsake,
storing them in a jar in a Philadelphia bank vault. There were rumors that
singer Michael Jackson, a collector of body parts, offered Abrams several
million dollars for the eyes...."
|
|
Using
infrared technology, researchers find tattoos on ancient Siberian mummies
(tass.ru)
"Infrared photography methods, used
for the first time by researchers at the Hermitage Museum in St
Petersburg, have made it possible to discover tattoos in ancient mummies
excavated in the Pazyryk mounds in the south Siberian Altai Mountains.
The mounds date back to the 8th to 5th
centuries BC. The discovery was made on three mummies – two that used to
be female bodies and one male body -- that were produced by special
treatment for burial ceremonies...."
|
|
MUMMY SCIENCE:
CALIFORNIA
|
British
Museum mummies begin exhibit at Bowers Museum with largest collection of
CT-scans (artdaily.com)
"On April 7, 2005 at 11 a.m. at the
Bowers Museum, a team of radiologists and curators will conduct computed
tomography (CT) scans of six ancient Egyptian mummies from the renowned
collections of the British Museum. The mummies are the focus of the
Bowers’ upcoming landmark exhibition, Mummies: Death and the Afterlife
in Ancient Egypt, which opens April 17, 2005. This is the largest
collection of CT scans ever performed on Egyptian mummies utilizing the
newest, state of the art technology...."
|
|
CLAIM: NORTHERN
EUROPEAN BOGS
|
News
or advertisement?: Mud from the peat bog may rejuvenate living skin
(emediawire.com)
"Over the past centuries, remains
of many hundreds of people--men, women, and children--have come to light
in peat bogs in northwestern Europe, especially in Ireland, Great Britain,
the Netherlands, northern Germany, and Denmark. Peatlands are most
extensive in northern regions. They develop where drainage of water is
blocked, precipitation is retained, and decomposition of organic matter is
slowed. Because of their highly acidic nature, wetness, low temperature,
and absence of oxygen, northern bogs have become a repository of past
life. The bog people are amazingly well-preserved with fingernails, hair,
and teeth in excellent condition. How is this possible when the dates
range from 8000 B.C. to the early medieval times? In fine spas Moor Peat
(or Moor Mud) is regularly used as bath, body wrap, and facial treatments.
Cost for these treatments can be as high as $150 for a body wrap, $100 for
a bath, and $85 for a mud mask or facial mask. These spa treatments can be
done successfully at home for fraction of the cost by purchasing fine
quality Moor Peat from a quality supplier...."
|
|
More on California mummy mystery (April
2004) Positive
identification of woman's mummified body not possible
(hidesertstar.com)
"A mummy that was found in the
garage of Robert Adams and Virginia Beiser after they died in a fire in
April 2004 can not be positively identified as Adams' wife.... However,
with all the evidence in the case, including the missing-person
investigation of Adams' wife, who disappeared in the San Diego area in
1975, detectives believe the mummy is Francis' remains, said the
detective...."
|
|
More on the mummified
woman found in Fairfield house
Son charged with
felonies in death of his mother (news10.net)
"The son of a Fairfield woman whose
decaying body was found last week in the home they shared is facing
charges of manslaughter and elder abuse. Jack Wilson, 58, heard the
charges against him in Solano County Superior Court Tuesday. The district
attorney is charging him with involuntary manslaughter, elder abuse
causing death, and two counts of felony elder abuse.... The partially
mummified body was later identified as that of 79-year-old Kathleen
Wilson, the mother of the suspect. According to police, the son said his
mother was injured by a fall in the home's kitchen in October 2003.
Wilson, and the woman's husband, who lived in the home, gave her food
occasionally as she lay there. She died about two-and-half weeks later.
Police said Wilson made no attempt to call anyone after his mother
died.... "
|
|
Preserved
soft tissue from T. Rex discovered!
(msnbc.com)
"A 70-million-year-old
Tyrannosaurus rex fossil dug out of a hunk of sandstone has yielded soft
tissue, including blood vessels and perhaps even whole cells, U.S.
researchers reported on Thursday. Paleontologists forced to break the
creature's massive thighbone to get it on a helicopter found not a solid
piece of fossilized bone, but instead something looking a bit less like a
rock. When they got it into a lab and chemically removed the hard
minerals, they found what looked like blood vessels, bone cells and
perhaps even blood cells...."
|
|
More on the mummified
woman found in Fairfield house
No
foul play in death of elderly mother after her partially mummified body
found on kitchen floor (latimes.com;
free registration required)
"The Solano County coroner said
there was no foul play in the death of a woman whose partially mummified
body was found in a home last week. An autopsy of Kathleen Wilson, 79,
found that she died naturally. Wilson's son, 58-year-old Jack Ronald
Wilson, said his mother fell in the kitchen in October 2003 and died there
a couple of weeks later, according to a police report. 'They tried to take
care of her, fed her for a few weeks' as she lay injured, police said...."
|
|
'Mummy
Autopsy' discovers lost queen of Egypt residing in Edinburgh
(theherald.co.uk)
"Skeletal
remains held by
the National Museum of Scotland have been identified as a lost Egyptian
queen and her child. The
discovery has been made by scientists who used forensic investigative
techniques to attempt to solve the mystery of the remains. The
bodies were acquired for the collection a year after being discovered by
Sir Flinders Petrie in 1909 at Qurna, a village on the west bank of the
Nile, which has been the focus of illegal excavations....
The lost queen is believed to be a Nubian princess...
"
|
|
More on the mummified
woman found in Fairfield house
Son
arrested in death of his elderly mother after her partially mummified body
found on kitchen floor (dailyrepublic.com)
"Jack Wilson, 58, was booked on
charges of elder abuse after police found a decaying body on the kitchen
floor of the Utah Street house he and his parents lived in. Health and
Social Services workers discovered the body Friday, and Wilson was outside
of the house waiting when law enforcement arrived. He was taken at
gunpoint for questioning, but didn't have a weapon and didn't resist....
Wilson and his father, 81-year-old Harry Wilson, were living in the house
with the desiccated body, Gresham said.... Because the body is
unidentified, police are still looking for Kathleen Wilson, Jack Wilson's
mother and Harry Wilson's wife, who also lived in the house. Officials
wouldn't speculate the body was Kathleen Wilson...."
|
|
Memory
of the 1969 Nelson County flood: Unidentified mystery bodies still puzzle
investigators (hamptonroads.com)
"The last of the eight [bodies] was
uncovered right at Woods Mill. It was late morning on Sept. 6, more than
two weeks after the flood and long after anyone might have expected to
recover fresh remains. But so they were, apparently preserved by their
tomb of mud and debris...."
|
|
Mummified
mammoth placed on display at Japan's Aichi Expo 2005 (iol.co.za)
"A frozen mammoth dug up from the
Siberian tundra has been unveiled in central Japan in a preview of the
six-month World Exposition, which is expected to draw millions of
tourists. The beast, believed to have lived 18 000 years ago, has been
preserved in a giant refrigerator. It is a key exhibit at the Expo, which
will open next Friday and largely feature modern wonders such as robots.
Full-bodied mammoths have been unearthed in the past, but this exhibit is
billed as the most successful attempt yet to display the animal almost
fully. The mammoth on display has tusks, a front leg and a nearly intact,
soil-coloured head covered with muscle tissue and some woolly hair..."
Additional
article
For
more information about the Expo's Yukagir mammoth
Information
about the Expo
Photo
of mammoth
|
|
Mummified
woman found in Fairfield house (timesheraldonline.com)
"The partially mummified body of a
woman was found Friday in the kitchen of a Fairfield home, and two men who
live there were questioned by police. The dead woman was discovered by
police officers who were called to the 1500 block of Utah Street by a
county worker who deals with abuse of the elderly. The worker reported a
foul smell emanating from the house. Witnesses said neighbors had recently
become suspicious because an elderly woman who lived in the residence had
not been seen for more than a year. That suspicion prompted a call to
Solano County's elder abuse telephone line, neighbors said. Still,
discovery of the body came as a shock...."
|
|
Mummified
man found in Aix apartment may have died two years ago
(expatica.com)
"The mummified remains of a
Croatian man have been found in his apartment in southeastern France,
police said Wednesday, adding that the man likely died two years ago.
Forensics experts were to determine the precise date of death from samples
taken from the remains...."
|
|
Mummies
found in ancient Marib cemetery by drug gang; gang members arrested
(yementimes.com)
"Two
mummies of a man and a woman have been found in Marib, in the area of Darb
al-Dhabi, the ancient city of Braqish. The place is believed to be an
ancient cemetery dating back to the Othmani era.... Sheik Ahmad Mohammad
Al-Sharif from al-Ashraf Tribe, Marib, told The Yemen Times that the two
mummies were discovered by a gang who was in search of opium in one of the
local cemeteries in the locality...."
|
|
Mummified
cat found under floor of art center to be auctioned on eBay
(currypilot.com)
"The reconstruction of the old wing
at Manley Art Center has uncovered what some considered disgusting, but at
least one artist considers a treasure. In fact, Jean Beebe is excited
about the mummified cat discovered when the sagging wooden floor was
removed. Beebe said she is sure sale of the cat will provide a fortune for
her and the Pelican Bay Arts Association, owner of the center. The
property was donated to the art association by Virginia Manley in 1981...."
|
|
VON HAGENS: FACTORY
CONTROVERSY
|
More on Von Hagens' plan to build Polish
plastination factory
Polish
town council says no to corpse preservation, will permit cold storage only
(expatica.com)
"Controversial
German anatomist Gunther von Hagens has been barred from preserving
corpses for exhibition in the western Polish village of Sieniawa Zarska,
it was reported on Friday. Dubbed "Dr. Frankenstein" or
"Dr. Death", von Hagens and his 89-year-old father Gerhard
Liebchen have plans to make the sleepy village their global headquarters
for preparing corpses for von Hagens' "Bodyworld" exhibitions.
But Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper said on Friday that the village council had
only permitted him to make cold-storage chambers and wooden models of the
bodies...."
|
|
POSSIBILITY: EGYPT
(updated)
|
More on the cause of King Tut's death
Interview
with Zahi Hawass: Tut's death will remain mystery, but publicity for new
exhibit will not (travelvideo.tv)
In this interview Hawass gives what may
be the final word about the study of King Tut and the cause of his death:
"There’s no way to find out if he was poisoned even if you look at
his internal organs. They will not show any signs. It is impossible to
prove foul play. I declare the case on King Tut close! He will not need
any further examination. We should leave the King now in peace. His death
shall remain a mystery for the rest of his afterlife! King Tut’s
mystery will continue. After all, he is the most important discovery in
the Valley of the Kings." He also explains that the scan of King Tut
was, in some ways, publicity for the upcoming tour of a new King Tut
exhibit (beginning in LA in June 2005).
Additional
article (medicalnewstoday.com)
Additional
article (guardian.co.uk)
Additional
article (reuters.co.uk)
Additional
article (discovery.com)
Visit
Zahi Hawass's King Tut CT-scan page (with photos)
Photo
of Tut's full-body CT-scan
Close-up
photo of King Tut's face
And if you want to read about King Tut
in more detail, try one of these books:
|
MUMMY TOMBS
COMMENT:
A few notable
points about this examination which resulted in a five-page
report. First, the mummy of King Tut, except for the head, was in
very bad condition. Second, two loose bone fragments were
found in his skull, but these seem to have been post-mortem
fragments (or they would have become stuck in the embalming
material). Third, the scientific team disagreed about the broken
thigh bone: did it happen before or after death? Some members
believe that the broken thigh led to King Tut's death, when it
became infected. Others believe that the embalmers caused the
breakage. Fourth, another mystery may have been solved when the
team seems to have found King Tut's missing member which had
disappeared sometime between 1923 and 1968; though uncertain, team
members believe they found it in the sand around the body.
Finally, Zahi Hawass wants to let King Tut rest now. Because the
results do not indicate conclusively how King Tut died, it is
unlikely that most Tut enthusiasts will be satisfied with the
results of the study. Even the theory that Tut may have been
poisoned cannot be studied, since Tut's internal organs are in
such bad shape that they would reveal nothing about toxins. No
matter what theory researchers come up with, since the body is in poor
condition, it is unlikely they they will ever get the
conclusive answer they seek.
|
|
|
Man
said to be oldest in Japan was kept mummified in home for 5-10 years
(bbc.co.uk)
"A Japanese man said to be Itami
city's oldest male has been found dead at his home up to a decade after
his death. The man's mummified body was found lying face down on a bed in
the home he shared with his children after a relative called the police.
Kyujiro Kaneoka was believed to have been alive, aged 107, and was named
as Itami's oldest man six years ago....An official with the Itami city
hall told the AFP news agency that the city was considering asking
Kaneoka's family to return gifts it had received since 1999 as a token of
the man's longevity...."
|
|
Preserved
body of Balto the sled dog displayed at Cleveland Museum of Natural
History (cleveland.com)
"When Gay Salisbury and her cousin
Laney Salisbury were growing up in New York City, they played and climbed
all over a bronze dog statue in Central Park. The statue of the famed
Balto honors sled dogs that carried serum to Nome, Alaska, during a
diphtheria outbreak in 1925.... After the serum run, Balto and six
teammates toured the country and ended up in a sideshow in Los Angeles. A
Cleveland man in Los Angeles on business recognized the dogs, returned
home and began a campaign to rescue them from deplorable living
conditions. Response was overwhelming, and the Clevelander bought the team
for $2,000. The dogs lived out their days at Cleveland's old Brookside
Zoo. Balto's body is preserved at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.
He died in 1933 at age 11...."
For
news about the exhibit and additional information about Balto
|
|
Mummy
at Denver museum given new face (denverpost.com)
"Colorado researchers have exposed
the face of an Egyptian mummy that lay under wraps for more than 3,000
years - without disturbing a piece of ancient linen. Using sophisticated
medical scans, forensic data and a touch of artistic license, experts at
Medical Modeling in Golden crafted a stunning three-dimensional bust of
the "rich woman mummy," a longtime resident of the Denver Museum
of Nature & Science. The woman has amulets in her body, stones in her
eyes, and terribly wrinkled skin despite her careful preparation at death,
the scans show...."
|
|
Mummies
stolen from archaeological site recovered by Yemeni authorities
(newkerala.com)
"Yemeni authorities have seized a
shipment of stolen antiques, including two mummies dating to three
centuries B.C.,, about to be smuggled out of the country. A security
source said Monday the suspected thieves were being interrogated to verify
if they had stolen other pieces. He said a special team from the
department of museums and antiques would examine the mummies, which were
stolen from an archeological site in the province of Maarab in
northeastern Yemen...."
|
|
More on the Frozen Dead Guy Festival
Town
prepares for quirky festival this weekend
(thedenverchannel.com)
"A Colorado town is getting ready
to celebrate "Frozen Dead Guy Days" this weekend. The quirky
festival is built around a Norwegian man whose body lies preserved with
dry ice in a Nederland, Colo., house. Past celebrations have included
coffin races and a "frozen dead guy" lookalike contest.
Bredo Morstoel's grandson had Morstoel's
body cryogenically frozen after he died in 1989 in hopes he could one day
be cloned...."
For
festival information
|
|
More on the cause of King Tut's death
Results
of Tutankhamun's CT-scan to be released tomorrow in Cairo
(theaustralian.com.au)
"The controversy over whether the
young Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun was murdered in 1343BC may be resolved
this week when the results of a CT scan of his mummy are released. The
1700 three-dimensional colour images may settle a dispute that has raged
for years.... The results will be announced in Cairo on Tuesday by Zahi
Hawass, chairman of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities...."
|
|
More on mummified female body found in
Marshall Missing
Shreveport woman identified as mummified Texas body receives burial
(nola.com)
"Almost 1 1/2 years after she was
murdered in a Bossier City motel, the body of Marjorie Ellin Rambin Smith
has been buried in the tiny DeSoto Parish community named after her
pioneer ancestors. The crowd of relatives and friends who gathered at St.
Mary's Catholic Church talked about her good times, not the murder that
left a motel room soaked with blood or the mummified body found in late
February in an abandoned house near Scottsville, Texas...."
|
|
Daughter
of frozen man may not be able to attend Frozen Dead Guy Days (9news.com)
"The daughter of a Norwegian man
whose body lies preserved with dry ice in Nederland is hoping to attend
the town's annual "Frozen Dead Guy Days" in her father's honor.
But Aud Morstoel says she's worried she won't be allowed to travel to
Colorado for this year's festival beginning March 11th...Morstoel's father
Bredo died in 1989 but his family froze his body in hopes he could one day
be cloned. His body is resting near Nederland."
For
festival information
|
|
VON HAGENS: FACTORY
CONTROVERSY
|
More on Von Hagens' plan to build Polish
plastination factory Polish
newspaper columnist compares possibility of plastination factory to
concentration camp (theaustralian.com.au)
"Controversial
German scientist Guenther von Hagens is embroiled in a new row over plans
to use a disused factory in Poland for an exhibition of human corpses and
body parts. For many Poles, the preparation of the bodies smacks of Nazi
experiments conducted in the concentration camps, many of which were on
Polish soil...The Polish dispute centres on the Nazi echoes of the
doctor's work. Newspaper columnist Zycie Warszawy compared the proposed
exhibition with a concentration camp, writing: 'It's difficult to
distinguish it from the kind of abuse that turned body parts into
lampshades and soap during the Hitler era.' "
|
|
More on the mummy with beaded overlay
from Saqqara tomb
- Photo
1 (as originally found;
bbc.co.uk)
- Photo
2 (close up before
unwrapping; chron.com)
- Photo
3 (close up of bead overlay,
after unwrapping; bbc.co.uk)
Secret
door led to newly-discovered mummy
(chron.com) with photo
"Archaeologists uncovered three
coffins and a remarkably well-preserved mummy in a 2,500-year-old tomb
discovered by accident — after opening a secret door hidden behind a
statue in a separate burial chamber, Egypt's chief archaeologist said
Wednesday. The Australian team was exploring a much older tomb — dating
4,200 years — belonging to a man believed to have been a tutor to the
6th Dynasty King Pepi II, when they moved a pair of statues and discovered
the door...."
Mummy
to be exhibited at new Saqqara museum
(cnn.com)
"Australian archaeologists have
discovered one of the best preserved ancient Egyptian mummies dating from
about 2,600 years ago, Zahi Hawass, the head of Egypt's Supreme Council
for Antiquities said Monday. The Australian team digging near the Saqqara
pyramids, 15 miles south of Cairo, found three coffins last week dating
from the 26th Dynasty (664-525 BC), Hawass told Reuters.... The mummies
will be exhibited at a new museum named after Imhotep, builder of the
first Egyptian pyramid, to be opened in Saqqara in three months...."
|
MUMMY TOMBS
COMMENT:
Though
one of the mummies has been called "remarkably well-preserved," archaeologists
are apparently referring to the outer condition of the mummy, which
includes the almost-pristine beaded overlay. Usually, such
overlays are damaged (the threads deteriorate and beads go missing). They
are not referring to the person contained inside the wrappings. Only the
very outer wrapping of the mummy appear to have been removed (look at the first two
photos above and you can see that the large bands of linen are in
place. The third photo shows that the large band across the face has at the very least
been moved (if not removed). Still, archaeologists will not be removing
the inner wrappings of the mummy, choosing to study it with non-invasive means. Therefore,
although news
accounts give the impression that the person is well-preserved, but this
may not be the case.
|
|
|
Body
found encased in concrete leaves imprint for investigators to study
(twincities.com; free registration required)
"The remains of a body encased in
concrete had been unearthed from the desert outside Vegas. Monahan wanted
to know how long the body had been entombed. Knowing might help
investigators identify the body.... Fitted together, the concrete
resembled a gigantic cocoon, rough and crude. But split apart, the nature
of the sarcophagus was altogether different.... He could see the wrinkles
and even the texture of the victim's skin perfectly preserved.
Fingerprints were missing because the hands had been clenched, but
delicate details stood out with heart-rending clarity, like a tiny mound
where the belly button had been.... "
|
|
VON HAGENS: FACTORY
CONTROVERSY
|
More on Von Hagens' plan to build Polish
plastination factory Von
Hagens warned not to build factory for Von Hagens in Poland
(expatica.com)
"Justice officials in Poland have
warned controversial German anatomist Gunther von Hagens he will face
prosecution should he open a special laboratory preparing human corpses
for public display...under Polish law von Hagens macabre specialty of
sculpting human corpses into detailed anatomical statutes could be defined
as a desecration of human remains and therefore subject to prosecution...."
|
|
VON HAGENS: FACTORY
CONTROVERSY
|
More on Von Hagens' plan to build Polish
plastination factory Von
Hagens' father, once SS sergeant, removed as project leader after outcry
(telegraph.co.uk)
"The German anatomist Gunther von
Hagens, who preserves human corpses by injecting them with plastic resin,
has bowed to pressure and removed his father as project leader at a new
corpse preparation factory in Poland after the disclosure that he was an
SS veteran. The trained doctor and self-publicist who, in 2002, performed
Britain’s first public autopsy in 170 years, has often attracted
controversy but has carried on with his so-called “Cartistic
dissections” regardless. But the latest revelations that his 88-year-old
father, Gerhard Liebchen, who was his legal representative and project
leader in Poland, was once a sergeant in the SS who allegedly sent 60
Poles to a concentration camp, proved to be a scandal too far...."
|
|
VON HAGENS: FACTORY
CONTROVERSY
|
Big
business of Body Worlds: Von Hagens wants to build plastination factory in
Sieniawa Zarska (abc.net.au)
"Controversial German artist
Gunther von Hagens, known for his displays of preserved human corpses
stripped of skin, wants to build a factory in Poland to mass-produce his
art, local officials have said. Mr von Hagens, whose exhibitions made out
of human and animal remains have attracted millions of visitors around the
world, has already bought land and industrial buildings in the western
Polish town of Sieniawa Zarska, near the German border. "
|
|
|
|