World's largest mummies exhibition in Utah


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Updated: 2/17 2:13 pm | Published: 2/15 6:21 pm
Reported by: Noah Bond
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SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - The world's largest display of mummies is in Utah. They were discovered in five different continents and loaned to Utah from 21 world-renowned museums.

Each mummy has a story to tell about the human family as it once existed hundreds or even thousands of years ago.

"We have one child mummy that was very ill for most of his life and I can only imagine about how difficult that was for his parents," said Director of Science and Education Development, Heather Gill-Frerking.

The South American lived where modern day Peru now stands. The child died about 850 years ago. It had a growth on its head, which could have been easily treated with modern day surgery.

The oldest mummy in the exhibition lived and died 6,500-years-ago. The Detmold child is one of the most remarkable mummies in the world. It's skin and hair is preserved. A CT scan reveals this little boy or girl died from a heart and lung condition.

The mummies in this display come from South America, Europe, Asia, Oceania and Egypt. Each display comes with its own stories, but also with its own mysteries.

"We can learn so much though modern science and technology," said Bryton Sampson who works at the Leonardo Museum.

A CT scan reveals preserved flesh inside a fully wrapped mummy and also the bone structure.

Scientists can even take hair samples to determine the mummies diet as it would have been thousands of years ago unlocking clues into these once very real men and women and children.

The Mummies of the World exhibition begins at the Leonardo February 16, 2013 and will continue through May 27, 2013.

Click on the attached link for more information.





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Dennis - 2/16/2013 7:45 PM
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This story gives me pause to consider it from a different perspective: Had those remains been discovered in the United States, this display would likely be in violation of federal law under "The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)" of 1990. (See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NAGPRA). In 1995, certain international agreements in accord with that act were also executed between the US and El Salvador, Canada, Peru, Guatemala, and Mali, yet the story above indicates that some on display originated in South America, and Peru in particular. And perhaps a few readers are old enough to remember when "Indian" remains were prominently displayed in glass cases at the visitor's center on Temple Square, much to the chagrin of Native Americans who consider their ancestors sacred. The resulting controversy led to their eventual removal for a proper burial well before the enactment of NAGPRA, but you'll have to research those facts for yourself. It all makes me wonder how the white man would feel if some of his dead ancestors were dug up and put on display for the idle curiosity and amusement of Native Americans. But, of course, being much less "civilized" than the conquering white man who justified himself in stealing their lands and effectively destroying their native cultures, the Indians would find no interest in such a display, preferring instead to respect the dead, which would never include selling expensive tickets to interested persons in order to raise revenue largely reminiscent of a circus side show. And if that were not true, then wouldn't admission to this "mummies exhibition" be free? -- at least in the interests of promoting "modern science and technology"? But if modern methods can now determine when a mummy lived and died; it's heart and lung condition; it's bone structure; and even what it ate, why is science seemingly unable to determine whether Detmold is a "little boy or girl"? How are Mormons supposed to baptize him/her?:)

Teerevor - 2/15/2013 8:53 PM
0 Votes
I'd love to see it but I can't afford to go. It would cost me and my wife $45. I'm still glad they brought it here for people to see. Anything that brings out the curiosity in people of, "How did this happen?" is a good thing.
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