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PRESS RELEASE, May 10, 2005 |
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Tutankhamun
Facial Reconstruction
Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, announced today the results of three independent attempts to reconstruct the face of Egypt’s most famous king, Tutankhamun. |
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Dr.
Hawass led the effort to see what King Tut, who died over three thousand
years ago, might have looked like in life. Under his direction three independent
artist-scientist teams, one French, one American, and one Egyptian, used
modern forensic techniques to reconstruct Tut’s face. Two of these teams
were chosen and sponsored by the National Geographic; the third was selected
by the SCA. The French and Egyptian teams were told that the subject was
Tutankhamun. The American team was not given the subject’s identity and
was thus working “blind.”
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These
likenesses are based on CT scan data collected by an all-Egyptian team,
led by Dr. Hawass, using a portable CT scanner provided by the National
Geographic Society and Siemens AG. The scan took place on January 5, 2005,
in the Valley of the Kings in Luxor. The fragile body of the king, which
had lain undisturbed since it was last X-rayed in 1978, was carefully carried
to the scanner inside the wooden tray of sand in which Carter had left
it in 1926. The CT scan was able, with minimum disturbance of the mummy,
to distinguish different densities of soft tissue and bone. During the
scan over 1,700 high-resolution images were captured; these were then used
to create three-dimensional models, both virtual and actual.
Results from the analysis of the CT scan were announced on March 5 of this year. The scientific team concluded that Tutankhamun was about 19 when he died. He was well-fed, and showed no signs of childhood diseases or malnutrition. The team found no signs of a blow to the head, as had been theorized based on X-rays taken in 1968, and no other evidence for foul play. They did note a bad fracture just above the left knee that may have occurred a day or two before the king died (rather than being caused by the embalmers or Carter’s team). “It is possible that this injury became infected and killed the king,” says team leader Zahi Hawass. |
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All
three teams started with the CT data provided by the SCA. The American
and French teams were given a plastic model of the skull produced in Paris;
the Egyptian team made their own model directly from the data. Based on
this skull, the American and French teams both concluded that the subject
was Caucasoid (the type of human typically found, for example, in North
Africa, Europe, and the Middle East). The American team, working blind,
correctly identified the subject as North African.
Based on the racial type, the teams added clay to the plastic models and used these as a guide to sculpt the features. The French and Egyptian sculptors also made reference to ancient images of Tutankhamun. When her clay model was complete, the French sculptor made a silicone cast and, based on the archaeological information, added glass eyes, hair, and color to the skin and lips. The results of the three teams are identical or very similar in the basic shape of the face, the size, shape, and setting of the eyes, and the proportions of the skull. The primary differences are in the shape of the end of the nose and ears. “In my opinion, the shape of the face and skull are remarkably similar to a famous image of Tutankhamun as a child, where he is shown as the sun god at dawn rising from a lotus blossom,” says Dr. Hawass. This is confirmation that the science and techniques of forensic reconstruction can be a useful tool for reconstructing the likenesses of people who lived long ago. The team of radiologists will start next month on the process of identifying
another five mummies that were also scanned on January 5, 2005. These are
the mummy of a child from the tomb of Tuthmosis IV, an unidentified mummy
from the tomb of Seti II, and three mummies found in a side chamber in
the tomb of Amenhotep II (an older woman, a youth, and a third mummy recently
speculated to be Queen Nefertiti). This work will be carried out as part
of the Egyptian Mummy Project, a five-year study led by Dr. Hawass to inventory
and scan all of the known mummies in Egypt.
Reconstruction
Teams:
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