Posted on 10/02/2015 1:12:16 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Building on a previous study conducted at a single Bronze Age burial site in the Outer Hebrides, Dr Booth used microscopic analysis to compare the bacterial bioerosion of skeletons from various sites across the UK with the bones of the mummified bodies from Yemen and Ireland.
Archaeologists widely agree that the damp British climate is not favourable to organic materials and all prehistoric mummified bodies that may be located in the UK will have lost their preserved tissue if buried outside of a preservative environment such as a bog.
Dr Booth, who is now based at the Department of Earth Sciences at Londons Natural History Museum, said: The problem archaeologists face is finding a consistent method of identifying skeletons that were mummified in the past especially when they discover a skeleton that is buried outside of a protective environment.
To help address this, our team has found that by using microscopic bone analysis archaeologists can determine whether a skeleton has been previously mummified even when it is buried in an environment that isnt favourable to mummified remains.
We know from previous research that bones from bodies that have decomposed naturally are usually severely degraded by putrefactive bacteria, whereas mummified bones demonstrate immaculate levels of histological preservation and are not affected by putrefactive bioerosion.
(Excerpt) Read more at sheffield.ac.uk ...
You’re busy tonight! (Thanks, FRiend, for all the interesting pings!)
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