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Composite Mummies

OneWingedBird

Beloved of Ra
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This is genuinely creepy, it's speculated that the composites might have been made up of related people, although since the mummy appears to have had some ritual use, I can't help thinking that perhaps they just replaced bits of it as they wore out over the years when a 'donor' became available. :eek!!!!:

Scottish prehistoric mummies made from jigsaw of body parts

DNA tests on British prehistoric mummies revealed they were made of body parts from several different people, arranged to look like one person.

The four bodies discovered in 2001 on South Uist, in Scotland's Outer Hebrides were the first evidence in Britain of deliberate mummification.

It is thought the body parts may have come from people in the same families.

Sheffield University's Prof Mike Parker Pearson said the mummies had not been buried straight after preservation.

A team from the University of Sheffield first uncovered the remains of a three-month-old-child, a possible young female adult, a female in her 40s and a male under the prehistoric village of Cladh Hallan.

But recent tests on the remains carried out by the University of Manchester, show that the "female burial", previously identified as such because of the pelvis of the skeleton, was in fact a composite.

It was made up of three different people, and some parts, such as the skull, were male.

Radiocarbon dating and stable isotope analysis showed that the male mummy was also a composite.

Prof Parker Pearson, an expert in the Bronze Age and burial rituals has a theory about why the mummies were put together this way.

"These could be kinship components, they are putting lineages together, the mixing up of different people's body parts seems to be a deliberate act," he said.

The results of the DNA work on the Cladh Hallan mummies will feature on the latest series of Digging For Britain on BBC2 in September with Dr Alice Roberts

"I don't believe these 'mummies' were buried immediately, but played an active part in society, as they do in some tribal societies in other parts of the world."

He said as part of ancestral worship, the mummies probably would have been asked for spiritual advice to help the community make decisions.

Archaeologists found the mummies in the foundations of a row of unusual Bronze Age terraced roundhouses.

But after being radiocarbon dated, all were found to have died between 300 and 500 years before the houses were built, meaning they had been kept above ground for some time by their descendants.

In order for the bodies to have been found as articulated skeletons as they were, rather than piles of bones, some soft tissue preservation had to have taken place.

Further tests showed that the bones had become demineralised, a process caused by placing a body in an acidic environment like a peat bog.

The degree of demineralisation on the bones found showed that after death, the bodies had been placed in bogs for about a year to mummify them before being recovered.

Mr Parker Pearson said he believed there may be more examples of deliberate mummification in Britain that have been missed by archaeologists up until now.
South Uist The bodies had been preserved in the peat bogs found on South Uist

The Cladh Hallan mummies had been carefully placed in the crouch burial position, a style of burial where the body is drawn up into the foetal position, commonly found in the Bronze Age.

Archaeologists are sometimes puzzled by how the bodies were contorted into such tight positions.

Prof Parker Pearson's team are examining other crouch burial examples to see if these were in fact the mummified remains of much older bodies as well.

Early results are proving to be promising, as a sample from remains in Cambridge show that bacterial decay was halted at some point after death.

The results of the DNA work on the Cladh Hallan mummies will feature on the latest series of Digging For Britain on BBC Two in September.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14575729
 
ramonmercado said:
An ancient Dr Frankenstein?

Well now, that's entirely a possibility. Maybe somebody with an experimental, enquiring nature had a go at putting together some bits to see if it would live...
 
"I don't believe these 'mummies' were buried immediately, but played an active part in society, as they do in some tribal societies in other parts of the world."
But presumably not a very active part...
 
Composite mummies are known from other sites and other cultures, and most of them are explained with regard to other circumstances motivating mixing and matching parts from multiple individuals.

For example, from Egypt ...

The differentiated state of preservation of the embalmed children’s bodies is mostly the result of the embalment method. In the Ptolemaic period the art of mummification had deteriorated substantially reaching a much lower standard than in previous periods. Indeed, examination of the bodies from the Saqqara necropolis suggests that they were often brought for embalming already in an advanced state of decay. The carelessness of Ptolemaic embalmers was noted by anthropologist Maria Kaczmarek in the case of the mummy of an infant which died at the age of 6–9 months (B. 415); its small crus bones
having been replaced with the much larger bones of a child dead at seven years of age, creating what is called a ‘composite mummy’. Typically, the bones of one or more dead persons, children and adults, were used to fill out a different mummy in order to replace missing body elements and achieve an anthropoid shape. The procedure was believed by Kaczmarek to take place whenever body decay had resulted in parts of the body missing at the time of the mummification process. ‘Composite mummies’ have been attested also at other necropolises, for example, at Hawara and in the west cemetery of the Roman period site at Ismant el-Kharab (Kellis) in Dakhleh Oasis.

Excerpt from pp. 175 - 176 in:

Małgorzata Radomska, Child Burials at Saqqara: Ptolemaic Necropolis West of the Step Pyramid
Études et Travaux XXIX (2016), 169–202
http://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/eleme...8807-4f2d-a334-cf8d97341348/c/13_Radomska.pdf
 
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