With support from the University of Richmond

New perspectives on how history is made

Patient aged 2,500 in for tests

A team of radiographers at a London university have been preoccupied with a patient somewhat older than most - 2,500-year old Egyptian mummy Tahemaa.

Specialists at City University in Islington, north London, used a CT scanner to learn more about how she died without damaging the corpse.

They discovered that, unusually, the brain had been left inside the mummy - suggesting an apprentice embalmed her.

Researchers discovered her thigh bone was broken after death.

Read entire article at BBC