• Home
  • Mail
  • Flickr
  • Tumblr
  • News
  • Sports
  • Finance
  • Celebrity
  • Answers
  • Groups
  • Mobile
  • More
Yahoo
    • Skip to Navigation
    • Skip to Main Content
    • Skip to Related Content
    • Mail
    News Home
    Follow Us
    • US
    • World
    • Politics
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Odd News
    • ABC News
    • Yahoo Originals
    • Katie Couric
    • Matt Bai

    Scans unveil secrets of world's oldest mummies

    Giovanna FLEITAS
    AFPDecember 24, 2016
    Over 7,000 years after they were embalmed by the Chinchorro people, an ancient civilization in modern-day Chile and Peru, 15 mummies underwent DNA analysis and scans
    View photos
    Over 7,000 years after they were embalmed by the Chinchorro people, an ancient civilization in modern-day Chile and Peru, 15 mummies underwent DNA analysis and scans (AFP Photo/Martin BERNETTI)

    Santiago (AFP) - The world's oldest mummies have just had an unusual check-up.

    More than 7,000 years after they were embalmed by the Chinchorro people, an ancient civilization in modern-day Chile and Peru, 15 mummies were taken to a Santiago clinic last week to undergo DNA analysis and computerized tomography scans.

    The Chinchorro were a hunting and fishing people who lived from 10,000 to 3,400 BC on the Pacific coast of South America, at the edge of the Atacama desert.

    They were among the first people in the world to mummify their dead. Their mummies date back some 7,400 years -- at least 2,000 years older than Egypt's.

    Now, researchers are hoping to use modern medical technology to reconstruct what they looked like in life, decode their genes and better understand the mysteries of this ancient civilization.

    The 15 Chinchorro mummies, mostly children and unborn babies, were put through a CT scanner at the Los Condes clinic in the Chilean capital.

    "We collected thousands of images with a precision of less than one millimeter," said chief radiologist Marcelo Galvez.

    "The next phase is to try to dissect these bodies virtually, without touching them, which will help us preserve them for another 500,000 years."

    Using high-tech computer processing, researchers are busy reconstructing the mummies' muscles and facial features.

    "We want to see what they physically looked like, to reconstruct them and bring to life someone who died thousands of years ago," said Galvez.

    Researchers are also hoping to learn more about how the Chinchorro mummified their dead.

    The Chinchorro, who apparently had a complex understanding of human anatomy, would carefully remove the skin and muscles of the deceased.

    Using wood, plants and clay, they reconstructed the body around the remaining skeleton, then sewed the original skin back on, adding a mouth, eyes and hair.

    A mask was then placed over the face.

    The result looks like something in between a statue and a person -- eerily lifelike even after thousands of years.

    - All in the family -

    Mummification was an intimate process for the Chinchorro, said Veronica Silva, the head of the anthropology department at Chile's National Museum of Natural History.

    "The family itself would make the mummy," she told AFP.

    The earliest mummies were unborn fetuses and newborns, she said.

    The mummies were all made using the same basic process, but each one shows unique "technological and artistic innovations," she said.

    It was a process that evolved over time. The newest mummies are the most elaborate.

    Some 180 Chinchorro mummies have been discovered since 1903.

    All were found outdoors, placed near the beach. The Chinchorro apparently did not build pyramids or any other structures to house them.

    In fact, the Chinchorro civilization left no trace besides its mummies.

    "We are effectively talking about the oldest artificially mummified bodies in the world," said Silva.

    "The Chinchorro mummies date to 7,400 years ago. That is to say, this system... existed 2,000 years before the first mummifications even began in Egypt."

    Surprises have already begun to emerge from the CT scanner.

    The smallest mummy, it turns out, was not a mummy at all.

    "There was no bone structure inside. It was just a figurine, possibly a representation of an individual who could not be mummified," said Silva.

    Researchers also took skin and hair samples from the mummies to analyze their DNA, in hopes of identifying genetic links with the modern-day population.

    "We want to better understand their way of life -- from their diet to whether we Chileans still carry their genes," said Silva.

    What to Read Next

    • This Republican congresswoman's Twitter poll on Obamacare didn't go very well for her

      CNBC
    • Lyle and Erik Menendez Start Getting into Trouble: Part 2

      ABC News Videos
    • Kate Hudson Joins List of Celebs Crushing on Jeff Bridges

      Taryn Ryder
    • #2 of 10 Most Popular News Galleries of 2016: 9/11: Then and now - 15 years later

      Yahoo News Photo Staff
    • Astronomers have found the source of a deep space radio wave burst for the first time

      The Verge
    • Jose Menendez Achieves His American Dream: Part 1

      ABC News Videos
    • Sources: Cavs agree to deal for sharpshooter Kyle Korver

      Yahoo Sports US
    • Lyle and Erik Menendez's Cousin Who Testified About Their Sexual Abuse Speaks Out for 1st Time

      ABC News
    • Arrest of young black suspects in brutal Chicago attack sparks hate crime debate

      Yahoo News
    • #8 of 10 Most Popular News Galleries of 2016: Deadly attack at Istanbul's Ataturk Airport

      Yahoo News Photo Staff
    • Threatened bluefin tuna fetches $632,000 at Tokyo auction

      Mashable
    • Suspects Charged With Hate Crime in Chicago Torture Video

      ABC News Videos
    • Obama calls Facebook Live attack ‘despicable,’ but says he’s optimistic about race relations

      Yahoo News
    • Self-made millionaire: Forget skipping Starbucks. Here are 5 real ways to get rich

      CNBC
    • Inside the Emotional Memorial for Carrie Fisher: ‘Everyone Was Singing’

      People
    • #10 of 10 Most Popular News Galleries of 2016: Stunning images from the 2016 National Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year contest

      Yahoo News Photo Staff

    The Label That Designed Tiffany Trump’s New Year’s Eve Gown Would Be ‘Honored’ to Dress Melania Trump

    Kathy: Some of the vitriolic comments here are numbing...how can you people be so hateful toward a person you do not even know? Unbelievable, frightening and pathetic.

    Join the Conversation
    1 / 5

    314

    • Costa Rica on alert as volcano spits ash

      AFP
    • New Year Off to a Slippery and Frozen Start

      ABC News Videos
    • Obama: Going to Newtown was the ‘toughest day of my presidency’

      Yahoo News
    • U.S. spymaster says evidence on Russian hacking has only gotten stronger

      Yahoo News
    • ‘It’s going to be a tough fight’: GOP Texas lawmakers champion ‘bathroom bill’

      Yahoo News
    • Protesting the Dakota Access pipeline

      Yahoo News Photo Staff
    • Why It Pays to Be Vague When Negotiating Prices

      LiveScience.com
    • Donald Trump Puts US Intelligence Agencies in the Hot Seat

      ABC News Videos
    • Charles Manson Had Over 100 Infractions in Prison Before Recent Hospitalization: ‘Not a Model Prisoner’

      People
    • Sears is closing 150 stores — here's the full list

      Business Insider
    • See Inside President Obama's Hawaiian Vacation Home

      Good Morning America
    • Warplanes pound Aleppo – Dozens dead

      Yahoo News Photo Staff
    • France launches mass duck cull to stem bird flu spread

      AFP
    • Dangerous Escaped Prisoner Caught in Massachusetts

      ABC News Videos
    • Ryan: GOP to 'defund' Planned Parenthood in Obamacare repeal

      Associated Press
    • Father of Georgia K Rodrigo Blankenship says it's 'an injustice' son isn't on scholarship

      Dr. Saturday
    • Help
    • Privacy
    • Suggestions
    • About our Ads
    • Terms