Ethics and Practice in the Excavation, Examination, Analysis, and Preservation of Historical Mummified Human Remains

Bibliographic Information

Article Title

Ethics and Practice in the Excavation, Examination, Analysis, and Preservation of Historical Mummified Human Remains

Journal Title

Historical Archaeology

Author(s)

Mytum, Harold

Year of Publication

2021

Volume Number

55

Article Pages

96-109

Web Address (URL)

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41636-021-00286-4

Additional Information

Available Through

Springer Link

Language

English

Notes

European perspectives on the study of human remains, particularly mummified individuals with associated material culture, highlight the multidisciplinary research potential of these rare discoveries. The diverse evidence associated with mummified remains offers unique potential to consider how the deceased was experienced over time. Scientific analyses reveal the complex taphonomic processes leading to the selective survival of tissue and cultural items. Medical approaches to mummies have been long established, but historical examples can combine cultural and historical sources with the palaeopathological to develop more nuanced understandings of disease and lifestyle, identifying both individual biographies and wider cultural trends in mortuary practice. Study of mummies raises ethical considerations similar to those for skeletonized remains, but given the greater recognition of their humanity, further social and religious considerations are relevant. Investigation needs to be set against the local legislation and the feelings of the mummies’ gatekeepers and, in some cases, their descendant communities.

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