Ancient cemetery in Egypt thought to contain over one million mummified
corpses.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
It is not
a mass grave, but it is both a very large cemetery and an extraordinary mummy
repository. The ancient site is Fag el-Gamous in Egypt, and the occupants were
not mummified on purpose. Researchers have been digging in the site for the
past three decades to unearth what they estimate to be more than one million
mummified bodies. They have a long way to go before the site is completely
excavated.
Fag
el-Gamous translates to mean “Way of the Water Buffalo,” a name that is derived
from a nearby roadway. Brigham Young University archaeologists have determined
that the many of the mummies at the site date to around the time of when the
Roman or Byzantine Empire occupied Egypt, perhaps anywhere from the first to
the seventh century A.D.
“We are
fairly certain we have over a million burials within this cemetery,” said
project director Kerry Muhlestein, associate professor in BYU’s Department of
Ancient Scripture. “It’s large, and it’s dense.”
Muhlestein
presented work accomplished under the project at the Society for the Study of
Egyptian Antiquities Scholars Colloquium held last month in Toronto. Muhlestein
indicated that the people buried at the site were not mummified the way ancient
Egyptian rulers were mummified. Rather, it was likely the region’s arid
conditions that led to the excellent preservation of the corpses.
“I don’t
think you would term what happens to these burials as true mummification,”
Muhlestein said. “If we want to use the term loosely, then they were
mummified.”
One
peculiarity found at the site is that there are clusters of bodies that have
similar hair colors. Blond-haired mummies were buried together, red-haired
mummies were buried together elsewhere, and so on. Muhlestein and colleagues
can only speculate as to why.
The
research team also found a mummy of a man who originally stood over seven feet
tall, which is considered an extreme rarity for the time period. To date, more
than 1,000 individual mummies have been excavated, and the archaeologists are
now faced with a huge publishing backlog.
Muhlestein
lamented, “We have a large publishing backlog; we’re trying to catch up on
making our colleagues and the public aware.”
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