The film will be "The Mummy" from 1932, featuring Boris Karloff and Zita Johann and HORUS Patron, Prof Joann Fletcher, will complement the film with a talk about "The History of Mummy Horror".
The Kurashiki Museum of Natural History, which served as an intermediary between Enjuin and the university, is providing support for the project. Kuida likens the mermaid mummy to Amabie ...
After illuminating the mummies with laser-stimulated fluorescence, or L.S.F., an imaging tool that until now had never been applied to tattoos, scientists discovered lines 0.1 to 0.2 millimeters ...
The intricate details of tattoos inked more than 1200 years ago have been made visible by scanning South American mummies with lasers. The mummies, belonging to a pre-Hispanic people known as the ...
Now, modern technology is peeling back the layers of history - literally - by revealing ... The researchers examined around 100 mummies from coastal Peru’s Chancay culture – a civilisation ...
Archaeologists discovered more than a dozen mummies older than 2,000 years with ... so taking a peek inside the jaws of history is a stroke of luck. Painting your tongue gold doesn’t do much ...