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Who's That Lying in My Coffin? An Imposter Exposed by 14C Dating

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2016

Karin Sowada*
Affiliation:
Department of Ancient History, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Geraldine E Jacobsen
Affiliation:
Institute for Environmental Research, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, NSW, Australia.
Fiona Bertuch
Affiliation:
Institute for Environmental Research, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, NSW, Australia.
Tim Palmer
Affiliation:
Institute for Materials Engineering, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, NSW, Australia.
Andrew Jenkinson
Affiliation:
Institute for Environmental Research, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, NSW, Australia.
*
Corresponding author. Email: ksowada@zeta.org.au.
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Abstract

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In the 19th and early 20th centuries, many museums acquired Egyptian coffins containing mummies from private donors who bought them from dealers in Egypt. Owing to the unknown context of such acquisitions, it cannot be assumed that the mummified individual inside the coffin is the same person named on it. Radiocarbon dating is a key diagnostic test, within the framework of a multidisciplinary study, to help resolve this question. The dating of an adult mummy in the Nicholson Museum at the University of Sydney was therefore checked using 14C dating. For over 150 yr, mummy NM R28.2 was identified as Padiashaikhet as per his coffin, dated to the 25th Dynasty, about 725–700 BC. 14C results from samples of linen wrappings revealed that the mummy was an unknown individual from the Roman period, cal AD 68–129. The mummification technique can now be understood within its correct historical context.

Type
Archaeology
Copyright
Copyright © The American Journal of Science 

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