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"It would make it a very important mummy," Manassa said, by showing the practice of animal offerings was not just done at temples. Corcoran said the mummy could be much younger than 4,000 years old. She said the closest time parallel is a case at an Egyptian museum in which a baboon was mummified and wrapped in a bundle that was placed over the mummified and wrapped body of a woman separately more than 3,000 years ago. Beckett said the packets may turn out to be organs, which were taken out of the body, preserved and placed back in the mummy for use in the afterlife. "Wouldn't it be wonderful if it turned out to be a bird?" Beckett said. "It's just so rare that it would be that we would be surprised." Determining the cause of death will be difficult, but researchers might be able to offer a range of diseases from which the mummified woman may have suffered, Beckett said. Beckett said he does not believe the woman was royalty, saying her worn teeth suggest the diet of a commoner. The mummy has been in the Barnum Museum since the 1890s and was a prized exhibit of the flamboyant showman P.T. Barnum. Radiological tests done in 2006 indicated the remains may be those of a woman who was at least 18 years old and possibly 30 or older and showed evidence of arthritis in the pelvic area, which is common with women who have given birth. The earlier tests were not able to determine a cause of death, researchers said. "Every mummy has the secrets of what their life was like," said Gerald Conlogue, co-director of the Bioanthropology Research Institute. "I think we'll learn a lot more about her."
[Associated
Press;
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