Volume 58 / Number 2
2016
Spotlight On: Mummies Beyond the Grave
On The Cover: Archaeologist Johan Reinhard examines a mummy found on the summit of Llullaillaco.

Vol. 58 / No. 2
Museum News – Spring 2016
New Acquisitions The American Section gratefully received 15 Pre-Columbian ceramic objects from the North Coast and Sierra of Peru, which […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
Member News: Meet Our Members: Ed and Pay Coyle GED05
New Galleries of the Ancient Middle East Previewed On June 2, members of the Expedition Circle and Loren Eiseley Society […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Moritz Jansen
In the Labs – Spring 2016: Archaeometallurgy at the Penn Museum: Then and Now
Archaeometallurgy is the scientific investigation of the technology and provenance of ancient metals. The study of the production, processing, and […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Paul Mitchell
Tangled Afterlives: How an Egyptian Papyrus Became the Mormon Book of Abraham
After 2,000 years of repose, 11 mummified human corpses and a few scrolls of papyrus entombed at Thebes became entangled […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Anna N. Dhody
The Curious Case of Mrs. Ellenbogen: Saponification and Deceit in 19th-Century Philadelphia
Old and probably ugly, with a nut-cracker profile. That is how Joseph McFarland, M.D., referred to the Soap Lady, one […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Page Selinsky
The Marvels of Body Worlds: Modern Mummies and the Exhibition of Human Anatomy
The Body Worlds exhibitions of plastinated human bodies and anatomical specimens by German anatomist Gunther von Hagens are in many […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Page Selinsky and Paul Mitchell
Journeys of the Mummy Scientist: An Exclusive Interview with Dr. Ronald G. Beckett
Doctor Ronald Beckett is a pioneer in using minimally invasive imaging techniques, particularly endoscopy (examining the inside of the body […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Frank W. Clements and with captions and photography by Shayne Dahl
The Buddhas of Mount Yudono: Sacred Self-Mummification in Northern Japan
A skeletal figure draped in brightly colored robes is not what one usually pictures when asked to describe a Buddha, […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Victor H. Mair
Ancient Mummies of the Tarim Basin: Discovering Early Inhabitants of Eastern Central Asia
The mummies of Eastern Central Asia (hereafter ECA) first entered my consciousness in the summer of 1988. I had heard […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Sabine Eisenbeiss
Preserved in Peat: Decoding Bog Bodies from Lower Saxony, Germany
Bog bodies—human corpses naturally mummified in the cool, acidic, and low-oxygen environments of peat bogs—have been found in Lower Saxony, […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: M. Vidale, L. Bondioli, D.W. Frayer, M. Gallinaro and A. Vanzetti
Ötzi the Iceman: Examining New Evidence from the Famous Copper Age Mummy
The Iceman mummy, nicknamed Ötzi, was discovered in 1991 amidst sheets of melting ice on the Tisenjoch pass of the […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Johan Reinhard
Frozen Mummies of the Andes: Human Sacrifices in the Sacred Landscape of the Inca
The Incas are renowned for massive carved stone structures, the construction of thousands of miles of roads, and the establishment […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Janet Monge
Mummies Beyond the Grave: An Introduction to Mummy Studies around the World
Over 20 years ago, I got hooked on mummies. It began when we first x-rayed the many South and North […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Julian Siggers
Accessible to All: From the Director
We want the Penn Museum to be accessible to all visitors. This is a priority of our mission—after all, the […]
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Vol. 58 / No. 2
By: Jane Hickman and Page Selinsky
Mummies: Unraveling History’s Mysteries: From the Editor
To many school children and their families, the Penn Museum is known as the “Mummy Museum.” Although visitors are fascinated […]
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