Researchers scan King Tut's mummy in a study of 3,000-year-old mystery
By Antonio Castaneda Associated Press
LUXOR, Egypt - A team of researchers briefly removed King Tut's mummy from its tomb Wednesday and laid bare his bones for a CT scan that could solve an enduring mystery: Was it murder or natural causes that killed Egypt's boy pharaoh 3,000 years ago?
Tut's toes and fingers and an eerie outline of his face could be seen as the mummy, resting in a box to protect it, was placed inside the machine in a specially equipped van parked near his underground tomb in the famed Valley of the Kings.
The 1,700 images taken during the 15-minute computerized tomography scan could answer many of the mysteries that shroud King Tutankhamun's life and death -- including his royal lineage, his exact age at the time of his death -- now estimated at 17 -- and the reason he died.
A simpler X-ray done 36 years ago showed bone fragments inside the skull of Tut, said Zahi Hawass, Egypt's chief archaeologist. But that previous test wasn't sophisticated enough to determine if the bone fragments signified a blow to the head.
The CT scan, in contrast, will provide a far more detailed, three-dimensional view of the scattered bones and coverings that make up Tut's mummy.
CT imaging has been used for numerous Egyptian mummies in the past, including one of famed Pharaoh Ramses I.
Hawass, part of the 10-member team that conducted Wednesday's tests, said the results of the Tut scan will be announced later this month in Cairo.
``There are so many stories about his death and his age,'' Hawass said. ``Today we will determine what really happened.''
Archaeologists have long wondered if Tut was murdered. Hawass said one factor was that the conditions of his burial in the tomb seemed ``hurried.''
The short life of Tutankhamun has fascinated people since his tomb was discovered in 1922 by a British archaeologist, revealing a trove of fabulous treasures in gold and precious stones.
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