To read this fascinating article by Andrew Trounson, University of Melbourne, and see some equally fascinating videos, click on the link or image below:
Modern technology and research has restored an ancient Egyptian woman, Meritamun, creating a unique teaching tool for medicine and health science

What a fantastic trip to the past and as well into the science of re-construction. Thanks for sharing. I was fascinated.
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😀
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Amazing! Thanks for sharing. @sheilamgood at Cow Pasture Chronicles
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My pleasure Sheila 😀
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This is super-cool (the NZ involvement in the reconstruction project especially so). Even though the reconstruction is an approximation, it’s amazing to realise we can see the faces of these people anew – and, really, they were just like us… with all the issues in their lives of any large and complex human society.
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Reblogged this on Kate McClelland.
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I love this type of thing — combining technologies to bring the past to life. There was a History Channel program that did this with Abraham Lincoln. The reconstruction was totally digital, though, and they animated it. He smiled and blinked. It was kind of creepy.
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Now THAT WOULD be creepy Annette 😳😱
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Cool…
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This led me to many other sites of historical and cultural interest that turned a two minute 3AM email check into 45 minutes of fascinating stuff. I should have just grabbed the chocolate and jumped back to sleep and not turned on the computer.
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LOLOL – But at least you enjoyed yourself Carl 😀
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Fascinating! Thanks for finding this and sharing.
xx,
mgh
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Welcome Madelyn 😀
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Cool!
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😀
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Reblogged this on Die Erste Eslarner Zeitung – Aus und über Eslarn, sowie die bayerisch-tschechische Region!.
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