安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Mummy - Wikipedia
A mummy is a dead human or an animal whose soft tissues and organs have been preserved by either intentional or accidental exposure to chemicals, extreme cold, very low humidity, or lack of air, so that the recovered body does not decay further if kept in cool and dry conditions
- Mummy | Definition, History, Facts | Britannica
Throughout the Middle Ages, “mummy,” made by pounding mummified bodies, was a standard product of apothecary shops In course of time it was forgotten that the virtue of mummy lay in the bitumen, and spurious mummy was made from the bodies of felons and suicides
- Brendan Frasers The Mummy 4 Release Date Officially Moved Up
Brendan Fraser's return in The Mummy 4 is now coming to theaters sooner than expected as the long-awaited sequel shifts its release date
- Mummy History
A mummy is a person or animal whose body has been dried or otherwise preserved after death
- 10 Famous Mummies and the Secrets They Reveal
Each mummy is a frozen moment in time, a human presence that bridges centuries or millennia Here are ten famous mummies and the secrets they reveal—about their own lives and about the worlds they once inhabited
- Egyptian Mummies - Smithsonian Institution
The methods of embalming, or treating the dead body, that the ancient Egyptians used is called mummification Using special processes, the Egyptians removed all moisture from the body, leaving only a dried form that would not easily decay It was important in their religion to preserve the dead body in as life-like a manner as possible
- Egyptian mummy unearthed with literary text on abdomen in first . . . - CNN
Archaeologists working at the ancient city of Oxyrhynchus in Egypt have unearthed a mummy with a passage from Homer’s “Iliad” stuck to its abdomen, in a first-of-its-kind discovery
- Archaeologists Find Egyptian Mummy Buried With the ‘Iliad’
Archaeologists working in Egypt have discovered a remarkable combination of Homeric epic and Egyptian ritual: a 2,000-year-old mummy with a papyrus fragment of the “Iliad” sealed in a clay
|
|
|