Egyptian mummy may have died ‘screaming from agony,’ researchers say

For roughly 3,500 years, the remains of an ancient Egyptian woman have preserved what may have been her final expression before death: an anguished shriek.

The mummy, known as the “Screaming Woman,” has been the subject of intense curiosity since it was first discovered in 1935. Her mouth hangs wide open with her mostly-intact top teeth bared, as if she were howling in pain. Her sunken eyes and black, leather-like skin add to her startling appearance.

While the woman’s identity has been lost to time, researchers from Egypt are trying to learn as much as possible from her remains — and they believe they’ve cracked the case of her unsettling facial expression.

Sahar Saleem, a radiology professor from Cairo University, and study co-author Samia El-Merghani, of the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, performed a “virtual dissection” of the mummy using CT scans. The results of their research were published Friday in the journal Frontiers in Medicine.

They believe that the Screaming Woman’s face is contorted that way because of a rare form of rigor mortis called cadaveric spasm, which can freeze a person’s body in their final action just before death.“It occurs after severe physical or emotional activity, leading to immediate postmortem rigor as the contracted muscles become rigid immediately following death and are unable to relax,” the study reads.

If it’s true that the woman’s expression is a result of cadaveric spasm, this indicates that she “died screaming from agony or pain,” the study says. Embalmers may have mummified the woman’s body before rigor mortis could dissipate, forever preserving her final scream.

The researchers concede that the cadaveric spasm is not fully understood. The phenomenon is mostly observed in forensic pathology and only impacts one group of muscles, not the whole body.

Not all scholars are convinced by this theory. The study notes that other academics have hypothesized that the putrefaction process or the compressive force of the wrappings used in embalming could have affected her facial features. Or perhaps her embalmers neglected to close her mouth before the mummification process.The researchers find the latter argument to be unlikely though, due to clues left behind in the woman’s burial chamber. There’s evidence that the woman’s embalmers used expensive, imported ingredients to prepare her body for burial, including juniper oil and frankincense resin. Plus, she was buried with fine jewelry — two scarab beetle rings made of gold, silver and jasper — and embalmers affixed to her head a luxurious, long haired-wig made from date palm fibres.

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