Cairo: Egypt will discover the secrets of a 3,000-year-old mummy, discovered in 1881 but not yet discovered.
According to the international website, the mystery of the remains of the mummy of Pharaoh and the first chosen one has been solved by the scientists after 3300 years. There was a veil.
Scientists say Pharaoh’s first mummy’s stomach is full of gold.
According to the RT, Amanathab I was the second ruler of the 18th Pharaoh dynasty in Egypt. He died in 1504 or 1506 BC, at which time he was hardly embalmed and saved.
All the distinctions of the royal family discovered in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have been examined.
Aman-e-Ahtab-e-Awal is the only Pharaoh whose mummy Egyptians never tried to open. It is said that the reason for not opening the mummy of Aman-e-Ahtab was not fear but the real reason was that her mummy was beautifully preserved and decorated with flowers.
The beautiful artificial face was adorned with a layer of precious stones.
Scientists at Cairo University worked with the help of 3DMRI to discover the secrets of the first-choice mummy. For the first time in history, he used a new method to explore the inner world of the dressed mummy.
Thanks to this method, scientists were able to discover the secret that Pharaoh Amanathab I was 35 years old.
It was 5 feet 7 inches long, and it was discovered that circumcision was practiced at that time. That was 3,000 years ago.
This is not the first time that an attempt has been made to solve the mystery of Aman-e-Ahtab. Earlier, his mummy was unveiled and his body was repaired and he was re-buried by the priests of the 21st century Was
Aman-e-Ahtab was buried at Deir al-Bahri in southern Egypt, where several other royal renovations, modified in 1881, were discovered.
Scientists at Cairo University have also researched and said that the amnesty sent to the first skull is still there, it was not taken out while embalming.
This is a unique event because most of the rulers of the modern Pharaonic state were sent out of their skulls during embalming, including Pharaohs such as Tutankhamun and Ramses II.