Brought to you by the reinvented two thousand twelve camera. It's ready. Are you welcome to Stuff you Should Know? From House Stuff Works dot Com? Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, There's Charles W Chuck Bryant. We're about to do this stuff you should know saying, yeah, did you like that? I did? Are you doing? Man? Great? Now that I've switched out my foul smelling microphone cover? Yeah, this is actually take two things. I'm not getting near it,
but I can you really imagine? Yeah, something's future facted on the mike cover, the peak clipper cover. Yeah, weird. You know, in real studios they change you out every now and then. These things have been running for at least a year. Fifty cents? All right, what's your chuck your sterling intro? Speaking of fifty cents, do you remember
when we were talking about fossils. Oh, yeah, and we said that every once in a while, something happens so that a fossil naturally occurs um and that it's desiccated, the skin is dried out. That's a mummy. Yeah, who knew? I knew. Actually when we talked about that, I was like we have to do how mummies work. And here we are. I'm kind of surprised this one had slipped under the radar for so long, right up our Yeah, um,
I went and looked. I'm like, surely we do have it, and yeah, it's it's like stuff you should know died in the wool. Yeah yeah, um. And you're about to hear why dear listeners, because we're about to talk about all the things that happened to a corpse after death, which we've done before, but we need to go over again. Mummies are cool, though, they are very cool. So Chuck, let's say that you were stabbed in the stomach enough times so that you could not move any longer. You
couldn't walk back home. It was out in the woods, and the one person you're with, the very person who stabbed you, left you there to die. You bleed out. You're dead. Things start happening to your body, right, yeah, pretty quickly. Up first is autolysis. Yes, that is uh,
that's kind of gruesome. That's when your organs that have digestive enzymes actually say, well, this is what we do, so we're gonna start digesting the organs right and not like my stomach is eating itself because I'm hungry, Like, my stomach is actually eating itself. It's rupturing and oozing and it's it's it's being reduced to nothing. Um while that's going on. And then actually, I think if I remember correctly, that kind of helps kickstart the process of
puture faction. Right, yeah, autolysis starts within a few hours after you're dead. The body, the body knows. And if you want like a really um big overview of this or in depth look at what happens to the body immediately after death, you should listen to a Rigor Mortis podcast if you haven't already body farms. I talked about it in there too, So yes, intra faction, you're right, is followed by or follows autolysis. And that is when bacteria does its a little job and reduces everything to
a skeleton. And you know, depending where you are, it's gonna happen in a few months, right, depending on where you are. Now, We as human beings are a subtropical species, right, Chuck, You know that, sure? So we are designed, if you believe in that kind of thing, to decomposed, decomposed most readily in a warm humid climate. That's where the bacteria that breaks down our tissue lives or thrives moisture warmth. If you have cold, dry, things change a little bit.
Like a refrigerator exactly. Um, which is a good place to store body if you want to preserve it, or food if you want to eat it. It's a good point to your body if you want to eat it. For an in depth flick at that, you might want to listen to our cannibalism podcast though. That's right, Um, But let's say you don't have a refrigerator. Nature provides it, are you? On some occasions there's you'd see the ice man, right, yeah, see the ice man. Yeah, that's the ice man. Yeah,
and the Italian ounce. This dude is very well preserved natural mummy. It was amazing. Died and basically got buried in ice and kind of stayed that way. Yeah. I think they have the impression that he fell into a crevasse died, but it was during like a blizzard maybe and he was covered with snow and ice that stuck around for millennia. Um. But he's so well preserved. You can see the tattoos on this um skin and still yeah,
and well, and we knew. Hey, they tattooed people years ago exactly, little window into what life was like for ice Man. Yeah, he um he was. He had I think a nice little set of arrows and his bow and copper age European guy. I think he had a wallet sized photo of of you as well of me. Yeah, he was from the future. That's my that's what I think. You just blew my mind, Chuck good So ice as we talked about the fossils too, Um was a is a very good preservant. But nothing does it. Oh, Pete
Boggs too. You remember I finally took you that picture of tolin Man. About Pete again, if you have not gone and looked at tole Man, it's awesome, Like his whiskers are still there. And he lived a couple of thousand years ago. Right, what's his name? Did they name him just man? I would name him pet terrible. Um. So those two are pretty good. But the money, the natural money preservant is sand. Yeah, I had no idea.
The reason why sand is such a great preservative is because it actually wicks away and absorbs and just removes the um any type of humidity in the body, which allows the body to desiccate, which means that there is no place for bacteria to live, which means the tissues, the tissue remains intact. And that's all about a mummy,
is it's a it's a corpse with its tissue intact. Well, and this kind of kick started the whole mummification artificial mummification craze in Egypt because at first they buried bodies. They weren't in caskets, they were you know, buried in the hot sand, and that preserved the body for so long. They said, well, hey, if the body is preserved, then that means the spirits preserved. And this all of a sudden,
we have new views on the afterlife and life. Right, So what they decided to do and this was so what I guess what you've just said though, was that the mummification, the whole concept of mummies that we have and that was so ingrained in the Egyptian culture, happened by accident, right yeah. Um, so they started they figured this out, So they start purposefully burying people in the sand with the intent of them being mummified, right, Um. But the problem is somewhere along the way they began
to have horrible thoughts of their dead. Well, it's has choked with sand. So they started to say, maybe we should put some sort of barrier up in between the corpse and the sand. And that led to caskets, right, Yeah, started with just like a wicker covering. Than that eventually led to wooden boxes. Uh, but here's the rub. Now the body is not preserved. Now the body rots. Well, it's just a normal corpse. Now you put a barrier between the body and the preservant in the form of
a tomb. So what's the Egyptian to do then? Well, the Egyptians, being the very pious culture that they were, and the very um intuitive and smart culture that they were, you should for that, you should go read um did the Greeks get all their ideas from the Africans? Good article? Did you write them? Yeah? Did we do that, podcat man, let's do that, okay. Um. They they decided that they needed to rectify their um, their religious beliefs with their
um problem. They're they're need to preserve bodies. And what did they do, Well, they said, maybe we can replicate this natural process that we've discovered through man made artificial means. And yeah, it's kind of like it's called embombing Josh. And they actually figured out Chuck that like um, one of the one of the problems with the desiccation, the natural desiccation and the desert um was that the skin turned like this crisp brown, like you know, over baked chicken.
It's exactly what it looks like actually. And Um, with these embalming techniques that they eventually mastered, they could they could preserve a body better than it could be preserved naturally, which is man conquering nature, conquering death. Even well, uh, they didn't have a huge success at first. They they would embalm the bodies mainly to keep it away from the elements, wrap it in linen, soaked in resin, and they would create a nice little shape pola forums it
looked kind of like people. But that didn't really do a whole lot because the bandages didn't really halt the composition. They basically figured out that it happens from the inside out. It took him, It took him a few centuries of not millennia, basically wrapping it up and it's just disintegrating within the bandages at first, right, But those bandages are important because they stick around pretty much the whole time, same with the resin right. Yes, so those two very
early embalming techniques are mummification techniques. UM stuck around, but it was a big leap when they figured out, oh wait a minute is going on inside and so we need to start addressing that by removing organs. Right, And it's about here I think that we we hit the Middle Kingdom and like the the mummies that we think of were produced in the from the eighteenth to twentieth
dynasties of the Middle Kingdom. Yeah, that was when the like the heyday of mummification, right right, which was um between fifteen seventy and ten seventy five b C. The mummies that we think of, the ones that are still around like really well preserved today, they they were preserved during this time, right, right. So what do you do when when you realize that everything bad is happening to a corpse from the inside out? How do you how do you address that? Should we just walk through the
process one by one, the gruesome process? Yeah, okay, the first thing you do is you take it and it varies, you know, the different processes and within the processes, they had things that they would say, sort of like religious rights that they would go through as well. It's very sacred process. But they would take the body generally to the red Land desert region is not near a whole lot of people, so people aren't grossed out, but it
is near the Nile River. They needed the Nile River to well, we'll see that in a second step one. Step one. You need the Nile for step one. They think they did in an open tents obviously to get some good ventilation going. And uh, the first place they took the body was to the Ibou, the place of purification. Yeah, that was basically the Nile or the place where they place near the Nile where they rensed the body with you washed the body off. It's like a rebirth symbol
of rebirth. Right, so the the the corpse was hastened or some of the spirit was hastened in the afterlife, and we should probably stay here so it doesn't get too confusing. There were three spirits um that the Egyptians believed comprised a person, right, the ka, the ba, and the ak. Yeah, okay, it's always tricky to pronounce that, right, So I think um with this purification process the co or the or the bar or the ah, we're moved
along to the to the next world. But the ka that was the one that was um inextricably linked with the corpse, which became the whole reason for mummification. As long as the corps was preserved, the co was preserved and the afterlife could you know, the person could live in the afterlife. But once the corpse died, the co died and that second death was final, which is why they wanted to preserve bodies in the first place. Yeah, it's pretty cool. It's like the opposite of ashes to
ashes and dusted us. Right. So, after they've washed the body and sort of reborn it and the rivers of the nile, Uh, they carried the body to the per Kniffer and that is the house of mummification. And this is kind of where This is the basement of the Fisher house. Basically huh and six ft under the Fishers. Oh yeah, this is in the basement. This is where Rico and the gang would get to work. Um. They
would lay it on a wooden table. The body. Uh. They removed the brain by hammering a chisel through the bone of the nose, you know. I knew that already before this article. The Christian slater E's and like he's in like one of the creep shows or um Amazing Amazing stories or tales from the Crypto movie Pump up the volume. It might have been that, but I think it was like a smaller um vignette, like a mini movie within the larger movie. It's called like a Lot
number nine or whatever. And Leaning the Cube, I think it was. Now that's called Brotherhood of the Tiger now I think they Yeah. Anyway, they there's a mummy who's hell bent on taking other people's brains using these hooks or whatever. Well, and that's exactly what they do. They make a nose hole basically larger than the nostrils they in sort of big hook, iron hook and start scooping it out. Eventually they go down to a spoon and eventually they just rents out the remaining bits of brain.
And what's funny is so hold on they discard the brain because they thought, I don't know why we have this stuff in our head, but we probably don't need it in the afterlife, which is kind of unusual for the Egyptians because they preserved organs, you know, but the brain. And what's what's funny though, Like I think what we just kind of meander past that we should kind of um meditate on for a second, Chuck, is that they get to a point where they filled the head with water.
I imagine close the nose in the mouth and shake the head around to slash all this stuff out, and then lean the head over and let all the last bits come out. That's how I would do it. And I wonder if they did shots of that stuff as like part of the ceremony, I would draw the line there. Well, they probably just thought, I don't know, they didn't even know what the brain was. Yeah, that's true, that's just waste.
So the brains out, Josh. Then they take a blade made from obsidian sacred stone, cut a little incision on the left side and reach in and start pulling out the organs that they can get to and then preserving those, like you said, except for the kidneys, because they didn't think they were important either, which they were, you know, I mean, the kidneys are important, but it's not like brain important. Well, I mean, you need kidneys to live.
I'm sure they preserve the appendence you need, all of you that was probably the most holy of the organs. So they actually when they preserve these things, they would um, they would wrap them in uh in resin strip of linen. Right, Basically they would mummify each organ and then they put them in in canopic jars. Basically it was like here's your body, and then also here are your organs. They'd leave the heart though, because they thought the heart was
you know, linked to the soul and the spirit. And they're kind of on the money there, I think. So these organs take up space in our chest and abdominal cavities. Um, so they would actually um stuff the body with like
incense and other materials as well. Right, yeah, well, first they'd rent it once they like I forgot, they take out the lungs to the abdomen yeah right right there you can't get along little side slit, and then they would rent the chest cavity with palm wine and then they would stuff it actually basically straw what I didn't say, what actually just said other materials. How would you straw?
Maybe frankinsense, little mirror, Yeah, just to complete the trilogy, straw franken cent sin mur that that kept the body from like caving in on itself, basically containing a little bit of shape. And then here is the key. This is the key to momification. And as a matter of fact, I was just gonna say it now. I found it on the internet. There is a step by step, very
easy to follow recipe on UM. I think WICKI how which I don't normally go on, but it's the only place I can find a recipe for mommifying a chicken using the Egyptian method, and it calls for UM natron, right, Yeah, that's the key. Natron is this UM basically a compound that the Egyptians figured out they could gather and and and combine from the Nile, which is basically baking soda
sodium bicarbonate and um table salt sodium chloride. You mix the two together and it becomes this perfect person of it. So they would put nature in powder, which is like this just accelerated the technique of mommification like by light years UM and they would cover the body with this stuff and leave it and it would just completely dry the body out. Right. Yeah, this took about forty days.
They had to guard the body while this was going on, obviously, because they didn't want vultures digging through the natren for what lies beneath. After the forty days, they move the body then to the wabet, which is the house of purification. Yeah, and call that incense and the stuffing out, refill it with the nature in resin, soaked linen and other materials again whatever these mysterious things are. Then they would sew all the incisions up, cover the skin with resin, and
then say, hey, it's time to wrap this puppy. Yeah. And this is where we get the idea for the mummy, our modern idea of a mummy always wearing like they are always coming off. You can just see the eyes, maybe teeth or something. So this is where we're at there at the bandaging procedure that thirty five or forty days, while um the nature and powder was doing its work, working away all of the basically acting as the desk knt Um, the family of the deceased was going around
town going do you have any linens we can have forever? Uh? Do you have some linens we can have and cut you like your linen's to spend eternity in the heavens above with our dead. Um. They collected about four thousand square feet just top the top of my head. That's about how much. They gathered um of linen and would bring it to the embalmers, and the embalmers would say, hey,
we like this piece that pieces horrible. Um, you're really gonna bury your your dad in this, And they would take the best stuff and they would cut it into or they would tear him into strips three to eight inches wide a bandages, and they would start the rapping, which would take a little while, right, Yeah, it takes uh week or two, I guess probably depending on how big the body is. Common sense. Start with the hands and feet. You wrap all This is the initial under wrapping,
I guess. You wrap everything individually, each little finger, each will toe everything's wrapped. And then once everything is wrapped individually, they do a whole body wrap ah, applying new layers, coating the linen with again the hot resin to keep everything in place, uttering spell. Sometimes they would wrap amulets over different parts of the body, wrap it up in there with you, protect you in the next world, that kind of thing, right, and then pressto chango you are
a mummy. And before we go further the process we've just described this really ordinate, wonderful, lengthy process where you would think about it like there's so many There were a lot of Egyptians running around, and a lot of them died on any given day, and there was a lot of work to be done. So this process that we just described was for the people who had lots of money. For some reason, the wealthy have always been revered, right,
and I've also gotten special treatment, right right. Um, if you were just an ordinary schmoke like me or Chuck, you were going to get the budget package, which is basically like instead of like carefully removing all of the organs each one, they would inject oil like this oil mixture into your cavities. Let it sit for a few days. Um, it was to stop up all your orifices first leak out, thank you. So I don't know how they did that.
I guess with other materials that you right, So they would stop you up full of oil, let it, let you sit for a few days, and then unstop your orifices and let all the oil drain out and it would carry the liquefied organs and tissue out with it. It's a lot easier, a lot faster. So even this many thousands of years ago. You get what you pay for exactly. That's pretty sad. Yeah, it's always been a
budget package. Or maybe that's a good thing that it wasn't only just reserved, like if you don't have any money, you just can't get Mummified's the way to go. They thought, you know what, let's think of it a cheaper way to do this for you folks. Let's just fill you up with the oil, stop up your orifices, and give you a good shake. So um, you're you're prepared. You're
all wrapped. However, they got your organs out there out you're bandaged, um, and you're now about to be outfitted what's called a cartonage cage, which is kind of like a breastplate, um, some cool like forearm armor, leg armor, pretty much this thing that's gonna hold your body together for a while. And a funerary mask, which is like the famous masks we think of when we think of like King tut like it's a death mask. And these were extremely important because they directed the spirit the car
to the right body your words. So it was in a person's visage or possibly that of a god, but the spirit would be in on you know what to look for. They would know that. That's how they knew. This guy is supposed to supposed to either look like Josh or Anubis. Either way, I think that's him right away there, so let's grab him. And speaking of Anubis, you would be committed to your tomb uh following a funeral procession where you were carried in your sue right,
which that's what you think of with King Tutt. That's the casket that looks like a person, like the gold casket in the shape of a human. Let's a suet um that would be carried to your tomb, and there would be a priest dressed as the jackal god Anubis. Um there were there was the ceremony of the mouth, which is pretty cool because there was some sort of weird understanding. I guess that Um, you had died and now certain things had to be stored, and the ceremony
of the mouth was um. This um passing over of sacred objects to like the across the suet's face. The caskets face UM. And it would restore your five senses because you need that exactly so you're placed. And this is weird, Chuck, did you find this odd? That your casket was placed leaned up against the wall. Yeah, it almost like I would do that while I was getting
everything ready, and then I would lay it down. So it almost made me think that they kind of forgot and they say, oh, well, we left that first one leaning against the wall, so I guess that's the way we do it. But that's not true. I'm sure they had a very good reason, probably because it was easier
to just walk up right out of there. Well, yeah, I would think they wanted to leave it upright, but standing it upright they didn't have, like the perfectly level floor probably wasn't too secure, so they just gave it a little lean, sure, little help, which is far less secure than just laying it down on the floor. Yeah. Um, following that, you are your furniture. Don't forget your canopic
jar of organs late next to you little food maybe? Sure? Um, your furniture, Um, basically the stuff you're gonna need in the next life to be comfortable, and your set. Your tomb is sealed up, and it's probably inscribed with something along the lines of as for anybody who shall enter this tomb in his impurity, I shall wring his neck as a bird's there's a standard um mummy curse. Yeah,
a mummy curse on the tomb. Yeah. People became in the nineteen twenties Howard Carter dug up King Tut's tomb and people were just crazy for mummies at the time. Westerners are like, oh my gosh, this is so interesting. This cursed thing is so neat. Uh. Laurel and Hardy are doing mummy curse movies and uh. A microbiologist from Germany name Guitard Cramer or Cramer Uh. He said there may be something to this cursed thing because they bury
people of food produce his mold spores. So when they unearthed this tomb, all these mold sports are released into the air and it might kill you. So it's not that there's something to the curse, but it could lead people to tie the two together. Unearthed tomb, then you die. Certainly, there's something weird about the Carter expedition who Um unearthed King Tut's tomb in two because eleven of the people who were involved, not necessarily present, but involved, UM died
within seven years. I think eleven people in a canary his canary died like UM right right when they entered the tomb and Copra ate it. That's bad luck, it is, and then it just went downhill from there. Um. So there's all sorts of explanations, but it's also um oddly intriguing and like you said, egypt Mania gripped the West.
Oh yeah, they loved it all right, um. And there was actually unraveling parties where people would get their hands on mummies and then like unbandage them, see what's in there, which is like, that's not what you do with a dead body. Yeah, it's bad luck too. So that pretty much is the Egyptian mummy, and that's what we mainly think of. But they weren't the first people to do this kind of thing in the in the interesting yeah,
they the first. The oldest mummies actually on the planet are from northern Chile, the Chinchorro people Cinchero, let's go to Cinchorro. Uh this they started doing this about two thousand years before the Egyptians. But they were not very much like uh, the Egyptians. They basically dismembered and disemboweled the body, put it back together again, sewed it up, and then covered it with black mud. Well they put it back together with like straw and sticks, and that's
what they had. It was like they made qupy dolls out of like these bodies, basically covered it with black mud and shaped it into a human form. Uh. But they believe that this wasn't necessarily done to preserve the
body for the afterlife. Maybe it was more for the people left on the planet Earth to mourn the death of their loved one keep them around a little longer, which is very sweet because they saw evidence of like retouching of the paint, signs of wear and tear, so that you know, basically they were kept in the households for a little while. They think basically as statutes, freaky freaky statues. And that was five thousand BC, which is two thousand years before the Egyptians came onto the scene
at all. It's right, um, And the would you say the Chinchorro people. I think I went with Chinchorro, but someone will point that out if I'm wrong. Um, They're not the only ones in South America who got into modification either. The Incas very famously did as well. They had a little habit of sacrificing children to the gods. Um,
and they cultural relativism chucked. They would um through this process like the child and the child's family were just treated like like royalty before this, like it was a high honor to be chosen to be sacrificed to the gods. Um. And they would get the child really wasted on this fermented corn concoction, take the child up to the cave.
Sometimes I think they would whack the kid over the head, or other times they would get the child so wasted that um, they just would leave them there in the cold temperatures, exposed to the freezing temperatures, and the child would die of exposure. I can't see jerks about this, you can, um. But the there's a very famous mummy called the Maiden, who is a fifteen year old girl and she was sacrificed as thanks to the gods for a really good corn harvest by the Incas in Peru
five dred years ago. Did you see that picture I sent you. It's like looking at a girl who's sleeping, but she's been dead for five hundred years, like you you if you've been to South America as I know you have, or Central America, like she looks just like one of those girls you might see down there like Central American indigenous person. She's probably short. Then she looks kind of shorty. That'd be funny. She's like six too.
But then moving on up, there's also one and it didn't make it into this article, but chuck, I've been there myself. Wanna want to. Mexico has a mummy museum and they have the world's smallest mummy. I think it might have been a fetus, but they were all naturally mummified um to the great surprise of the nineteenth century townspeople who had to move a graveyard and found like, okay, there's a lot of mummies. How big it was very small object uh coffee cup, coffee cup, standard coffee cups.
But then there's like people. They were still wearing their suits and it's it's really amazing. You walk into this little Mexican building and there's just dead people everywhere, just behind this glass. It's very neat. If you ever go to Wanna want to Mexico, you have to go to the mummy museum. I think I should. Yeah. Lady Chang China, Chinese were they were lousy with mummies. Yeah, they loved
the mummify people. She was an aristocrat from about two thousand years ago, and she is believed to be about the best preserved ancient mummy so far. Did you see her picture? Yeah, so their tongue sticking up pretty well mummified and her hair still. Yeah, she was. They haven't studied her a whole lot, the Chinese haven't, so they don't know exactly how she was prepared, but they do think that mercury and the embalming fluid might have something to do with it. Yeah, then I would imagine that
will do mercury, Yeah sure. And um also in China, mummies have kind of rewritten history a little bit. UM, some very very ancient mummies from UM one thousand BC before one thousand BC, UM, they found some people of
Indo Iranian descent. You know, they linked them to Um like basically Mesopotamia through tattoos and like other implements that they had in the shape of their face, the way they looked, and they figured out like, wait a minute, these people were like Indo European traders, what are they doing here? And they just made their way to settle right in in the deserts of China before the Han dynasty ever showed up. So that kind of changed things
a little bit. I'm sure. Uh, if we talk about mummies, we got to talk about the more modern day mummies because of the big interest in mummification thanks to tut being found was the big one. That's right around the time Lenin died in Russia and they said, you know what, let's preserve Lenin and disclaiming the Kremlin. So that's exactly what they did. And we do not know exactly how
because it's an ancient Russian secret. I don't know about ancient, but it's a Russian secret, and they it's ongoing because they continue to him in a preservative bath every now and then, and he's wears a waterproof suit. That's right. And if you've ever seen pictures of Linen or av parone, did they look pretty lifelike. But hers was hers is way cool. They basically replaced all the fluids in her body with wax, right, which would be a very modern
take on the ancient practice. There's also um incorruptible corpses of the Catholic faith. It's basically a person who is so pure on earth that they their body just didn't didn't rot. And there's example those there's one. He's like a prince. He's like a child prince. I think he died in like he died more than a thousand years ago or about a thousand years ago, um, and his his body is totally preserved and there's no evidence that
he was embalmed or anything like that. They don't understand that there are some bodies out there that just the five logic that I wrote an article and you should read it. It's a miracle. How can a courts be incorruptible? We need to keep in track of these awesome ideas.
Where where's our person? Where's our boy Charlie or no, our boy Friday Charlie uh and then Josh, finally we have In the nineteen seventies, some scientists discovered something called plasticization, and that is when all of the water and lipids in the body cells replaced with polymers and you basically become like plastic, very flexible and durable. You don't decompose,
and you don't stink too bad. And that is used to preserve bodies, mainly for anatomical research at this point, or for bodies world or bodies the exhibit I have have you've been no, I've never been but that's how they do it. It It is really something. I mean, you're right there up on this corpse missing its skin and like it is a dead person, um and it's really interesting. There's one the one that I went to in Atlanta.
It's two eyeballs and they're connected to the spinal cord which is going down and then the coming off the spinal cord are the major nerves of the central nervous system. And that's it. And it's just laid out perfectly, really kind of surprising. I'm shocked that I haven't been to that yet. It's pretty cool. It's definitely worth going to. I did the dialogue in the Dark thing. I have not been there. That's next door. That was that kid. You know. I was a little disappointed. Yeah, not in
the exhibit itself, but the way the way they do it. Uh. I think it could have been like really awesome, but the way they do it, it wasn't as awesome as it could have been. Just gonna take you. Me and her sister went and she said they would have liked it. Put there was this very loud, drunk woman who kept like falling into people. What they wanted to know? You can do about that near the dark weather, you could just like kick her in the shin and run away.
We should mention Bob a Dr Bob Bryer real quick though. He is a Egyptologist who or said, you know what, I want to try and replicate the Egyptian technique. And he did it, Yeah, with the chicken, and he did it was pretty successful at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. And one of the things he learned from doing this that the uh, the way the body ends up looking as a result of the mummification process, not the fact that it's been in the ground for thousands
and thousands, like the shriveled, wrinkled look. Yeah. Yeah, so that's one thing I learned. That's a big thing to learn, though, I mean, think about it. That's Egyptology hasn't really advanced much in the last fifty years. And it not that I know is I never Aldo didn't find squat, No, he didn't know that wasn't he Aldo her Aldo looked for um components. I watched that one. That was fun. I was a youngster and I was so excited and yeah,
but it's so disappointed when it was just a total disaster. Yeah, well it's it for mummies, right, chucky anymore? I'm I'm are you mummied out? All right? Um? If you want to learn more about mummies, check out m you m M I E s in the handy search bar, How stuff works dot com. You can learn how to mummify a chicken on wiki how and um what else? I think there might be a website for the mummies of wanna want to? That's I think g U A n A j u A t oh. Maybe sounds good at me,
does it? You know? I think Matt and Rachel from Cool Stuff in the Planet did a thing on the Egyptian Mummy or not Egyptian Mummy Museum? Want to want to Mummy Museum? Yes, Cool Stuff on the Planet check out that is definitely worth watching as well. It's worth watching anyway. And I said handy search bar somewhere in there, which means I guess time for listener mail. Uh hi, Chuck and Josh and Jerry. My name is Maddie. I'm
twelve years old. I love your podcast. I wait all day at school to get home so I can check for new podcasts. They always help me fall asleep, but not because you're boring, but because it gets my brain thinking and the brain gets tired, that's cool. Uh was wondering if you give a shout out to my best bud, Casey. Casey has a tumor in his leg and is in a wheelchair. He tells me he is very miserable, but at least he gets to listen to me talk about
you guys. And fun fact, he also has a pet rooster named Louis, and Lewis is house strained, so he just runs around the house. That is awesome house strain chicken. So please give Louis, I'm sorry Casey a shout and Lewis. While it make him feel better, it would make his day or even his year. And tell me which podcast you're gonna put it on, because I am just twelve and some of them are inappropriate. Oh was this inappropriate? I don't know. Probably not this shaking the brain part out.
We'll figure it out, Okay, I'll tell him to just listen to the listener mail and let his parents listen to the And also a suggestion the infamous story of that French queen who said let the meat cake. I don't remember her name's marine that with Kristen Dunns. And remember I do not have Facebook, so please answer me by emails, she says. And then she is a d D or t T it's d D. And then her signature is potato in a mushroom for Maggie. I don't even know what that means. All the kids are saying
these days. All right, potato in a mushroom? Everybody, you said, Maggie, it's Maddie, right, Maddie. Okay, Maddie, thanks for the email. Maddie. Did we give a shout out to Lewis and Casey Well o, Casey, We hope you're feeling better, but I'm sorry to hear about that, and hope you're up and around before you know it. Take care, Lewis. Yes, if you're an egyptologist and you have some good mummy stories, we want to hear it. You know what, if you have any good mummy story, we want to hear it.
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