![]() The face might be carefully modeled to look like the deceased. Sometimes plaster was smoothed over the face and body, to preserve the appearance of a human being even better. Individual fingers and toes were wrapped separately, and the whole body, when wrapped like this, kept the form of a human being. The first method of preservation was to wrap the body in as many layers of linen as possible. ![]() Two methods evolved to preserve bodies artificially: linen and plaster and natron. Unfortunately, while these burials were often perfectly safe, without the contact of hot sand to speed the drying process, the flesh rotted, leaving only skeletons.īecause the natural course of events in Egypt was for the body to be preserved and to remain recognizable after death, the decay of bodies which were carefully protected in fine tombs was unacceptable. To keep bodies safe, the Egyptians began, about five thousand, five hundred years ago, to bury some people in very large baskets, wooden boxes, or underground tombs with stone floors. The problem with burying bodies in the hot dry sand is that, although the body is safe from decay, it is not safe from animal scavengers, nor from thieves who might dig the body up to take jewellery or other grave goods. Bodies are less likely to be preserved if buried in fine tombs, than if left in the sand. There are far more skeletons, however, than mummies, in the tombs of the Age of the Pyramids. Most preserved bodies of Ancient Egyptians from the Age of the Pyramids are natural mummies. Knowing that it was natural for a body to be preserved, the Egyptians may have felt that it was unnatural for it to decay, and that there must be some important reason why bodies did not decay, but retained their hair and skin, and continued to be recognizable for many years after death. The Egyptians must have found many natural mummies over the centuries before the Age of the Pyramids. Without moisture, the bacteria which cause decay will not be able to survive, and the body will simply dry up – a natural mummy. These deserts are so dry that bodies placed into them will quickly lose all moisture. The dead were buried close to the villages of the living, in the higher, dry deserts that flanked the Nile. When the Ancient Egyptians buried their dead, they did not want the bodies to be washed away by the floods, nor did they want to use up valuable farm land for cemeteries. During each flood, however, all the fertile land was flooded, and property lines and low-lying structures were washed away. The dark rich soil deposited by the annual flood, the Inundation, enabled farmers to grow two crops a year. The Nile has allowed people to live in Egypt and develop a great civilization. ![]() The Sahara would stretch right across from near the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea if not for the Nile River.
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