A special examination recently occurred in the Meander
Medical Center. A nearly 1,000 year old mummy received a CT scan and had
samples taken with an endoscope. Several hospital employees helped with this
unique project in their free time.
The leader of this study is the Amersfoort resident Erik
Bruijn, an expert in the field of Buddhist art and culture and guest curator at
the World Museum in Rotterdam. Gastrointestinal and liver doctor Reinoud
Vermeijden and radiologist Ben Heggelman received the Chinese mummy at the
hospital for internal examination on September 3rd. The mummy was part of the
Mummies exhibition earlier this year and dates from the 11th or 12th century.
The mummy is the mummified body of the Buddhist master
Liuquan, who belonged to the Chinese Meditation School. The discovery of the
mummy is of great cultural significance. It is not only the only one of its
kind, but also the only Chinese Buddhist mummy that is available for scientific
research in the West.With an endoscope made specially available by Surgical
Technologies in Didam, Vermeijden took samples of a yet unidentified material
and examined the thoracic and abdominal cavities. He made a spectacular
discovery – among all kinds of rotten material in the space where there had one
been organs, he found paper scraps that are printedwith ancient Chinese
characters. Heggelman took a CT scan that beautifully shows how the mummy looks
inside and took samples of bone material for DNA testing.
The research will be published in the monograph that will
appear on Master Liuquan. The mummy has since been taken to Hungary where it
will be on display at the National Museum of Natural History in Budapest until
May 2015.
Source: nltimes.nl | Via: EWAO