From Napoleon Bonaparte to classic horror movie buffs, people love mummies.
And whatâs not to love? Mummies provide a human link to our past that is more than just fossilized bones. Thanks to a variety of ancient preservation techniques, mummies still have skin and bits of hair even though virtually all of their contemporaries have turned to dust over the ensuing millennia
As such, mummies are imbued with a sense of humanity that a simple skeleton does not possess.
Thanks to modern reconstruction techniques that would make them proud on the sound studios of CSI, McGillâs trio of Egyptian mummies are even more lifelike.
Last year, using skeletal data from CT scans and radiocarbon analyses, Victoria Lywood, a forensic artist from John Abbott College, was able to reconstruct the faces of the mummies. The results show a young man and a young woman, as well as a white-haired matron, as they all might have appeared before their deaths.
While perhaps not as daunting a process as building a pyramid, working with mummies is a challenge.
âIt is easier reconstructing the faces of regular people even if it is a lost person or the remains of an unknown person,â said Lywood, who has also worked with law enforcement personnel. âMummies have been dehydrated, coated in resin and wrapped in bandages. Over time, it all just kind of melds together.â
Working with CT scans of the Redpath mummies that were taken at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, physical anthropologists were able to strip the virtual skulls down to the bone.
Those files were then used in tandem with a special 3D printer that actually created a life-size replica of each mummyâs skull. âItâs like a really powerful ink jet printer,â said Lywood. âSeeing the skull [get âprintedâ] is like watching the phoenix rise.â
Once a skull was mounted, Lywood began to apply the tissue. But how much and where? Using ultrasonic assessments of facial soft tissue thickness in adult Egyptians taken from a recent study, Lywood was able to specific landmarks on each skull. Photographing each skull, she then turned them into two-dimensional drawings. These would serve as Lywoodâs blueprints.
âWith mummies thereâs no way to tell how heavy they were when they were alive because there are no live Egyptians from that period of time who we can use for comparisons,â said Lywood. âSo we used this study to try to hit the average.â
Once I start applying the clay to the skull then you lose all [the landmarks],â said Lywood. âI need that blueprint so that I can still go back to it.â
Going muscle by muscle, Lywood sculpted each face, taking into account qualities like thickened brow ridges, where the eyelid would have attached on the eye socket and whether missing cartilage in the  temporomandibular joint meant a mummy would have an overbite. Once that was done, she applied the skin.
Hair required more detective work. Did the male mummy have a beard, as seen on male figures that adorn many caskets from the same era. Further study of the original CT scan revealed no remnants of facial hair. As a result, the male mummy is clean-shaven.
An old report said that when the male mummy had been unwrapped in the early 1900s, he had abundant brown hair, though very little of it remains today. But the scans revealed the hair that remained was curly and so, today, he has a thick head of curly locks.
Similarly, the female mummiesâ hairstyles were based partially on what the CT scans revealed and partially on the styles that were in fashion for women of the day.
Once the busts were finished, they had to pass Lywoodâs final test.
âWhen I finish [a facial recreation] I like to sit with them around me,â she said. âIt may sound weird but I do that for a week or so and that way I get to look at them from different angles to see if I have got it right. When they start looking back at me it means that I know theyâre done.â
Reproduced with the kind permission of the .