Tuesday 6 January 2015

This Girl Was Frozen In Sleep 500 Years Back, This is More Than Shocking

The mummy rests frozen in sleep at the High Country Archaeological Museum in Salta, Argentina. 
Scroll down for her pictures!


This is a mummy of an Inca girl who sits frozen since 500 years in a museum in Argentina.
This is a mummy of an Inca girl who sits frozen since 500 years in a museum in Argentina.

Archaeologists carry the 500-year-old mummies of three Inca children down Argentina's Llullaillaco volcano in 1999.
They were  wrapped in layers of plastic, snow, and foam insulation to keep them cold and maintain their exquisite preservation.
Archaeologists carry the 500-year-old mummies of three Inca children down Argentina's Llullaillaco volcano in 1999. They were wrapped in layers of plastic, snow, and foam insulation to keep them cold and maintain their exquisite preservation.

She and other two children were left on top of this mountain to die in the  cold as offerings to the gods said Archaeologist who found the mummified remains.
She and other two children were left on top of this mountain to die in the cold as offerings to the gods said Archaeologist who found the mummified remains.
She is also called  La Doncella or The Maiden.
She is also called La Doncella or The Maiden.

She was found dressed in a ceremonial dress and decorated  with a headpiece as a token of her sacrifice to heaven
She was found dressed in a ceremonial dress and decorated with a headpiece as a token of her sacrifice to heaven
The girl was made to drink corn liquor to put her to sleep and her mouth still held fragments of coca leaves, which the Inca chewed to reduce the effects of altitude sickness
The girl was made to drink corn liquor to put her to sleep and her mouth still held fragments of coca leaves, which the Inca chewed to reduce the effects of altitude sickness

The museum is displaying the mummy in a refrigerated, low-oxygen environment to reproduce the high-altitude conditions for it's natural preservation while the other two children remain for further study.
The museum is displaying the mummy in a refrigerated, low-oxygen environment to reproduce the high-altitude conditions for it's natural preservation while the other two children remain for further study.
"The Best Preserved Mummy" called by National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Johan Reinhard.

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