Scientists found something strange inside an ancient
Buddha sculpture the mummified remains of a monk. The statue was subjected to
CT scans in December 2014 at Meander Medical Center in Amsterdam.
Researchers determined that the monk went through self-mummification, a process that involves being buried alive inside of a chamber while meditating. "The object is a rarity," Wilfried Rosendahl, head of the German-Mummy-Project at the Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen in Mannheim, Germany, said via email. Nothing like it has been studied in Europe before, he said.
The CT scans revealed that the mummy was a man, between
30 to 50 years, who was mummified and probably kept in a monastery for 200
years before he was covered by paper and enamel to make a statue. Rosendahl and
a team of researchers determined that the mummy dates back to around the year
900 to 1,000. The statue was originally discovered in China and can currently
be seen at the Natural History Museum in Budapest.