Even for a forensic expert it's a tough case. Three children die in Egypt around the time of Christ ... about 1870, their mummified bodies are stored in the British Museum ... now, after 2000 years, give or take a century, people are seriously looking for answers.
Who were these kids and how did they die? How old were they? Were they suffering from disease? Were they related? And were they Egyptians, Greeks or Romans?
It sounds like a job for a "forensic Egyptologist", which is how Janet Davey describes herself.
Ms Davey and a team of colleagues from the
Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine
are using modern medical and forensic techniques, including CT scans and DNA testing, to answer the questions. The mummified bodies of the boy and two girls, nicknamed "the angelic one", the "cross one" and the "sad one", had been in the British Museum since the 1870s.
Apart from being identified as coming from the "Graeco-Roman" period (332BC to 395AD) and being X-rayed in the 1960s, they were left alone...
She then suggested the three mummies as a research study for the Melbourne Mummy Project...