Experts hope to unravel mystery of 163 child corpses preserved for 200 years
06.01.2022 - 03:01
/ dailyrecord.co.uk
Scientists are hoping to solve the mystery of 163 mummified child corpses "superbly" preserved in a network of Italian catacombs.
The bodies are contained in a "child chapel" in northern Sicily with the children believed to have died between 1787 and 1880 - however, their identities and cause of death remain unknown.
Many look as though they are asleep.
The remains are located in the Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, which also house the mummified bodies and skeletons of more over 1,000 adults, the Mirror reports.
Now, a British-led team are hoping to find out more about the children's fate.
The two year study will involve 41 of the bodies being X-rayed, with researchers looking to finally uncover how they came to perish.
Dr Kirsty Squires, of Staffordshire University, told The Guardian that fieldwork would begin this month.
Dr Dario Piombino-Mascali, who is working on the project, said that some of the children are "superbly preserved" and look like "tiny little dolls".
He said: "Some really look like sleeping children.
"They are darkened by the time but some of them have got even fake eyes so they seem to be looking at you."
Dr Piombino-Mascali added it was "upsetting" to deal with children in anthropology, stating: "Of course you want to do something to preserve them and to make sure their stories are told and give a sense that they are children. "
Experts will take a portable X-ray unit and take hundreds of images of the children.
It is hoped the findings could reveal more about the children's health and identity, and explain why they were mummified.
Dr Squires previously said: “The Capuchin Catacombs comprise one of the most important collections of mummies in the world.
"However, there is very little documentary evidence