For thousands of years, peoples around the world practiced mummification as a way of preserving and honoring their dead. Mummies reveals how scientists are using modern technology to glean stunning details about them and their cultures.
Egyptian mummies were prepared using a detailed process that included removing many of the internal organs, desiccating the body in a drying salt, and wrapping the preserved body in linen before placing it in a wooden coffin, like this one. The painted coffin (#30023) below, and the mummy that was inside it, are both featured in Mummies.
Grave robbing was a problem in ancient Egypt, but coffins made of limestone made the grave more difficult to open.
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While most people couldn’t afford one, wealthier Egyptians sometimes paid for the added security. The fragment below is from a limestone coffin, also called a sarcophagus, that would have held a wooden coffin and, inside that, a mummy. The full sarcophagus would have weighed several thousand pounds.
Visit Mummies Revealed to learn about the noninvasive technologies used in modern research.
Mummies are inextricably linked in our imagination with ancient Egypt, and not without reason. Mummification was practiced for thousands of years in Egypt and was long considered a key step in a person’s journey to the afterlife.
This is a bulleted list style. Egyptian mummies were prepared using a detailed process.
The process included:
Sub-bullet style. Removing many of the internal organs
Desiccating the body in a drying salt
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The Process
In the 1200s
Mummies are inextricably linked in our imagination with ancient Egypt, and not without reason. Mummification was practiced for thousands of years in Egypt and was long considered a key step in a person’s journey to the afterlife.
Another sublevel
Mummies are inextricably linked in our imagination with ancient Egypt, and not without reason. Mummification was practiced for thousands of years in Egypt and was long considered a key step in a person’s journey to the afterlife.
Mummies are inextricably linked in our imagination with ancient Egypt
Mummies are inextricably linked in our imagination with ancient Egypt, and not without reason. Mummification was practiced for thousands of years in Egypt and was long considered a key step in a person’s journey to the afterlife.
While most people couldn’t afford one, wealthier Egyptians sometimes paid for the added security. The fragment below is from a limestone coffin, also called a sarcophagus, that would have held a wooden coffin and, inside that, a mummy.
This is a numbered list style. Egyptian mummies were prepared using a detailed process.
The process included:
Sub-bullet style. Removing many of the internal organs
Desiccating the body in a drying salt
Frequently asked questions.
Non-motorized wheelchairs are available for visitors to use at no cost, on a first-come, first-served basis. You can find them in three places: at the Membership Desk directly inside the Rose Center/81st Street entrance; at the main entrance on Central Park West; and in the parking garage. Visitors borrowing a wheelchair must present a photo ID and provide a telephone number.
The American Museum of Natural History is committed to ensuring that its facilities, exhibitions, and services are accessible to all individuals, including those with disabilities.
All of the Museum's exhibitions are accessible by wheelchair, and all public floors of the Museum can be reached by elevator. Public elevators near the Central Park West and 77th Street entrances and those in the Rose Center are equipped with Braille signage and give auditory signals.
All theaters include wheelchair locations and companion seats. The LeFrak Theater also is equipped with chairs that have swing-out armrests for those wishing to sit in a theater seat.
All food service areas are accessible by wheelchair, with no steps, turnstiles, or other potential obstructions.
Service animals are welcome to visit the Museum. Please note: To protect our live butterflies, visitors with service animals must answer a few simple questions before entry to the Butterfly Conservatory is permitted.
Wheelchair Availability
Non-motorized wheelchairs are available for visitors to use at no cost, on a first-come, first-served basis. You can find them in three places: at the Membership Desk directly inside the 81st Street/Rose Center entrance, at the main entrance on Central Park West (upstairs), and in the parking garage. Visitors borrowing a wheelchair must present a photo ID and provide a telephone number.
Accessible Entrances
81st Street/Rose Center for Earth and Space: Enter the Rose Center at 81st Street between Central Park West and Columbus Ave.
Parking garage: Located at 56 West 81st Street, adjacent to the Rose Center entrance
The American Museum of Natural History is committed to ensuring that its facilities, exhibitions, and services are accessible to all individuals, including those with disabilities.
All of the Museum's exhibitions are accessible by wheelchair, and all public floors of the Museum can be reached by elevator. Public elevators near the Central Park West and 77th Street entrances and those in the Rose Center are equipped with Braille signage and give auditory signals.
All theaters include wheelchair locations and companion seats. The LeFrak Theater also is equipped with chairs that have swing-out armrests for those wishing to sit in a theater seat.
All food service areas are accessible by wheelchair, with no steps, turnstiles, or other potential obstructions.
Service animals are welcome to visit the Museum. Please note: To protect our live butterflies, visitors with service animals must answer a few simple questions before entry to the Butterfly Conservatory is permitted.
Wheelchair Availability
Non-motorized wheelchairs are available for visitors to use at no cost, on a first-come, first-served basis. You can find them in three places: at the Membership Desk directly inside the 81st Street/Rose Center entrance, at the main entrance on Central Park West (upstairs), and in the parking garage. Visitors borrowing a wheelchair must present a photo ID and provide a telephone number.
Accessible Entrances
81st Street/Rose Center for Earth and Space: Enter the Rose Center at 81st Street between Central Park West and Columbus Ave.
Parking garage: Located at 56 West 81st Street, adjacent to the Rose Center entrance
The American Museum of Natural History is committed to ensuring that its facilities, exhibitions, and services are accessible to all individuals, including those with disabilities.
All of the Museum's exhibitions are accessible by wheelchair, and all public floors of the Museum can be reached by elevator. Public elevators near the Central Park West and 77th Street entrances and those in the Rose Center are equipped with Braille signage and give auditory signals.
All theaters include wheelchair locations and companion seats. The LeFrak Theater also is equipped with chairs that have swing-out armrests for those wishing to sit in a theater seat.
All food service areas are accessible by wheelchair, with no steps, turnstiles, or other potential obstructions.
Service animals are welcome to visit the Museum. Please note: To protect our live butterflies, visitors with service animals must answer a few simple questions before entry to the Butterfly Conservatory is permitted.
Wheelchair Availability
Non-motorized wheelchairs are available for visitors to use at no cost, on a first-come, first-served basis. You can find them in three places: at the Membership Desk directly inside the 81st Street/Rose Center entrance, at the main entrance on Central Park West (upstairs), and in the parking garage. Visitors borrowing a wheelchair must present a photo ID and provide a telephone number.
Accessible Entrances
81st Street/Rose Center for Earth and Space: Enter the Rose Center at 81st Street between Central Park West and Columbus Ave.
Parking garage: Located at 56 West 81st Street, adjacent to the Rose Center entrance
The American Museum of Natural History is committed to ensuring that its facilities, exhibitions, and services are accessible to all individuals, including those with disabilities.
All of the Museum's exhibitions are accessible by wheelchair, and all public floors of the Museum can be reached by elevator. Public elevators near the Central Park West and 77th Street entrances and those in the Rose Center are equipped with Braille signage and give auditory signals.
All theaters include wheelchair locations and companion seats. The LeFrak Theater also is equipped with chairs that have swing-out armrests for those wishing to sit in a theater seat.
All food service areas are accessible by wheelchair, with no steps, turnstiles, or other potential obstructions.
Service animals are welcome to visit the Museum. Please note: To protect our live butterflies, visitors with service animals must answer a few simple questions before entry to the Butterfly Conservatory is permitted.
Wheelchair Availability
Non-motorized wheelchairs are available for visitors to use at no cost, on a first-come, first-served basis. You can find them in three places: at the Membership Desk directly inside the 81st Street/Rose Center entrance, at the main entrance on Central Park West (upstairs), and in the parking garage. Visitors borrowing a wheelchair must present a photo ID and provide a telephone number.
Accessible Entrances
81st Street/Rose Center for Earth and Space: Enter the Rose Center at 81st Street between Central Park West and Columbus Ave.
Parking garage: Located at 56 West 81st Street, adjacent to the Rose Center entrance
For information regarding admission pricing, special exhibitions, parking, and more, please see the Visitor Information section of our site.