Ancient Egyptian mummies smell "spicy" and "sweet", study finds
Ancient Egyptian mummies smell "spicy" and "sweet", study finds

Researchers find nine mummies they examined all smelled "woody", "spicy" and "sweet".

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/39143995
The authors of the academic study, published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society on Thursday, had to get the smell from inside the sarcophagus without interfering with the mummy inside.
The researchers, from UCL and the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, did so by inserting a tiny tube so they were able measure the scent without taking any physical samples.
If you want to smell the smell too
They say recreating the composition of the smells chemically will allow others to experience a mummy's whiff - and help to tell when the bodies inside may be starting to rot.
"We want to share the experience we had smelling the mummified bodies, so we're reconstructing the smell to be presented in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo," Cecilia Bembibre, one of the researchers, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.