• CT Scan reveals mummy hidden within Buddha statue

    From Khelair@VERT/TINFOIL to All on Monday, February 23, 2015 20:36:25
    Van Vilsteren doesn’t know for sure how Liuquan happened to become a mummy, but “in China, and also in Japan and Laos and Korea, there’s a tradition of self-mummification.”

    James Sullivan | @kingpiranha825| February 23, 2015


    An ancient Chinese statue of an iconic sitting Buddha holds a surprise beneath its gold painted exterior. Within the statue, scientists found 1,000 year old mummified remains of a Buddhist monk.

    The mummy may have once been a respected Buddhist monk, who after his death was revered as an enlightened being, according to Vincent van Vilsteren, a curator at the archaeology wing of Drents Museum in the Netherlands, where the statue was held for exhibit last year.

    For many years, those working to restore the statue suspected something, but it was only until late last year that archaeologists did scans and took tissue samples from the mummy.

    The unusual statue is currently on display at the Hungarian Natural History Museum of Budapest.

    The papier-mâché statue bears the approximate dimensions of a single, seated person, the remnants are then covered in a lacquer alongside a gold-based paint. The provenance, however, is somewhat obscure. Archaeologists believe that it was kept in a Southeastern China monastery over the last several centuries. It likely came to Europe at some time during the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s, when Chairman Mao called on Chinese citizens to destroy “bourgeois” cultural institutions in order to make way for the new order.

    By 1996, the statue was in the Netherlands, traded privately, when one of its owners hired someone to clean the gold-painted exterior of the statue. The statue’s restorer lifted the statue from a wooden platform, revealing two pillows covered in ancient Chinese inscriptions. Lifting the pillows, he found human remains. The text revealed the mummy to be Liuquan, a teacher who was revered in the years following his death.

    “He looked right into the bottom of this monk,” van Vilsteren told Live Science. “You can see part of the bones and tissue of his skin.”

    According to carbon dating, the mummy is believed to have lived some time in the 11th or 12th century. The carpet upon which the statue is seated is approximately 200 years older.

    Mummies of this sort are found quite often in Asia. A 200-year-old mummified monk was discovered recently in Mongolia, preserved in the lotus position for meditation.

    Van Vilsteren doesn’t know for sure how Liuquan happened to become a mummy, but “in China, and also in Japan and Laos and Korea, there’s a tradition of self-mummification,” he said.

    To do so, elderly Buddhist monks were known to gradually starve themselves to death – eliminating fat and liquid for a diet of primarily pine needles and resin, which was often used for processes of mummification. When they were approaching death, they were simply buried alive, equipped with only a breathing tube that let them meditate peacefully until their lives were over.

    “There are historical records of some aging monks who have done this practice,” van Vilsteren said. “But if this is also the case with this monk is not known.”

    http://www.sciencerecorder.com/news/ct-scan-reveals-mummy-hidden-within-buddha- statue/

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