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Archaeologists used cutting-edge technology to reveal intricate tattoos on a 2,000-year-old Siberian “ice mummy.” The skin, ...
Researchers reconstructed a roughly 2,000-year-old woman’s tattoos, from prowling tigers to a fantastical griffinlike creature.
Using near-infrared imaging, researchers uncovered extraordinary hand-poked designs of tigers, griffins and tiny roosters on ...
Interestingly, the study’s authors noted that the mummy’s right forearm tattoos were more technically proficient and detailed ...
New imaging technology has allowed scientists to decipher the tattoos of an Iron Age mummy—and study them like never before.
As in modern times, tattooing in ancient Siberia was an art that required formal training and artistic sensibilities, ...
Archaeologists have used cutting edge techniques to reveal new information about the intricate tattoos of a woman that lived ...
Tattoos are rare in the archaeological record, because skin rarely survives the centuries. But in the permafrost of the Altai ...
THE intricate tattoos of a 2,500-year-old Siberian “ice mummy” have finally been revealed through high-tech imaging. The ...
Caspari and his colleagues turned to cutting-edge infrared photography to image in three dimensions the tattoos on the arms ...
The Mummy cost $62 million, with Universal reportedly spending $15 million on special effects alone. CGI was still relatively new in cinema, with Vosloo having "no idea what to expect" as an actor.