It sounds like the
something from the script of a Hollywood action adventure. But the 'mystery of the
moving mummy' - which has seen an Egyptian statue mysteriously
start to spin round in a display case - has spooked museum bosses. The 10-inch tall relic, an
offering to the Egyptian God Osiris, was found in a mummy's tomb and has been
at the Manchester Museum for 80 years. But in recent weeks, curators have been
left scratching their heads after they kept finding it facing the wrong way.
They now believe there could be a 'spiritual explanation' for the turning
statue. It is believed that there is a curse of the pharaohs which strikes
anyone who dares to take relics from a pyramid tomb.
Experts decided to monitor
the room on time-lapse video and were astonished to see it clearly show the
statuette spinning 180 degrees - with nobody going near it. The statue of a man named
Neb-Senu is seen to remain still at night but slowly rotate round during the
day. Now scientists are trying to explain the phenomenon, with TV physicist
Brian Cox among the experts being consulted. Scientists who explored the
Egyptian tombs in the 1920s were popularly believed to be struck by a 'curse of
the Pharaohs'. Now Campbell Price, a curator at the museum on Oxford
Road, said he believes there may be a spiritual explanation to the spinning
statue.
Video after the cut.............
Egyptologist Mr Price, 29,
said: 'I noticed one day that it had turned around. 'I thought it was strange
because it is in a case and I am the only one who has a key. 'I put it back but then the
next day it had moved again. 'We set up a time-lapse
video and, although the naked eye can't see it, you can clearly see it rotate
on the film. 'The statuette is something that used to go in the tomb along
with the mummy. 'Mourners would lay offerings at its feet. The hieroglyphics on
the back ask for 'bread, beer and beef'. 'In Ancient Egypt they believed that
if the mummy is destroyed then the statuette can act as an alternative vessel
for the spirit. 'Maybe that is what is causing the movement.'
Other experts have a more
rational explanation - suggesting that the vibrations caused by the footsteps
of passing visitors makes the statuette turn. That's the theory favoured
by Professor Cox - but Campbell said he was not convinced. 'Brian thinks it's
differential friction,' he said. 'Where two surfaces, the serpentine stone
of the statuette and glass shelf it is on, cause a subtle vibration which is
making the statuette turn. But it has been on those surfaces since we have had
it and it has never moved before. And why would it go around in a perfect
circle?' Campbell is urging members of the public to come along and take a look
for themselves. 'It would be great if someone could solve the mystery,' he
added.
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