![]() | ![]() |
Formats:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation © 2006 Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland Preserved skin structure of a recently found fifteenth-century mummy in Daejeon, Korea 1Department of Cosmetology, Hanseo University, Seosan, Republic of Korea 2Department of Anatomy, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea 3Department of Pathology, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea 4Department of Multi-Beauty Coordination, Daegu Mirae College, Gongju, Republic of Korea 5Gyeryongsan Natural History Museum, Gongju, Republic of Korea 6Department of Anatomy, Dankook University College of Medicine, Chonan, Republic of Korea 7Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea 8Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Hanyang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea 9Department of Hygiene, Seoul Health Junior College, Sungnam, Republic of Korea 10Department of Anatomy, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea Correspondence Dr Byung Soo Chang, Department of Cosmetology, Hanseo University, Seosan 356-706, Republic of Korea. T: +82 41 660 1584; E: Email: bschang/at/hanseo.ac.kr; Dr Dong Hoon Shin, Department of Anatomy, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Yongon-Dong 28, Seoul 110-799, Republic of Korea. T: +82 2 740 8203; F: +82 2 6230-9160; E: Email: drdoogi/at/snu.ac.kr Accepted January 24, 2006. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Recently published reports on Korea’s medieval mummies have been regarded as an invaluable source for studies into the physical characteristics of medieval Koreans. However, even though the mummified tissues have been investigated histologically on various previous occasions, there are many unanswered questions relating to their tissue preservation. The aim of this study was to obtain new data on the ultramicroscopic characteristics of the mummified skin of a fifteenth-century mummy found recently in Daejeon – one of the oldest ever found in Korea. Electron microscopy revealed that much of the epidermis had decayed; what remained of the dermis was filled with collagen fibres and melanin granules or invading bacterial spores present within the mummified epidermis. Considering the histological characteristics shared by naturally formed mummies in different parts of the world, we concluded that the ultramicroscopic patterns of the Daejeon mummy were more comparable with those naturally formed mummies than with artificially formed ones. This is the first full description of the morphological characteristics of the skin collected from this recently found medieval mummy from Daejeon, South Korea. Keywords: Daejeon, electron microscope, medieval, mummy Introduction Well-preserved medieval mummies have been found in several tombs from the Chosun Dynasty (1392–1910) (Shin et al. 2003a). Mummies have been found in the cities or counties of Gwangju (1968), Cheongwon (1977), Cheongyang (1982), Ulsan (1986), Paju (1995), Andong (1998), Okcheon (2000), Yangju (2001), Paju (2002), Buan (2004) and Daejeon (2004). In the earlier period of the Chosun Dynasty, tombs were constructed with large stone blocks; however, the practice of sealing tombs with a lime–soil mixture was subsequently adopted among the royal families of the dynasty because the neo-confucianist ruling elites were afraid that the excessively hard work involved in the more traditional construction methods would cause unrest among the people. The novel burial system in tombs with a lime–soil mixture barrier was thereafter adopted increasingly by the ruling elite, and has even influenced the funeral customs of modern Korea (Chung, 1994). The medieval mummies in Korea, the subject of the present study, were found exclusively in tombs with a lime–soil mixture barrier. As the burial system was adopted primarily by the ruling elite, one by-product has been that abundant grave goods have been found along with these medieval mummies, providing another invaluable source of information about medieval Korean society. Our previous report on the Yangju mummy (Shin et al. 2003b) described the use of light and electron microscopy to determine that the mummified skin was partially preserved. The corneal layer and the anucleated cells within it were thought to be preserved in the epidermis, while the dermis was filled with collagen fibres running in various different directions. However, although we were able to present the histological characteristics of Korean mummified skin for the first time, the description was not detailed enough for us to be able to compare medieval Korean mummies with those reported from other countries. When a fifteenth-century mummy was recently found in Daejeon we therefore thought it might reveal the preservation qualities of mummified skin in Korean mummies; although this was one of the oldest mummies ever found in Korea, the morphology of the mummified skin showed a much better preservation pattern than those of any other cases in Korea. The aim of this study was to present ultramicroscopic findings of the skin of the Daejeon mummy, in order to provide additional data on the histological characteristics of medieval Korean mummies. As our electron microscopic data yielded better images than those we had obtained previously, it seemed likely that we would be able to assess whether there were histological similarities between the mummified skin of medieval Korean mummies and that of other mummies previously reported from other countries. Materials and methods Skin sampling and electron microscopy Our study was performed in accordance with the Vermillion Accord on Human Remains, World Archaeological Congress, South Dakota, 1989. The skin samples used in this study (1 × 1 cm2) were collected from the skin covering the back muscle of the mummy. Sections were stained using the haematoxylin–eosin, Masson’s trichrome, Fontana-Masson, orcein and silver-staining methods for light microscopic observations (Sheehan & Hrapchak, 1980). Counter-staining with haematoxylin–eosin was also performed on silver-stained sections. A control section of normal adult skin was selected from the educational slides for medical students at Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was performed in accordance with previously described methods (Hayat, 1970; Bozzola & Russell, 1992). Hair samples were immersed in 2.5% paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde in neutral 0.1 m phosphate buffer for 1 h. Tissues were post-fixed for 1 h in 1% (w/v) osmic acid dissolved in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol and embedded in Epon812 (EMS, Fort Washington, PA, USA). Ultrathin sections were cut and mounted on nickel grids coated with Formvar film and viewed under a JEOL 100 CX-II TEM (Tokyo, Japan) after uranyl–lead counterstaining. To clean the surface of the skin, additional sonication treatment was performed on samples with an ultrasonic cleaner (Branson, 2510R-DTH, USA) for 10 min. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was also performed in accordance with previously reported methods (Hayat, 1970; Bozzola & Russell, 1992). Hair samples were prefixed by immersion in 4% paraformaldehyde/0.1% glutaraldehyde in neutral 0.1 m phosphate buffer, and post-fixed for 2 h in 1% (w/v) osmic acid dissolved in PBS. Samples were treated in a graded series of ethanol and isoamyl acetate, dried in a critical-point dryer (Hitachi SCP-II), gold coated using an ion coater (JFC-1100), and observed under a JSM-840A SEM. Electron dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) EDS was used to analyse materials making up the surface coat of the skin. After collecting surface-coating samples from the mummified skin, the surfaces of randomized particles and of pressed discs of the samples were scanned, and the elemental compositions were analysed using a scanning electron microscope equipped with an energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometer. Radiocarbon dating We performed radiocarbon dating to determine the exact age of the mummy (although we also tried to identify the mummy based on genealogical records). The samples acquired for carbon dating were 5.22 mg of mummy intestine. Accelerator mass spectroscopy (AMS) was performed to measure the amount of 14C in the sample. Graphite samples prepared from the reduction procedure were put to the Cs-sputtering ion source of the tandem-type electrostatic accelerator (Model 4130 Tandetron, High Voltage Engineering Europa) at the Inter-Universities Research Facility of Seoul National University, Korea. Results Profile This male mummy was found in Daejeon, Korea (Fig. 1A
General histology of the skin We examined the general structure of the mummified skin using light microscopy. The relative ratio of each skin layer was markedly different from that of normal skin tissue (Fig. 2A,B
We also suggest that the remaining structures in this layer may be collagen fibres, based on our previous study of the Yangju mummy, which showed the exclusive presence of collagen fibres within the dermis. This speculation is supported by additional histochemical staining specific for collagen or elastic fibres. As seen in Fig. 3(A–C)
The surface coating on the epidermis During SEM observation of the surface of the skin, we observed white substances on the surface of the epidermis (Fig. 4A
Ultramicroscopic findings of the epidermis and dermis On the surface of the skin, which was washed using a sonicator treatment, we observed the hair shaft holes using SEM (Fig. 6
Melanin granules in epidermis As we speculated that the black pigments in the mummified epidermis (Fig. 2C
Discussion As discussed in our previous study, the medieval mummies recently found in Korea were not intended to be preserved; in fact their descendants hoped that the bodies would disintegrate completely after interment. In addition, as the climate of Korea was not conducive to natural mummification (which is usually observed in dry or permafrost environments), the exact reasons why mummification had been able to take place Korea appeared to be a mystery (Shin et al. 2003b). During the Chosun Dynasty (1392–1920), the bodies of the dead were laid within double-layered wooden ‘inner coffins’ that were sealed by an external coffin made of a lime–soil mixture. As mummies were only found in cases where the lime–soil mixture barrier had not been broken until their discovery – making it possible that the inner space of the coffins was separated completely from the surrounding area – it is possible that the completely sealed inner environment provided conditions conducive for mummification. As yet, however, we have not been able to confirm whether or not the conditions inside the Korean coffins are similar to those where natural mummification has taken place (i.e. in dry or permafrost conditions), because in the Korean cases the mummification process seems to have resulted from the distinctive burial practices of medieval Korea, which are not directly comparable with situations in which mummification has occurred naturally. Previous histological studies on mummified skin have identified two different types of preserved structure, which seem to reflect differences in the mummification process (natural and artificial). In the case of skin samples collected from 2300- to 1600-year-old bodies preserved in the bogs of northern Germany, collagen bundles were observed profusely in the dermis, whereas the epidermis had almost disappeared. Under electron microscopy, the naturally mummified dermis of the bog bodies, in which no cellular elements were observed, also exhibited collagen fibrils with a typical periodicity (Stucker et al. 2001). A similar histological pattern was also observed in naturally formed 2500-year-old Altai mummies, in which collagen fibres were found to be a predominant protein (Romakov et al. 2002). Those reports might be taken to indicate that a dermis rich in collagen bundles but with a scarcity of cellular elements is characteristic of naturally mummified bodies. By contrast, much well-preserved structure has been observed in the skin of artificially embalmed Egyptian mummies. In the case of Egyptian mummies buried between 150 BCE and 90 CE (Perrin et al. 1994), even the epidermis – the skin layer which had completely disappeared in most of the naturally mummified cases – was reported to be sufficiently well preserved to show the subcellular structures of desmosomes or tonofilament bundles. The superior skin preservation of the Egyptian mummies was also evident in the dermis, where elastic fibres – which were not found in naturally mummified bodies – were found together with collagen fibres (Montes et al. 1985; Perrin et al. 1994). Another example of the well-preserved embalmed skin of Egyptian mummies was reported by Hino et al. (1982a,b). In an ultramicroscopic study of the skin of a female Egyptian mummy (embalmed between about 100 and 300 CE), subcellular structures such as mitochondria and desmosomes were observed in epidermal cells, while in the dermis, elastic fibres as well as collagen fibres were localized. Although the epidermis may not be in such a good state of preservation in all Egyptian mummies (Perrin et al. 1994), it is possible to make some generalizations about the skin histology of artificially embalmed mummies in Egypt: these mummies show preservation of the epidermis, the additional presence of elastic fibres in the dermis and various subcellular structures observed in the epidermal cells, all of which are different from those in naturally formed mummies. Although it remains unclear whether the better preservation of mummified skin in Egypt is correlated with embalming of the skin, it is undeniable that artificially formed mummies exhibited better preservation of skin histology than naturally formed mummies. In this regard, because medieval Korean mummification may have been induced by the combined effects of both natural and artificial mummification processes (Shin et al. 2003a), the current study on mummified skin in Korea may be useful for confirming which preservation pattern (natural or artificial) was responsible for the cases of mummification in Korea. For information regarding the characteristics of the mummified skin discussed here, we refer the reader to our earlier findings on the Yangju mummy (Shin et al. 2003a,b), in which we noted the relative thickness change in each skin layer, the good state of preservation of the collagen fibres in the dermis, and the very thin epidermis, with its paucity of cellular elements. However, as our previous reports on the histological characteristics of the mummified skin from Yangju could not provide sufficient data, the present ultramicroscopic study on the skin of a recently discovered Daejeon mummy was undertaken in the hope of providing good additional data on the state of preservation of the skin of Korean mummies. In this regard, as we observed a change in the relative ratio of the thickness of each mummified skin layer, including a marked decrease in the thickness of the epidermis (unlike the dermis, which maintained its thickness), the current ultramicroscopic data may support earlier findings concerning the skin of Korean mummies. In addition, because the existing structures in the dermis in the Daejeon mummies were mainly composed of well-preserved collagen fibres, as confirmed by silver or Orcein staining techniques (to eliminate the possibility of the presence of elastic or reticular fibres within the dermis), it is easy to demonstrate similarities in the histological findings between the Yangju and the Daejeon cases. However, electron microscopy indicated that the collagen fibres in the recently found Daejeon mummy were much better preserved than those in the Yangju case, even though the former is thought to have been buried earlier. In addition, the identification of melanin pigments in the mummified epidermis – not easily observed in the previous case, but here confirmed by Fontana-Masson staining – may be regarded as one of the unique findings of the present study. Although some of our findings were unique to the present case, overall we believe that our histological findings show more similarities with naturally formed mummies than with artificially embalmed ones: namely, the loss of epidermis, the fact that the dermis retained only collagen fibres, and the lack of any specific subcellular structure except for melanin granules within the mummified epidermis. Therefore, although the Korean mummies were formed through a very exceptional mummification process, which cannot strictly be classified as either ‘artificial’ or ‘natural’ based on comparison with the techniques used in other countries, the general pattern of preservation of the mummified skin in the medieval Korean mummy indicates that the mummification process was more natural than artificial. Finally, we should also comment on the white coating on the surface of the mummified skin, which was clearly visible to the naked eye. Using EDS to analyse the composition of surface materials on the mummified skin, calcium was found to be the most prominent material. As calcium is not commonly found in the soil around the tomb, we suggest that it may have come from the lime–soil barrier mixture, which included large quantities of calcium. Before the lime–soil mixture began the hardening process around the coffin, calcium may have infiltrated the inner space of the coffin, and then been included on the surface coat on the skin. It seems possible that the calcium-rich coating may have sealed the skin of the mummy from the air trapped inside the coffin, helping to preserve the mummified skin in the same way as the lime–soil barriers preserved the inner coffins. Conclusion In studies from other countries, light and electron microscopy have demonstrated that naturally mummified skin exhibits a typical histological pattern, with loss of the epidermis, and the dermis being filled with collagen fibres but with no cellular components. In the present study we observed that the preservation pattern of the mummified skin corresponded well to those of other cases of natural mummification from other countries, even though the medieval Korean mummies were formed by a unique process that could not easily be classified within the mummification processes previously reported. This is the first full description of the morphological characteristics of mummified skin collected from the recently found fifteenth-century mummy in Daejeon, Korea. Acknowledgments The investigations on the recently found mummy from Daejeon were superintended by the Research Team for Medieval Mummies in Daejeon, Korea University, and we are particularly grateful to them for their generous decision to supply the samples to our lab. The mummy is currently displayed in the Gyeryongsan Natural History Museum, Korea. We thank Mr Edward Fenton for his help with the English language version of the manuscript. This study was supported by Korea Research Foundation Grant (KRF-2003-I01485-E00006). References
|
PubMed related articles
Your browsing activity is empty. Activity recording is turned off. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Ann Anat. 2003 Jul; 185(4):377-82.
[Ann Anat. 2003]Forensic Sci Int. 2003 Nov 26; 137(2-3):172-82.
[Forensic Sci Int. 2003]Ann Anat. 2003 Jul; 185(4):377-82.
[Ann Anat. 2003]Forensic Sci Int. 2003 Nov 26; 137(2-3):172-82.
[Forensic Sci Int. 2003]Hautarzt. 2001 Apr; 52(4):316-21.
[Hautarzt. 2001]Vopr Med Khim. 2002 Jul-Aug; 48(4):357-60.
[Vopr Med Khim. 2002]Ann Dermatol Venereol. 1994; 121(6-7):470-5.
[Ann Dermatol Venereol. 1994]Histochemistry. 1985; 83(2):117-9.
[Histochemistry. 1985]J Cutan Pathol. 1982 Feb; 9(1):25-32.
[J Cutan Pathol. 1982]Ann Anat. 2003 Jul; 185(4):377-82.
[Ann Anat. 2003]Ann Anat. 2003 Jul; 185(4):377-82.
[Ann Anat. 2003]Forensic Sci Int. 2003 Nov 26; 137(2-3):172-82.
[Forensic Sci Int. 2003]