How Did the Ancient Egyptians Preserve Bodies for Thousands of Years?

The ancient Egyptians used special techniques to keep bodies from decaying for thousands of years, like putting them inside a time capsule made of salt and cloth.

The Salt Bath

Imagine you’ve just taken a big, muddy bath, your body is wet, full of dirt, and might start to smell. That’s what the Egyptians did to the body: they put it in a salt bath. The salt acted like a super-dry towel, pulling all the moisture out of the body. Without water, bacteria can’t grow, so the body doesn’t rot.

Wrapping Like a Present

After the body was dry, the Egyptians wrapped it up tight, like how you wrap a present with gift paper and string. They used layers of cloth, sometimes even adding special oils to help keep everything soft and protected. It’s like giving the body a cozy blanket and a nice coat, all in one!

The Final Touch

Then they put the wrapped body into a strong box made of stone, called a sarcophagus. This was like putting the present inside a treasure chest, safe from any harm.

That’s how the Egyptians kept bodies looking just as good as the day they died, for thousands of years!

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Examples

  1. A child learns about how the ancient Egyptians dried out a body to keep it from decaying.
  2. Someone compares mummification to making a special kind of preserved snack for the afterlife.
  3. A student imagines being wrapped in cloth like a sandwich to stay fresh forever.

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