Did You Know?: May 2019

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Is This What King Tut Really Looked Like?

King Tut
King Tut


King Tutankhamun - King Tut - was born in 1341 BC during the New Empire Period and died in 1323 BC (in that era, the years go backward).  He was born with some physical deformities that hindered his ability to walk as he got older, forcing him to use a cane or be seated at most functions. He reigned as Pharaoh for about ten years and died when he was 17. 

His tomb laid relatively undisturbed for over 3,000 years until 1922 when British archaeologist Howard Carter discovered it while on a funded expedition. To his surprise, the tomb was almost completely intact.  

Inside the tomb, Carter found many expensive artifacts and treasures had been entombed with King Tut, meant for him to enjoy in his afterlife, as per the custom.  

When we think of King Tut, we picture the mask image as seen in the above picture. For years, scientists and archaeologists have wondered what the boy king really looked like because artistic renderings were very different from each other, with no two being the same.  

What King Tut looked like physically was directly related to his lifestyle and the massive amount of inbreeding that was acceptable between first and second generational family members.  His whole life, he suffered from illnesses that scientists believe were directly related to inbreeding.

Tut's Parentage
Akhenaten, Tut's father, married a woman who, for centuries, was believed to be Tut's mother.  But findings from a DNA study say that it isn't true and that Tut's mother was likely one of Akhenaten's long line of consorts, five of whom were his own sisters.  Her real name is not known. She is referred to as "The Younger Ladyin Egyptian documents.


Tut's Wife's Parentage
A 2010 study revealed the parentage of King Tut's wife, Ankhesenpaaten. Her father was Tut's own father and her mother was one of his consorts named Nefertiti. This means that King Tut married his half-sister. 

When she married King Tut, she changed her name to Ankhesenamun. They had two daughters, but both died in infancy.

Controversy has long surrounded King Tut's cause of death.  Egyptian experts claim King Tut was aware that he was surrounded by bad actors among his advisors, and that he always had to be on guard for assassination attempts.  Since Tut had no heirs waiting in the wings, the family line would come to an end with his death, and any number of advisors thought they could step into the job.

Not so fast.  For King Tut's wife to keep the queenly status she had become accustomed to as the wife of Pharaoh, her only option was to marry again. Then that man could take over as Pharaoh, which is exactly what happened.

In 2008, scientists studied the DNA of Tut's mummy to learn more about Tut's life, health, and possibly shed more light on his cause of death. 

The scientists discovered that, for a young man, he had quite a few health problems, and they felt that some of them may have contributed to his death.  


Tut was about 5 foot 6 inches tall, which is considered average height for a young teen who was probably still in his growing phase. However, his growth could have been stunted by reoccurring malaria which he suffered with for most of his life. Malaria would have also hindered his immune system's ability to heal from infections and broken bones. 

In 2011, another study revealed that Tut was most likely physically challenged so that he had to walk with a cane when he was able to walk.  

Tut had Kohler's Disease which is a fragile bone disorder that causes infections to heal slowly. Comfort comes with avoiding weight-bearing activities which probably accounts for why there are so many images of Tut in a seated position, whether he was practicing archery, attending festivals and military campaigns, supervising the building of temples and his tomb.  

At the time of his death, King Tut had a broken thighbone and was in the throes of a bout of malaria.  Scientists say there was evidence he had a club foot, a trait that is typical of inbreeding between first and second generation family members. 


The 2011 study revealed that one of Tut's daughter was born prematurely at around six months of pregnancy. The other daughter was full-term pregnancy but she had scoliosis like her father, as well as spina bifida and Sprengel's deformity.



King Tut, what he looked like, according to a 2011 Study
Scientists say this is what King Tut looked like


 Nefertiti and her husband the Pharaoh Akhenaten were known for the religious revolution in Egypt, worshipping just one god named Aten, who was a sun disc. 


A bust of Nefertiti, who is believed to be King Tut's mother in law, his wife's mother
Bust of Nefertiti


Based on the sculpture, Nefertiti was considered beautiful with her defined facial features. With 3D imaging technology, experts were able to determine what they think Nefertiti may have looked like.

Artist rendering of what Nefertiti looked like
This is what scientists say
Nefertiti looked like in life


First, the mummy’s face was scanned, then paleoartist Elisabeth Daynes took about 500 hours to recreate the face on the bust.   This project seems to prove that “The Younger Lady” was indeed Nefertiti. Upon its release, the image caused much controversy over the supposed color of Nefertiti’s skin.

So what do you think? Your comments are welcomed.


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Dentures in the 18th Century

1792 advertisement for human front teeth
A dentist's advertisement for real human teeth


The above advertisement from 1792 may seem funny to some of our readers, but it was a reality for dentists who had no other option but to advertise for human teeth so they could make dentures for their wealthy patients.  

Upper-class British aristocrats had terrible teeth due to their overconsumption of sugar and sugary foods, liquor, and wines - all of which rotted and discolored their teeth.  They tried to whiten their teeth but the procedure ended up destroying the enamel. They needed dentures, preferred to have human teeth, and were willing to pay high prices because human teeth were in very short supply.   

Grave robbers jumped at the chance to make some money and used pliers to yank out the teeth of any dead soldier as long as the teeth were in good condition to sell them. 

Once the dentist bought the teeth, they would be boiled, the ends chopped off, and shaved down to shape them to fit in with the other teeth on the dentures.

According to a June 2015 BBC article, dentists would acquire the live human teeth, fasten them with rivets onto ivory dentures, then file them to make them uniform.  


This next picture shows teeth that were taken from dead Waterloo soldiers and strung up on piano wire to be offered for sale. By 1832, human teeth or "Waterloo teeth" were starting to phase out because of advancements in dentistry.


Dentures were made from teeth of dead soldiers at Waterloo
Dentures used to be made from real teeth of soldiers who died at Waterloo

An ivory denture with human teeth could cost over £100.   

1800s dentistry of dentures held together by springs
In early days of dentistry, dentures were held together with springs


But there were a few rural dentists and jewelers who still advertised as late as 1851 for human teeth. 

At the time of the Battle of Waterloo, says the BDA Museum's Rachel Bairsto, anyone could call themselves a dentist and give you medical advice about your teeth. You might even go to a jeweler to get your dentures adjusted.


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Divorce Vending Machine

Divorce vending machine
An idea that was far ahead of its time

Oldest Monks In The United Kingdom

In the 1880s, in Somerset, United Kingdom, a group of archaeologists unearthed the ruins of a cemetery attached to Beckery Chapel, which was a medieval monastery from the Middle Ages.  Since its finding, the cemetery has been hailed as the oldest monk cemetery in the UK. 


The Cemetery at Beckery Chapel
The dig site at Beckery Chapel
 



About two hundred years later, during an excavation in the 1960s, archaeologists found around 60 bodies in the ruins. Only one was a woman, which supports the claim that this was indeed a monastic cemetery. 




To properly date the skeletons, they knew they would have to wait for technology to advance a little more, so the age of the remains was guestimated.  


In 2016, the remains were finally carbon dated and they were from medieval times around 406 AD to 544 AD. 

Archaeologists had expected the graveyard to be as old as the chapel but further excavation showed that the chapel was far older than the skeletons and much older than the dates that had been in place since the 1880s. 



The finding of the monk skeletons made them among the oldest monks in the United Kingdom. The graveyard also showed signs that the monastery was in use for quite some time. 



From the 7th to the 9th centuries, the public was allowed to be buried in the cemetery. Then at the end of the 9th century, the Vikings overran Somerset making Beckery Chapel unusable.  This explains why there were no more monks after 544 AD.



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History of Oleomargarine

For those of you who are too young to remember when oleomargarine made its first appearance in your house, this one is for you!  Perhaps you recognize "margarine" but not the "oleo" part. Oleomargarine is artificial butter. It is made from the yellow, tasteless and odorless oil that is obtained from beef suet. Oleomargarine was shortened to "margarine" shortly after it became available in the United States in 1851.


Stork Margarine Advertisement
1930's advertisement said margarine was nourishing
but there was little truth to that.


In 1869, Napoleon III sponsored a contest where he asked French citizens to invent or create an affordable butter substitute that was less perishable than real butter. He had a good reason.  France was going through a butter shortage and Napoleon III wanted a cheaper but buttery tasting product to feed French troops and a product that lower classes would be able to afford.  





British ad for margarine
1940's British advert for Margarine


Hippolyte  Mege-Mouries, a French chemist, won the contest.  He was well-known to Napoleon III. He was working at la Ferme Impériale de la Faisanderie, which was Napoleon III's private farm in Vincennes near Paris.  Formerly he worked as a pharmacist for royal supported Hotel Dieu Hospital in Paris where he was published in medical journals, most notably, his findings of experiments that reduced the side effects of a syphilis medication. 


Mege-Mouries was no stranger to obtaining patents. He held patents for effervescent tablets, for techniques in papermaking, for sugar refining, and for the tanning of leather using egg yolks.  


He had been experimenting with margaric acid, a new fatty acid discovered in 1813 by Michel Eugene Chevreul, his former teacher. 

He mixed processed beef tallow with skimmed milk and created his product which he called "oleomargarine."  As requested, it was less perishable than butter and far cheaper. 
The oil is placed in churns, with one-fifth of its weight of sour milk and churned until an emulsion is formed, a red-orange dye is added to give it the right color. It is then cooled and salted like common butter. It is estimated four thousand tons (eight million pounds) have been consumed in this country in 2018. 



I Can't Believe It's Not Butter
Taste so much like butter
that you can't tell the difference!
Mege-Mouries received a prize for winning the contest and he used it to open his own manufacturing company outside of Paris.  However, there were no more shortages of butter and butter manufacturers were back to enjoying high sales of their product which was exported to England and other countries. Mege-Mouries felt his sales suffered because butter exports eliminated the need for people to buy oleomargarine. 

In 1951, the W.E. Dennison Company received U.S. Patent 2,553,513 for a method to place a capsule of yellow dye inside a plastic package of margarine. After purchase, the capsule was broken inside the package, and then the package was kneaded to distribute the dye. Around 1955, the artificial coloring laws were repealed, so that margarine could now be legally sold with coloring so it looked like butter.





This next part might make you reconsider or at least cut down how much margarine you consume when you see how it is processed.


How Margarine Is Processed Before Sale
How Margarine Is Processed 



 With all the hype about eating heart healthy and the pros and cons of butter and margarine, the following sites might be of interest to you.

https://www.ourheritageofhealth.com/the-history-of-margarine-and-why-butter-is-better/

http://blog.fit-fresh.com/butter-vs-margarine-whats-difference/

https://bigpictureeducation.com/lovely-spread

https://wellnessmama.com/2193/never-eat-vegetable-oil/



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Infant Seat for Flying

infant seat in airplane overhead compartment 1953
Infant seat attached to overhead compartment 1953


Back in 1953, BOAC supplied skycots, a hammock type of carrier, that clipped onto the lip of the overhead baggage compartment just above the heads of the parents sitting in the seats below.  Skycots were supplied free to parents of infants who were not able to crawl or turn over yet.  

Although the child had to be held in the arms of a parent for liftoff and landing, for the duration of the airplane trip, the child lay snug and secure in the skycot above them. Its scoop-like sides evidently were all that was needed to keep the child from falling out.  

So I guess they didn't have any turbulence back then?

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Airplane Food

Airplane food
your sense of taste is altered on an airplane


You can't taste sweetness or saltiness nearly as well on an airplane due to altitude and pressure, as well as a lack of humidity. Cabin air also decreases your ability to smell, and tasting is as much about your nasal passages as it is your taste buds. Even the noise that jet engines produce can impact your tongue.



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Proper Storage For Carrots

Keep carrots out of direct sunlight

Carrots can become waterlogged or even rot if they are left in the refrigerator for too long. Store carrots away from direct sunlight in a place with low moisture, like a countertop away from the kitchen window or door.

proper storage for carrots
Store carrots away from direct sunlight


 If you have already cut up a bunch of carrots to serve that night for dinner, place them in a container of cool water, enough just to cover them. Put the container in the refrigerator until you are ready to cook them.  

If you want to use them the next night for dinner, cook them first, cool, then refrigerate. Use within 24 hours or flash freeze them to use within 3 months.  


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Proper Storage For Bread

The Bread Goes In The Breadbox

Leaving your bread in the refrigerator dries it out. At cold temperatures, your bread will turn stale, dry, and tasteless. Also, bread acts as a kind of sponge and it will soak up whatever odors are lingering around your fridge. 


To be safe, store leftover bread in a breadbox. If you don't have one, haunt the flea markets and garage sales and you can get one pretty cheap (under $5).  Mine is made of oak and I store breakfast pastries, bread, crackers, and cookies in the breadbox and they never go stale.  You can forgo the breadbox and store your bread in your microwave. Just be mindful that it is in there so you don't forget.  

The bread box will keep moisture from escaping from the bread.  


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The Beatles Refused To Play To Segregated Audiences

The Beatles refused to play to segregated audiences
Before they were BIG, they had a lot of demands in their contracts


Many stars make demands or requests of the management of the different places they perform.  Sometimes the requests are easy to fill, sometimes they aren't and sometimes they are so far out there, the venues won't oblige.

 A Beatles contract and rider from a 1965 concert at the Cow Palace in Daly City, California came up for auction in September 2011.  The Beatles made several demands of the Cow Palace  - electricity and running water in the trailer, and that the dressing rooms would have four cots, mirrors, an ice cooler, a TV and clean towels.  Their salary was $40,000 for the concert.

They wanted a minimum of 150 uniformed police for protection and they also wanted a special drumming platform for Ringo.  All of this was doable.

But the Cow Palace saw one more demand that they did not fulfill and that was the Beatles refused to play to a segregated audience, meaning they didn't want their audience to be separated by color. They wanted to play to everyone.  This was 1965 at the height of the civil rights movement.

You can read about the event and the crowd of 17,000 people who broke through the security barrier and caused the Beatles to stop playing until the venue was secure again.



The contract was signed by their manager, Brian Epstein. The contract and rider were expected to auction for about $5,000 by Nate D Sanders Auction on September 20, 2011. 


 A little research shows a news article from 2008 stating that the original 1962 contract between Beatles and their new manager Brian Epstein sold for £240,000 which in US money comes to $302,697.

Another article shows the Beatles contract from 1965 concert at the Cow Palace sold for $10,780, exceeding the expected $5,000 projection.

You can read more here:
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2011/sep/15/beatles-refused-play-segregated-audience


 


The World's Tiniest Diamond Heist



A New York City gem dealer almost immediately discovered that the diamond thief was an ant because he had traveled only a few feet away.  The dealer filmed as the ant managed to steal one diamond, which is almost as big as he is, from a pile of very small diamonds that we can see on the desk. The camera zooms in and follows the ant carrying his glittering booty across the table. 


It's an interesting but short video, 47 seconds. Take a look. 

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Household Items That Are Poisonous To Pets

Pet owners treat their pets like their children but when they bring a new pet into their home, sometimes they don't bother to child-proof their house to make it safe for their pet.


Bad things pets eat







How safe is your house for your pet?



Cat eats plants and dirt




Are your everyday household items put out of his reach?




Sick doggie





When was the last time you pet-proofed your house?


Bad things in your kitchen for pets



Do you feed your pet "table food?"



Worst meat and fish to feed pets


Worse foods that are toxic to pets

Toxic and safe dairy for pets


Toxic sweets and nuts for pets


Worst bread products and dairy for pets





The most common household items in your pantry, basement, and garage that are not a threat to humans, can be toxic to your pet.   Here is a room by room review, but each is only a partial list.

Top 5 dog toxins



BATHROOM
Medications - both prescription and over-the-counter drugs
Caffeine pills
Drain and toilet cleaners
Bleach
Ammonia
Lime and rust removal products
Cough drops
Toothpaste
Q-tips
Deodorant
Shampoos and conditioners
Mouthwash
Toilet brush (used)
Room air fresheners
Plastic shower curtain liners (loosened)


Cat gets health checkuup





ATTIC AND BASEMENT
Mothballs
Insecticides
Rodenticides
Paint
Rodent droppings




LAUNDRY ROOM
Detergent
Fabric softeners
Bleach
Dryer sheets
Lint
Detergent Pods
Rodent droppings




Toxic and non-toxic plants for cats


 


KITCHEN
Nuts - macadamia, peanuts in shells, etc)
Chocolate
Raisins and currants
Grapes
Caffeinated products (coffee, tea, cocoa)
Chicken bones
Table salt
All cleaning products
Steel wool
Kitchen sponges
Fatty scraps
Used oil containers
Onions
Chives
Garlic
Unbaked yeast dough




cat protected by neck cone















Fertilizers
Mothballs
Bone meal and other products used to treat gardens
Compost
Lawn food
Glue
Weed killer
Sharp objects
Antifreeze
Windshield washer fluid
Motor oil
Gasoline
Ice melting products
Grub and snail baits
Rodenticides
Paint
Antifreeze
Windshield washer fluid
Motor oil
Gasoline




ASPCA animal control center





Most dangerous foods for dogs



Poison control contact for pets



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