Experts left stunned as 300-year-old Chinese mummy’s pristine preservation turned BLACK within hours of coffin being opened

Kane Khanh | Archeaology
July 5, 2023

Chinese archaeologists are puzzled by a burial site dating back 300 years, where two bodies turned into skeletons while one remained remarkably intact, leading to astonishment.Upon opening one of the coffins, experts were astounded to find the man’s face perfectly preserved, only to witness a rapid transformation within hours. The face began to darken, accompanied by a repugnant odor emanating from the body.

300-year-old Chinese mummy’s perfectly preserved body turned BLACK in just hours after coffin was opened, leaving experts stunned. – swiftydragon

Baffled Chinese archaeologists are studying a 300 year-old coffin found with two others in which two of the bodies had been reduced to skeletons, but in which the third was almost perfectly preserved

The skin on the corpse – which has now been taken to the local university for study – also turned black.

The body is thought to be from the Qing Dynasty.

It was unearthed on October 10 on a construction site in a two metre-deep hole in the ground at Xiangcheng in Henan province, central China.

Dr Lukas Nickel, a specialist in Chinese art and archaeology at SOAS, University of London, told MailOnline that preservations such as these were not intentional.

300-year-old Chinese mummy’s perfectly preserved body turned BLACK in just hours after coffin was opened, leaving experts stunned. – swiftydragon

‘The Chinese did not do any treatment of the body to preserve it as known from ancient Egypt, for instance.

‘They did, however, try to protect the body by putting it into mᴀssive coffins and stable tomb chambers.

‘So the integrity of the physical structure of the body was important to them. In early China, at least, one expected the ԀeαԀ person to live on in the tomb.’

Occasionally bodies in the Qing Dynasty were preserved by the natural conditions around the coffin.

In this case, the body may have had a lacquered coffin, covered in charcoal – which was common at the time. This means bacteria would have been unable to get in.

Dr Nickel added that if this was the case, as soon as air hit the body, the natural process would be for it to turn black and quickly disintegrate.

300-year-old Chinese mummy’s perfectly preserved body turned BLACK in just hours after coffin was opened, leaving experts stunned. – swiftydragon

When the coffin was opened by historians at Xiangcheng said the man’s face was almost normal but within hours it had started to go black, and a foul smell had appeared

Historian Dong Hsiung said: ‘The clothes on the body indicate he was a very senior official from the early Qing Dynasty.

‘What is amazing is the way time seems to be catching up on the corpse, ageing hundreds of years in a day.’

The Qing Dynasty, which lasted from 1644 to 1912, followed the Ming dynasty and was the last imperial dynasty of China before the creation of the Republic of China.

Under the Qing territory, the empire grew to three times its size and the population increased from around 150 million to 450 million.

The present-day boundaries of China are largely based on the territory controlled by the Qing dynasty

Burial rituals in the Qing Dynasty were the responsiblity of the eldest son, and would have included a large number of officials.

Professor Dong proposes an alternative theory for the preservation. ‘It’s possible the man’s family used some materials to preserve the body,’ he said. ‘Once it was opened the natural process of decay could really start.’

‘We are working hard though to save what there is.’

300-year-old Chinese mummy’s perfectly preserved body turned BLACK in just hours after coffin was opened, leaving experts stunned. – swiftydragon

Historian Dong Hsiung said: ‘The clothes on the body indicate he was a very senior official from the early Qing Dynasty. What is amazing is the way time seems to be catching up on the corpse, ageing hundreds of years in a day’

The Qing Dynasty, and the preceding Ming Dynasty, are known for their well-preserved corpses.

In 2011, a 700-year-old mummy was discovered by chance in excellent condition in eastern China.

The corpse of the high-ranking woman believed to be from the Ming Dynasty was stumbled across by a team who were looking to expand a street