- Hundreds of ancient tombs in Aswan, Egypt contain mummified remains and artifacts.
- Archaeologists recently found evidence of the diseases the inhabitants had when they died.
- Experts have excavated only a fraction of the necropolis, with hundreds of tombs still unexplored.
Egyptians were mummifying their dead long before the time of the pyramids. And some of those tombs remain today, filled with food, art, treasure, and bodies that are still well-preserved more than 2,000 years later.
A hillside cemetery in Aswan, Egypt is one such place. Not far from the Nile, the ancient necropolis offers a place to "better know our ancestors and the people of the past, who are not so different from us," Egyptologist Patrizia Piacentini told Business Insider.
Piacentini is part of an excavation team who's been studying the tombs as part of a joint project between the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities and Italy's University of Milan for the past several years.
The team has uncovered many amazing finds, including a stretcher that may have been used to carry bodies into the tombs and jars of bitumen, a tar-like substance that was sometimes used in mummification.
Most recently, the excavators have turned their focus to the mummified remains. Using X-rays and CT scans on the bodies, they've discovered how some likely died. Even among the wealthy elites, anemia, malnutrition, and other diseases, were common, the team found.
Photos from the site show how the team excavates the ancient tombs and some of the artifacts and mummified bodies they've found.