The use of technology in the mummy in the excerpt of "Mummy" uses various techniques to convey specific aspects to the audience. How to use the camera has a big impact on the impression; for example, the smallest move including the slogan includes the impressive nature of exotic places - to block the main content of action / adventure type movies. A vast lens highlights the desert's area, where the screen is full of sandstorms, the hero's airplane is very fragile, and this also uses another type of convention
Pathological studies of mummies spread to various degrees throughout the 20th century. In 1992, the first world mummy research conference was held in Puerto de la Cruz on Tenerife in the Canary Islands. More than 300 scientists attended the conference and shared data on mummies for almost 100 years. The information provided at the meeting raised new interest in this topic. One of them was to integrate mummy biomedical and bio archaeological information with existing databases. Due to the unique and highly specialized skills required to gather such data, this was impossible before the meeting.
Interest in mummies can be traced back to Ptolemy Greece, but most structured scientific research began in the early 20th century. Before this, many rediscovered mummies were sold with curiosity or were used for mimicry science novels such as mummies. The first modern scientific test of this mummy began in 1901, by a professor of the UK government medical department in Cairo, Egypt. When Grammton Elliott Smith and Howard Carter examined Thutmose IV mummies using Cairo's only X-ray device, the first X-ray picture of Mummy appeared in 1903. British chemist Alfred Lucas conducted a chemical analysis of Egyptian mummies in the same period and the results showed a lot of results on the type of substance used for preservatives. Lucas also made an important contribution to the analysis of Tutankhamen in 1922.