Recreate a woman's face from a 1,800-year-old skull

By 3D method, the scientists recreated the human face from the 1,800-year-old skull found in the White Stone Cape.

By 3D method, the scientists recreated the human face from the 1,800-year-old skull found in the White Stone Cape.

Recently, scientists have reconstructed the face of a skull dating back to about 1,800 years using 3D technology. The skull is part of an ancient skeleton buried in the Beachy Head area - a cliff located on the southernmost coast of England, near the town of Eastbourne in East Sussex county.

Picture 1 of Recreate a woman's face from a 1,800-year-old skull

The skull of a 1,800-year-old woman was found at Beachy Head in 1953

The skeleton was first discovered in Beachy Head in 1953 and the researchers estimated that she lived around 245, as the wife or lover of a local official in an ancient Roman villa nearby.

Heritage researcher Jo Seaman said: "Through our tests, we found that this woman was about 30 years old, had a decent life, a smoothie diet and her bones and teeth were in a state of Not only that, but the bone isotope test results also showed that her hand and foot bones showed no signs of heavy labor . "

Picture 2 of Recreate a woman's face from a 1,800-year-old skull

Picture 3 of Recreate a woman's face from a 1,800-year-old skull

By 3D method, researchers recreated this woman's face

Researchers from the Eastbourne Museum, in collaboration with Dundee University experts, measured isotopes for analysis and examination of bones and teeth and trace elements of the skeleton to determine the exact origin and condition. health, diet, cause of this woman's death.

More specifically, they used skulls and traces left in the area to build her image to give people insight into the life and culture of the Romans.

Update 17 December 2018
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