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| American Drugs in Egyptian Mummies   Updated from S. A. Wells  <www.colostate.edu>   Abstract:          The recent findings of cocaine, nicotine, and hashishin
  Egyptian mummies by Balabanova et. al. have been  criticized on grounds that: contamination of the mummies may
  have occurred, improper techniques may have been used, chemical decomposition
  may have produced the compounds in question, recent mummies of drug users
  were mistakenly evaluated, that no similar cases are known of such compounds
  in long-dead bodies, and especially that pre-Columbian transoceanic voyages are
  highly speculative.  These criticisms
  are each discussed in turn. 
  Balabanova et. al. are shown to have used and confirmed their findings
  with accepted methods.  The
  possibility of the compounds being byproducts of decomposition is shown to be
  without precedent and highly unlikely. 
  The possibility that the researchers made evaluations from of faked
  mummies of recent drug users is shown to be highly unlikely in almost all
  cases.  Several additional cases of
  identified American drugs in mummies are discussed.  Additionally, it is shown that significant evidence exists for
  contact with the Americas in pre-Columbian times.  It is determined that the original findings are supported by
  substantial evidence despite the initial criticisms.   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Discussion          In a one-page article appearing in Naturwissenschaften, German scientist
  Svetla Balabanova (1992) and two of her colleagues reported findings of
  cocaine, hashish and nicotine in Egyptian mummies.  The findings were immediately identified as improbable on the
  grounds that two of the substances are known to be derived only from American
  plants - cocaine from Erythroxylon
  coca, and nicotine from Nicotiana
  tabacum.  The suggestion that such
  compounds could have found their way to Egypt before Columbus' discovery of
  America seemed patently impossible.          
  The study was done as part of an ongoing program of investigating the
  use of hallucinogenic substances in ancient societies.  The authors themselves were quite
  surprised by the findings (Discovery, 1997) but stood y their results despite
  being the major focus of riticism in the following volume of Naturwissenschaften.  Of the nine mummies evaluated, ll showed
  signs of ocaine and hashish Tetrahydrocannabinol), whereas all but one
  sampled ositive for nicotine.  It is
  interesting too that the concentrations of the compounds suggest uses other
  han that of buse.  (For example,
  modern drug addicts ften have concentrations of cocaine and nicotine in heir
  hair 75 and 20 times higher respectively than hat found in the mummy hair
  samples.) It is even possible that the quantities found may be high due
  toconcentration in body tissues through time.          
  Without question, the study has sparked an interest in various
  disciplines.  As Balabanova et. al.
  predicted, "...the results open up an entirely new field of research
  which unravels aspects of past human life-style far beyound [sic] basic
  biological reconstruction."    The Criticisms         
  The biggest criticism of the findings of Balabanova et. al. was not
  necessarily directed at the extraction process per se, although this was
  discussed.  The biggest criticism was
  that cocaine and nicotine could not possibly have been used in Egypt before the
  discovery of the New World, and that transatlantic journeys were not known -
  or at least they are highly speculative. 
  It is safe to say that the criticisms of the study would have been
  minimal or nonexistent if the findings had been made of Old World drugs.  Such findings, in fact, would not have
  been at all unusual as the use of stimulants were known in Egypt.  Poppy seeds and lotus plants have been
  identified for just this use in manuscripts (the Papyrus Ebers) and in
  hieroglyphs (as Balabanova et. al. show).          
  Schafer (1993) argues that, "the detection of pharmacologically
  active substances in mummified material never proves their use prior to
  death." He argues that such compounds could have been introduced as part
  of the mummification process.  The
  suggestion is that (especially) nicotine could have been introduced around the mummy (and subsequently
  absorbed into its tissue) as an insecticide (being used as a preservative)
  within relatively modern times.  A
  similar criticism was raised by Bjorn (1993) who wondered if nicotine might
  have been absorbed by the mummies from cigarette smoke in the museums where
  the mummies have been preserved. 
  According to Schafer, the only way to show that the compounds were
  taken into the bodies while they were alive would be to find different
  concentrations at different distances from the scalp - a procedure not
  undertaken by the authors.         
  Another interesting criticism of Schafer (1993) is that Balabanova et.
  al. might have been the victims of faked mummies.  Apparently people (living in the not too far distant past)
  believed that mummies contained black tar called bitumen and that it could be
  ground up and used to cure various illnesses.  In fact the very word 'mummy' comes from the Persian 'mummia'
  meaning bitumen (Discovery, 1997).  A
  business seems to have developed wherein recently dead bodies where
  deliberately aged to appear as mummies and that some of the perpetrators of
  such deeds were drug abusers.          
  The criticism that seems most popular is that the identified drugs
  might have been products of "necrochemical and necrobiochemical
  processes" (Schafer, 1993; Bjorn, 1993).  One explanation is that Egyptian priests used
  tropine-alkaloid-containing plants during the mummification process that
  subsequently underwent changes in the mummy to resemble the identified
  compounds.          
  Yet another argument is that there is nothing in the literature
  showing that any of the three compounds have been identified in bodies that
  have been dead for some time.    Reply to the Critics   Analytical
  Techniques and Contamination         
  “In the study, samples were taken from nine mummies that were dated
  from between 1070 B.C. to 395 A.D. 
  The samples included hair, skin and muscle were taken from the head
  and abdomen.  Bone tissue was also
  taken from the skull.  All tissues
  were pulverized and dissolved in NaCl solution, homogenized, and
  centrifuged.  A portion of the
  supernatant was extracted with chloroform and dried and then dissolved in a
  phosphate buffer.  Samples were then
  measured by both radioimmunoassay (Merck; Biermann) and gas chromatography /
  mass spectrometry (Hewlett Packard) - hereinafter GCMS. “         
  “This is the procedure used to produce what McPhillips (1998)
  considered indisputable evidence for confirming products of substance abuse
  in hair.  Within recent years, hair
  analysis has been used more commonly in this kind of screening process and
  the techniques employed have been optimized. 
  Mistakes are known to have occurred in some cases evaluating for
  metals, but the ability to detect drugs such as cocaine, nicotine, and
  hashish seem not been problematic (Wilhelm, 1996).   The two possible mistakes in analyzing hair for drugs include false positives, which are caused by
  environmental contamination; and false negatives, where actual compounds are
  lost because of such things as hair coloring or perming.  In recent years, these techniques of hair
  analysis have revealed the interesting findings of arsenic in the hair of
  Napoleon Bonaparte, and laudanum in the hair of the poet Keats. “         
  “The procedure includes a thorough washing of the hair to remove
  external contaminants followed by a process of physical degradation using a
  variety of methods (such as digestion with enzymes or dissolution with acids,
  organic solvents, etc.,).  Following
  these preparatory procedures, the hair is then analyzed.   Antibody testing (e.g. radioimmunoassay)
  is a well-established procedure although there is small potential of
  obtaining false positive results. 
  These are mainly caused by the cross-reactivity of the antibody with
  other compounds, including minor analgesics, cold remedies and antipsychotic
  drugs - compounds not likely to be found in Egyptian mummies.  Because of the possible false positives,
  chromatography (GC-MS) is routinely utilized to confirm the results.  “         
  “The suggestion of nicotine contamination from cigarette smoke is
  eliminated by the use of solvents and/or acids in the cleaning process -
  methods used by Balabanova et. al. and all other researchers that have
  documented drugs in mummies. “         
  “The validity of Balabanova's findings seems to be vindicated at least
  so far as the analytical methods used in the study.  The authors' methods as well as those in the additional
  findings reported here (see below) have used the combination of immunological
  and chromatographic methods to both analyze and confirmsamples. “   Faked
  Mummies         
  “The argument that the mummies might have been modern fakes was
  investigated by David (Discovery, 1997).  
  David is the Keeper of Egyptology at the Manchester Museum, and
  undertook her own analysis of mummies, independent of Balabanova's
  group.   In addition, she traveled to
  Munich to evaluate for herself the mummies studied by Balabanova's
  group.   Unfortunately the mummies
  weren't available for filming and they were being kept isolated from further
  research on grounds of religious respect.  
  David had to resort to the museum's records.   She found that, except for the city's famous mummy of Henot
  Tawi (Lady of the Two Lands) the mummies were of unknown origin and some were
  represented only by detached heads. “         
  “David's inability to examine the mummies herself may have kept the
  possibility of faked ones open; however, her evaluation of the museum's records
  seemed to indicate otherwise.   The
  mummies were preserved with packages of their viscera inside.   Some even contained images of the
  gods.   In addition the state of
  mummification itself was very good.  
  The isolated heads may have been fakes (evidence one way or the other
  is lacking) but the intact bodies examined in Balabanova's research were
  clearly genuine. “   Chemical
  Changes         
  “The argument that the identified drugs might be byproducts of
  decomposition is highly unlikely.  
  The argument appears to resemble a 'Just So' story of biochemical
  evolution without the benefit of natural selection.   Schafer (1993) admits that natural decomposition or
  mummification has never led to the synthesis of cocaine or related alkaloids
  but leaves the possibility open anyway.  
  He argues that the compounds in question might theoretically have been
  produced by tropine-alkaloid-containing plants (such as were present in
  species that were utilized in the mummification process). “         
  “The benefit of the doubt in this case clearly goes to Balabanova et.
  al. Until it is shown how cocaine could be produced in this way, the argument
  is hypothetical at best. “   Isolated
  Example         
  “The detection of drugs in human hair is a fairly recent endeavor
  (McPhillips, 1998; Sachs, 1998).   A
  few compounds were identified during the 1980's but it wasn't until the 1990s
  that drug screening via hair analysis became accepted and used as a possible
  alternative to urine sampling.   The
  criticism that no known cases of cocaine, nicotine, or hashish have been
  reported in human hair must, therefor be interpreted with clarification.   None of these compounds had been observed
  in human hair because the process had not been fully developed, nor had the
  application even been considered until quite recently.   Even then the claim is not true. “         
  “Cartwell et. al. (1991) using a radioimmunoassay method detected
  cocaine metabolites in pre-Columbian mummy hair from South America.   In this study two out of eight mummies
  analyzed showed cocaine metabolites.  
  All samples tested were confirmed by a separate laboratory
  (Psychomedics Corporation, Santa Monica, California) using GC-MS.   The two mummies testing positive were
  from the Camarones Valley in northern Chile.   The artifacts as well as the mummies at this site were typical
  of Inca culture. “         
  “Since the initial work of Balabanova et. al., other studies have
  revealed the same drugs (cocaine, nicotine, and hashish) in Egyptian mummies,
  confirming the original results.   Nerlich et. al. (1995), in a study evaluating the tissue
  pathology of an Egyptian mummy dating from approximately 950 B.C., found the
  compounds in several of the mummy's organs.  
  They found the highest amounts of nicotine and cocaine in the mummy's
  stomach, and the hashish traces primarily in the lungs.   These findings were again identified
  using both radioimmunoassay and GSMS techniques.   Very similar results were again found in yet another study by
  Parsche and Nerlich (1995).   Again,
  the findings were obtained using the immunological and chromatographic
  techniques. “         
  “David's work (Discovery, 1997) though not finding cocaine, did
  confirm the presence of nicotine.  
  This finding has seemed a little less threatening to conservative scholarship
  in that it seems possible (albeit unlikely) that a nicotine-producing plant
  may have existed in Africa within historic times - only becoming extinct
  recently. “         
  “Such a possibility might allow for a comfortable resolution to
  conservative scholarship but doesn't explain the evidence of cocaine.   Additionally, the possibility of a native
  plant going extinct is unlikely.  
  Much more reasonable would be that an introduced species under
  cultivation could go extinct, yet this only begs the question of the original
  provenance of the species. “         
  “In any event, considering the several confirmations of Balabanova's
  work (as well as that of Caldwell et. al. prior to her study) it appears that
  the argument against their findings based on too little evidence is quickly
  vanishing (if not already obviated). “   Pre-Columbian
  Voyages to America         
  “The major reason for the initial criticisms to Balabanova's work is
  the disbelief in pre-Columbian transoceanic contacts.   Egyptologist John Baines (Discovery,
  1997) went so far as to state, "The idea  that the Egyptians should have traveled to America is overall
  absurd...and I also don't know anyone who spends time doing research in these
  areas, because they're not perceived to be areas that have any real meaning
  for the subjects.  " Another
  interpretation on why researchers haven't considered the subject closer is
  given by Kehoe (1998), "Aftermid-century, any archaeologist worried
  about money or career avoided looking at pre-Columbian contacts across
  saltwater [p. 193].." It appears that acknowledging that pre-Columbian
  contacts occurred was not academically acceptable.   Kehoe (1998) also gives examples of several researchers whose
  work has been academically marginalized because it supported these views
  (e.g. Stephen Jett, Carl Johannessen, Gordon Ekholm, Paul Tolstoy, and George
  Carter). “         
  “Surprising at it may seem, evidence for early ocean voyages to
  America from the Old World is not lacking - nor is it negligibly verifiable.   Within the last two years, two
  periodicals, focusing on these contacts have been established.   The first, entitled Pre-Columbiana, is
  edited by Stephen C. Jett, Professor of Clothings and Textiles at the
  University of California, Davis; the second is entitled Migration and
  Diffusion and is edited by Professor Christine Pellek in Vienna, Italy.   There is certainly quite a bit of
  spurious reports of early contacts from the Old World, however, a general disregard
  for all of the evidence is, anymore, itself evidence of academic negligence,
  as these two periodicals indicate. “         
  “A bibliography of these early contacts is given by John Sorensen
  (1998) in the first issue of Pre-Columbiana.   It is a good example of the kinds of evidence being uncovered
  by legitimate researchers and institutions.  
  The bibliography is itself a condensation of a two-volume work of
  these publications and includes titles such as: The world's oldest ship?
  (showing evidence for a pre-Columbian ship in America) published in
  Archaeology; Peruvian fabrics (showing very strong similarities between Peru
  and Asia) published in Anthropological papers of the American Museum of
  Natural History; Robbing native American cultures: Van Sertima's Afro
  centricity and the Olmecs (showing evidence for connections between Africa
  and the Olmecs of Middle America) published in Current Anthropology; Possible
  Indonesian or Southeast Asian Influences in New World textile industries
  (showing at least three textile-related inventions that appear in both
  Indonesia and the New World) published in Indonesian Textiles; and, Genes may
  link Ancient Eurasians, Native Americans, published in Science.”         
  “And the list goes on and on - some evidence being better than others
  - but as a whole it seems pretty much irrefutable. Claims to the contrary
  seem to be made by individuals with a vested interest in the isolationist
  position. The evidence, pro and con, when evaluated objectively, would seem
  without question, to favor the diffusionist position (which claims that
  pre-Columbian contacts took place). “   Considerations         
  “The initial reaction to the findings of Balabanova et. al. were
  highly critical.   These criticisms
  were not based on a known failing in the authors' research methodology,
  rather they were attempts to cast doubt on an implication of the research -
  that cocaine and nicotine were brought to Egypt from the New World before
  Columbus.   This conclusion is not
  acceptable to conservative investigators of the past.   In fact it suggests a deep-rooted
  aversion to what Balabanova suggested might mean an unraveling of aspects of
  history contrary to basic reconstructions.  
  This aversion, according to Kehoe (1998) stems from the conviction
  that Indians were primitive savages destined to be overcome by the civilized
  world - that the acme of evolutionary success resided in the conquering race
  itself.   ‘Childlike savages could
  never have voyaged across oceans.’ “         
  “Balabanova's findings bring yet other evidence forward that humanity
  is not so easily pinioned into the pre-conceived notions of primitive and
  advanced - even as this might be related to the presumed technology of
  earlier times.   The quest for
  discovery - to find new worlds - is not just a modern selective advantage of
  our species.   Perhaps it is the
  defining characteristic. “   Literature Cited:    Balababova, S., F. Parsche, and W. Pirsig.  1992.  First
  identification of drugs in Egyptian mummies. 
  Naturwissenschaften
  79:358.    Bisset, N.G. and M.H.
  Zenk. 1993.  Responding to 'First identification of drugs in Egyptian mummies'.  Naturwissenschaften 80:244-245.    Bjorn, L.O. 1993.  Responding
  to 'First identification of drugs in Egyptian mummies'.  Naturwissenschaften80:244.    Cartwell, L.W. et. al.
  1991.  Cocaine metabolites in pre-Columbian mummy hair.  Journal of the Oklahoma State Medical
  Association 84:11-12.    Discovery Information. 1997. 
  Curse of the Cocaine Mummies. Thirty-six page transcript of program
  viewed on US National TV in January 1997 and July 1999.    Kehoe, A.B. 1998.  The Land of
  Prehistory, A Critical History of American Archaeology.  Routledge, New York and London. 266 pp.    McIntosh, N.D.P. 1993. 
  Responding to 'First identification of drugs in Egyptian
  mummies'.  Naturwissenschaften
  80:245-246.    McPhillips, M. et. al.
  1998.  Hair analysis, new laboratory ability to test for substance use.  British Journal of Psychiatry 173:
  287-290.    Nerlich, A.G. et. al.
  1995.  Extensive pulmonary haemorrhage in an Egyptian mummy.  Virchows Archiv 127:423-429.    Parsche, F. 1993.  Reply
  to "Responding to 'First identification of drugs in Egyptian
  mummies'".  Naturwissenschaften
  80:245-246.    Parsche, F. and A.
  Nerlich.  1995. Presence of drugs in different tissues of an Egyptian mummy.
  Fresenius'.  Journal of Analytical
  Chemistry 352:380-384.    Sachs, H. and P. Kintz. 1998. 
  Testing for drugs in hair, critical review of chromatographic
  procedures since 1992.  Journal of
  Chromatography (B) 713:147-161.   Schafer, T. 1993.  Responding to
  'First identification of drugs in Egyptian mummies'.  Naturwissenschaften 80:243-244.    Sorenson, J.L.
  1998.  Bibliographia Pre-Columbiana. 
  Pre-Columbiana 1(1&2):143-154.    Wells, S. A.  American
  Drugs in Egyptian Mummies:  A Review of the Evidence. www.colostate.edu,          Wilhelm, M. 1996.  Hair analysis
  in environmental medicine.  Zentralblatt fur Hygeine
  und Umweltmedizin 198: 485-501.     |