Yes. In the olden days but now it is mostly preserved in the mortuary
stuff! process to preserve bodies, changes water and fat to plastic
if there were no Golgi bodies then the food could not be stored any where
well sounds kinda creapy.. take actual bodies of people... not nessasary alive... but people... probaly tissuse or so but people..
you can see heavenly bodies with the help of a telescope
In ancient Egypt, the following things were commonly done to preserve corpses: * Soft tissue and organs would be removed, because they decompose quickly. * Bodies would dried over a varying course of time in a substance called "natron" and it's attributes were similar to salt. This didn't wasn't practiced until the Middle Kingdom, however. (Before, the heat of the desert was relied upon) * Mummies would be wrapped in linen to keep out invading organisms (insects, etc)
they were built as a stairway for the king to go to heaven another reason is so the king could build chambers under themPyramids are tombs. Intended to preserve the bodies of Kings, and all of their treasures.
to preserve them
The bodies were placed in sarcophagi (plural sarcophagis), which were left in tombs. They are just called tombs.
The Ancient Egyptians strongly believed in an afterlife, that's why they tried to preserve the bodies as well as they could so that the deceased could survive in the afterlife.
to preserve respected ones e.g king tuts and so that the bodies could go into the afterlife
their still looking for the dead bodies.
Coffins filled with bodies probably
died bodies
To preserve and purify the body so that it could be used by the Pharaoh in the after-life. Egyptians thought pharaohs needed their bodies in the afterlife.
out salt on the bodies and wrap it with cloth
They took the insides out of mummies, so that they could stuff the bodies, and so that they could preserve the bodies longer. As well as that they wanted the person to have a good time in the next life for that person.
Embalming fluidThe chemical to preserve bodies is Natron