Abstract
The Museo Egizio in Turin holds a unique collection of 116 mummified or skeletal human bodies or body
parts. This collection is currently under study by the “Mummy Conservation Project”, a collaborative venture
of the Museo Egizio, the Institute for Mummy Studies of Eurac Research, the Soprintendenza Archeologia del
Piemonte, and the Horus Group, whose aim is to improve mummy conservation techniques. In the context
of this project, an assessment of the state of preservation of the mummified human remains was carried
out by monitoring basic physical parameters (temperature, relative humidity and water activity) and by performing
a fungal survey. The latter revealed the presence on the mummified material of fungal spores and
mycelia that could possibly pose a biodegradative threat. However, all the current physical parameters show
that the mummies are stored under optimal environmental conditions, which will suppress any microbial
up-growth.