Carrier Context :
Unique Projects
John Ferguson, an engineer in Carrier's Advanced Systems Group, quietly asked the question: "Is the hair on the back of your neck standing up, too?"
Everyone in the room was reacting in their own way
as a Peruvian archaeologist carefully, almost tenderly, removed
the white wrapping that covered the frozen body of the "Ampato
Maiden," the 500-year-old mummy that has caused a worldwide
stir since her discovery last September atop an Andean volcano.
Straight black hair reaching her shoulders frames a face whose skin has dried and pulled back slightly from a full set of white teeth. But the brownish skin of her shoulders, bodice, arms, legs and feet retains a dull lustre not far from life.
To the scientists in the room, the Maiden on the
table is a cache of knowledge frozen in pre-Columbian time. She
is a potential storehouse of answers to questions about her Inca
contemporaries that, until now, could only be guessed at.
But some of us gathered around the table see her through a parent's emotional eyes. With her hands delicately folded in her lap and her knees drawn up toward her chin, she is a vulnerable child of 13 or 14 about to be violently sacrificed for the overall good of her community. No answers here. Her silence poses only questions about the day her life ended near the windswept 20,700-foot summit of Nevado Ampato.
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