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Fovia's High Definition Volume Rendering(R) Brings 2,500-Year-Old Mummy Back to Life
Astonishing 3-D Fly-Through Centerpiece of SF Exhibition
| Source: Fovia, Inc.
PALO ALTO, CA--(Marketwire - November 3, 2009) - Irethorrou, an Egyptian priest entombed for
thousands of years in the Middle Egyptian city of Akhmim, can now be seen
like never before. Using state of the art High Definition Volume
Rendering® technology developed by Fovia, Inc., in conjunction with high
resolution computed tomography (CT) scans provided by the Stanford Medical
School's Department of Radiology, Irethorrou's long-held secrets have been
revealed through advanced three-dimensional imaging techniques.
"Very Postmortem: Mummies and Medicine," which opened on Halloween at the
Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco, uses Fovia's High Definition
Volume Rendering, or HDVR®, software to provide scientists new forensic
insights into the ancient practice of mummification through the lens of the
world's most advanced imaging technology. With Fovia's HDVR software,
scientists have been able to learn a great deal about Irethorrou and how he
was prepared for eternity, including the locations and textures of over a
dozen magic amulets that were placed on his body during the intricate
wrapping process.
"Having the chance to view Irethorrou in three dimensions is amazing in its
own right, but having the chance to view him with Fovia's software has
increased the viewing experience to a unparalleled level of clarity and
depth, allowing for more accurate analysis and interpretation. Fovia
creates an unbelievable, breathtaking and lifelike view of the mummy, with
intricate detail down to the 2,500-year-old crack in one of Irethorrou's
decorative amulets," said Jonathan Elias, PhD, director of the Akhmim Mummy
Studies Consortium in Harrisburg, PA.
In the center of the exhibition, the fully wrapped mummy of Irethorrou lies
supine within his decorated coffin, but the true centerpiece is the
collection of HDVR movies displayed on a wall-mounted high definition
monitor. Utilizing fly-throughs of the skull and body cavity, the movies
reveal what the mummy cannot: the amazing preservation of its internal
structures. The benefit of this dual presentation is the ability to
observe the mummy wrapped in its entirety, undisturbed, while concurrently
examining the anatomy and ornamentation of the ancient priest using HDVR.
The virtual unwrapping is a way to explore the mummy without being
disruptive to the exquisite form of the ancient relic.
To see images and a fly-through movie of Irethorrou, visit www.fovia.com.
Very Postmortem: Mummies and Medicine runs through August 2010 at the
Legion of Honor in San Francisco.
About Fovia
Fovia, Inc., a Palo Alto-based software company, has developed a CPU-based,
High Definition Volume Rendering® platform that offers unrivaled image
quality and uncompromised performance for 2D/3D advanced volume
visualization. Volume rendering is an advanced technique for analyzing
extremely large sets of data in three-dimensions. This technique has
extensive applications in fields such as medicine, dentistry, veterinary
science, industrial engineering, geoscience and bioscience.
Fovia's innovative, software-only High Definition Volume Rendering solution
overcomes the many limitations of imaging technologies currently available,
and enables local, enterprise-wide and web-based volumetric rendering.
Furthermore, Fovia's High Definition Volume Rendering solution, or HDVR®,
successfully leverages the scalability and flexibility of off-the-shelf
CPUs.
Fovia's HDVR® software makes real-time volume rendering an extremely
informative tool for Egyptologists, osteologists, palaeopathogists,
archaeologists and mummy specialists worldwide.
For additional information, visit www.fovia.com.