The remains belong to an unknown woman, a local priest and abbot of the monastery – the bishop.
Scientists have created a reconstruction from the remains of three people found in a monastery more than 800 years old. They were found in a medieval crypt in the monastery of Whithorn, Scotland, writes Live Science.
As part of a project to study the life of the medieval population of Scotland, a digital reconstruction of the faces of these three people was carried out. It was carried out by anthropologist Chris Rinn, who was the first to make a 3D scan of every discovered skull.
He used the help of artificial intelligence to get the most realistic reconstructions of the faces of long dead people. The result is pictures that look like pictures of real people.
“I wanted to create real human faces, not just digital images. I made them as lifelike as possible, even with some expression,” Rynn said.
It is known that the researcher used the help of artificial intelligence to get the most realistic reconstructions of the faces of long dead people. The result is pictures that look like pictures of real people.
“As for the priest’s skull, there seems to be a defect in the jaw, which may be displayed on the lips. I tried to recreate this defect as accurately as possible,” Rynn added.
According to the anthropologist, the priest’s skull is the most asymmetrical skull he has ever worked with. And the skull of a young woman, on the contrary, was the most symmetrical of those that fell into his hands.

Image: lifescience.com
Image formation
Recall that earlier in Israel, a rare intact burial cave was discovered with dozens of artifacts from the late Bronze Age from the time of the Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II. Untouched burial archaeologists found in Palmachim National Park.
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