Thank you for your thoughts, Robin and Tony! I guess I was also concerned
that if these bundles became humid, that it would "reactivate" the
possibility of fresh carrion insects showing up on them. We will have to be
very observant.

I'll let you know if we carry out further research on this and what we find.
Best wishes,
Angelica

On Thu, 3 Jun 2021 at 10:16, 'Robin F Hazen' via MuseumPests <
pestlist@googlegroups.com> wrote:

> I would assume *C. macellaria *and *Dermestes maculatus are f*eeding on
> the protein of the natural mummy bundle.  The others are probably
> incidental, as they would require actively decomposing remains.  Very
> interesting question!
>
> Robin
>
> On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 10:48 AM Angelica Isa-Adaniya <a.isa14...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Dear everyone,
>> I have a question about old, presumably dried up and naturally mummified
>> human remains.
>> If I find flies normally associated with decomposing matter such as *Musca
>> domestica, Chrysomya albiceps *and *Cochliomyia macellaria*, and we are
>> in a relatively rural area, should I be concerned that they might be
>> getting to some packaged up funerary bundles? Or are they more likely just
>> flying in from outside?
>>
>> We found adult *M.domestica and C. albiceps* out in the open, but the *C.
>> macellaria *was one larva and one pupa on a mummy bundle as well as one
>> larva and one adult hide beetle *Dermestes maculatus* on a mummy. Am I
>> correct in assuming they're feeding on the remains?
>>
>> Thank you for any pointers on this.
>> Best,
>>
>> Angelica
>> Pachacamac Museum - Lima, Peru
>>
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>
>
> --
>
> Robin Hazen
>
> Preservation Specialist
>
> Binghamton University Libraries - Preservation Unit LS2525
>
> 607-777-6220
>
> rha...@binghamton.edu
>
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