The interesting detection of tobacco traces on the remains of Pharaoh Ramses II would have completely been forgotten had it not been for another accidental and similar discovery involving several ancient Egyptian mummies sixteen years later.
It was in 1992 when Dr. Svetla Balabanova, a toxicologist from the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Ulm, Germany examined the mummified remains of Henut Taui, a priestess who lived sometime in 1000 B.C. during the reign of the 21st Dynasty of ancient Egypt. The body of the priestess along with several other mummies was subjected to the same testing methods applied in modern times to prove drug consumption. To Dr. Balabanova’s astonishment, Henut Taui’s mummified body along with those of other mummies showed traces of nicotine and cocaine, particularly in their hair.
To make sure that she wasn't wrong about her findings, Dr. Balabanova had the tests repeated, and sent samples to three more labs. When they confirmed that her initial discovery was accurate, she published her findings with two of her colleagues. However, the forensic scientist’s publication was met with acrimonious reception. People called her a fraud and accused her of fabricating or misinterpreting the actual results of her research on Henut Taui’s body. On the other hand, a sizeable portion of those who read her work and believed in the credibility of her findings used her research as proof that there was contact between the ancient Egyptians from the Old World and the pre-Columbian people in the Americas.
Dr. Balabanova’s findings went on to be investigated by Dr. Rosalie David, who worked as the keeper of Egyptology at the Manchester Museum. Her efforts to research the mystery behind the cocaine mummies confirmed that Balabanova’s findings were not compromised and that the mummies that were studied, including Henut Taui’s mummified remains, were genuine Egyptians mummies of ancient origin.
However, despite the corroboration of a skeptic like David, mainstream scholars continue to remain skeptical of Balabanova’s discovery of cocaine and nicotine in the mummified bodies of ancient Egyptians. Their refusal to accept her findings also stems from the fact that others have also attempted to replicate the toxicologist’s detection of cocaine from the samples of Egyptian mummies but failed to produce similar results successfully. While some accept the results of Balabanova’s study, they insist the cocaine and nicotine can be explained by the mummification methods implemented at the time. For example, plants containing atropine alkaloid may have been used in the mummification of the bodies and these plants “necrochemically” changed over time to resemble the compounds present in tobacco and coca plants.