Her wipers pulsed at full speed as the green fields of Flanders turned a blurry grey. Behind her sat a small, black picnic cooler. Within 24 hours, it would be full of human brains - not modern specimens, but brains that had contemplated this landscape as far back as the middle ages and had, miraculously, remained intact.
For centuries, archaeologists have been perplexed by discoveries of ancient skeletons devoid of all soft tissue, except what MortonHayward cheerfully described as "just a brain rattling around in a skull". At Oxford, where she is a doctoral candidate, she has gathered the world's largest collection of ancient brains, some as old as 8,000 years. Additionally, after poring over centuries of scientific literature, she has tallied a staggering catalogue of cases - more than 4,400 preserved brains as old as 12,000 years. Using advanced technologies such as particle accelerators, she is leading a new effort to reveal the molecular secrets that have enabled some human brains to survive longer than Stonehenge or the Great Pyramid of Giza.
This research may unlock not just the past, but present-day mysteries, too. Morton-Hayward has suggested that the molecular processes that damage our brains in life could help preserve them after death a revelation that may reshape our understanding of ageing and neurodegenerative conditions.
On that stormy day, Morton-Hayward had embarked on an expedition to collect 37 brains recently excavated from a medieval graveyard in Belgium. She radiated empathy and good humour as she chatted about slicing up cerebral matter.
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