dr. joanna fields at 9:30. the woman rips dead egyptians from their tombs for a living. she's bad company. she's one of the country's foremost archaeologists. did i say "curse"? did anyone say "doomed for eternity"? it's an honor the natural history museum chose eastman. when we cat scan this mummy, its age, its sex. we can look at its bones and tissue, see what diseases it had. we can reconstruct what it looked like in real life. imagine getting to examine a body that's 3,000 years old. ooh, yeah. my dream come true. personally, i'd rather examine one in the 16-20-year-old range. you're remarkably limited. wait. before you go. ji jim? aah! good tip, vin. whatever i do, i won't call it jim. the museum acquired it through an antiquities dealer in san francisco, who had very little information about it except that a wealthy sacramento family owned it for 80 years. from the manner of painting and wrapping suggests we're not dealing with an upper-class person, but we could be surprised. are we all set? yes, sir. everyone wearing their anti-curse amulets? o.k. let's go. i hea