According to local media reports, the general supervisor of Aswan and Nubian antiquities and Egypt’s director of the archaeological mission, Abdel Moneim-Saeed, revealed that the mummies discovered consist of an adult, possibly a woman, and a child who passed away at around one or two years of age. These bodies were found in close proximity within a stone coffin, and further examinations will be carried out to ascertain their precise relationship. This discovery suggests that the middle class of Aswan Island's population may have been buried in this area of the cemetery, while the upper class was interred in the upper part of the cemetery. Additionally, preliminary studies, directed by the professor of Egyptian archaeology at the University of Milan and the director of the Italian side of the mission, Patrizia Piacentini, indicate that among the mummies, several died at a young age – some as newborns, while others had reached puberty.