At the top of the display to the left is a white ibis with its wings spread. Its wingspan is about half a metre. A little below, to the right, is a funerary boat, made of wood and covered in plaster painted in white, red, black and green pigments . It is about 1 metre long, with its prow and stern curving upwards. There is an open pavilion in the centre of the deck and there are figures on each side of the pavilion. Under the roof of the pavilion is a mummy with two figures kneeling by its side. On the roof is the god Anubis as a jackal, sitting with its fore-paws in front and its head up.
At the left of the case, below the ibis, is a statue of a seated cat, about 30 cm in height.
Below the cat, occupying the width of the display, is a wooden coffin, its sides shaped to the contours of a human body. It is decorated with a frieze along the top of vertical human and animal figures and an intricate design below the frieze, with hieroglyphs and figures in many scenes. There is no lid and inside the coffin is a mummy, bound in yellowed linen.
In front of the coffin, at the base of the display, are more objects. At the left is a blue faience net about 90 cm long and 20 cm across, with a square net pattern crosswise. To its right are two mummified birds: the one at the back is much larger, but both are almost cone-shaped and come to a point on the right-hand side. Both have yellow-brown linen wrappings. To their right are five small (10 cm) shabtis - human figures in the shape of a mummy in different blues and blue-greens.