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Otzi The 'Iceman'

Oetzi the Iceman may have been buried, says team

Oetzi, the 5,000 year old "Iceman" found in the Italian Alps, may have been ceremonially buried, archaeologists claim.

An autopsy showed that Oetzi had been murdered, dying of an arrow wound.

While this is not disputed, a new study suggests that months after his death, Oetzi's corpse was carried to the high mountain pass where it was found.

The discovery site therefore may not be a murder scene after all, but a burial ground.

The new study, led by Professor Luca Bondioli of the National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnology in Rome and his US-Italian team, is published in the journal Antiquity.

Oetzi was discovered on the alpine border between Italy and Austria in 1991.

Although thought at first to be the corpse of a modern climber, scientists later proved that the mummified body was more than 5,000 years old.

When an autopsy showed that he was killed by an arrow wound to the shoulder, Oetzi became an overnight media sensation.

In the new study, researchers produced a detailed map of where the corpse and artefacts were found.

Based on guesses about how the artefacts had dispersed down slope over time, they inferred that the body had originated on a rock platform nearby. They argued that this was a later burial site, and not the original scene of his murder.

This "burial theory" may explain some perplexing facts about Oetzi.

For example, analysis suggests he died in the spring because the pollen of plants that bloom at that time of year is found in his gut. However, pollen within the ice suggests that the corpse was deposited in the late summer.

Professor Bondioli and his team say that these facts makes most sense if the body was deliberately carried to its site of discovery many months after death.

This suggests a burial.

Professor Bondioli elaborated: "Oetzi must have been a very important person to be taken to this high mountain pass for burial. Perhaps he was some sort of a chieftan."

However, Professor Frank Ruehli of the University of Zurich, the medical doctor who performed the original autopsy, is not totally convinced by the burial theory.

He remarked: "The left arm of the corpse is in a weird position. This must have happened at the time of death."

"If Oetzi was a chieftan, why did his people not move the twisted arm into a more natural position?" he told BBC News. "This would be expected in the burial of an important person".

Also somewhat sceptical is Dr Wolfgang Muller of Royal Holloway University of London. He studied the chemistry of Oetzi's teeth and bones to track his migration route through the Alps.

"It's an interesting new interpretation but it's not bullet proof," he said. "However, if Oetzi was buried they must have carried the body a long way because the nearby villages would have been at a low altitude."

While much remains to be learned about the enigmatic Iceman - as the mummified corpse has been dubbed - one thing is certain: This famous mummy will remain the subject of intense speculation and new research for decades to come.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11086027
 
Model gives ancient Iceman Oetzi new face
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-12599162

Oetzi model (pic from South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology/Ochsenreiter) The reconstruction gives a vivid impression of a Stone Age hunter

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* Alps Iceman may have been buried
* 'Iceman' row ends after 17 years

Oetzi the Iceman has reappeared looking fighting fit - as a new model on show in the Italian Alps, where he died from an arrow wound some 5,300 years ago.

In 1991 a German couple found Oetzi's mummified corpse embedded in a glacier, in a high mountain pass.

Using 3D images of the corpse and forensic technology two Dutch experts - Alfons and Adrie Kennis - created a new Oetzi model. They gave him brown eyes.

The model is on show at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano.

The museum is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Iceman discovery - a find which became an international sensation.

Oetzi was found still wearing goatskin leggings and a grass cape, and his copper-headed axe and a quiver full of arrows were lying nearby.

He was named after the Oetz Valley, on the Italy-Austria border, where he was found.

Researchers say Oetzi was about 159cm tall (5ft, 2.5in), 46 years old, arthritic and infested with whipworm.
 
Ötzi the iceman's stomach throws up a surprise
11 December 2011 by Andy Coghlan

IT'S time to rethink Ötzi the iceman's last hours. The theory that he was caught and killed after a lengthy and exhausting chase through the Alps clashes with new evidence that he sat down for a leisurely meal no more than an hour before his violent death.

Ötzi's body was discovered in 1991 inside a glacier near the mountainous border between Italy and Austria. It had been naturally mummified by ice about 5300 years ago.

A previous analysis of Ötzi's stomach concluded it was almost empty of food, leading to the idea that the iceman spent his final moments running on an empty stomach. But when Albert Zink of the Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, Italy, and colleagues took a closer look, they realised that the empty "stomach" was in fact a section of Ötzi's colon. They found that the real stomach had been forced upwards, and now lies wedged under the iceman's ribs.

Zink's team has now examined its contents, which include plenty of partially digested ibex meat, probably suggesting that Ötzi enjoyed a hearty meal shortly before his death (Journal of Archaeological Science, DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2011.08.003).

"The iceman felt secure and had a rest with a large meal," says Zink. "At a maximum of 30 to 60 minutes later - because otherwise his stomach would have emptied - he was shot from behind with an arrow."

The researchers also found that Ötzi had three gallstones, supporting the idea that he had a diet rich in animal fat. Previous work showed his arteries were full of fatty deposits.

The team also looked at the iceman's skeleton, and found that his knees show evidence of wear and tear caused by the repeated heavy strain of hiking across mountainous terrain. This supports theories that he spent long periods walking in the mountains, possibly hunting animals for food.

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... prise.html
 
Oetzi the Iceman's nuclear genome gives new insights
By Jason Palmer, Science and technology reporter, BBC News

New clues have emerged in what could be described as the world's oldest murder case: that of Oetzi the "Iceman", whose 5,300-year-old body was discovered frozen in the Italian Alps in 1991.
Oetzi's full genome has now been reported in Nature Communications.
It reveals that he had brown eyes, "O" blood type, was lactose intolerant, and was predisposed to heart disease.
They also show him to be the first documented case of infection by a Lyme disease bacterium.

Analysis of series of anomalies in the Iceman's DNA also revealed him to be more closely related to modern inhabitants of Corsica and Sardinia than to populations in the Alps, where he was unearthed.

The study reveals the fuller genetic picture as laid out in the nuclei of Oetzi's cells.
This nuclear DNA is both rarer and typically less well-preserved than the DNA within mitochondria, the cell's "power plants", which also contain DNA.
Oetzi's mitochondrial DNA had already revealed some hints of his origins when it was fully sequenced in 2008.

Albert Zink, from the Eurac Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, Italy, said the nuclear DNA study was a great leap forward in one of the most widely studied specimens in science.
"We've been studying the Iceman for 20 years. We know so many things about him - where he lived, how he died - but very little was known about his genetics, the genetic information he was carrying around," he told BBC News.

He was carrying around a "haplotype" that showed his ancestors most likely migrated from the Middle East as the practice of formal agriculture became more widespread.
It is probably this period of transition to an agrarian society that explains Oetzi's lactose intolerance.

Prof Zink said that next-generation "whole-genome" sequencing techniques made the analysis possible.
"Whole-genome sequencing allows you to sequence the whole DNA out of one sample; that wasn't possible before in the same way.
"This was really exciting and I think it's just the start for a longer study on this level. We still would like to learn more from this data - we've only just started to analyse it."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17191398
 
And he had Lymes diesease....

On top of all his other woes
 
Oetzi the Iceman's blood is world's oldest
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17909396

Oetzi's genome was published in February, indicating his probable eye colour and blood type

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Ancient Iceman 'had brown eyes'
Model gives Iceman Oetzi new face
Alps Iceman may have been buried

Researchers studying Oetzi, a 5,300-year-old body found frozen in the Italian Alps in 1991, have found red blood cells around his wounds.

Blood cells tend to degrade quickly, and earlier scans for blood within Oetzi's body turned up nothing.

Now a study in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface shows that Oetzi's remarkable preservation extends even to the blood he shed shortly before dying.

The find represents by far the oldest red blood cells ever observed.

It is just the latest chapter in what could be described as the world's oldest murder mystery.

Since Oetzi was first found by hikers with an arrow buried in his back, experts have determined that he died from his wounds and what his last meal was.

There has been extensive debate as to whether he fell where he died or was buried there by others.

In February, Albert Zink and colleagues at the Eurac Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, Italy published Oetzi's full genome.

An earlier study by the group, published in the Lancet, showed that a wound on Oetzi's hand contained haemoglobin, a protein found in blood - but it had long been presumed that red blood cells' delicate nature would have precluded their preservation.

Prof Zink and his colleagues collaborated with researchers at the Center for Smart Interfaces at the University of Darmstadt in Germany to apply what is known as atomic force microscopy to thin slices of tissue taken from an area surrounding the arrow wound.

The technique works using a tiny metal tip with a point just a few atoms across, dragged along the surface of a sample. The tip's movement is tracked, and results in a 3-D map at extraordinary resolution.


The studies turned up red blood cells' classic "doughnut" shape
The team found that the sample from Oetzi contained structures with a tell-tale "doughnut" shape, just as red blood cells have.

To ensure the structures were preserved cells and not contamination of some kind, they confirmed the find using a laser-based technique called Raman spectroscopy - those results also indicated the presence of haemoglobin and the clot-associated protein fibrin.

That, Prof Zink explained, seems to solve one of the elements of the murder mystery.

"Because fibrin is present in fresh wounds and then degrades, the theory that Oetzi died some days after he had been injured by the arrow, as had once been mooted, can no longer be upheld," he said.

The team also suggest that their methods may prove to be of use in modern-day forensics studies, in which the exact age of blood samples is difficult to determine.
 
Iceman was Central Europe native, new research finds

SAN FRANCISCO — Otzi the Iceman, an astonishingly well-preserved Neolithic mummy found in the Italian Alps in 1991, was a native of Central Europe, not a first-generation émigré from Sardinia, new research shows. And genetically, he looked a lot like other Stone Age farmers throughout Europe.

The new findings, reported Thursday here at the American Society of Human Genetics conference, support the theory that farmers, and not just the technology of farming, spread during prehistoric times from the Middle East all the way to Finland.

"The idea is that the spread of farming and agriculture, right now we have good evidence that it was also associated with a movement of people and not only technology," said study co-author Martin Sikora, a geneticist at Stanford University.

More at: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49760676/ns ... KMpv2eErcs
 
Link to Oetzi the Iceman found in living Austrians
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-24477038

Austrian scientists have found that 19 Tyrolean men alive today are related to Oetzi the Iceman, whose 5,300-year-old frozen body was found in the Alps.

Their relationship was established through DNA analysis by scientists from the Institute of Legal Medicine at Innsbruck Medical University.

The men have not been told about their connection to Oetzi. The DNA tests were taken from blood donors in Tyrol.

A particular genetic mutation was matched, the APA news agency reports.

Oetzi's body was found frozen in the Italian Alps in 1991.
Oetzi reconstruction (South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology/EURAC/Marco Samadelli-Gregor Staschitz) A reconstruction shows what Oetzi may have looked like before an arrow felled him

Walther Parson from the Institute told APA, the Austrian Press Agency, that the same mutation might be found in the nearby Swiss region of Engadine and in Italy's South Tyrol region.

"We have already found Swiss and Italian partners so that we can pursue our research," he said.

He was quoted as saying DNA had been analysed from 3,700 men who had given blood donations in Tyrol. They also provided data on their ancestry.

Women were not included in the study, as a different procedure would be required to match their genes.

Since Oetzi was first found by hikers with an arrow buried in his back, experts have determined that he died from his wounds. There has been extensive debate as to whether he fell where he died or was buried there by others.
 
New tattoos discovered on iceman Oetzi: All of the skin marks on the mummy mapped
Date:
January 27, 2015

Source:
European Academy of Bozen/Bolzano

Summary:
With the aid of a non-invasive photographic technique, researchers at the EURAC-Institute for Mummies and the Iceman have been able to show up all the tattoos on the man who was found preserved in a glacier, and in the process have stumbled upon a previously unknown tattoo on his ribcage. This tattoo is very difficult to make out with the naked eye because his skin has darkened so much over time. The latest sophisticated photographic technology has now enabled tattoos in deeper skin layers to be identified as well.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150127100203.htm
 
A team of researchers with the European Academy of Bozen (EURAC) aka, the Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, Italy, has found examples of the oldest known samples of red blood cells. In their paper uploaded to the open access site, Journal of the Royal Society Interface, the team explains how they found the red blood cells and why they now believe the Iceman died very quickly.

The Iceman as he has come to be known, (also known as Ötzi) has been the object of intense scrutiny ever since being found embedded in an Alpine glacier back in 1991—he is believed to have died approximately 5,300 years ago. Attempts to find examples of actual red blood cells within his body have failed in the past, but in this new effort, the researchers used a new technique—a nano-sized probe they moved very slowly over parts of the mummified body that had been wounded, leading to open cuts. Because it moves, the probe allows for capturing 3D imagery—it revealed the clear doughnut shape of red blood cells. To confirm that the images they were seeing represented real red blood cells, the team shone a laser on the same material and read the wavelengths that were reflected back—that revealed that the molecular makeup of the material matched that of red blood cells—a finding that marks the oldest known preserved instance of a red blood cell. ...

http://phys.org/news/2015-05-iceman-reveals-oldest-red-blood.html
 
It was an arrow to the shoulder that most likely killed him, but Ötzi the Iceman may also have had a tummy ache when he died.

Otzi’s 5300-year old body was discovered in 1991 by mountaineers in the Alps. The find was special because his body is incredibly well preserved, says Frank Maixner at the European Academy of Bozen/Bolzano in Italy. “We have many skeletons from that period, but we can see his organs, his clothes… He provides a huge package of information,” he says.

Maixner and his colleagues wanted to see what the iceman’s stomach and gut could tell us. “His stomach was completely filled – he ate quite a lot before he was murdered,” he says.

In the surviving bits of his digestive tract, they found DNA from Helicobacter pylori – a type of gut bacteria carried by around half the world’s population. The DNA showed a pattern of age-related damage that you would only expect to see after thousands of years, meaning it was likely that the bacteria were present in the living Ötzi rather than having colonised his corpse in recent times.

https://www.newscientist.com/articl...mpid=SOC%25257CNSNS%25257C2016-GLOBAL-twitter
 
I'm quite impressed that a middle aged guy could hike across the Alps. Was he a sort of stone-age Brian Blessed?
 
He was probably exceptional for his time.
Still fit enough to climb mountains and hunt - he was probably a great warrior, even perhaps a chieftain.
The circumstances of his death are still odd. I'm thinking he was assassinated, thrown out of his tribe.
 
He did have signs of arthritis though.
Guess we'll never solve this stone-age whudunnit, but the poor sod certainly died a bad death.
 
"In the surviving bits of his digestive tract, they found DNA from Helicobacter pylori – a type of gut bacteria carried by around half the world’s population."

I had that once. It causes gastric ulcers, and it's hell. Somewhere on this MB you'll find the story of how I and thousands of others were cured, as the result of a brave doctor experimenting on himself.
 
Who killed Oetzi the Iceman? Italy reopens coldest of cases
By Bethany Bell BBC News, Bolzano and Munich

High in a remote area of the Oetztaler Alps in northern Italy, 5,300 years ago, Oetzi the Iceman was shot in the back with an arrow.
It hit a main artery and he probably bled to death within minutes.
His body was preserved in the ice, making him one of the oldest and best-preserved mummies on Earth.

Oetzi was first discovered in 1991 and scientists discovered the flint arrowhead lodged in his shoulder 10 years later. But only in recent months have investigators, led by a senior police detective, focused more intently on how Oetzi was shot.
Was it murder? And who might have killed him?

Angelika Fleckinger, director of the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology, where Oetzi's body is on display, called on a professional to investigate. He is Detective Chief Inspector Alexander Horn of the Munich Police Department, who is also head of behavioural analysis with the Bavarian police.
He admits to being slightly taken aback at the request.
"It was a funny situation, because when I was asked by the director if I work on cold cases, I said 'yes, I do'," Inspector Horn said.
But this case was colder than most. :twisted:

"The usual cold case that we have is 20 or maybe 30 years old, and now I was asked to work on a case 5,300 years old," he said.
Initially, Inspector Horn did not think he could help.
"I thought that probably the body would be in a bad condition. But what I learnt very soon was that it was in perfect condition. It's even in a better condition than some of the bodies I am working on nowadays."

As well as visiting the scene of the crime high in the Alps, the inspector was able to draw on the extensive research done on Oetzi over the last 25 years, which includes detailed analysis of his stomach contents and the injuries on his body.
Both were to prove key to Inspector Horn's theories.
"It looks a lot like a murder," he says.

The killer seems to have caught Oetzi by surprise.
"Oetzi was shot probably from quite a distance, about 30m (100 ft), which is not a close-contact killing; it's a distance killing."
Inspector Horn says Oetzi seems to have been quite relaxed up on the glacier just before he was shot. His own bow wasn't ready for use.
"About half an hour before he was killed, he was having a rest up there. He was having quite a heavy lunch or meal at least, so it doesn't seem like he was in a rush or fleeing from something."

Another crucial clue came from the injury on Oetzi's right hand - a wound he received one or two days before his death, probably during a fight.
"That injury was something we would define as a classic active defence wound. That would be like if somebody... threatens you with an knife and he stabs you, if you grab into the knife and... try to push it away."
Oetzi did not suffer other defence injuries, so Inspector Horn believes he won the initial fight - which possibly took place down in the valley.

"What we think… is that the killing up on the glacier is probably the continuation of this fight that happened about one-and-a-half days before."
Knowing that he was unlikely to win in hand-to-hand combat, Oetzi's killer probably stealthily followed him up the mountain and shot him.
The glacier "is a very remote area and probably not a place where you would randomly run into each other", Alexander Horn says.

But who was the offender and what were his motives?
Inspector Horn says the offender didn't steal Oetzi's valuable copper blade axe and other gear, so it is unlikely to have been a crime for profit. He speculates that it was probably due to "some strong personal emotion".
"If there was hate, if it was jealousy, if it was revenge, we will not be able to tell you."

Angelika Fleckinger from the Museum of Archaeology says she is very happy so much progress has been made into the big mystery of Oetzi's death.
But Inspector Horn says he is still unsatisfied.
"I don't think there is a high likelihood we will ever be able to solve that case."
The offender "got away with that murder - which I don't like, being in charge of investigations," he said with a wry smile.
"I don't like the fact that we have an unsolved homicide there."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-40104139

I don't suppose we're going to find a confession at this distance in time... :p
 
Who killed Oetzi the Iceman? Italy reopens coldest of cases
By Bethany Bell BBC News, Bolzano and Munich

High in a remote area of the Oetztaler Alps in northern Italy, 5,300 years ago, Oetzi the Iceman was shot in the back with an arrow.
It hit a main artery and he probably bled to death within minutes.
His body was preserved in the ice, making him one of the oldest and best-preserved mummies on Earth.

Oetzi was first discovered in 1991 and scientists discovered the flint arrowhead lodged in his shoulder 10 years later. But only in recent months have investigators, led by a senior police detective, focused more intently on how Oetzi was shot.
Was it murder? And who might have killed him?

Angelika Fleckinger, director of the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology, where Oetzi's body is on display, called on a professional to investigate. He is Detective Chief Inspector Alexander Horn of the Munich Police Department, who is also head of behavioural analysis with the Bavarian police.
He admits to being slightly taken aback at the request.
"It was a funny situation, because when I was asked by the director if I work on cold cases, I said 'yes, I do'," Inspector Horn said.
But this case was colder than most. :twisted:

"The usual cold case that we have is 20 or maybe 30 years old, and now I was asked to work on a case 5,300 years old," he said.
Initially, Inspector Horn did not think he could help.
"I thought that probably the body would be in a bad condition. But what I learnt very soon was that it was in perfect condition. It's even in a better condition than some of the bodies I am working on nowadays."

As well as visiting the scene of the crime high in the Alps, the inspector was able to draw on the extensive research done on Oetzi over the last 25 years, which includes detailed analysis of his stomach contents and the injuries on his body.
Both were to prove key to Inspector Horn's theories.
"It looks a lot like a murder," he says.

The killer seems to have caught Oetzi by surprise.
"Oetzi was shot probably from quite a distance, about 30m (100 ft), which is not a close-contact killing; it's a distance killing."
Inspector Horn says Oetzi seems to have been quite relaxed up on the glacier just before he was shot. His own bow wasn't ready for use.
"About half an hour before he was killed, he was having a rest up there. He was having quite a heavy lunch or meal at least, so it doesn't seem like he was in a rush or fleeing from something."

Another crucial clue came from the injury on Oetzi's right hand - a wound he received one or two days before his death, probably during a fight.
"That injury was something we would define as a classic active defence wound. That would be like if somebody... threatens you with an knife and he stabs you, if you grab into the knife and... try to push it away."
Oetzi did not suffer other defence injuries, so Inspector Horn believes he won the initial fight - which possibly took place down in the valley.

"What we think… is that the killing up on the glacier is probably the continuation of this fight that happened about one-and-a-half days before."
Knowing that he was unlikely to win in hand-to-hand combat, Oetzi's killer probably stealthily followed him up the mountain and shot him.
The glacier "is a very remote area and probably not a place where you would randomly run into each other", Alexander Horn says.

But who was the offender and what were his motives?
Inspector Horn says the offender didn't steal Oetzi's valuable copper blade axe and other gear, so it is unlikely to have been a crime for profit. He speculates that it was probably due to "some strong personal emotion".
"If there was hate, if it was jealousy, if it was revenge, we will not be able to tell you."

Angelika Fleckinger from the Museum of Archaeology says she is very happy so much progress has been made into the big mystery of Oetzi's death.
But Inspector Horn says he is still unsatisfied.
"I don't think there is a high likelihood we will ever be able to solve that case."
The offender "got away with that murder - which I don't like, being in charge of investigations," he said with a wry smile.
"I don't like the fact that we have an unsolved homicide there."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-40104139

I don't suppose we're going to find a confession at this distance in time... :p

Boris says Corbyn did it!
 
Otzi's last meal was mainly Ibex fat

“It was surprising to see this extraordinarily high-fat diet,” said Frank Maixner at the Eurac Research Institute for Mummy Studies in Bolzano, Italy. “He clearly knew that fat is a high-energy source and he really composed his diet to survive at high altitude.”

Ötzi’s last meal may have fortified him for a hunting trip that lasted several days high up in the Alps, but it may not have been the most enjoyable feast. Maixner has tried ibex. He said the meat is not too bad, but struggled to find the words to encapsulate the experience of eating the animal’s subcutaneous fat. “The taste is really, well, it’s horrible,” he said. “And they had no salt at the time.”

Through a combination of methods including DNA matching and microscopic inspections, the researchers found traces of red deer and ibex meat, ancient wheat and plenty of ibex fat. They also discovered multiple traces of toxic bracken, a finding that has the scientists stumped.

Writing in the journal Current Biology, the researchers speculate that Ötzi may have eaten the toxic bracken to rid himself of whipworm parasites, which had been discovered in his intestines previously. But Maixner favours other explanations. Ötzi may have eaten the bracken as a food supplement, a practice known among some indigenous groups. “Another possibility is that he wrapped his dried meat in bracken leaves and some of the material got into his gut unintentionally,” Maixner said.
 
It was probably 'survival food' while he was on the run.

Yes: whoopee! for the choices we have today.

Didn’t l read once that our cities are 72 hours from starvation should the food supply network fail?

maximus otter
 
Yes: whoopee! for the choices we have today.

Didn’t l read once that our cities are 72 hours from starvation should the food supply network fail?

maximus otter
Hunters like yourself and baked-bean-tin hoarders like me don't have to worry too much. It's mainly the city dwellers that have to worry.
 
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