Topic ID #8474 - posted 8/30/2010 2:32 AM

Prehistoric ‘Iceman’ Gets Ceremonial Twist



Jennifer Palmer

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Prehistoric ‘Iceman’ Gets Ceremonial Twist
Rather than dying alone high in the Alps, Ötzi may have been ritually buried there

Posted: August 27, 2010
By Bruce Bower, Science News

A prehistoric man whose naturally mummified body was discovered frozen in the Italian Alps may have been toted up the mountain by his comrades, a new study suggests.

The Iceman, also nicknamed Ötzi, lived between 5,350 and 5,100 years ago as part of a genetically distinct European population (SN Online: 10/30/08). Hikers noticed the Iceman poking out of a glacier in 1991.

Since the 2001 discovery of a stone point in the Iceman’s left shoulder, many scientists have assumed that someone shot and killed Ötzi with an arrow as he attempted to flee through a mountain pass after a disastrous fight. From this perspective, the Iceman preserves a brutal prehistoric moment in time.

But a new analysis of the distribution of Ötzi’s belongings around his body, published in the September issue of Antiquity, raises the possibility that he perished near kin living at low altitudes, who took him to the mountains for a final send-off as soon as the weather permitted.


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