Mummy's Tale

<p>In 1991, a pair of hikers in the &Ouml;tztal Alps along the Austrian-Italian border stumbled over the frozen, mummified body of an ancient man. The 5,300-year-old mummy, affectionately known as &Ouml;tzi, was amazingly well preserved. Since then, scientists have pieced together an incredibly detailed picture of the iceman who lived before, from where he lived to what he ate before dying in the ice.</p>

His job

<p>Based on animal hair from his clothing, <a href="Rapid%2520Communications%2520in%2520Mass%2520Spectrometry">&Ouml;tzi herded sheep, cows</a>, and goats. The skin from his clothing came from domesticated animals, according to a 2008 study in Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry. That would make &Ouml;tzi a member of the more progressive culture at the time, unlike the more primitive hunter-culture that existed around the same time.</p>

His fashion sense

<p>During the Stone Age, animal skins were all the rage. Most of &Ouml;tzi&#39;s clothing was badly disintegrated, but researchers did manage to salvage parts of his sheep- and cow-leather shoes, <a href="http://www.livescience.com/5061-mummified-iceman-ancient-job-determined.html">goatskin leggings</a>, bear fur cap, and animal skin loincloth. The iceman also carried a grass mat or cape with him, either to sleep on or shield him from the rain. The ancient pastoralist also sported several tattoos.</p>

What he looked like

<p>&Ouml;tzi&#39;s body was so well preserved that scientists had a rough idea of what he looked like for years. But in 2011, researchers gave the <a href="http://www.livescience.com/13151-otzi-reconstruction-iceman-mummy-copper-age.html">iceman a makeover</a>. Using 3-D images of his skull, two brothers assembled an extremely lifelike <a href="http://www.livescience.com/13150-otzi-reconstruction-iceman-mummy-copper-age.html">reconstruction of &Ouml;tzi&#39;s face</a>. The weather-beaten man had deep-set eyes, a long, hooked nose, and a vague resemblance to actor Harvey Keitel. Like other Copper Age men, &Ouml;tzi was a diminutive 5 feet 3 inches (1.6 meters) tall and weighed around 110 pounds (50 kilograms).</p>

His relatives

<p>The Tyrolean Iceman&#39;s genetic profile most closely resembles modern-day Sardinians. Scientists believe that most of the Neolithic farmers and pastoralists in Central Europe would have had similar DNA. But if &Ouml;tzi were to come back today, he might be pretty lonely: a 2008 DNA analysis revealed that his <a href="http://www.livescience.com/5152-iceman-mummy-leaves-relatives.html">mother&#39;s line is likely extinct</a>, although it&#39;s possible that &Ouml;tzi fathered children whose descendants are living today.</p>

How he died

<p>For years, &Ouml;tzi&#39;s murder was the world&#39;s oldest cold case. The fact that he had an undigested meal in his stomach suggests the Iceman was ambushed, but scientists couldn&#39;t agree whether he was bashed over the head or killed by an arrow that nicked an artery in his shoulder. In a 2012 study detailed in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, scientists analyzed the <a href="http://www.livescience.com/20030-ice-mummy-oldest-blood-cells.html">mummy&#39;s red blood cells</a> and concluded that <a href="http://www.livescience.com/1578-cold-case-closed-iceman-mummy-bled-death.html">&Ouml;tzi bled to death</a> after the arrow wound. The blood cells showed traces of a clotting chemical that quickly appears in human blood after a wound but disappears immediately after; the fact that it was still around suggested &Ouml;tzi didn&#39;t survive long after the injury.</p>

His last meal

<p>Before being ambushed, &Ouml;tzi apparently sat down to a tasty meal of unleavened bread, sloes (fruit of the blackthorn), and deer meat. Scientists also found <a href="http://www.livescience.com/5202-iceman-mummy-moss-tummy.html">mosses in &Ouml;tzi&#39;s stomach</a>. &Ouml;tzi may have used the mosses to wrap his food and unintentionally swallowed them, or consumed them while drinking water from a steam. Either way, it probably wasn&#39;t a staple part of his diet: The mosses were neither nutritious nor tasty.</p>

His equipment

<p>All evidence suggests &Ouml;tzi was quite crafty. The Neolithic herdsmen carried several pieces of equipment when he died, including several wooden tools that were used to make clothing or utensils. His copper axe was a status symbol, indicating that he ranked high in his pastoralist culture. &Ouml;tzi was also carrying a bow and arrow, which he had leaned against a tree before he died. (Shown here, a window looking into the Iceman mummy&#39;s refrigerated cell at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology).</p>

Where he grew up

<p>It turns out, &Ouml;tzi wasn&#39;t far from home when he died. By analyzing the contents of his stomach, as well as the isotopes (atoms of the same elements with different weights) in &Ouml;tzi&#39;s body, and the type of equipment he carried scientists concluded that he didn&#39;t live in the Alps per se, but spent most of his life in Isack Valley or the lower Puster Valley, in the northernmost part of what is now Italy. However, he probably spent the last 10 years of his life in an area south and west of his previous home, not far from where he died.</p>

His health

<p>&Ouml;tzi made it to the ripe old age of 45, but he wasn&#39;t necessarily in top condition when he died. Analysis of his skeleton revealed he had bad knees. A 2012 study of the Neolithic herdsman&#39;s genome revealed that he was lactose intolerant (sad news for a sheepherder), and was infected with <a href="http://www.livescience.com/18704-oldest-case-lyme-disease-spotted-iceman-mummy.html">Lyme Disease</a>. And before dying, &Ouml;tzi had taken a medicinal herb called hop hornbeam, suggesting that he may have been suffering from nausea or stomach upset.</p>

Mummy Melodrama: Top 9 Secrets About Otzi the Iceman

Date: 08 November 2012 Time: 10:30 PM ET
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