Testimony from the Iceman
The 5,000-plus-year-old Neolithic man discovered a decade ago is telling scientists how he lived and died
- By Bob Cullen
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2003, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 10)
Only when an archaeologist from the University of Innsbruck, Dr. Konrad Spindler, saw the copper ax found with Otzi and estimated it to be 4,000 years old—a relic of the Neolithic age—did anyone begin to comprehend what an astonishing discovery had been made on the Tisenjoch. The Neolithic era was the transitional age when stone tools began to give way to metal and when agriculture was supplanting hunting and gathering. Until Otzi, archaeologists had been required to reconstruct Neolithic civilization from skeletal remains, flint tools and arrowheads, bits of pottery and the beginnings of metallurgy. The glacier’s damp, freezing temperature had preserved not only Otzi himself but also a trove of organic artifacts—clothing, wooden handles for tools and weapons, feathered arrows—never before seen by modern eyes. Some of the artifacts, however, were inadvertently damaged or destroyed as the body was pried from the ice.
“A lot was lost,” says Dr. Markus Egg, an archaeologist at the Roman-Germanic Central Museum in Mainz, Germany, who supervised the restoration of Otzi’s belongings. “For example, we don’t know how the backpack was worn—over the head or over the shoulder. And the quiver has no strap to indicate how it was carried.” Nevertheless, the study of the artifacts that did survive the extraction changed our understanding of the Neolithic world. The radiocarbon dating of Otzi’s ax blade forced a revision in the generally accepted date for the advent of copper smelting in the Alpine region. The feathers on two of his arrows showed that Neolithic man understood the ballistic principles that make an arrow rotate and fly more accurately. The embers that he carried, wrapped in maple leaves in a birch-bark container, suggested how Neolithic people transported fire from place to place.
There had been an assumption, of course, that people of that era wore clothing of some sort. But, save for some jewelry and buttons, there had been no examples until Otzi. From him, archaeologists learned that Neolithic people in central Europe had leggings to protect them from the cold. But they evidently had few woven textiles; all of Otzi’s clothing came from animal hides. Despite its primitive appearance, his gear was functional. He had shoes made of leather and bast (plant fiber), stuffed with grass for insulation. When researchers made copies of the shoes, they found them quite practical for hiking in the snow. “Everything we know about clothing from the Neolithic age in Europe is from him,” Egg says. “There is nothing to compare. He is alone.”
Scientists who worked on the Otzi project produced some elegant results with just specks of evidence. Some researchers, looking at the structure of the body’s damaged thighbone, analyzed the secondary osteons—concentric arrangements of bone matrix that increase as a person ages—and estimated that Otzi was in his 40s when he died.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (5)
45 years is old even for the 1800's. Agriculture, copper, mobility, in an area just north of Etruscan territory. Thousands of years before Etruscan civilization. Someone shot an arrow into him, and no signs of cannibalism. This stuff is great.
So much is lost to time and decay it's tragic.
Posted by Fred on October 14,2011 | 07:14 PM
otzi was 500 years old when he was discovered
Posted by Frank on July 28,2011 | 10:34 PM
was otzi realy 5000 years old when he died
Posted by on January 20,2011 | 08:32 AM
I second the comment above--I began looking for research on tattoos and was astonished to find out that the Iceman had tattoos--and now I am getting off-track reading this article!
Posted by Olivia on September 29,2010 | 09:31 AM
This is amazing! I first started my research no Tattoos this lead me to The Tattoos on the "Iceman". I was so into what I had found it lead me to go off track a bit.
I then started reading Testimony from the Iceman. All I can say is WOW!! I would like to know more...
Posted by Darla on July 24,2009 | 06:25 PM