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 8 of 10)
Early in 2002, Egarter, alerted by Quilici, decided to investigate further. He defrosted Otzi’s right hand and examined it under a microscope. He found a small cut running from the palm of the right hand, just below the index finger, over to the top side of the hand. It was, in total, about 3.5 centimeters (1.4 inches) long. When he probed, he found he could gently push a scalpel blade to a depth of five or six millimeters. He saw discoloration along the edges of the cut, which suggested to him that it was not made during the extraction of the body. It had been made while Otzi’s blood still flowed, before he died. “I think that the wound was very painful,” Egarter says. “Two fingers are nearly immobilized.”
This wound, too, had not been noticed in Austria. Egarter asked Gostner to make close-up x-rays of the body’s right hand. Gostner found two bone lesions—one under the cut and a second on the right wrist. They were consistent with the sort of lesion that a woodworker might suffer if he cut his hand on the blade of a saw. This suggested that Otzi might have sustained the wound fending off an attacker’s blade.
Egarter is still not sure how this new evidence fits into a comprehensive theory that would explain how Otzi came to die where he did. He hopes to investigate further. He would like to do an endoscopic examination of Otzi’s chest cavity. Then he would like to get permission from the scientific committee of the museum that controls research on Otzi to defrost the body and remove the arrowhead. Doing that would enable him to determine whether the arrow severed any nerves, arteries or veins. Severed arteries would indicate that Otzi died of blood loss shortly after the arrow hit him.If veins were damaged, he might have lasted considerably longer before the loss of blood killed him. If no blood vessels were damaged, he might have survived the wound for several days. While further tests await, Egarter continues to look for other clues. “It was my work, my responsibility at first,” he said. “But it has become my hobby.” I had the sense that if his command of English were more certain, Egarter would have used the word “passion” instead of “hobby.”
I tagged along with Egarter, mountain guide Pirpamer and Quilici one day last summer when they helicoptered up to the Tisenjoch to have a look around. Clouds wafting down from the mountain above hid the sun, melding with the snow and ice that covered much of the ground. Rocks that in sunlight glint with the faint golden color of pyrite looked black and foreboding. It was cold; we could see our exhalations in front of us as we hiked through the snow toward the place where Otzi was discovered.
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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