News imageNews imageNews imageNews imageNews imageNews imageNews image
Link to BBC HomepageNews imageNews image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
News image
News image
News image
UK
News image
News image
News image
News image
World
News image
News image
News image
News image
Business
News image
News image
News image
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
News image
News image
News image
Sport
News image
News image
News image
News image
Despatches
News image
News image
News image
News image
World News in Audio
News imageNews image
News image
News image
News image
News image
On Air
News image
News image
News image
News image
Cantonese
News image
News image
News image
News image
Talking Point
News image
News image
News image
News image
Feedback
News image
News image
News image
News image
Low Graphics
News image
News image
News image
News image
Help
News image
News image
News image
News image
Site Map
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews imageNews image
Saturday, March 28, 1998 Published at 13:09 GMT
News image
News image
News image
Despatches
News image
Italian iceman goes on show
image: [ Shortly after his discovery, 'Oetzi' was moved to the University of Innsbruck for study ]
Shortly after his discovery, 'Oetzi' was moved to the University of Innsbruck for study

The remains of a prehistoric man who died in an Alpine glacier 5,000 years ago have gone on public display for the first time at a new museum in northern Italy. BBC Rome Correspondent, David Willey, reports:

The iceman was discovered by some German hikers at an altitude of more than 3,000m, frozen into an Alpine glacier on the border between Italy and Austria. It is the first time that the remains of a prehistoric man have been recovered almost intact.

His cloak made of woven leaves, his quiver full of arrows, and his shoes and leggings made of animal skins have all gone on show, together with the iceman in a newly converted four-storey Natural History museum in the city of Bolzano. Bolzano is the capital of the Italian province of South Tyrol, which was transferred from Austria to Italy as part of the peace settlement at the end of the First World War.


[ image: Italians prefer to call the iceman 'Hibernatus']
Italians prefer to call the iceman 'Hibernatus'
The iceman himself now reposes inside a large refrigerator, built at a cost of over $1m. The temperature inside, -6°C at 98% humidity, is expected to preserve the body for many years to come.

There's a small viewing window for members of the public to peer inside. Ownership of the iceman, nicknamed 'Oetzi' by the Austrians after the Alpine valley in which he was found, has been disputed between Austria and Italy.

After six years of scientific research at Innsbruck University in Austria, the body was sent back to Italy earlier this year after an arbitration commission found that its original location was just over the Italian side of the icy Alpine border. The iceman, or 'Hibernatus' to Italians, is expected to become a big tourist attraction in the South Tyrol.

Already icecream shops are selling iceman sundaes, while the local winery has introduced an iceman wine label.



News image
News image
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
News image
News image
News image
Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage
News image
News image
Link to BBC Homepage

News imageNews image
News imageNews imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
16 Jan 98�|�Sci/Tech
Italy's iceman comes home
News image
News image
News image
News image
Internet Links
News image
University of Innsbruck - information on the iceman
News image
News image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
Historic day for East Timor
News image

News image
News image
News image
Despatches Contents
News image