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| Thursday, 7 February, 2002, 11:43 GMT Image of Stone Age death ![]() The replica has been constructed from Cat scan data This small object is at the centre of one of the most extraordinary stories in modern archaeology. It is a perfect replica of the flint arrowhead scientists now think killed Oetzi the iceman, the 5,300-year-old hunter who emerged from a melting glacier in the Italian Alps in 1991.
Arguments now rage as to whether the real arrowhead should be cut out of Oetzi, who is kept in a freezer at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano. Peter Vanezis, professor of forensic medicine and science at the University of Glasgow, UK, is in no doubt a full post mortem procedure should go ahead. Professor Vanezis is one of the many researchers who have been called in to look at the body. "It's vital to carry out an autopsy because as a forensic pathologist I'm fully aware that you don't really get the answer to all the questions you want unless you have a proper look inside the body and are able to retrieve the evidence," he told the BBC science programme Horizon. Bad case of worms The iceman was discovered by German tourists in the September of 1991 in the Oetz Valley - hence the name - still wearing goatskin leggings and a grass cape. His copper-headed axe and a quiver full of arrows were lying nearby. At first, it was thought he died from cold and hunger. It was only last year that researchers finally established he had a stone arrowhead embedded in his shoulder and that the nature of the injury - its position in an area full of blood vessels - probably meant he bled to death.
Oetzi was about 159 centimetres (five feet, 2.5 inches) tall, 46 years old, arthritic, and infested with whipworm. He had also been seriously ill three times in the last several months of his life. High levels of copper and arsenic in his hair indicate that he had been involved in copper smelting. Dead mountaineer He wore three layers of garments made from goat, deerskin and bark fibre. He had well-made shoes and a bearskin hat. It is believed he belonged to an agricultural community based on the cereal grains found not just on his garments but recovered from his colon, which contained bran of the primitive wheat Einkorn. Muscle fibres also retrieved from the colon confirm he ate goat meat as well.
In Thursday's Horizon programme, which reviews the Oetzi story so far, German hikers Erika and Helmut Simon describe the moment they discovered our best window on the Stone Age. "My husband walked in front of me a bit and then suddenly he stopped and said 'look at what's lying there' and I said 'oh, it's a body'." Mrs Simon says. "Then my husband took a photograph, just one, the last we had left in the camera." Mr Simon continues: "We thought that it was a mountain climber or a skier who had had an accident - perhaps 10 years previously or perhaps two years previously." ![]() Oetzi was discovered by German tourists in 1991 Death Of The Iceman was broadcast on BBC Two at 2100 GMT on Thursday, 7 February. | See also: Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Sci/Tech stories now: Links to more Sci/Tech stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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