4.7 Article

The reconstruction of the last itinerary of 6tzi, the Neolithic Iceman, by pollen analyses from sequentially sampled gut extracts

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 26, Issue 7-8, Pages 853-861

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2006.12.007

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The investigations of the Tyrolean Iceman Otzi and his artefacts, discovered at a remote location high in the Eastern Alps, have contributed greatly to the knowledge of the lifestyle of Neolithic humankind. However, the events immediately prior to the Iceman's death have remained unclear and even the recently discovered arrowhead in his back does not explain conclusively the cause of death satisfactorily. From the pollen and macrofossil content of his gut, we reconstruct his travels just before his demise. Sequential sampling of the food residues in the digestive tract of the 5200 year old glacier mummy has made possible the analyses of a series of meals and, from the pollen content, the deduction of the environments in which the last meals were eaten. During his last 33 or so hours, Otzi crossed different habitats in the Otztal mountains over considerable distances from high up near the timber line (at about 2500 m), to low down in the zone of warmth-loving trees (about 1200 in or less), and finally very high in the zone of perennial ice (above 3000 m). These final journeys lend new weight to the disaster theory of Otzi's death, which suggests that, returning from the high alpine pastures to his native village, he came into a severe conflict with his kin such that he had to flee from the community back to the high ground familiar to him, where he died. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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