Oetzi the Iceman Gets a New Look

Scientists update Oetzi's genome, find some differences from 2012 version
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Aug 16, 2023 12:34 PM CDT
Oetzi the Iceman Gets a New Look
A reconstruction of "Oetzi the Iceman" sculpted by Alfons & Adrie Kennis. Decades after he was found in the Italian Alps, scientists determined that Oetzi was mostly descended from farmers from present day Turkey, and his head was balder and skin darker than initially thought.   (South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology/Ochsenreiter via AP)

Oetzi the Iceman has a new look. Decades after the famous glacier mummy was discovered in the Italian Alps, the AP reports that scientists have dug back into his DNA to paint a better picture of the ancient hunter. An earlier draft of Oetzi's genome was published in 2012, but ancient DNA research has advanced since then, so scientists decided to take another look at the iceman's genes, explained study author Johannes Krause, a geneticist at Germany's Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. They used DNA extracted from the mummy's hip bone to determine that Oetzi was mostly descended from farmers from present day Turkey, and his head was balder and skin darker than what was initially thought, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Cell Genomics.

Oetzi, who lived more than 5,000 years ago, was frozen into the ice after he was killed by an arrow to the back. His corpse was preserved as a "natural mummy" until 1991, when hikers found him along with some of his clothing and gear—including a copper ax, a longbow, and a bearskin hat. Since then, many researchers have worked to uncover more about the mummy, which is displayed at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy.

Based on the new genome, Oetzi's appearance when he died around age 45 was much like the mummy looks today: It's dark and doesn't have much hair on it, said study author Albert Zink, head of the Institute for Mummy Studies at Eurac Research in Italy. Scientists previously thought the iceman was lighter-skinned and hairier in life, but that his mummified corpse had changed over time. His ancestry suggests that he lived among an isolated population in the Alps, Zink said. Most Europeans today have a mix of genes from three groups: farmers from Anatolia, hunter-gatherers from the west, and herders from the east. But 92% of Oetzi's ancestry was from just the Anatolian farmers, without much mixing from the other groups. (More Oetzi stories.)

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