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Famed 5,300-Year-Old Alps Iceman Was a Balding Middle-Aged Man With Dark Skin and Eyes
Genetic analysis shows that Ötzi was descended from farmers who migrated from an area that is now part of Turkey
Famed 5,300-Year-Old Alps Iceman Was a Balding Middle-Aged Man With Dark Skin and Eyes
Genetic analysis shows that Ötzi was descended from farmers who migrated from an area that is now part of Turkey
Brian HandwerkAugust 16, 2023
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Ötzi, the 5,300-year-old mummy found murdered high in the Alps with an arrow in his back, is a prehistoric celebrity who attracts 300,000 visitors a year to his custom cooling chamber in the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy. Years of studies have revealed much about the Iceman, from his last meal—dried ibex and deer meat with einkorn wheat—to the distant Tuscan origins of his copper ax. But while the wizened mummy is extraordinarily well preserved for its age, it gives little impression of how Ötzi would have appeared in life. Now, a detailed genetic study has revealed much more about what the Iceman looked like—and traces the Copper Age corpse’s ancestral lineage back to Anatolia, an area that is now the Asian portion of Turkey.
Scientists have newly sequenced Ötzi’s genome a decade after an earlier effort, using modern techniques and comparative data to produce a much higher-quality result than ever before. The study published Wednesday in Cell Genomics reveals that Ötzi had dark eyes and skin pigmentation darker than that commonly seen among modern inhabitants of Greece or Sicily, though he’s previously been depicted with lighter skin more akin to that of Europeans living in the Alps today. And contrary to most artists’ interpretations, it also appears that he suffered from an age-old affliction still troublesome today—he was going bald.
The study also used comparisons with other ancient individuals’ DNA to suggest that the Iceman is descended, in large part, from the Anatolian agriculturalists who first brought farming to Europe about 9,000 years ago, through what is now Turkey into Greece and the Balkan Peninsula. Ötzi’s genes show little mixing with the hunter-gatherer populations already living in Europe during that time, suggesting that his community was small and relatively isolated in their beautiful but remote alpine environment.
“The Iceman genome was the second or third (depending whether you count Neanderthals) ancient human genome ever published,” says Iain Mathieson, a population geneticist at the University of Pennsylvania, who wasn’t involved in the new study. Mathieson called the 2012 effort to sequence Ötzi's genome a remarkable achievement, but he noted that technology has since improved by leaps and bounds. “From the perspective of the now more mature field, it’s nice to see people going back, producing higher-quality data and doing justice to this iconic individual.”
In 1991, a group of German hikers accidentally discovered Ötzi, emerging from the ice, high in the Tyrolean Alps along the Austrian-Italian border. His remains created instant intrigue even after 5,300 years—the mysterious mummy had been shot in the back with an arrow that entered his left shoulder and pierced an artery, causing him to bleed to death. But why was he killed? And how did his body survive in such amazing shape?
Ötzi’s preservation is so unusual he was first thought to be a far more modern corpse. While it was once believed that the uniquely fortunate timing and location of his death immediately resulted in his permanent burial below snow and ice, it now seems that he was exposed to the elements during various eras. That theory makes more such discoveries possible or perhaps even likely as Europe’s glaciers melt. (Other human bodies, horse remains and even centuries-old skis have emerged from alpine glaciers since Ötzi was found.)
The brown eyes, brown hair and darker skin tone suggested by Ötzi’s genes appear to be typical of Europe’s Neolithic Anatolian migrants, according to genetic research on other ancient skeletons. “The results about pigmentation are what we would expect given what we know about other nearby populations,” said Mathieson. These groups rather quickly adapted to life in Europe, where less sunny weather favored skin that could more easily synthesize vitamin D from sunlight, so genomes show that Europeans had much lighter skin tones by the Bronze Age.