Ötzi, 30 years on: A reappraisal of the depositional and post-depositional history of the find

Author:

Pilø Lars1ORCID,Reitmaier Thomas2,Fischer Andrea3,Barrett James H4,Nesje Atle5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cultural Heritage, Innlandet County Council, Norway

2. Archaeological Service of the Canton of Grisons, Switzerland

3. Institute for Interdisciplinary Mountain Research, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria

4. Department of Archaeology and Cultural History, NTNU University Museum, Norway

5. Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Norway

Abstract

When Ötzi, the Iceman, was found in a gully in the Tisenjoch pass in the Tyrolean Alps in 1991, he was a huge surprise for the archaeological community. The lead initial investigator of the find argued that it was unique, preserved by serendipitous circumstances. It was hypothesised that the mummy with associated artefacts had been quickly covered by glacier ice and stayed buried until the melt-out in 1991. It is now more than 30 years since Ötzi appeared. In this paper, we take a closer look at how the find can be understood today, benefitting from increased knowledge gained from more than two decades of investigations of other glacial archaeological sites, and from previous palaeo-biological investigations of the find assemblage. In the light of radiocarbon dates from the gully and new glaciological evidence regarding mass balance, it is likely that Ötzi was not permanently buried in ice immediately after his death, but that the gully where he lay was repeatedly exposed over the next 1500 years. We discuss the nature of the ice covering the site, which is commonly described as a basally sliding glacier. Based on the available evidence, this ice is better understood as a non-moving, stationary field of snow and ice, frozen to the bedrock. The damaged artefacts found with Ötzi were probably broken by typical postdepositional processes on glacial archaeological sites, and not, as previously claimed, during conflict prior to Ötzi’s flight from the valley below.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

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