An
international team of anthropologists, cultural heritage specialists and lab
analysts has found tattoos of a type never seen before on the face and arm of
an 800-year-old Andean mummy. Their paper is published in the Journal
of Cultural Heritage.
The research team began by noting that
there are few surviving examples of tattooed skin from archaeological finds due
to the nature of the soft tissue involved. Because of that, they chose to look
more closely at a female mummy held
at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin that
had been recovered from a dig site in the Andes Mountains. They began their
work by using radiocarbon dating to
find the age of the mummy—it showed that she had lived sometime between 1215
and 1382 CE.
They next chose to use a pair of techniques to find any tattoos not visible to the naked eye. They began with 500- to 950-nm infrared false-color analyses and then used 950 nm w/b IR reflectography. They discovered tattoos on both cheeks of the face (three straight running lines from the ear to the mouth) and another on one wrist (in the shape of an S).
To
determine the materials used to make the tattoos, the team used X-ray
fluorescence and μRaman spectroscopy as
well as a scanning electron microscope. They discovered that the tattoos had been made using
pigments created from magnetite and a mineral called pyroxenes. Surprisingly,
no charcoal had been used.
The researchers were not able to discern the purpose of the tattoos—nothing like them had ever been seen before on a mummy—though they suggest that they must have meant something important to the woman to have them placed so prominently.
Source: Tattoos of rare shape and composition found on 800-year-old Andean mummy
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