Researchers
studying Oetzi, a 5,300-year-old body found frozen in the Italian Alps in 1991,
have found red blood cells around his wounds. Blood
cells tend to degrade quickly, and earlier scans for blood within Oetzi's body
turned up nothing. Now a study in the
Journal of the Royal Society Interface shows that Oetzi's remarkable
preservation extends even to the blood he shed shortly before dying. The find
represents by far the oldest red blood cells ever observed. It is just the
latest chapter in what could be described as the world's oldest murder mystery.
Since Oetzi was first found by hikers with an arrow buried in his back, experts
have determined that he died from his wounds and what his last meal was. There
has been extensive debate as to whether he fell where he died or was buried
there by others. In February, Albert Zink and colleagues at the Eurac Institute
for Mummies and the Iceman in Bolzano, Italy published Oetzi's full genome.
An earlier study by the group, published in the
Lancet, showed that a wound on Oetzi's hand contained
haemoglobin, a protein found in blood - but it had long been presumed that red
blood cells' delicate nature would have precluded their preservation. Prof Zink
and his colleagues collaborated with researchers at the Center for Smart
Interfaces at the University of Darmstadt in Germany to apply what is known as
atomic force microscopy to thin slices of tissue taken from an area surrounding
the arrow wound. The technique works using a tiny metal tip with a point just a
few atoms across, dragged along the surface of a sample. The tip's movement is
tracked, and results in a 3-D map at extraordinary resolution. The team found
that the sample from Oetzi contained structures with a tell-tale
"doughnut" shape, just as red blood cells have.
To ensure the
structures were preserved cells and not contamination of some kind, they
confirmed the find using a laser-based technique called Raman spectroscopy -
those results also indicated the presence of haemoglobin and the
clot-associated protein fibrin. That, Prof Zink explained, seems to solve one
of the elements of the murder mystery. "Because fibrin is present in fresh
wounds and then degrades, the theory that Oetzi died some days after he had been
injured by the arrow, as had once been mooted, can no longer be upheld,"
he said. The team also suggest that their methods may prove to be of use in
modern-day forensics studies, in which the exact age of blood samples is
difficult to determine.
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