The Kaleiodoscope Effect

Chapter 8: The Iceman

by Ronald W. Hull


The Tyrolean Alps: September 1991

Tom and Sonya were married in June at the Old Abby in Lancaster. Obligations to family and their work at British Petroleum caused them to postpone their honeymoon until the the Fall. Both were fitness buffs, and a few days in the Alps was their idea of fun. It happened midday on the fifth day of their trek, on a high pass leading to Innsbruck.

"Tom, look at that! Isn't that hair sticking out of the ice over there!" Sonya had grabbed Tom by the arm, and was pointing to a spot on the glacier about ten meters off the trail. They both rushed over for a closer look.

She was right. "Oh, my god, it is hair. And it looks like the top of someone's head! Poor bloody devil. Must have died in an avalanche last winter." She was shaking as Tom held her close and they stared at the grotesque sight.. Soon, the others were crowding around them.

Their trek was halted for the day. They waited two hours for an Austrian rescue team to arrive by helicopter. The team, dressed in identical yellow jump suits, jumped out of the helicopter with large packs and ran over. The leader of the four man group ordered the spectators to back away, then he and his crew began hacking away at the ice above where the body lay encased in ice with ice axes. The ice was blue and hard, but the men made progress. After a few minutes, they had uncovered a leg.

Tom noticed that the leg was covered by a leather legging, and a strange, hand sewn leather boot covered the foot. The lead rescuer hooked the leg with his ax and began pulling on it. "Wait! Something's wrong. That's not somebody who just died!" Tom yelled, prepared to run in and stop him.

The Austrian spoke impeccable English, and understood immediately what the Englishman was yelling. He stopped pulling, held up his hand to stop the others, and drew in for a closer look.

"Ya, this is old. The Englishman is right. We had better be more careful with this one," he said in English, rubbing a piece of tattered leather in his fingers.

He stopped the rescue. After radioing the authorities for guidance, he came back and ordered everyone to move back further. His men then cordoned off the area with tape and covered the exposed parts of the body with tarp to keep the sun off and keep it frozen.

It was getting late, so their guide told them they had to leave. They hiked into Innsbruck at 7 pm. The town was already abuzz with the discovery. As they lounged in their comfortable, quaint ski lodge that night and ate room service food, they watched subtitled Austrian TV to try to keep up with what was happening. They both agreed to curtail the rest of their honeymoon trek to watch the events unfolding. They set their alarm for 4 AM.

As dawn broke they were hiking back up the mountain. They were not alone. It seemed like half of Innsbruck had the same idea they had. When they got to the site of their discovery, a much larger area had been cordoned off. The crowd grew, and four helicopters were parked on the ice field. Several other helicopters came and went, probably carrying news photographers.

Archaeologists were clearly in charge now. Each bit of leather, grass, hair, wood, or other material was carefully photographed in place, then tweezers were used to remove it to marked plastic bags. This process took three days. The ice was chipped off with surgical precision, and the body, covered in leather with grass sticking out of holes in it, gradually came into view. There was a long bow and arrows, a wooden back pack made of white birch, and a hasped ax. The body appeared to be that of an old man . It was very well preserved. When it was free of the ice, the body was wrapped in a thermal blanket to keep it cold, then carefully placed in a box. The box was carted off, and the work continued, removing bits and pieces spread over a several square meter area of ice.

Tom and Sonya, with many others, groped their way back to Innsbruck each night. They were lucky to have their room. The town was full of reporters. Their discovery was big news. Soon they were found out, and had to submit to many interviews about how they found the body. The British press awaited them when they returned home. Finally, after a few weeks of media flurry, they were allowed to return to their lives.

The Iceman, as he came to be known, became the source of intense study. The tools and material he carried with him were studied to determine why and how he came about carrying them. The evidence found with him rewrote theory about the Copper Age. The ax found with him was one of the best examples of Copper Age tools ever found. Scientists named him Otsi, after the region he was found. After a long battle between Austria and Italy, his remains were interred in a new museum built for him in Tyrol. Scientific study continued as other frozen bodies were found in Siberia and in the Andes.

Chapter 9

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