Ötzi the Iceman: A 5,000-Year-Old True Crime Murder Mystery | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS

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  • Опубліковано 27 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @bethylawson480
    @bethylawson480 Рік тому +2016

    I read that Otzis hip was damaged by a jackhammer when he was being removed from the ice. Video of his un-icing is horrible. Its a wonder he survived intact as much as he did

    • @mccorrect3470
      @mccorrect3470 Рік тому +307

      Seriously they just flipped and tossed it around

    • @TomHill-xh7ec
      @TomHill-xh7ec Рік тому

      When he was first discovered, they thought he'd been murdered in the last few months or years, not thousands of years. It wasn't scientists removing a priceless relic from the ice, it was the local police and medical examiner. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96tzi#Discovery

    • @Ssmmmm80
      @Ssmmmm80 Рік тому +56

      That's why I thought

    • @kuriboh635
      @kuriboh635 Рік тому +175

      It was an ice axe in the video they hit his hip, damaging it and his knife before tossing the knife to the side, thinking it was just a piece of junk.

    • @garafanvou6586
      @garafanvou6586 Рік тому +50

      First dibs will do that to a person

  • @mikewazowski350
    @mikewazowski350 11 місяців тому +1004

    It's amazing they recovered anything. The people who removed him from the ice obviously were not professionals. I am in shock.

    • @LexieEclectic
      @LexieEclectic 10 місяців тому +21

      YEAAAAAAH😳

    • @JeffBrown-vn1xe
      @JeffBrown-vn1xe 8 місяців тому +6

      Please keep all.away. it's my son I need my papers on my princess dna and righteous rightful royalty. My men do not no who is being hurt. Tell Justin n his brothers. I've found so many holy relics tell nick groff try being with Alyssa see If it'll help. Don't trust anyone. Suits wa t help us. I'm Not who Dan says I am. Put wrinkly with co co. They with Bentley and do not turn selves n. I have no ear coach. Money gone 100,000,000 was dropped off for release so what prob. Get mask off everyone. 600 year old vampire is here he was stuck in an imprisonment for 300 years. They thought it was a suit and tried to protect selves. Tell Blake not trust anyone we no or kin just for saftey 20:44 l not the game. Mj please i gotu its prob one button to hold n keep safe n stop pain. Get out ground above is only safe place. My family is not tough enough or brave enough to keep from turning kids in

    • @beesechurger9464
      @beesechurger9464 7 місяців тому

      ​@@JeffBrown-vn1xe mythical youtube comment 🤑🙏

    • @hansj2468
      @hansj2468 6 місяців тому

      @@JeffBrown-vn1xe I had a stroke reading that. Either a terrible Google Translate job or a full on schizophrenic.

    • @thegoodguy44
      @thegoodguy44 6 місяців тому

      @@JeffBrown-vn1xe I will help you!

  • @anamartins3223
    @anamartins3223 Рік тому +989

    Otzi never thought that over 5000 years later he was going to be famous and in a museum!!! Not bad Otzi!!!

    • @buggalujuju
      @buggalujuju Рік тому +30

      I came here to say the same thing! Haha he never could have imagined when he was alive, that we would become so valuable and beloved by the world. So amazing!

    • @nagone11
      @nagone11 Рік тому +17

      I'm sure he didn't plan it, like I'm sure he didn't plan to get shot with an arrow and slump to his end either..

    • @buggalujuju
      @buggalujuju Рік тому +4

      @nagone11 uhmmmm duh?

    • @nagone11
      @nagone11 Рік тому +2

      @@buggalujuju Uhmm duh!!

    • @Road_Rash
      @Road_Rash Рік тому +13

      He had no concept of a museum, seeing how they didn't exist at the time...

  • @MadBull.34
    @MadBull.34 11 місяців тому +593

    "Ötzi's killer would eventually be forgotten, but Ötzi, who lay slain, would continue to tell the world his story."

    • @michaelisshort-ll7ug
      @michaelisshort-ll7ug 6 місяців тому +7

      Frfr

    • @ashish282
      @ashish282 6 місяців тому +20

      You believe that life's purpose is to be remembered and have a legacy.
      What if they didn't have same believe. Have a good life matters not afterlife

    • @thegoodguy44
      @thegoodguy44 6 місяців тому +3

      They know who killed him. Recent documents were analysed, found in his possession.

    • @volovolo_
      @volovolo_ 4 місяці тому +3

      ​@@ashish282 Afterlife matters

    • @dxxgx6713
      @dxxgx6713 3 місяці тому +1

      such a disgusting society lover thing to say

  • @lorrieshigley3625
    @lorrieshigley3625 Рік тому +897

    I so wish they had also done a reconstruction of Uttsie’s whole facial features as he looked while alive!

    • @paulabuck5976
      @paulabuck5976 Рік тому +33

      Me too!

    • @SteveGrin
      @SteveGrin Рік тому +53

      Right? I'm struggling with the point of duplicating the mummy. I get the preservation aspect, but it seems like they could have just stored the scan and reproduced it should the need arise.

    • @delacruztaylor
      @delacruztaylor Рік тому +47

      Colossal let down, I see the point of them recreating the mummy, but put a goddam face on the guy...........haha

    • @sinshamsh11
      @sinshamsh11 Рік тому

      I believe his face was reconstructed elsewhere. Do a quick google search :)

    • @grouchyolddan
      @grouchyolddan Рік тому +18

      That's what it sounded like it was what they were doing until the repetition keeps happening and you're half way in lol

  • @alisterzarkar7163
    @alisterzarkar7163 11 місяців тому +26

    The best part of this program was Gary and his work. The contribution these guys make to the education and imagination of kids seeing these works.

  • @mackpines
    @mackpines Рік тому +208

    Once again, another outstanding NOVA documentary.
    I can’t thank PBS enough for producing these high quality shows.

    • @pbbunnyz1784
      @pbbunnyz1784 Рік тому +18

      Funding for PBS programming is provided by viewers like you. Thank you.

    • @variyasalo2581
      @variyasalo2581 Рік тому +4

      I love Nova!

    • @brooksequine7621
      @brooksequine7621 Рік тому +3

      I concur !

    • @hsmd4533
      @hsmd4533 Рік тому

      Let’s all appreciate that the documentary was factual and didn’t contain woke nonsense.
      I was prepared for a story about how Otzi was an underprivileged, persecuted but highly intelligent black man mercilessly killed by white people because…racism.

    • @michaelrains64295
      @michaelrains64295 11 місяців тому +2

      Except this is a terribly repetitive and superficial documentary on a truly fascinating topic. I don’t find it remotely “high quality.” I find it sorely lacking.

  • @DesiderataSanctuary
    @DesiderataSanctuary Рік тому +223

    "Who invented 'The Dab'?"
    "5,000 years ago, there was an ice man..."

  • @torrilarsen6503
    @torrilarsen6503 Рік тому +490

    We need an update. Forensic studies have come a long way in the past few years.

    • @avalondreaming1433
      @avalondreaming1433 Рік тому +5

      Isn't this documentary 5 or 6 years old?

    • @dlemmo9006
      @dlemmo9006 11 місяців тому +17

      ​@@avalondreaming1433 its from 2016

    • @higgsmerino3925
      @higgsmerino3925 11 місяців тому

      There are many recent updated docs, some on on you tube. Google them.

    • @av1421
      @av1421 11 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/ZtEt-S7wKmg/v-deo.html&ab_channel=DanDavisHistory

    • @mattiemathis9549
      @mattiemathis9549 11 місяців тому +23

      I heard they did new testing in 2023. All I remember is they had a clearer idea of his DNA and they found some living “relatives” somewhere in Italy , I think. But don’t quote me.
      It’s on YT. Something like new iceman dna findings.

  • @kyleighwhite1409
    @kyleighwhite1409 Рік тому +145

    It’s crazy to know that the ailments and illnesses that are rampant today and the health issues that people have today are the same things that people then had to deal with WITHOUT any kinda of medical care. The pain people went through and just had to endure it and still live.

    • @thatzwhat
      @thatzwhat 11 місяців тому +24

      The scientists in this video were better at diagnosing Otzi's maladies than my physician is at diagnosing mine.

    • @Merrymaid
      @Merrymaid 11 місяців тому +10

      @@gadidakodaka Guess that's not true since he had Lyme disease, arthritis and predisposed to heart disease. He was estimated to be only 45 years old. Ok an arrow probably killed him but he was not in stellar health. He was probably in chronic pain.

    • @Stej-i7m
      @Stej-i7m 9 місяців тому +4

      And toothaches

    • @VintageFLA
      @VintageFLA 6 місяців тому +4

      @@Stej-i7m Even a simple tooth infection could be fatal. People had so many pitfalls ahead of them as they aged back then.

    • @paulclarke7571
      @paulclarke7571 2 дні тому

      Even back then there were medicinal plants, mushrooms, etc that were used for ailments. Things that did far less harm than drugs today.

  • @keithwald5349
    @keithwald5349 Рік тому +332

    I remember being so fascinated when first hearing about this discovery. Imagine a human who lived at the dawn of history, after "caveman" times but still in the nascency of the times of language and architecture. What were his life experiences? With whom did he interact? What was a typical day like for him? What language(s) did he speak? Endless questions.

    • @personalfinancialjourney
      @personalfinancialjourney Рік тому +15

      Me too. I remember his discovery in National Geographic when I was a child.

    • @MrFriiy
      @MrFriiy 11 місяців тому

      He walked around looking for something to screw or eat…. If he got cold he built a fire or wore more clothes, he carried around a stick to achieve his first two goals.. screwing and eating.

  • @odetoclear
    @odetoclear 5 місяців тому +44

    ötzi is the reason i want to become an archeologist, ever since i read about him in a donald duck magazine when i was 8 i was fascinated with mummies, wether made by nature or (especially) ancient civilizations. thanks for sparking this interest in me, ötzi, and rest in peace

  • @Linda-sq2ti
    @Linda-sq2ti Рік тому +53

    Watching reconstruction of a person who lived thousands of years ago is amazing to watch .

  • @dsoutherland1747
    @dsoutherland1747 11 місяців тому +44

    The sculptor Gary was nervous about how his work would be critiqued. (I was nervous for him too). Soon he was smiling in relief as his creation was awed and amazed at. He did a superb job as an artist/sculptor. Congrats Gary.

    • @TwinsBigLikeTia
      @TwinsBigLikeTia 10 місяців тому +3

      I've been seeing his work all my life and never knew! The dinosaurs looking into the building are part of the Indianapolis Children's Museum. He has contributed to my love of dinosaurs and anthropology from the earliest age, his work is incredible!

  • @shanghunter7697
    @shanghunter7697 Рік тому +478

    The 1st two men who found the body WERE damaging a LOT of evidence/material and body. Even stepping on the mid mass/back of his body. I remember when the body was 1st found both Italy and the swiss didn't want to claim the body due to the paperwork ect ect, but when both countries found out exactly how old he was a fight began regarding who's exact country he was on......Unreal !!

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +13

      Wow. That’s good information. Thanks!

    • @BriscoeRodgers
      @BriscoeRodgers Рік тому +6

      This is fascinating.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Рік тому +8

      CSI should have processed the scene.
      😮😯😲

    • @vampirina-vp7op
      @vampirina-vp7op 11 місяців тому +6

      It was a husband & wife hiking that discovered him not 2 men. The people that damaged him trying to remove his body damaged it will a jack hammer I believe.

    • @clarkrobertson7982
      @clarkrobertson7982 8 місяців тому +10

      They used hiking poles to dig him out.
      Clothing, etc., was damaged.
      Initially, it was thought that this was a recent death.
      Lesson in not making assumptions.

  • @FDguy343
    @FDguy343 4 місяці тому +164

    That dude was laying there for 3 millenniums before Jesus Christ even showed up, people. Over 3,000 years before the son of God walked the earth. It's almost incomprehensible to even begin to try and fathom the amount of time that his body was laying in that ice, all while staying preserved. How unbelievably amazing this story is. And the best part is we are still learning more about him to this very day! Very cool!

    • @kokemon84
      @kokemon84 4 місяці тому +5

      ***Citation needed

    • @Zamolxess
      @Zamolxess 3 місяці тому +14

      Before god created the earth!😅

    • @CoasterkidVlogs
      @CoasterkidVlogs 3 місяці тому

      @@Zamolxessno

    • @HarshDude126
      @HarshDude126 2 місяці тому +17

      Your Jesus is a fairy tale.

    • @Oscarthewildfrontier
      @Oscarthewildfrontier Місяць тому +9

      ​​​@@HarshDude126There's actual proof that Jesus was real and walked the earth. (writings by historians & artifacts)

  • @martaholmes4287
    @martaholmes4287 Рік тому +222

    If they were worried about bacterial/viral contamination, why were some of these researchers not wearing their mask over there nose? One big sneeze could harm this mummy.

    • @martaholmes4287
      @martaholmes4287 11 місяців тому +10

      @@susanb2015 That's why they were wearing them. It was stated in the video that viral/bacterial contamination could cause deterioration.

    • @martaholmes4287
      @martaholmes4287 11 місяців тому +11

      @@susanb2015 Did you watch the program?

    • @SummerSun-sg3wf
      @SummerSun-sg3wf 11 місяців тому +5

      It amazes me that people who have never done anything with thier lives say this

    • @childcrone
      @childcrone 11 місяців тому +18

      I was taken aback by that, too. You'd think they know better. Sneezing of course, but even just breathing.

    • @ti-lo5hy
      @ti-lo5hy 11 місяців тому +13

      Why not go in with fully enclosed suits? The room wasn't even refrigerated, there was no steam from the observers breathing..

  • @TaterChip91
    @TaterChip91 Рік тому +349

    3:19
    That man LITERALLY stepped right in the middle of his back

    • @BangBang-hk4rg
      @BangBang-hk4rg Рік тому +20

      I saw that too! 🤣

    • @AuroraDarlingRN
      @AuroraDarlingRN 11 місяців тому +84

      I was stunned when I watched those three fools hacking his body out of the ice standing on top of him, throwing his belongings I was mortified. A five-year-old knows not to touch it, not to disturb it, no matter if the person died yesterday or 5000 years ago let alone three grown men. They should be ashamed, and nothing is mentioned of it in the documentary. You see someone hurt on the side of the road and you know not to move them and call 911 what the hell was their excuse?

    • @thomasgregorovich7976
      @thomasgregorovich7976 11 місяців тому +17

      Is abuse of a corpse a felony or a misdemeanor here in the US??

    • @Aeoxmusic
      @Aeoxmusic 11 місяців тому +2

      it had frozen solid ice over that area lol, ice is hard

    • @HollyMoore-wo2mh
      @HollyMoore-wo2mh 11 місяців тому +23

      It was painful to watch. Yeah it was 1991 but GOOD GRIEF.

  • @grump9001
    @grump9001 Рік тому +93

    "He continues to generate this BODY of information.."
    Lol you were so proud of that one

    • @Inguiasu
      @Inguiasu 11 місяців тому +2

      Body Of Information: the story of his life after death. Not in heaven or hell; but here on EARTH. We end up where we began.

  • @momv2pa
    @momv2pa 10 місяців тому +14

    That was amazing. Just after I had my son in 1995, I spent many hours reading a book about the Iceman. It was so very interesting. This video was incredibly informative. I especially enjoyed hearing about the DNA research. Well done-thank you!

  • @moreknowledgableother
    @moreknowledgableother Рік тому +215

    The "tinder mushroom" 34:47 ...Chaga mushrooms or true tinder fungus, is a survivalist or bushman’s multi tool fungus. The dried light brown inside of chaga is used to start fires as the smallest spark can ignite it. The smoke from burning chaga is a mosquito repellent and a medicinal tea is made from chaga.

    • @swainscheps
      @swainscheps Рік тому +18

      Excellent info - thanks!

    • @shanghunter7697
      @shanghunter7697 Рік тому +15

      Not only that, if you know how to do it, you can keep a chunk of chaga lit/ember for DAYS. I drink a cup of chaga tea every other day since 1865......NOT a typo, just saying (longevity).

    • @geraldhoskins2933
      @geraldhoskins2933 Рік тому

      Chaga is good for you but you wont live 150 + years drinking it .

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +6

      @@shanghunter7697😂😂

    • @shanghunter7697
      @shanghunter7697 Рік тому +2

      @@OanhSchlesinger Isn't that funny, no one can live that long right ? We all age and die because we THINK we have too.

  • @maggiematthews3517
    @maggiematthews3517 2 місяці тому +13

    Archaeologists would be horrified when they see the video of how carelessly (and disrespectfully) Ötzi's remains were handled and damaged. One of the discoverers even stood on him, hacked around him with pickaxes, threw artefacts around as if they were garbage. Certainly they had no idea how old he was but even if he was a fairly recent death then preservation of evidence is of absolute importance. That part is quite shocking to watch.

    • @geralds.9735
      @geralds.9735 2 місяці тому +2

      As an Austrian from Tyrol I feel ashamed how they treated Ötzi. They even broke his bow to get it into a plastic bag! 😮 ... Incredible. 😢

  • @SteveJohnson-r2y
    @SteveJohnson-r2y Рік тому +70

    I forgot how great these NOVA programs are.

    • @track1949
      @track1949 6 місяців тому

      Don't look for them ever again if MAGA/ Republicans get total control. They will end this show and the rest of PBS and NPR. It will be another version of them banning books.

  • @wdking8833
    @wdking8833 11 місяців тому +8

    Kudos to the artists who recreated Otzi. A truly wonderful job. I doubt that if shown Otzi and his "twin" side by side, most people, even on close inspection, could tell them apart. A truly awesome job by incredibly talented artists.

  • @dawnadriana1764
    @dawnadriana1764 Рік тому +42

    Beautiful, emotional, incredible. I wept to think of this human being dying alone on the mountain, and rescued 5000 years later. My grandmother was born in Sardenia and I thought of her and how he could have been an ancestor.

    • @comfortablynumb9342
      @comfortablynumb9342 Рік тому

      If he's her ancestor he's yours too. Perhaps you can find out through DNA?

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +1

      No you can’t take possession of the Iceman. And no you can’t get reparations for keeping him captive and enslaved after death.

    • @chummidixit6433
      @chummidixit6433 3 місяці тому +1

      I was scanning comments to see if someone from Sardenia would respond. I am surprised they didn't show us more about sardenia & it;s people today, their race or culture. We could have an idea of his descendents atleast

  • @lilym1137
    @lilym1137 Рік тому +173

    touching it with bare hands is CRAZY

    • @CrackberryMe
      @CrackberryMe Рік тому +19

      I thought the same thing. No gloves 🧤 is a NOPE.

  • @catherinekenyon7555
    @catherinekenyon7555 Рік тому +37

    Got to see a sneak preview of this documentary years ago in Kansas City. Afterwards there was a question and answer session with Mr. Staab. What a fun event!

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +6

      I lived in Kansas City for years. Right at Power & Light District on Grand Ave. Didn’t realize how much I missed it until I moved away 😢

  • @MetalPcAngel
    @MetalPcAngel 11 місяців тому +20

    We need more of the NOVA documentaries on here, it's tiring to see many of the good ones locked away in that paywall.

    • @frankc7118
      @frankc7118 2 місяці тому +2

      American taxpayers should not be stopped by a paywall, we pay PBS 90 plus million dollars a year ...... yes $90,000,000.00

  • @HellOnWheel
    @HellOnWheel Рік тому +151

    It's a shame the people who found him just ripped off his clothes in chunks. Why on earth did they disturb it before experts got there??

    • @DuangRungsaengchan
      @DuangRungsaengchan Рік тому +23

      Because they were ignorant, they didn't know what they were supposed to do.

    • @emarieburson8846
      @emarieburson8846 Рік тому +22

      I know! It made me so sad bc I wonder how much we could have learned

    • @BangBang-hk4rg
      @BangBang-hk4rg Рік тому +30

      They were trying to find his wallet to see if there was any money in it before the cops got there 🤣

    • @higgsmerino3925
      @higgsmerino3925 11 місяців тому +14

      THOSE WERE THE EXPERTS! (in 1991). Beyond sad. There are better docs out there now also.

    • @BABUROBINSON
      @BABUROBINSON 7 місяців тому

      Theres always a loser in the bunch who tries to make a dry ass joke... smh... pathetic

  • @PrincessRoyalSix
    @PrincessRoyalSix 5 місяців тому +5

    Otzi my guy made it from a unpopular and unknown man to a superstar of history respect my guy

  • @joyciejd9673
    @joyciejd9673 Рік тому +70

    Saw this years ago and loved it. Delighted to see it again.

    • @kennethflorek8532
      @kennethflorek8532 Рік тому +3

      Copyright 2016.

    • @EEsmalls
      @EEsmalls 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@kennethflorek8532 oh dang really? I was hoping it was newer since it was just posted recently.

    • @kennethflorek8532
      @kennethflorek8532 11 місяців тому +1

      @@EEsmalls Me too. Besides re-broadcasting old episodes of various series, with the new ones, PBS does reframing from old formats preceding 1080. (So without letterboxing.) Recently it has become practical to digitally reprocess things on film to get better resolution, and better color, than the original (not just upscaling) by using more than one frame of the original and the fact that the registration frame-to-frame was not perfect, although I doubt PBS is going this.

  • @chrisxschmidt
    @chrisxschmidt Рік тому +93

    Otzi never disappoints!

  • @jyeung222
    @jyeung222 Рік тому +57

    Wow, I was introduced to the Ice Man as a 3rd grader from those discovery magazine back in 2003... I remembering being so in awe of him when reading the article.

    • @Varphi_
      @Varphi_ 11 місяців тому +4

      Same!!

  • @chikkinnuggits
    @chikkinnuggits Рік тому +18

    Gary Staab has a really cool job. Such a talented artist!

  • @purplepeople9298
    @purplepeople9298 Рік тому +105

    This would be interesting if we could see what he would have looked like before he died! But the information that he has provided us is amazing

    • @barryjive1104
      @barryjive1104 Рік тому +8

      This is exactly what I hoped for too. I personally don't find replications of original objects very interesting. There are better uses for an artist's talents than making a 1:1 scale model of a corpse.

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +10

      @@barryjive1104not in this case. A learning tool for the young and old.

    • @debbralehrman5957
      @debbralehrman5957 Рік тому +5

      I have seen pictures of what they think he did look like. There is a museum dedicated specifically to him. I think they have even done a physical reconstruction of what he would have look like in life.

    • @debbralehrman5957
      @debbralehrman5957 Рік тому

      I have seen pictures of what they think he did look like. There is a museum dedicated specifically to him. I think they have even done a physical reconstruction of what he would have look like in life.

    • @debbralehrman5957
      @debbralehrman5957 Рік тому +1

      I have seen pictures of what they think he did look like. There is a museum dedicated specifically to him. I think they have even done a physical reconstruction of what he would have look like in life.

  • @usgalsen
    @usgalsen 11 місяців тому +26

    3:18 The lunatic steps on him. Wow, he shows absolutely no regard for the corpse. He's the cold blooded iceman.

  • @beesod6412
    @beesod6412 Рік тому +86

    Thanks for feeding my brain for the last 35 years!

  • @ephgm
    @ephgm Рік тому +35

    Ötzi: "I used to be an adventurer, like you, until I took an arrow to the back."

    • @alnorris1954
      @alnorris1954 5 місяців тому

      Atleast it wasn't a gay arroy😄

    • @ipoison3862
      @ipoison3862 Місяць тому

      Did someone steal your sweet roll?

  • @susanlee298
    @susanlee298 Рік тому +34

    This was pretty fascinating. Interesting to see so many teams working together to tell us about his life.

    • @Errcyco
      @Errcyco Рік тому +3

      There’s bodies on Mount Everest that are 80 years old that are broken apart and mangled. It’s absolutely amazing this body churned through glaciers for 5,000 years and stayed in tact. It’s like one in a billion

  • @Delulubooklover
    @Delulubooklover 11 місяців тому +5

    I read a book about this when I was in I think third grade and I had nightmares about it for weeks until I realized he's been dead for literally thousands of years and isn't coming back anytime soon. And from then I realized that his story and what we can learn from his remains is amazing

  • @robbyjobarton2637
    @robbyjobarton2637 Рік тому +75

    They never give the earlier man the smarts he or she really had. Let’s face it there are amazing creations all over the world that took a lot of 🧠 power to create

    • @peterquinn2997
      @peterquinn2997 Рік тому +12

      It was probably no different than humans today. Back then I’m sure they had both geniuses and idiots.

    • @JadedLady
      @JadedLady Рік тому +15

      My husband and I always have heated disagreements when it comes to the peoples who came before today. For years he was so stuck on the idea that "cavemen" were the stereotypical caveman. It has taken me years to get him to even be open to the fact they had to be much smarter than the credit given to them.

    • @Stej-i7m
      @Stej-i7m 9 місяців тому +2

      @@peterquinn2997 Unless you lived in a structured society like ancient greece you probably had to be fairly intelligent to survive

    • @annonce4133
      @annonce4133 5 місяців тому

      Ƙķķķķlķkkkììkìlìikkíkìk😅 53:47 😅😅😅😅😅😅 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 😅 53:47 53:47 😅 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 😅 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 53:47 uķììiikiìƙikkiiiiìiķķkíķkkkkkuuiìukiii😅😮😅😅 53:47 53:47 kìiiiƙìiììikìķklikķkkliììkìkķìiiķìkķiķiķìƙkkiiuķìklķiìíiìlìiiķkiuìiikiìuìƙķķķķkiķkikukƙíķķƙiķkiìkìlkìķķikķuķuķƙķķƙìƙkiƙìƙkìiikķķììķikìķķkkkkkķkƙķklìiììíiiķìkklkkķķkìukķiìkìƙƙikƙkķkkķiķķikkiíƙķķķkìķiķkķiƙìiiķkķƙķķķķukiķƙkķkķƙƙķķuìkkiilkkiķkķkkķkķkìķukķkkķķiķiìķkƙķkķķilķķkkƙķķķķìķķķìkíiķiķķķkkkkkķƙiliikiķķķiķilƙƙķìķikkķkķiķķkiķķķklķƙķƙķiiķķìkķƙķiuķķķììkkkiķiķkķikkkkķkiķķììkiƙulƙiķkkiƙikkķukkiìiìķikiķiƙiilƙķuƙƙkkkķìiƙķkķuķíklìiiiìķƙììƙķkìlķķikkkƙķƙķkķiķuiķķķkķƙƙuķķķkíììkƙìķķìíkukìkklikķƙķķķķììķìiìiìķkķiiķķķkkìyìkkìķi5kķiķklķķíìķƙķķƙƙķlķķķķķķķķķķķkiìķķkkiķkķkkkiiķķķķkķkuķķķķƙkķķķķƙķķkķķķķķķƙķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķikķķķķkķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķkķķķķķķkķlķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķkķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķķkķķķķķķķķķķķķƙ​@@Stej-i7m

    • @annonce4133
      @annonce4133 5 місяців тому

      ​@@JadedLady53:47 53:47 53:47

  • @AuroraDarlingRN
    @AuroraDarlingRN 11 місяців тому +23

    I can’t imagine how cold he must’ve been. It’s snowing and I let the dog out to use the bathroom and I’m freezing with a hoodie, sweatshirt and sweatpants on and this man climbed the Alps with shoes made of grass and straw.. how can I ever complain again?

    • @EmilyKinny
      @EmilyKinny 11 місяців тому +8

      His shoes were replicated and professional mountain climbers used them and said they were warm and comfortable: "The boots’ performance was even tested and later praised by experienced hikers and climbers who tried them out in extreme conditions. Vaclav Patek, a Czech mountaineer who took part in the testing, described them as surprisingly cozy, warm, and comfortable, maybe even better than some modern models of footwear."
      Most of the materials our ancestors used were much better adapted for their climates than any of the synthetic crap we create today. They weren't idiots. They knew how to stay comfortable (and alive) in their environments, far more than we do with our AC and central heating and civilization all around.

    • @jessyjulie5506
      @jessyjulie5506 8 місяців тому

      ​@@EmilyKinnyhe was used to it. Studies on feral children show they can run naked in the snow or have an ice cold bath without really caring.

  • @TimeTheory2099
    @TimeTheory2099 Рік тому +22

    Thanks Nova on PBS 👍

  • @lambeausouth1
    @lambeausouth1 11 місяців тому +5

    Absolutely amazing! One of if not the most important finds in human history!

  • @robertpaulson2052
    @robertpaulson2052 Рік тому +17

    Think about how strange life and things are. He could have never comprehended that this is what would become of him. Murdered, unfortunately, frozen and preserved for thousands of years, found by people in world stranger than he could imagine, world famous and heavily studied. This guy was in ice through the entirety of the Roman Empire and then some. Makes you wonder what else is out there to be found.

  • @metsrus
    @metsrus 11 місяців тому +6

    I remember reading about Otzi in 1992 in 6th grade class. Good to know he has become sorta of a mummy rockstar.

  • @laurahemenway4608
    @laurahemenway4608 Рік тому +17

    I've been following Ötzi for years. How fascinating.

  • @markvonwisco7369
    @markvonwisco7369 9 місяців тому +12

    I was in grad school at the Uni Salzburg when Ötzi was discovered. It was a huge news story in all the Austrian newspapers at the time.

  • @astronomicalreason9807
    @astronomicalreason9807 Рік тому +22

    Imagine if someone told you in 5,000 years future humans will find your frozen body, study it, and create a replica using a 3D printer

    • @brooksequine7621
      @brooksequine7621 Рік тому +1

      I'd be all for that !
      I thought about this before Utzi's time because I've been pinned & plated together so many times, had so many spinal surgeries that removed bone ( but I'm still carrying on ) that I'd be seen as a horseman ( due to the changes in my hips , knees , ankles & spine ) then the rest would be such a super mystery for someone to unravel !
      Wouldn't it be glorious ! 🎉❤😊😊

  • @MikePuorro
    @MikePuorro 6 місяців тому +3

    The reconstruction of the damaged hip on the resin replica is astounding!

  • @rameyzamora1018
    @rameyzamora1018 Рік тому +85

    My fave scientist is the guy wearing his protective face mask under his nose. C'mon, man!

    • @SolaceEasy
      @SolaceEasy Рік тому +6

      He hasn't breathed out of his nose since the millennium.

    • @variyasalo2581
      @variyasalo2581 Рік тому +8

      Since the pandemic, we've all become more aware of how to wear a facemask.

    • @brooksequine7621
      @brooksequine7621 Рік тому +1

      Oh my ... You people are everywhere .
      SMH ...😮 Please educate yourselves or tighten your masks .

    • @sagesleuth
      @sagesleuth Рік тому

      👏👏👏👏

    • @MrJsv650
      @MrJsv650 Рік тому

      Like good 🐑 ​@@variyasalo2581

  • @minasan6337
    @minasan6337 8 місяців тому +5

    50:52 the model of otzi that gary made is so AMAZING like the amount of detail put in is insane

  • @primavera919
    @primavera919 3 місяці тому +6

    @6:50 "What did he do for a living?" this one killed me...

    • @lukmanalghdamsi3189
      @lukmanalghdamsi3189 17 днів тому

      this helps the scientists know where his parents came from

  • @Allegedly..Angela
    @Allegedly..Angela Рік тому +33

    Very cool episode. I saw the first one and this is a treat- an update on what they are learning about him!

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +2

      I remember reading about The Iceman in National Geographic years ago.

  • @fanny3942
    @fanny3942 11 місяців тому +9

    Very fascinating documentary. I loved it 😍 thank you .

  • @lynnseredych3306
    @lynnseredych3306 Рік тому +14

    Fascinating! I've always enjoyed watching Nova.

  • @Karl-w6r
    @Karl-w6r 3 місяці тому +1

    Well done to Gary and the team...your talents are nothing short of intimidating.

  • @ReneeHorth
    @ReneeHorth Рік тому +9

    What an amazing replica! Such a wonderful journey, of discovering things about this long dead man !

  • @hartless76
    @hartless76 10 місяців тому +1

    I love the sound of that voice so much!❤ Such a great lead singer. He is right up there with Johnny Maestro ❤

  • @monav4062
    @monav4062 Рік тому +14

    I haven't finished the video -- I'm at the part where they're talking about how the iceman has over 60 tattoos, mainly just short lines in certain areas. I'm not a scientist or a medical doctor, but I can give you the answer as to why his tattoos existed and that's because the iceman was treated by someone who knew about acupuncture!!
    He would go to see the acupuncturist in his local village! And, the acupuncturist being the professional that he was, told the iceman that he had to tattoo lines in all of the places that the iceman had pain! Can you imagine there were doctors who knew about acupuncturing 5,000 years ago?
    Amazing!

    • @daisyadele967
      @daisyadele967 Рік тому +2

      That's what I was thinking! So that practice is very old.

    • @higgsmerino3925
      @higgsmerino3925 11 місяців тому +1

      Don't be sexist...she does good sticking.

    •  11 місяців тому +1

      His tattoos represent the 5th Element

    • @neonmeate8180
      @neonmeate8180 9 місяців тому +1

      Can you cite your source stating that his tattoos had to do with acupuncture?

    • @monav4062
      @monav4062 9 місяців тому +3

      @@neonmeate8180 My source is -- "Common Sense". This guy was a 'repeat' customer of the local village acupuncturist -- so the acupuncturist marked his body in all of the familiar places for faster relief, he didn't need to re-map this man's body for his pain every time. It isn't much of a leap -- whoever did his tattoos was already using a 'needle' of some sort to transfer the 'ink' into his skin -- so why would it be hard to see him using other needles to go much deeper into the areas that hurt?
      Go back and review the part of this video showing where all of his tattoos were located, it shows that the short lines were above all of his areas of chronic pain.
      If you would like to experiment on your own body of how to relieve pain -- the next time you find yourself hurting, maybe you have a muscle cramp after having done a lot of walking? Take your hand, maybe using your thumb, and place it directly in the area of the pain apply pressure and hold it there for a few minutes -- your pain will subside. Acupressure works!
      I have chronic back pain from having been in a car accident and I use acupressure on my back all of the time. You can make simple tools by taking a pair of thick men's socks and balling them up together and then you place the balled-up socks in between the back of your chair (I use my computer chair) and your back where the pain is located. You hold it there by pressing your back into the back of the chair with the socks in between and the pain will go away with the pressure of the socks pushing into the area of the pain. It works like a charm every time!
      When you apply pressure to the areas of pain the pressure relieves the pain and once the pain subsides it will allow your muscles to relax and they won't be tensed up any longer. I've gotten so good at it that I can literally lift the collapsing disk in my spine where it's pinching together and all of my pain melts away! No need for drugs or even over the counter meds.
      .

  • @basedaf5580
    @basedaf5580 3 місяці тому +3

    imagine you're otzi the iceman not knowing 5000 years into the future somebody makes a documentary on you

  • @SilverStreak1
    @SilverStreak1 Рік тому +40

    Very interesting documentary. The artist in Kearney, Mo. did a great job recreating a replica of Otzi.

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +3

      Been to Kearney. He’s probably the most famous guy in town.

  • @GrungeHistory
    @GrungeHistory 11 місяців тому +16

    The first human in history to ever do the dab

  • @OanhSchlesinger
    @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +9

    Wow. The most fascinating video I ever watched. The narrator- superb! Thank you PBS 🤓

  • @MissesWitch
    @MissesWitch 5 місяців тому +2

    that reaction at the end was like "did you steal this?"

  • @kross1261
    @kross1261 Рік тому +18

    Watching this on Nova right now and this popped up on UA-cam.

  • @smadaf
    @smadaf 11 місяців тому +17

    It's great that PBS is making so much _Nova_ stuff available on UA-cam now. It’s a shame, though, that, with all their resources, they couldn't get anybody to make the narrator rhyme the "Ö" in "Ötzi" with the "oo" in "book" and "good" instead of the "oo" in "boot" and "food". It's like spending an entire documentary talking about Adolf "Hightler" or George "Wayshington".

    • @ikutiap5923
      @ikutiap5923 11 місяців тому +4

      EXACTLY!!!!! "Ö"

    • @zaphodbeeblebrox8640
      @zaphodbeeblebrox8640 5 місяців тому

      Yes, the narrator is very ignorant. There is no Uttsie, the name is Ötzi. "Ö" more or less as in "early". The word comes from "Ötztaler Alpen", the mountain group, where the body was found. Its boundaries are: - Reschenpass 1508 m - Stiller Bach - Inntal - Ötztal - Timmelsjoch 2474 m - Passeier - Etschtal - Reschenpass. So, You see that the names last origin is the Ötztal. And this comes from the old German word "etz" for meadow (Tollmann 1986).

  • @rajun1231
    @rajun1231 11 місяців тому +3

    Truly fascinating and thought provoking. How about an update on the research done since this NOVA docu was produced?

  • @suyapajimenez516
    @suyapajimenez516 Рік тому +13

    Love the documentary. Thanks

  • @JosephBoot-ln7mw
    @JosephBoot-ln7mw 11 місяців тому +2

    Very well done documentary. I enjoyed watching it thoroughly. Thank you very much to all the involved scientists and scholars involved. This is how we teach our children about the history of man.

  • @teresasardinas5642
    @teresasardinas5642 Рік тому +30

    Fantastic! I was mesmerized by this video and the information that it provides, and the effort of everybody involved; great job! Thank you!!!!! I love it. My maternal Haplogroup is K, although not exactly the same haplotype as Ötzi, and my oldest documented ancestor was in the island of Minorca, in the Mediterranean Sea, close to Sardinia!

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому +1

      How far back did that go?

    • @jamesleonard2870
      @jamesleonard2870 Рік тому +2

      You kinda sound like Ottzi. Lols. Just joking =]

    • @randomvintagefilm273
      @randomvintagefilm273 Рік тому

      I'm matched to Chedder man in England. I uploaded my DNA to the ancient DNA site MyTrueAncestry

  • @peterolbrisch8970
    @peterolbrisch8970 Рік тому +7

    That poor guy needs a makeover. They have people who could recreate what he looked like when he was alive.

  • @johnsonjohnson4725
    @johnsonjohnson4725 Рік тому +27

    I had no idea Lyme disease was that old!!! The more we think we know, the more re realize how little we know.

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +4

      I had no idea it was encoded in DNA. Fascinating!

    • @Leigh-says-stuff
      @Leigh-says-stuff 8 місяців тому +1

      @@OanhSchlesingerthe tissue sample they took from him had the remains of some of the Lyme disease bacteria (Borrelia burgdorferi) in it. We mostly know it as a rash today, but if it’s not treated, the bacteria will spread throughout the body and damage muscles, joints, and organs.

  • @TheAutistiXBand
    @TheAutistiXBand 5 місяців тому +6

    This was a wonderful documentary though I also had read that the damage to his leg was caused by people digging him out of the ice after his discovery. My understanding wax that the couple who initially found him thought it was someone murdered not long ago. I’ve been to Bolzano to the museum twice and have stared at Otzi and his artifacts with complete awe. I’ve read several books. In my family he is known as my ‘boyfriend’ as I am so ‘besotted’ with him, reading books, seeing documentaries, etc!

  • @user-useff
    @user-useff Рік тому +11

    I am amazed the shipping companies got it there without damage.

  • @dominicaddesa154
    @dominicaddesa154 7 місяців тому +5

    Legend has it, Otzi was a traveling extended warranty salesman.

  • @paustinheaton
    @paustinheaton Рік тому +10

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @bodhi5933
    @bodhi5933 Місяць тому +1

    It’s great when kids find interest and fascination with our human past.

  • @joesands8860
    @joesands8860 Рік тому +59

    I have always wondered what is still buried in ice another this planet. I have heard of the wooly rhinos, elephants, cats and others found in permafrost along with all the ancient tools found at melting glaciers, but I would love to hear of a frozen Neanderthal man in ice somewhere.

    • @darlenelarochelle4011
      @darlenelarochelle4011 Рік тому +10

      Well i guess we might find some of that stuff now. With all the glaciers melting & whatnot. 😢

    • @jeremias-serus
      @jeremias-serus Рік тому +6

      Agreed. I've believed for a while now that someday we will find a naturally preserved Neanderthal mummy somewhere deep under ice in Central or Northern Europe. Being able to map the genome of a non-modern human would be one of the most incredible achievements.

    • @Merrymaid
      @Merrymaid 11 місяців тому

      I would like to know who his modern relatives were

    • @childcrone
      @childcrone 11 місяців тому

      @@jeremias-serus Search up The Neanderthal Genome Project; it HAS been mapped. There are a few ancestry test services that can tell you how much Neanderthal you have in your DNA.

    • @remasteredvanity
      @remasteredvanity 10 місяців тому

      @@jeremias-serus😊qq

  • @thatzwhat
    @thatzwhat 11 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating production. I'm continually amazed at how much extrapolation anthropologists can make about human life and civilization 5,000 years ago from a single data point.

  • @elizabethdraper4325
    @elizabethdraper4325 Рік тому +6

    Absolutely stunning this better than any adventure I have seen ..congratulations

  • @stealthimaster8583
    @stealthimaster8583 11 місяців тому +2

    I just realized something, Otzi is the first person to dab in history.

  • @moreknowledgableother
    @moreknowledgableother Рік тому +12

    New, high-coverage genome with much less modern human contamination has been published in 2023. 47:44 ...
    2023 study on Ötzi's genome found a very high proportion (90%) of Anatolian-farmer-related ancestry - in fact, the highest among European populations of the same time.
    Also, examining the genetic sites involved in phenotypical traits, the authors were able to predict that the Iceman, among other things, had darker skin than present-day Europeans, but not as dark as the Mesolithic Western Hunter Gatherers, was affected by baldness, and suffered from obesity-related metabolic disorders.
    The Cambridge World History of Violence (2020) cited Ötzi as evidence of prehistoric warfare

  • @alinapepe9748
    @alinapepe9748 Рік тому +8

    Went to see Otzi in Bolzano, incredible is all I can say.

  • @LeftToWrite006
    @LeftToWrite006 Рік тому +9

    The museum that has the body and the stuff he was found with is in Bolzano, Italy. It is well-worth the visit.

  • @johncharles2524
    @johncharles2524 11 місяців тому +3

    Absolutely
    Excellent.
    5 stars ⭐️.
    As proven from scientific study, we are all related.

  • @sharkusvelarde
    @sharkusvelarde Рік тому +6

    As others have commented, this episode really misses the mark when an eminent paleo artist is asked to reconstruct the mummy we've already seen and not a life reconstruction?!!

    • @Jenniferatcreativeartspark
      @Jenniferatcreativeartspark 11 місяців тому +1

      That’s kinda what I’ve been thinking. This is fascinating, but I also want to see what they thought he actually looked like!

  • @Mandy7D7
    @Mandy7D7 2 місяці тому +7

    Watching the buffoons who removed him from the ice stand on him, throw around his belongings and touch him without gloves is always hard to watch. FFS you see his belongings are not from this time period in the least and he's in ice. Maybe give you a clue that he might be something to be studied.

  • @johnrandolph6121
    @johnrandolph6121 11 місяців тому +7

    He's the most studied man in history but it took them 10 years to notice he has an arrowhead in him?

    • @judigrumm7190
      @judigrumm7190 11 місяців тому +2

      I thought that too! Who had custody?? The original discoverers were horrible.

    • @Gnomelander1400
      @Gnomelander1400 11 місяців тому +6

      So many idiots working on him. The guys who dug him up literally step on top of him and pickaxe his body, unaware of damaging his bones and organs.

  • @stina6225
    @stina6225 4 місяці тому +1

    It's so funny how the narrator almost gets the pronunciation of Ötzi right in the beginning and then it just deteriorates more and more until it's just "Utzi" 😂

  • @QuarrySolution9454
    @QuarrySolution9454 6 місяців тому +4

    Thanks to the people, they didn’t leave it to rot. If left unattended, it may disappear due to the warm atmosphere and melting ice. Scavengers, birds or mammals could completely destroy it. But experts were able to extract it with less damage to things and DNA.
    But first of all, thank you again for taking care of the find.

  • @AustinB.3322
    @AustinB.3322 5 місяців тому +5

    I remember as a kid thinking he had laid down on the arm to relieve the pressure. I had a sore shoulder a lot back then and sometimes to lay like that takes the pressure off.

  • @nickhowatson4745
    @nickhowatson4745 6 місяців тому +3

    5,000 years my Iceman Otzi out here crankin' that Soulja Boy like it's 2007

  • @hg191
    @hg191 4 місяці тому +1

    He has been cranking that souljaboy for more than 5000 years
    impressive.

  • @kamiw5864
    @kamiw5864 Рік тому +20

    A note about the pain they speculate endured during all the stick and poke tattoos- it was likely nothing compared to everything else he experienced and they probably didn’t experience pain as we do now, not by a long shot. I imagine their threshold was much, much higher then. Also, the time it took was immense but they had the time back then.

    • @darlenelarochelle4011
      @darlenelarochelle4011 Рік тому +3

      Right. No social media to occupy them. 😮

    • @kamiw5864
      @kamiw5864 Рік тому +1

      @@darlenelarochelle4011 actually it isn’t quite that simple though I understand why you mentioned it. Social media is a major distraction today, yes.

    • @TheVeek192
      @TheVeek192 Рік тому +9

      Days were the same length then as they are now. We have the same amount of time that they did. We make choices about how we spend our time. We think that we're busier, but we're not.

    • @kamiw5864
      @kamiw5864 Рік тому +3

      @@TheVeek192 , nailed it.

    • @projectionv.accountability1010
      @projectionv.accountability1010 Рік тому +2

      What?? What are you basing any of that on? You're just throwing out bits of opinion as if it's anything more than just bits of opinion. Ridiculous.

  • @l-sturges
    @l-sturges 20 днів тому

    They were exactly gentle with him when they first discovered him. I'm really shocked they didn't take more care, even before knowing his age and significance 😮

  • @tedbomba6631
    @tedbomba6631 Рік тому +14

    Have any of those brilliant scientists and experts even considered the possibility that Ötzi might have been both a hunter and a gathere ? As is often said, ' man does not live by bread alone '. Many people do consume meat and vegetables together.

    • @OanhSchlesinger
      @OanhSchlesinger Рік тому +5

      Hunter / Gatherer, Farmer, etc is how groups of time are recorded. His diet was diverse as seen by his stomach contents.

    • @darlenelarochelle4011
      @darlenelarochelle4011 Рік тому

      Um. Yeah, the brilliant scientists did ascertain he was a "Hunter - Gatherer"
      That is the classification they stuck on him. As opposed to "Farmer".
      Hunter Gatherer, hunts animals, and forages along their way. Pick berries, gather seeds. They gather up what Nature provides. What they do NOT do is FARM. As in, deliberately put seeds in the ground and nurture the crop. Yep, those brilliant scientists did figure out he ate more than meat. They found both meat & grains in his stomach. Hence, they dubbed him a "Hunter - Gatherer".

  • @kevculmstock1
    @kevculmstock1 11 місяців тому +2

    Incredible to think what life was like when Otzi was alive.

  • @justicewillprevail1106
    @justicewillprevail1106 Рік тому +6

    Uttssie had a rough life. Hope he's been rest easy since departure.

  • @thefangirlfromhell9627
    @thefangirlfromhell9627 14 днів тому

    I feel so much closer to Otzi with the section on his tattoos. I have machine and hand poke tattoos and so there’s something so beautiful knowing that I’ve sat through the same process he has thousands of years ago. I have tattoos also for medical reasons such as medical alert or symbols and designs to encapsulate the struggle with illnesses and such. Isn’t it beautiful how connected to our past we are. How similar. How close.