NOVA - Official Website Iceman Murder Mystery. ICEMAN MURDER MYSTERYNARRATOR: Frozen for more than 5,0. Iceman, a frozen relic from the Stone Age, the oldest intact human body ever found.

He's a messenger from the past, bearing secrets of how humans lived nearly a thousand years before the pyramids. He is also a homicide, waiting to be solved.

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  5. ICEMAN MURDER MYSTERY. NARRATOR: Frozen for more than 5,000 years, on a remote mountain pass, and now, preserved for the ages in a refrigerated tomb; he is the Iceman.

Who was he? And who shot an arrow into his back? PATRICK HUNT (Alpine Archaeologist): Whoever shot him went up and pulled the arrow shaft out of his back. Why would you do that? Why would you take the arrow away? NARRATOR: Was it warfare? Or murder? Now, a rare and dangerous procedure leads to some startlingly fresh clues. A piece of bone, a copper ax and a last meal surprise the experts, as they come closer to understanding our ancient past and to solving the Iceman Murder Mystery, right now on this NOVA- National Geographic Special.

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On a remote mountainside, high in the European Alps, a man makes his way through the thin mountain air. It is a desolate place, but he is not alone. On this day, 3,0.

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Christ, this man's life will end in a violent death. But his body will remain on the mountain for over 5,0. September, 1. 99. Two hikers climbing in the Italian Alps wander off the trail.. At first, the pathologist responding to the scene assumes it's simply the remains of an unfortunate hiker, one of many lost to the Alps over the years.

But this body looks different. It shows almost no signs of decomposition. Its skin and flesh appear to have been freeze- dried. Hands, feet, even eyeballs are still intact.

The mountain air and ice had transformed this corpse into a mummy. As the recovery continues, some unusual items begin popping up: bits of leather and hand- made rope and a knife with a flint blade. This was no ordinary hiker. Initial analysis of his gear suggests he was thousands of years old. The find causes a world- wide sensation. The press dubs him the "Iceman," or "í–tzi," after the í–tztal Mountains where he died. Eventually, carbon dating confirms that í–tzi died 5,3.

His were the oldest intact human remains ever recovered. What can they tell us about our own history? And about how this man died up on that mountain? PATRICK HUNT: For some reason, í–tzi makes a fateful journey up this ridge, along this valley all the way up. He goes from essentially about 1,0. Why? NARRATOR: At first, they suspect he was lost in a storm, but mounting evidence begins to suggest something else happened to the Iceman, something more violent.

Exactly what that was will likely be uncovered here, in Bolzano, Italy, just 3. A multi- million dollar museum celebrates what could be the world's oldest open case of homicide. Fahrenheit, relative humidity: 9.

Now, doctors in charge of the body are hoping to force a break in the ancient case by conducting a rare and dangerous procedure. They are letting the Iceman's body defrost. Scientists flock to Bolzano to get their hands and instruments on the 5,0. They will be following fresh leads about the Iceman's death, but also his life, at a key turning point in human civilization. They will have just nine hours to complete their investigations before the Iceman must be refrozen. Pathologist Eduard Egarter Vigl is leading an operation that could be risky.

DR. EDUARD EGARTER VIGL (Head of Conservation for the Iceman) (Translation): One risk is that scientists who enter the room bring their bacteria and germs with them. Another risk is that we have no way of knowing if there are still living organisms in the mummy itself, and if these would be activated in the defrosting. NARRATOR: If the body is harmed by the defrosting, the loss would be profound. Scholars depend on this one corpse to shed light on a crucial time in human history. NEWS FOOTAGE (Translation): í–tzi is unique. He's from the very end of the Stone Age, a time when humans still used stone tools, but before they had mastered the art of smelting metal. NEWS FOOTAGE (Translation): Struck down in mid- stride, he provides a glimpse of what life was like in those times, with some surprising twists.

PATRICK HUNT: One find—the man in the ice—opened up a whole new window on the ancient world that was never there before. NARRATOR: Five thousand years ago, on the European continent, is a time before countries, before kings, even before the introduction of the wheel.

In these alpine valleys, some people are living in small settlements, just beginning to grow crops like wheat and barley, and to raise goat, sheep and cattle. But others are nomadic hunters, still depending on wild game for survival. Population is increasing, and so is competition between those hunters and early farmers.

PATRICK HUNT: We now know that with increasing population, there are more people contesting boundaries. This is the first time we're actually farming. So people can now fight over a plot of land and over the resources on it.

NARRATOR: This is 1,0. PATRICK HUNT: Everything was placed in that refrigerator, and the door was sealed. And we can open up that window in time, 5,3. NARRATOR: In fact, when they found the Iceman, he was still wearing one of his shoes. The artifacts are now in the Bolzano museum, where Patrick Hunt is joined by Annaluisa Pedrotti, of nearby Trento University, to carefully examine each item, searching for clues, not only about í–tzi's culture, but about his last day alive. Why would he have been carrying these things with him at the time of his death?

The shoe is one of the earliest examples of its kind and surprisingly complex. PATRICK HUNT: You can just see here, at least three different kinds of material. Tonari No Kaibutsu-Kun Episode 4 Eng Sub Full. You see grass, you see skin, and you see cord.

NARRATOR: It's unlikely a man from the Stone Age would wear shoes all the time, but if he knew he was going to cross the rocky slopes and glaciers of the Alps, shoes like this would be important to pack along. The artifacts not only provide personal details about the man who carried them, they prove that Stone Age designs could be surprisingly sophisticated.

His backpack, with its wooden frame, seems almost modern. A leather pouch was possibly tied around his waist like a fanny pack. Chunks of tree fungus, thought to have medicinal powers, served as first aid kit. Maple leaves were used to carry hot embers for starting fires. PATRICK HUNT: í–tzi's culture knew the use of every possible plant…ANNALUISA PEDROTTI (Trento University): Yes.

PATRICK HUNT: …and stone and wood. ANNALUISA PEDROTTI: Yes, they use the optimal material. NARRATOR: But venturing into the mountains beyond his settlement could be dangerous.

Wolves, wild boar and bears were common. Clashes between settlements and hunters were also possible, so í–tzi carried weapons. Along with his knife, he had a bow and arrows. His quiver, the oldest ever found, contained carefully crafted wooden arrows, with flint arrowheads, chipped to a razor's edge and glued on with pitch made from the sap of a birch tree. The feathers on the shafts are also carefully attached—to stabilize the arrow in flight.

But for some mysterious reason, the bow and arrows were not ready to use. PATRICK HUNT: If you count the number of arrows here, easily over a dozen, most of the arrows are completely un- useable at this time. Why do we have so many arrows unfinished? ANNALUISA PEDROTTI (Translation): This is a huge mystery.

He was found with equipment that was not fully prepared. NARRATOR: It's as if he were walking in the wilderness with an unloaded gun. PATRICK HUNT: I would say that í–tzi is going to be in trouble. This is a serious flaw in his plan for survival.

NARRATOR: But he wasn't completely unarmed. He was carrying a weapon far advanced for his time, an ax made of copper. PATRICK HUNT: The one object that continues to draw our attention, like a magnet, is that copper ax. It's so intriguing, because the technology required to make it is far beyond anything we've seen before.

NARRATOR: The Iceman's copper ax surprises archaeologists and forces a revision in the timeline of history.

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