In a "eureka" moment worthy of Dr. Frankenstein, scientists have discovered that two 3,000-year-old Scottish "bog bodies" are actually made from the remains of six people.
According
to new isotopic dating and DNA experiments, the mummies—a male and a
female—were assembled from various body parts, although the purpose of
the gruesome composites is likely lost to history.
The mummies
were discovered more than a decade ago below the remnants of
11th-century houses at Cladh Hallan, a prehistoric village on the island of South Uist, off the coast of Scotland.
The bodies had been buried in the fetal position 300 to 600 years after death. Based
on the condition and structures of the skeletons, scientists had
previously determined that the bodies had been placed in a peat bog
just long enough to preserve them and then removed. The skeletons were
then reburied hundreds of years later. Terry Brown,
a professor of biomedical archaeology at the University of Manchester,
said there were clues that these bog bodies were more than they
seemed.
On the female skeleton, "the jaw didn't fit into the rest
of the skull," he said. "So Mike [Parker Pearson, of Sheffield
University] came and said, Could we try to work it out through DNA
testing?" Brown sampled DNA from the female skeleton's jawbone,
skull, arm, and leg. The results show that bones came from different
people, none of whom even shared the same mother, he said. The
female is made from body parts that date to around the same time
period. But isotopic dating showed that the male mummy is made from
people who died a few hundred years apart.
Quick Dip in the Bog
Another clue to the odd nature of the Cladh Hallan mummies is their unusually well-preserved bones.
A peat bog is a high-acid, low-oxygen environment, which inhibits the bacteria that break down organics, said Gill Plunkett, a lecturer in paleoecology at Queen's University Belfast who was not involved in the current study.
"The combined conditions are particularly good for the preservation of most organic materials," she said.
"But
on the other hand, the acidic conditions will attack calcium-based
materials," so most known bog bodies have better preserved skin and soft
tissue than bones.
In
the Cladh Hallan bodies, the bones are still articulated—attached to
each other as they would be in life. This suggests that the buriers
removed the bodies from the peat bog after preservation but before acid
destroyed the bones. When the mummies were later reburied in soil, the soft tissue again began to break down. The
researchers aren't sure why the villagers went through this unusual
process, or why they built composite mummies in the first place.
A
cynical theory, study author Brown said, assumes that the Bronze Age
people of Cladh Hallan were just eminently practical: "Maybe the head
dropped off and they got another head to stick on." Another
possibility is that the merging was deliberate, to create a symbolic
ancestor that literally embodied traits from multiple lineages. Brown
cites the example of the Chinchorro mummies discovered in the Chilean
Andes, where embalmers reinforced or reconstructed bodies with sticks,
grass, animal hair, or even sea lion skin.
"It seems the person is not so important, but the image is. So it's not a single identity, but it's representing something."
More Combo Mummies Out There?
According to Brown, there may be other composite bodies waiting to be discovered.
Often
when scientists study the DNA of very ancient remains, they sample
only one part of a body to prevent needless damage to the skeleton.
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