Lasers help archaeologists study ancient tattoos on Peruvian mummies
Lasers help archaeologists study ancient tattoos on Peruvian mummies (Picture credit: AP)
WASHINGTON: For more than 5,000 years, humans have adorned themselves with tattoos.
In a new study, researchers used lasers to uncover highly intricate designs of
ancient tattoos
on mummies from Peru.
The preserved skin of the mummies and the black tattoo ink used to show a stark contrast, revealing fine details in tattoos dating to around 1250 AD that aren’t visible to the naked eye, said study co-author
Michael Pittman
, an archaeologist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
The researchers examined around 100 mummies from coastal Peru’s
Chancay culture
, a civilization that flourished before the Inca empire and the arrival of Europeans.
All the individuals had some form of tattoos on the back of their hands, knuckles, forearms or other body parts. The study focused on four individuals with “exceptional tattoos”, designs of geometric shapes such as triangles and diamonds, said Pittman.
It wasn’t clear exactly how the tattoos were created, but they are “of a quality that stands up against the really good electric tattooing of today,” said
Aaron Deter-Wolf
, an expert in
pre-Columbian tattoos
and an archaeologist at the Tennessee Division of
Archaeology
, who was not involved in the research.
Results were published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Using lasers that make skin faintly glow, “we basically turn skin into a light bulb,” said co-author Tom Kaye of the nonprofit Foundation for Scientific Advancement in Sierra Vista, Arizona.
The findings were “helpful to learn about new
non-destructive technologies
that can help us study and document sensitive archaeological materials,” such as mummies, said Deter-Wolf.
The oldest known tattoos were found on the remains of a Neolithic man who lived in the Italian Alps around 3,000 BC. Many mummies from ancient Egypt also have tattoos, as do remains from cultures around the world.
Throughout history, tattoos have been used in many ways, to mark cultural or individual identity, life events or social status, or to “ward off maladies or help enhance relationships with spirits or deities,” said Lars Krutak, an archaeologist at the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico, who was not involved in the research.
While designs on pottery, textiles and stonework are more commonly preserved and studied by researchers, “when ancient tattoos are available to us, they give exciting insights into forms of figurative and abstract art that we aren’t otherwise able to access,” said Bournemouth University archaeologist Martin Smith, who was not part of the study.
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