logo
Stunning 2,500-year-old TATTOOS from Siberian ‘ice mummy' depicting ‘mythical creatures' revealed in perfect detail

Stunning 2,500-year-old TATTOOS from Siberian ‘ice mummy' depicting ‘mythical creatures' revealed in perfect detail

Scottish Sun31-07-2025
The scans exposed "intricate, crisp and uniform" tattooing that could not be seen with the naked eye
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
THE intricate tattoos of a 2,500-year-old Siberian "ice mummy" have finally been revealed through high-tech imaging.
The designs reveal leopards, tigers, a stag, a rooster and even some long-lost mythical creatures.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
7
The tattoos belong to a woman, who has about 50-years-old when she died
Credit: M Vavulin
7
On her right forearm, the woman had an image of leopards and tigers around the head of two deer
Credit: Daniel Riday
7
The woman is thought to have belonged to the nomadic horse-riding Pazyryk culture, which roamed the lands between China and Europe
Credit: Getty
They are so detailed that even a modern tattooist would struggle to reproduce them, according to the researchers behind the discovery.
The tattoos belong to a woman who was about 50-years-old when she died.
She is thought to have belonged to the nomadic horse-riding Pazyryk culture, which roamed the lands between China and Europe.
The scans exposed "intricate, crisp and uniform" tattooing that could not be seen with the naked eye.
Over the two millennia, the ink has become all but invisible on the body as the skin darkens with time.
"The insights really drive home to me the point of how sophisticated these people were," lead author Dr Gino Caspari from the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology and the University of Bern, told BBC News.
Archaeologists worked with researcher Daniel Riday, a tattooist who reproduces ancient ink on his own body to understand how they were made.
Tattooing was likely widespread during prehistory, but few remains from that era are preserved well enough to investigate.
7
Tattooing was likely widespread during prehistory, but few remains from that era are preserved well enough to investigate
Credit: Daniel Riday
But the so-called "ice mummies" of the Altai mountains in Siberia were often encased in ice tombs which preserved the skin.
While the tattoos were not visibly on the skin, they were brought back to life using near-infrared digital photography in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, Russia.
Mystery Solved: The Story of 'The Screaming Woman' Mummy (1)
The high-resolution scans were able to reveal the decorations for the first time in 2,500 years.
"This made me feel like we were much closer to seeing the people behind the art, how they worked and learned. The images came alive," said Dr Caspari.
On her right forearm, the woman had an image of leopards and tigers around the head of two deer.
On the left arm, a mythical griffin-like creature with the body of a lion and the head and wings of an eagle appears to be fighting with a stag.
"Twisted hind bodies and really intense battle scenes of wild animals are typical of the culture," explained Dr Caspari.
7
The high-resolution scans were able to reveal the decorations for the first time in 2,500 years
Credit: Daniel Riday
The "ice mummy" also had a rooster on her thumb, showing "an intriguing style with a certain uniqueness," says Dr Caspari.
The design was made with uniform thickness, suggesting sophisticated methods and tools for tattooing.
Some lines were created using a multipoint tool, while others were made with a finer, single-point tool, according to the study.
The researchers could even see where the ancient tattooist stopped working and picked up again in the overlapping of some lines.
"Many cultures around the world traditionally used bundles of plant thorns and spines to tattoo," study co-author Aaron Deter-Wolf, an archaeologist at the Tennessee Division of Archaeology and ancient-tattooing expert, told Live Science in an email.
"We envision the multi-point tool as being a tightly clustered bundle of tines, probably bound together with thread or sinew."
The tools were made of natural, biodegradable materials, meaning the researchers aren't able to examine the implements themselves.
7
The so-called "ice mummies" of the Altai mountains in Siberia were often encased in ice tombs which preserved the skin
Credit: M Vavulin
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The woolly mammoth and a 30ft sea cow could all soon be back from the dead
The woolly mammoth and a 30ft sea cow could all soon be back from the dead

Metro

time19 hours ago

  • Metro

The woolly mammoth and a 30ft sea cow could all soon be back from the dead

If all goes to plan, Ben Lamm's next Christmas card to his friends will be of him posing with a woolly mammoth and a dodo. Lamm, 43, is the billionaire entrepreneur who founded Colossal Biosciences, a genetic engineering company, in 2021. What the company hopes to do is certainly colossal – working to resurrect extinct species, a process called de-extinction. The idea, Lamm told Metro, came during a call about human-based biology with George Church, a biologist at Harvard Medical School. 'By the way, I'm working to bring back mammoths and other extinct species to reintroduce them back into the Arctic and regenerate the ecosystem. But I have to go now. Goodbye,' Lamm recalled of the call. 'I had just heard the greatest thing ever, and then the call was over. I stayed up all night reading articles and listening to interviews about all these things.' Scientists have long dreamed of reviving extinct species. But earlier this year, Colossal researchers helped bring the dire wolf, a giant, extinct species made famous by Game of Thrones, back from the dead. Kind of. Scientists salvaged DNA from the fossils of dire wolves and edited 20 of their genes into their closest living relatives, grey wolves. (Think Jurassic Park just without the maniacal computer-network engineer.) After creating embryos and implanting them in surrogates, three pups were born: Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi. The pups, with their dense, pale coats, were the first successful case of de-extinction, Colossal said. SOUND ON. You're hearing the first howl of a dire wolf in over 10,000 years. Meet Romulus and Remus—the world's first de-extinct animals, born on October 1, dire wolf has been extinct for over 10,000 years. These two wolves were brought back from extinction using… — Colossal Biosciences® (@colossal) April 7, 2025 Now, Colossal wants to revive the woolly mammoth by giving elephants dense hair and thick fat, and reintroducing them to the Siberian tundra. Lamm said that his team are also 'exclusively focused' on two other extinct creatures: the Tasmanian tiger and the 12-foot-tall bird called Moa, though they haven't cracked how to insert edited genes into eggs yet. 'I'd personally love to bring back the Steller's sea cow,' Lamm said, referring to the extinct, 30-foot-long relative of the manatee, 'but there is nothing to gestate it in until we have artificial wombs working.' Inventing an undo button for extinction sounds like a sci-fi film, but Lamm's reasons for doing it are very much real. Many of the de-extinction candidates were eradicated by humans: The dodo was, well, as dead as a dodo by 1662 after people colonised Mauritius. The Tasmanian tiger was similarly wiped out after European settlers relentlessly hunted the striped marsupials in the 1800s, while the sea cow was wiped out by humans within 27 years of its discovery. Climate change threatens to make even more species vanish, and wildlife populations have already plummeted by 70%. 'Habitats around the planet are changing at a pace that is faster than evolution by natural selection can keep up,' explained Lamm. 'For many species, there is not enough time.' We're launching the Colossal Species Reintroduction Fund: $250K annually to help return missing and at-risk species to the wild. Rewilding restores ecosystems and helps prevent extinctions. This is one more step toward making extinction a thing of the past. — Colossal Biosciences® (@colossal) August 5, 2025 Is de-exctinction, with the power of pipettes and computers, possible? Experts told Metro they aren't so sure. For one, the dire wolves Colossal brought back can be better described as modified grey wolves, said Benjamin Tapon, a PhD student at Queen Mary's School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences. 'By any practical definition of a species, no animal that Colossal has genetically engineered so far is anywhere near the extinct animal they are trying to emulate,' he said. 'Colossal is doing the equivalent of rebuilding the Library of Alexandria by printing PDFs of a few books and adding them to the shelves of the local public library.' As much as dire wolves and grey wolves share 99.5% of their DNA code, Tapon said, people and bananas share 60% of genes. 'It's a bit like saying that Romeo and Juliet shares 99% of its words with 50 Shades of Grey, or a book in another language,' he added. Alex de Mendoza, a senior lecturer at Queen Mary's Centre for Epigenetics, said Game of Thrones and Colossal got a big thing wrong about the dire wolf – they probably weren't white. The wolves lived in arid conditions, not the tundra, de Mendoza said, so they were probably a red-ish brown, adding: 'The habitat they once roamed on is no longer here. 'Most species extinctions these days occur due to habitat loss. If we couldn't preserve their habitat while they were still alive, why should we bring them back?' Capon wonders whether developing the technology to resurrect long-dead creatures could make people less diligent at preventing extinction. 'If we bring them back, will they be zoo attractions?' he said. As controversial as de-extinction is, both Capon and de Mendoza understand where Lamm is coming from. Capon would love a pet dodo, 'just not enough to try to bring them back.' More Trending De Mendoza said he would de-extinct the Tasmanian tiger: 'It is so frustrating that this wonderful animal disappeared in the 1930s. 'I think there's still habitat for it to survive, as long as people don't kill it… That said, my hopes for seeing a Tasmanian tiger come back from extinction and not just a kangaroo with some stripes are rather low.' Lamm understands where his critics are coming from, too. Which animals Colossal hopes to de-extinct take into account whether they'd have a positive impact on the environment or help conservation efforts. 'If bringing back the species can also inspire the next generation,' he added, 'then that is just another bonus.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: I went inside the Navy's secret battlespace barely anyone knows about MORE: I discovered the murky world of 'minor attracted people' – it's even more disturbing than you think MORE: Moment huge black bear is chased out of home by tiny Pomeranian dog

Jim Lovell dead aged 97: Apollo 13 Commander who led crew safely back to earth after space disaster dies
Jim Lovell dead aged 97: Apollo 13 Commander who led crew safely back to earth after space disaster dies

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Jim Lovell dead aged 97: Apollo 13 Commander who led crew safely back to earth after space disaster dies

Read the touching tributes for the space legend below ASTRONAUT GONE Jim Lovell dead aged 97: Apollo 13 Commander who led crew safely back to earth after space disaster dies Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) SPACE veteran and heroic Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell has died at the age of 97. Jim passed away on August 7, in Lake Forest, Illinois with NASA leading tributes for the "unforgettable astronaut". Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Space veteran and heroic Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell has died at the age of 97 Credit: Alamy 3 Jim, centre, with two crew members of Apollo 13 Credit: Getty 3 Jim attends the Living Legends of Aviation Awards in 2020 Credit: Getty Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy paid a touching tribute to Jim. He said: "NASA sends its condolences to the family of Capt. Jim Lovell, whose life and work inspired millions of people across the decades. "Jim's character and steadfast courage helped our nation reach the Moon and turned a potential tragedy into a success from which we learned an enormous amount. "We mourn his passing even as we celebrate his achievements. "From a pair of pioneering Gemini missions to the successes of Apollo, Jim helped our nation forge a historic path in space that carries us forward to upcoming Artemis missions to the Moon and beyond. "Known for his wit, this unforgettable astronaut was nicknamed Smilin' Jim by his fellow astronauts because he was quick with a grin when he had a particularly funny comeback. "Jim also served our country in the military, and the Navy has lost a proud academy graduate and test pilot. "Jim Lovell embodied the bold resolve and optimism of both past and future explorers, and we will remember him always." Jim's wife, Marilynn, died in 2023. The couple are now survived by their four children.

Woman, 20, plagued by spontaneous uncontrollable orgasms all day long – and docs are stumped
Woman, 20, plagued by spontaneous uncontrollable orgasms all day long – and docs are stumped

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Woman, 20, plagued by spontaneous uncontrollable orgasms all day long – and docs are stumped

Find out everything there is to know about the condition below PAIN NOT PLEASURE Woman, 20, plagued by spontaneous uncontrollable orgasms all day long – and docs are stumped Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) FOR years a woman experienced uncontrollable and spontaneous orgasms in a rare case that left doctors baffled. The 20-year-old's symptoms were unrelated to sexual desire and were reported to have severely impaired her daily life. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 The woman began experiencing "electric sensations" in her groin that resembled orgasms when she was 14 years old Credit: Getty From around the age of 14, the unnamed woman started having sharp "electric sensations" in her groin and pelvic contractions resembling orgasms. Despite multiple treatments, including treatment for depressive and psychotic symptoms, her orgasms persisted. She began to believe they were being externally manipulated. Desperate to get help, the woman finally visited a hospital in China, but her condition had become so severe her orgasmic episodes interrupted her medical interviews. Neurologists were left clueless after ruling out epilepsy and other neurological disorders through ECG monitoring and other tests. But when the researchers prescribed antipsychotic medication - specifically risperidone and later olanzapine - her symptoms began to subside. It was at this point she was diagnosed with persistent genital arousal disorder (PGAD). After a few weeks of treatment, her symptoms became infrequent and less severe. Her delusions also improved. And over time, she was able to return to work and function socially. When she stopped treatment, her symptoms returned, but as long as she continued taking medication, her condition remained stable. My partner and I are celibate but I can't stop having orgasms – I have 50 a day and it's actually excruciating Her case was published in AME Case Reports, with the authors concluding: "Our case suggests that the dopamine system may play an important role in pathological processes involving sensory abnormalities, particularly those involving the central nervous system. "And the treatment with antipsychotic drugs may be one of the therapeutic directions for PGAD." PGAD remains a poorly understood condition with no established standard treatment. It's difficult to pinpoint the exact number of people with PGAD in the UK, but research suggests it's a rare condition, potentially affecting around 1 per cent of women. The exact cause is unknown, but possible physical causes include nerve damage, spinal abnormalities, or medication side effects. Experts have suggested PGAD might be triggered by changes in the use of antidepressants or anti-anxiety medications, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors. Psychological stress and anxiety may also worsen symptoms. Some research has proposed PGAD is related to dopamine system dysfunction. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter, a chemical messenger in the brain, that plays a key role in the brain's reward system, motivation, and movement, and can affect arousal. Excess dopamine activity in certain brain regions, such as the hypothalamus and limbic system, may amplify sexual responses and could theoretically produce symptoms like those seen in PGAD. The use of dopamine-blocking medications - such as risperidone and olanzapine - may reduce abnormal arousal sensations by dampening the dopamine response. This case adds support to this hypothesis.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store