A fresh study of the last meal of the famous Tollund Man, an Early Iron Age bog man (naturally mummified corpse) found in Denmark, has revealed new information about his final hours before his most likely tragic death.
Tollund Man ate a bog-water porridge made of barley, pale persicaria, flax, and presumably fish 12 to 24 hours before he was slain, according to results published this week in the journal Antiquity.
Researchers lead by Nina Nielsen of the Silkeborg Museum also discovered eggs and proteins from intestinal worms, indicating the mummy was infected with parasites such as tapeworms, whipworms, and mawworms.
"Although the meal may reflect ordinary Iron Age fare, the inclusion of threshing waste could possibly relate to ritual practices," the report noted. "This re-analysis illustrates that new techniques can throw fresh light on old questions and contribute to understanding life and death in the Danish Early Iron Age."
Plant residue deterioration blocked further progress after previous examinations revealed the presence of barley, flax, pale persicaria, and gold-of-pleasure seed porridge, as well as 16 other plant species. While plant macrofossils, pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, steroid indicators, and proteins were all examined in the current research.
“Back in 1950, they only looked at the well preserved grains and seeds, and not the very fine fraction of the material,” Nielsen earlier told NBC News. “But now we have better microscopes, better ways of analysing the material and new techniques. So that means that we could get more information out of it.”
The team added in the research that they'd looked for components that could be related to rituals, and investigated whether the weed seeds, which were also found in many other bodies which met the same fate, could represent a food shortage, and looked into Iron Age health and sanitation as well as cooking habits in this re-investigation.
Previous evidence suggested that Tollund Man's last meal did not include meat, but they discovered that the "coprostanol:5-stigmastanol peak-area ratio of 3:1 represents a zoosterol level higher than in herbivores," implying that Tollund Man's last meal included both cholesterol-containing and plant-based foods.
Five peptides unique to bony fish were found, offering "clear evidence of the consumption of fish as part of the last meal," according to the research, which considered Bjaeldskovdal's closeness to a lake and watercourses.
All in all, Tollund Man's final supper did not reveal any signs of a serious food shortage, according to the scientists. And the worms in his intestines are likely the sign of the man had previously consumed raw or undercooked meat infested with tapeworm cysts.
"Future improved residue analyses will undoubtedly add further detail concerning the gut contents, diet and, perhaps, manner of death of Northern European bog bodies, and hence contribute to our understanding of life in the Danish Early Iron Age," the researchers concluded.
People who were placed in acidic peat bogs were naturally mummified and sometimes well-preserved, providing scientists with a thorough and unique view into daily life at the time, including health, diet, death, and a final supper.
Tollund Man, who is thought to be between the ages of 30 and 40 at the time of his death, had previously been hanged and thrown into the peat-cutting pit. While his death seems noteworthy, as scientists determine it to have been a sacrifice, the authors of the study state that he did not appear to have ingested anything "special" in preparation for the sacrifice, such as hallucinogens or pain medications.
The bog body was discovered in Bjaeldskovdal during peat cutting in 1950, and his stomach and intestinal tract were taken during forensic exams that year, before the contents of different regions of his gut were extracted separately in 1951.
As of now, given the fact that technologies for the preservation of organic materials were not so developed in the 1950s, only a perfectly preserved head remained of the original body, while the rest of the organic tissue of the body itself was decomposed. The Tollund Man is exhibited in a museum with an exact copy of the body and the original head.