Exactly!Minimalist wrote:Yes.
It also could imply that he was an attacker who was wounded and could not keep up with the rest of the group during a subsequent retreat.
See? It's not so difficult. You're getting the hang of it already!

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Minimalist wrote: That still does not address the question of why he was not robbed.
Why are you assuming they didn't?Digit wrote:
[...] why did his people not look for him? [...]
So even if Ötzi's clansmen looked for him in force, chances are overwhelming they would not have found him.
Perhaps "home" was sacked, invaded. My point is that we cannot make assumptions that he was murdered, nor that he was alone, there could be more out there that we simply haven't found yet. There is insufficient evidence to determine under what circumstances he died, it is all conjecture (which is fun, but cannot be conclusive). There are so many possibilities, so many stories that could told (that is what I love about archaeology, digging through them all and perhaps getting close to an answer).Digit wrote:One objection to that RW is that according to forensics he was a local man, so why not head home, why did his people not look for him?
If I remember correctly the arrow entered at an angle from below, that suggests that he was heading uphill, so he was either ambushed or perhaps leaving the scene of conflict.
He was also carrying a lot of equipment, was he travelling, or was he a bandit perhaps?
This new cause of death finding raises all the old questions again.ROME, Italy: Researchers studying Iceman, the 5,000-year-old mummy found frozen in the Italian Alps, have come up with a new theory for how he died, saying he died from head trauma, not by bleeding to death from an arrow.
Just two months ago, researchers in Switzerland published an article in the Journal of Archaeological Science saying the mummy — also known as Oetzi — had died after the arrow tore a hole in an artery beneath his left collarbone, leading to massive loss of blood, shock and heart attack.
He could have pulled it out himself and acheived exactly the same result.The researchers believe the Iceman fell over backward, but was then turned over onto his stomach by his aggressor who then pulled out the arrow shaft while leaving the arrowhead imbedded in Oetzi's shoulder.