Further Reading

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Mind-boggling discovery: Perfectly preserved brain of Iron Age man unearthed in York

Archaeologists believe they have discovered one of the world's oldest brains that once belonged to a man in Iron Age Britain who was sacrificed in a ritual killing. Scientists found the cranium in a muddy pit when they were excavating a site before a new campus was to be built at the University of York. When a researcher reached inside the skull, she was stunned to discover the soft tissue of the 2,500-year-old brain still preserved. Fractures and marks on the bones suggest the man, who was aged between 26 and 45, died most probably from hanging, after which he was carefully decapitated and his head was then buried on its own. Scientists have been baffled by how the brain tissue - which usually rots after a couple at years - managed to remain intact for so long. (Daily Mail)