Posted on 03/25/2019 6:19:19 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Once dismissed as an odd-looking little artifact, the tool pushes back evidence for tattooing in the U.S. Southwest by a millennium.
The tool ismade from a bundle of prickly pear cactus spines, their tips saturated with dark pigment, inserted into a handle carved from lemonade sumac and bound with yucca fiber.
Some 2,000 years ago, a tattooist in whats now southeast Utah used this tool to hand-poke a design into someones skin. After the point of one of the cactus spines broke off, the tool was likely tossed into a trash heap. It remained there for centuries, in a pile of bones, corncobs, and other discarded items.
(Excerpt) Read more at lastsparrowtattoo.com ...
2,000-year-old tattoo needle identified by archaeologists
By Krista Langlois
PUBLISHED February 28, 2019
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/2019/02/ancient-tattoo-needle-southwest-archaeology/
Ouch.
Nearby, they'll find the first PreColumbian bandaid. ;^)
There have been tats as long as there has been skin.................
I notice that some of those people in that drawing are white while others are brown. That seems really odd for pre-Spanish Conquest....................
Probably still in use at some of the dives on Central Ave. in Albuquerque.
I suppose it all depends upon who did the drawing! :-)
Utzi the “iceman” has a tattoo. :^)
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