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IndianCivilization, ravi9@h... wrote:

To list memebers

 

 

To List members

 

 

 

With archeological evidence for AIT being much disputed, below is an

article from National Post Saturday magazine of May 12, 2001, URL

www.saturdaynight.ca, or nationalpost.com Toronto from a forthcoming

book by Heather Pringle with extensive refernce to Victor Mair.

 

The main theme is the discovery of Caucasian mummys discovered. An

anaylysis of their looks, clothing and DNa appaers to show they

orioginated in the Salzburg region of Austria.

 

I have also upload a file ait evidence with a photograph.

 

Any comments

 

 

 

Regards

 

 

Ravi Chaudhary

 

 

 

FEATURES

 

 

 

Photograph © Jeffery Newbury

 

 

THE CURSE OF THE RED-HEADED MUMMY

How could an ancient mummy found in remote China have red hair and

caucasian features? The answer has sparked a battle over smuggled

DNA, Western imperialism, and history as we know it

by Heather Pringle

 

 

Until he first encountered the mummies of Xinjiang, Victor Mair was

known mainly as a brilliant, if eccentric, translator of obscure

Chinese texts, a fine sinologist with a few controversial ideas about

the origins of Chinese culture, and a scathing critic prone to

penning stern reviews of sloppy scholarship. Mair's pronouncements on

the striking resemblance between some characters inscribed on the

Dead Sea Scrolls and early Chinese symbols were intensely debated by

researchers. His magnum opus on the origins of Chinese writing, a

work he had been toiling away at for years in his office at the

University of Pennsylvania, was eagerly anticipated. But in 1988,

something profound happened to Mair, something that would touch a

nerve in both the East and the West, raising troubling questions

about race, racism, and the nature of history itself.

 

That year, Mair had led a group of American travellers through a

small museum in Ürümchi, the capital of China's remote

northwesternmost province, Xinjiang. Mair had visited the museum

several times before, but on this occasion a new sign pointed to a

back room. "It said something like 'Mummy Exhibition,' " recalled

Mair, "and I had the strangest kind of weird feeling because it was

very dark. There were curtains, I think. Going in, you felt like you

were entering another world."

 

In a glass display case so poorly lit that visitors needed to use

flashlights to look at its contents, Mair spied a bizarre sight. It

was the outstretched body of a man just under six feet tall, dressed

in an elegantly tailored wool tunic and matching pants, the colour of

red wine. Covering the man's legs were striped leggings in riotous

shades of yellow, red, and blue, attire so outrageous it could have

come straight from the pages of Dr. Seuss. But it was not so much the

man's clothing that first riveted Mair's attention. It was the face.

It was narrow and pale ivory in colour, with high cheekbones, full

lips, and a long nose. Locks of ginger-coloured hair and a greying

beard framed the parchment-like skin. He looked very Caucasian:

indeed he resembled someone Mair knew intimately. "He looked like my

brother Dave sleeping there, and that's what really got me. I just

kept looking at him, looking at his closed eyes. I couldn't tear

myself away, and I went around his glass case again and again and

again. I stayed in there for several hours. I was supposed to be

leading our group. I just forgot about them for two or three hours."

 

Local archaeologists had come across the body a few years earlier

while excavating in the Tarim Basin, an immense barren of sand and

rock in southern Xinjiang. The region was not the kind of place that

generally attracted well-dressed strangers. At the height of summer,

temperatures in the basin soared to a scorching 125 degrees

Fahrenheit, without so much as a whisper of humidity, and in winter,

they frequently plunged far below freezing. The desert at the basin's

heart was one of the most parched places on Earth, and its very name,

the Taklamakhan, was popularly said to mean "go in and you won't come

out." Over the years, the Chinese government had found various uses

for all this bleakness. It had set aside part of it as a nuclear

testing range, conducting its blasts far from prying eyes. It had

also built labour camps there, certain that no prisoner in his right

mind would try to escape.

 

The Taklamakhan's merciless climate had one advantage, however. It

tended to preserve human bodies. The archaeologists who discovered

the stranger in the striped leggings marvelled at the state of his

cadaver. He looked almost alive. They named him Cherchen Man, after

the county in which he was found, and when they set about carbon

dating his body, they discovered that he was very, very old. Indeed,

the tests showed that he had probably roamed the Tarim Basin as early

as the eleventh century bc. When Mair learned this, he was

astonished. If the mummy was indeed European in origin, this would

undermine one of the keystones of Chinese history.

 

Scholars had long believed that the first contacts between China and

Europe occurred relatively late in world history -- sometime shortly

after the mid-second century bc, when the Chinese emperor Wudi sent

an emissary west. According to contemporary texts, Wudi had grown

tired of the marauding Huns, a nomadic people whose homeland lay in

what is now southwest Mongolia. The Huns were continually raiding the

richest villages of his empire, stealing its grain and making off

with its women. So Wudi decided to propose a military alliance with a

kingdom far to the west, beyond Mongolia, in order to crush a common

foe. In 139 bc, the emperor sent one of his attendants, Zhang Qian,

on the long trek across Asia. Zhang Qian failed to obtain the

alliance his master coveted, but the route he took became part of the

legendary Silk Road to Europe. In the years that followed, hundreds

of trading caravans and Caucasians plied this route, carrying bundles

of ivory, gold, pomegranates, safflowers, jade, furs, porcelain, and

silk between Rome and the ancient Chinese capital of Xi'an.

 

Nationalists in China were very fond of this version of history. It

strongly suggested that Chinese civilization, which had flowered long

before Zhang Qian headed west, must have blossomed in isolation, free

of European influence, and it cast early Chinese achievements in a

particularly glorious light. In one popular book, The Cradle of the

East, Chinese historian Ping-ti Ho proudly claimed that the hallmarks

of early Chinese civilization -- including the chariot, bronze

metallurgy, and a system of writing -- were all products of Chinese

genius alone. According to Ping-ti Ho, those living in the ancient

Celestial Kingdom had never stooped to borrowing the ideas of others

and their inventive genius surpassed that of the West.

 

Mair, a professor of Chinese in the department of Asian and Middle

Eastern Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, had long doubted

this version of history. He suspected that the Chinese had

encountered Westerners from Europe long before the emperor Wudi

dreamed up his military alliance. Several early Chinese books, for

example, described tall men with green eyes and red hair that

resembled the fur of rhesus monkeys. Most scholars dismissed these

accounts as legendary, but Mair wasn't so sure. He thought they were

descriptions of Caucasian men. During his studies of Chinese

mythology, he had found stories strikingly similar to those in early

Greek and Roman tales. The parallels were too frequent to be mere

coincidences. And he kept stumbling across words in early Chinese

texts that seemed to have been borrowed from ancient languages far to

the west. Among these were the words for dog, cow, goose, grape, and

wheel. But though Mair repeatedly argued the case for early trade and

contact between China and the West, he had no hard archaeological

evidence of contact, and no one took him very seriously. "People

would laugh at me. I said that East and West were communicating back

in the Bronze Age and people just said, 'Oh yeah? Interesting, but

prove it.' "

 

Never for a moment did Mair expect to find the kind of flesh-and-

blood vindication that Cherchen Man promised. Still, he was wary of a

hoax. The man's tailored woollen clothing, with all the complex

textile technology it implied, was unlike anything Mair had ever seen

from ancient Asia, let alone a remote outpost like Xinjiang. The

mummy itself seemed almost too perfectly preserved to be true. "I

thought it was part of a wax museum or something, a ploy to get more

tourists. How could they have such advanced textile technology three

thousand years ago? I couldn't put it into any historical context. It

didn't make any sense whatsoever."

 

Mair began asking his Chinese colleagues about Cherchen Man. He

learned that European scholars had unearthed several similar bodies

in the Tarim Basin almost a century before but had regarded them as

little more than oddities. In 1895, for example, the British-

Hungarian scholar Marc Aurel Stein exhumed a few Caucasian bodies

while searching for antiquities and old Central Asian texts in the

Tarim Basin. "It was a strange sensation," noted Stein in his later

writings, "to look down on figures which but for the parched skin

seemed like those of men asleep." However, Stein and the Europeans

who followed him were far more interested in classical-era ruins than

in mummified bodies, and failed to investigate further.

 

Early Chinese archaeologists in the region also came across some of

the bodies, but they were no more interested than the Europeans. They

thought it likely that a few ancient foreigners had strayed into this

outlying territory of ancient China by chance. But in the 1970s,

while surveying along proposed routes for pipelines and rail lines in

Xinjiang, Chinese archaeologists happened upon scores of the parched

cadavers, so many that they couldn't excavate them all. Most of the

bodies were very Caucasian-looking -- a major discovery that went

unreported outside a small circle of archaeologists in China. The

mummies had blond, red, or auburn hair. They had deep-set eyes, long

noses, thick beards, and tall, often gangly, frames. Some wore

woollens of what looked like Celtic plaid and sported strangely

familiar forms of Western haberdashery: conical black witches' hats,

tam-o'-shanters, and Robin Hood caps. Others were dressed only in fur

moccasins, woollen wraps, and feathered caps, and buried with small

baskets of grain. This last group, it transpired, contained the

oldest of the Caucasians. According to radiocarbon-dating tests, they

roamed the northwestern corner of China in the twenty-first century

bc, the height of the Bronze Age, just as Mair had long been

suggesting.

 

Not only had they wandered the Tarim Basin, they had also settled

there for a very long time. Cherchen Man had walked the Tarim deserts

in the eleventh century bc, a millennium after the earliest

Caucasians. Moreover, murals from the region depict people with fair

hair and long noses in the seventh century ad, while some local texts

of the same era are inscribed in a lost European language known as

Tocharian. If the writers were descendants of the Caucasian-looking

people who arrived in Xinjiang nearly 2,800 years earlier, one can

only conclude that this was a very successful colony.

 

Convinced now of the authenticity of the mummies, Mair began puzzling

over their meaning. Who were these ancient invaders, he wondered, and

where exactly had they come from?

 

 

 

Victor Mair is a big, rugged- looking man in his mid-fifties, a shade

over six foot one, with size-fourteen feet and the clean-cut good

looks that one often sees in former pro-football players. The

American-born son of an Austrian immigrant, he stands nearly a head

taller than most of his colleagues in China, a physical advantage

that he often tries to minimize in group photographs by stepping down

off a curb or onto a lower step. He has short, neatly combed grey

hair, a large aquiline nose, observant blue eyes, and a jesting wit

he uses to particularly good effect, laughter being the best way of

bridging any awkward cultural gap. He neither smokes nor drinks, and

never did, and is, by his own admission, a born leader. Possessed of

an uncommon self-confidence, which sometimes comes across as

arrogance, he is also a man of many surprising quirks.

 

I got my first glimpse of this quirkiness in a downpour in Shanghai,

in June of 1999. I had arranged to meet Mair in the Chinese city,

where, eleven years after first seeing the mummies, he was hoping to

begin a new round of dna testing on them. In our early phone

conversations, Mair had told me that he would be travelling with a

geneticist who hoped to take tissue samples from the Tarim Basin

mummies stored at the Natural History Museum in Shanghai.

 

It sounded as if everything had been arranged. But as I quickly

discovered upon my arrival in Shanghai, Mair was still a long way

from gathering the samples. Housed in a small guest house for foreign

lecturers at Fudan University, he strode the hallways like a weary

giant. He had just spent two full days in meetings with his Chinese

colleagues, trying to hammer out a deal. But the talks were stalling.

To clear his head, Mair invited me to join him for a walk. In the

downpour, I struggled to keep up with him, dodging flocks of cyclists

in their shiny yellow rain slickers, and black pools of nearly

invisible potholes. Mair wove around them absently. Instead of a

raincoat, he wore two long-sleeved plaid shirts, one inside the

other. He didn't seem to care that he was getting soaked.

 

Nothing, he explained as we walked in the rain, was ever simple when

it came to the Xinjiang mummies. Dead as they had been for thousands

of years, they still managed to stir strong feelings among the

living. In China, a restive ethnic minority known as the Uyghurs had

stepped forward to claim the mummies as their own. Numbering nearly

seven million, the Uyghurs viewed the Tarim Basin as their homeland.

Largely Muslim, they had become a subjugated people in the late

nineteenth century. During the 1930s and 1940s, their leaders managed

to found two brief republics that later fell under Chinese control.

But Uyghur guerillas continued fighting stubbornly, until their last

leader was executed in 1961. Since then, the Chinese government has

dealt harshly with any sign of separatist sentiment. Amnesty

International's 1999 report for Xinjiang made grim reading. "Scores

of Uyghurs, many of them political prisoners, have been sentenced to

death and executed in the past two years," it noted. "Others,

including women, are alleged to have been killed by the security

forces in circumstances which appear to constitute extra-judicial

executions."

 

Still the Uyghurs refused to give up, and when they caught wind of

mummies being excavated in the Tarim Basin, they were keenly

interested. Historians had long suggested that the Uyghurs were

relative latecomers to the region, migrating from the plains of

Mongolia less than two thousand years ago. But Uyghur leaders were

skeptical. They believed that their farmer ancestors had always lived

along the thin but fertile river valleys of the Tarim, and as such

they embraced the mummies as their kin -- even though many scholars,

Mair included, suspected that Uyghur invaders had slaughtered or

driven out most of the mummies' true descendants and assimilated the

few that remained. Still, in Xinjiang, Uyghur leaders picked one of

the oldest mummies as an emblem of their cause. They named her, with

some poetic licence, the Beauty of Loulan and began printing posters

with her picture. That she was so Caucasian-looking was not a problem

in Uyghur eyes: some Uyghurs had Caucasian features. People in

Ürümchi, the province's capital, were captivated. Musicians began

writing songs about her that subtly alluded to the separatist cause.

 

This sudden outburst of mummy nationalism alarmed the Chinese

government. Before long, everything related to the Xinjiang mummies

was considered a matter of state security. No one in government was

in any hurry to authorize a genetic test on them. If the mummies' dna

revealed even a partial link to the Uyghurs -- a not unlikely

prospect, given the Uyghurs' mixed heritage -- it would further

strengthen the separatists' claims to the region in the eyes of the

world. This was something the Chinese wished to avoid, especially

after the international condemnation of their treatment of another

ethnic minority, in Tibet. Adding to the problem was the Chinese

sensitivity to any matter touching on the Tarim Basin. Beyond the

wispy river valleys and beneath the Tarim's bleak desert plains lay

immense oil fields. According to Chinese geologists, they contained

nearly 18 billion tons of crude, six times more than the known

reserves of the United States.

 

Chinese officials were not the only ones worried about genetic

testing. Western scholars fretted, too. Some hated the thought that

Europeans could have succeeded in planting settlements so far into

Asia thousands of years ago. Not only did such a migration threaten

the Chinese version of history; it seemed vaguely to smack of ancient

colonialism, a notion that many historians abhor. "There's a lot of

Western guilt about imperialism and sensitivity about dominating

other people," said Mair. "It's a really deep subconscious thing, and

there are a lot of people in the West who are hypersensitive about

saying our culture is superior in any way, or that our culture gets

around or extends itself. So there are people who want to make sure

that we don't make mistakes in our interpretation of the past."

 

Certainly, the presence of ancient Europeans in China -- even in its

outer reaches -- could be twisted and distorted to political ends:

people with racial agendas had long been searching for just such

evidence. During the 1930s, for example, Adolf Hitler and Heinrich

Himmler had taken an unhealthy interest in Genghis Khan, the most

famous leader of the Mongols, who in the thirteenth century had

conquered vast stretches of Central Asia, from southern Siberia to

Tibet, and from Korea to the Aral Sea. "Our strength," observed

Hitler in a thundering speech to the commanders of Germany's armed

forces in 1939, "is in our quickness and brutality. Genghis Khan had

millions of women and children killed by his own will and with a gay

heart. History sees in him only a great state builder. . . ."

 

But Hitler's admiration of the ancient Mongol presented a serious

problem for a party that placed great stock in racial purity. Genghis

Khan, after all, was not Caucasian. He belonged to an Asian race that

the Nazis heartily despised as inferior. Himmler, who fancied himself

a historian, finally came up with a solution based on pure whimsy. He

told one anthropologist that Genghis Khan and his elite Mongol

followers were actually Caucasians, descended from the citizens of

Atlantis who had decamped from their mythical island home before it

sank, cataclysmically, beneath the waves. These Mongol Caucasians,

Himmler claimed, were a special kind of Caucasian: German blood

flowed through their veins.

 

One recent book suggests that Himmler went so far as to request a

collection of mummies from Central Asia. But Mair doubted it. "In all

of my reading of works emanating from these expeditions," he said, "I

have never come across any indication that they brought such corpses

back to Europe."

 

Even so, the bizarre racial ideas of the Nazis troubled Western

scholars. They worried about where genetic testing of the Xinjiang

mummies might lead, and worse still, about who might ultimately try

to profit from the research. Testing the mummies was like taking a

stroll through a minefield: there was no telling what might explode

in the traveller's face.

 

"It would be especially bad news if any of the mummies were German,"

observed Mair later, in the guest house where he was

staying. "They've had two world wars in which they were the

perpetrators and if any of these mummies were even remotely Germanic,

forget it. People just wouldn't want to talk about it."

 

 

 

As amazed as Mair had been by the mummies back in 1988, he hadn't had

the time to study them. In September, 1991, however, he picked up a

newspaper and read about the discovery of a frozen, partially

preserved corpse of a 5,300-year-old man in a glacier along the

Austrian-Italian border. This became Europe's famous iceman, known as

Ötzi.

 

The news startled Mair. His own father had grown up in Pfaffenhoffen,

a small Austrian village just a short distance away from where

scientists had dug the iceman from a glacier. His father's family had

grazed their herds in the same alpine meadows where Ötzi had probably

wandered. The iceman, he realized, might well be a distant relative.

Might he also have had some connection to the ancestors of Cherchen

Man, who looked so much like Mair's own brother? "I saw the headlines

and I jerked," Mair recalls. "I looked at that iceman and I

said, 'These guys out in the Tarim are just like him.' One's in ice

and the others are in sand. It didn't take half a second."

 

Austrian scientists planned on performing sophisticated scientific

tests, including dna analysis, on the iceman. It occurred to Mair

that similar tests on Cherchen Man and his kin could do much to trace

the ancestry of the mummies. He immediately wrote to Wang Binghua,

one of the foremost archaeologists in Xinjiang, outlining the project

that was forming in his mind. He also called Luigi Cavalli-Sforza, a

distinguished geneticist at Stanford University who was an expert on

ancient dna. Cavalli-Sforza instantly saw the possibilities. He

recommended that Mair contact one of his former students, Paolo

Francalacci, at the University of Sassari, in Italy. Mair did just

that, and working closely with Wang over the next months he managed

to hammer out a deal with the Chinese goverment. Beijing finally gave

the team a green light in 1993.

 

Francalacci thought it best to collect samples from mummies left in

the ground, as opposed to bodies already stored in museums. This

would reduce the possibility of contamination with modern dna. So in

Ürümchi, he set off, along with Mair and Wang Binghua, for the well-

documented grave sites found during the Chinese pipeline and railway

surveys of the 1970s and in archaeological studies since. Dozens of

these mummies, many lying in relatively shallow underground tombs,

had been left alone because of the enormous cost of curating them.

 

At each chosen grave, the young geneticist donned a face mask and a

pair of latex gloves, and docked tiny pieces of muscle, skin, and

bone from the mummies, often choosing tissue along the inside of the

thighs or under the armpits because these regions had been less

exposed to the excavators. He sealed each sample in a plastic vial.

After several days, he had collected twenty-five specimens from

eleven individuals, enough for a modest study. But there was little

time for celebration. In a stunning about-face, Chinese authorities

suddenly demanded Francalacci's samples, refusing to allow them out

of the country.

 

Then a mysterious thing happened. Just shortly before Mair departed

for home, a Chinese colleague turned up with a surreptitious gift. He

slipped five of the confiscated, sealed samples into Mair's pocket.

These had come from two mummies. The grateful Mair passed the samples

on to Francalacci, who began toiling in Italy to amplify the dna.

 

For months, the Italian geneticist laboured on the mummy samples,

trying to extract enough dna for sequencing. The nucleic acids had

badly degraded, but still, Francalacci kept trying various methods,

and in 1995 he called Mair with a piece of good news. He had finally

retrieved enough dna to sequence, and his preliminary results were

intriguing. The two Xinjiang mummies belonged to the same genetic

lineage as most modern-day Swedes, Finns, Tuscans, Corsicans, and

Sardinians.

 

the genetic studies were promising, but they only whetted Mair's

curiosity. It was not just that Cherchen Man bore an uncanny

resemblance to his own brother Dave (whom he had taken to calling Ur-

David), it also had to do with Mair's own deeply rooted

beliefs. "Everything that I've done," he explained, "even though it's

been running all over the map, it's all been tied into making things

accessible to the everyday guy, the worker. That's what it's all

about and that's why I looked at these mummies. They were just

everyday guys, not famous people."

 

Mair had acquired this outlook at an early age. His immigrant father,

whom he adored and deeply admired, was a lathe operator for a ball-

bearing company in Canton, Ohio. His mother was a poet and

songwriter. Growing up in a working-class family, Mair was

continually reminded of the importance of ordinary people, who

sweated on the assembly lines or who bent over mops and brooms at

night. These were the kinds of people history tended to ignore.

 

Now, with this same instinct for the common man, Mair redoubled his

efforts to trace the mummies' ancestry. In Xinjiang, a Chinese

colleague had slipped him another parting gift: a swatch of blue,

brown, and white cloth taken from a twelfth-century-bc mummy. The

fabric looked like a piece of Celtic plaid. Mair passed it over to

Irene Good, a textile expert at the University of Pennsylvania

Museum. Good examined it under an electron microscope. The style of

weave, known as a "two over two" diagonal twill, bore little

resemblance to anything woven by Asian weavers of the day. (Indeed,

it would be almost another two millennia before women in central

China turned out twill cloth on their looms.) But the weave exactly

matched cloth found with the bodies of thirteenth-century-bc salt

miners in Austria. Like the dna samples, the mysterious plaid pointed

straight towards a European homeland.

 

Excited by the textile connection, Mair organized a new expedition to

Xinjiang with Good, her fellow textile expert Elizabeth Barber, and

her cultural anthropologist husband, Paul Barber. As the two women

pored over the mummies' clothing, Barber examined the bodies

themselves, studying their mummification. Mair hoped this might offer

clues to the origins of the people themselves. But the ancient desert

dwellers, he discovered, had not taken any of the elaborate measures

favoured by the Egyptians or other skilled morticians. Instead, they

had relied on nature for a few simple tricks. In some cases, family

members had buried their dead in salt fields, whose chemistry

preserved human flesh like a salted ham. Often, they had arranged the

cadaver so that dry air flowed around the extremities, swiftly

desiccating the flesh. Cherchen Man, for example, had benefited from

both techniques.

 

Mair, too, assisted in the work. In his spare time, he translated key

Chinese reports on the mummies and published them in his own journal,

The Sino-Platonic Papers. This gave Western archaeologists access to

the scientific findings for the first time. He wanted to make the

mummies the focus of a lively scientific and scholarly investigation.

So he set about organizing a major international scientific

conference on the mummies, bringing leading archaeologists,

anthropologists, linguists, geneticists, geographers, sinologists,

historians, ethnologists, climatologists, and metallurgists to the

University of Pennsylvania to discuss their ideas. After everyone

left, Mair dutifully edited and translated two large volumes of their

papers, clarifying their arcane prose until everyone interested in

the field could understand it. "If I have grey hair," he joked, "it

was because I was sitting there slaving over this stuff."

 

When he had finally finished, he sat down in his office with a pad of

paper and a pen. He sifted through hundreds of studies on matters as

diverse as linguistics, pottery styles, methods of tomb construction,

and metallurgy across Eurasia over the past seven thousand years,

searching for cultures whose core technologies and languages bore

clear similarities to those of the ancient Caucasian cultures of

Xinjiang. These he recognized as ancestral societies. Slowly,

patiently, he worked his way back through time and space, tracing the

territories of these ancestral groups. Eventually, after months of

work, he sketched a map of what he concluded was their homeland. The

territory stretched in a wide swath across central Europe, from

northern Denmark to the northwestern shore of the Black Sea. But its

heart, some six thousand years ago, lay in what is now southern

Germany, northeastern Austria, and a portion of the Czech

Republic. "I really felt that that fit the archaeological evidence

best," Mair later told me.

 

When he finally showed his map to some of his colleagues, though,

they were deeply dismayed. Elizabeth Barber, one of his closest

collaborators, angrily demanded that he redraw it, insisting that

linguistic evidence, particularly the ancestry of ancient words for

looms, pointed to a homeland much farther east. Realizing that he had

gone too far for the comfort of his colleagues, and that he had yet

to find the proof he needed, he bowed to their pressure. He redrew

the map, placing the homeland in a broad arc stretching from eastern

Ukraine and southern Russia to western Kazakhstan. Then he published

it in the conference proceedings. "I thought, for this book, it

wouldn't be too bad," he confessed, shaking his head. "I decided I

wouldn't go against the flow that much, because that is a big flow

with some really smart people." Then he looked down at the map in

front of him. "But in my own integrity and honesty, I'd want to put

it in here." He sketched a narrow oval. Its centre fell near the

Austrian city of Salzburg.

 

 

 

All of which brought us to Shanghai, and the rain, and the final

arbiter, hopefully, of more dna testing. Convinced he was right, and

desperately wanting to find the proof that would dispel all doubt,

Mair believed genetics still offered the best hope of vindication. If

dna testing was sufficient to convict or exonerate men in a court of

law, it would surely be strong enough to persuade even the most

skeptical of his colleagues. He needed samples for another, more

powerful type of dna testing, but as he had just discovered, the

Chinese officials had upped the ante again. Japanese researchers had

recently paid $100,000 to acquire samples of the ancient matter for

dna testing, and officials at Shanghai's Museum of Natural History

now wanted a similar sum from Mair.

 

Mair didn't have it, and he was running out of time. Still, he

remained surprisingly upbeat. During a break in the negotiations one

afternoon, he invited me to follow Xu Yongqing, the head of the

Shanghai Museum of Natural History's anthropology department, down

the stairs to a basement room in the museum. Unlocking the door to a

small room behind the employees' bicycle racks, Xu led the way

inside. Along three of the walls, mummies in glass cases reclined

luxuriously on red velvet cloth. Stacked three high in spots, they

looked much like train passengers bedded down for the night in their

berths. Mair stood quietly, scanning the room. Then he saw what he

wanted to show me. In one of the lower glass cases, a young woman lay

stretched out on her back, stripped of her fine woollens. Her knees

were pressed demurely together, her arms rested comfortably at her

sides, and her breasts lay round and full, as if she had perished in

the midst of nursing a child.

 

But it was the hair that caught my attention. A long wavy golden-

brown mane twisted down her back. Standing in that room, I felt an

unexpected sense of kinship with her, surrounded as she was by

strangers. And I wondered just what had prodded her ancestors to

exchange the cool greenness of Europe for the scorching barrens of

the Tarim Basin.

 

as always, mair had some ideas. He believed a new invention had

spurred this woman's forebears to embark on this eastern exodus:

horseback riding. Some 5,700 years ago, he explained, Eurasians had

begun rounding up wild horses, and sometime later they started

sliding bits into their mouths and swinging their bodies onto their

backs. These seemingly simple acts led them to conquer terrestrial

space. For the first time ever, human beings were able to travel

swiftly over immense distances, an accomplishment so exhilarating and

adrenalin-charged that they suddenly gave full rein to their

wanderlust.

 

So equipped, Mair went on with growing enthusiasm, early Europeans

had easily spread out across Eurasia, their brisk progress recorded

in the ancient campsites they left behind. Some of the invaders swept

northward, becoming the Germanic tribes; others journeyed west to

become the Celts of the British Isles. But the ancestors of the

Xinjiang people had headed east across the grassy steppes of Asia,

repelling any who tried to bar their path, and four thousand years

ago, a small group of latecomers rode into the vacant river valleys

of the Tarim Basin. Finding sufficient land to make a life there,

they stayed, passing on their love and knowledge of fine horses to

their descendants. When mourners buried Cherchen Man, they arranged a

dead horse and a saddle atop his grave, two essential things he would

need in the next life.

 

In all likelihood, observed Mair, some of these European invaders

rode even further to the east and north, beyond the reach of

desiccating deserts. And there they brought with them such new

Western inventions as the chariot, a high-performance vehicle

designed for warfare and sport, and bronze metallurgy, which made

strong weapons that retained their killing edge. Very possibly, a few

of these invaders carried with them the secret of writing. While

examining the hand of an ancient woman exhumed near Cherchen Man,

Mair had noticed row upon row of a strange tattoo along her hand.

Shaped like a backward S, it clearly resembled the early Phoenician

consonant that gave us our modern S. Mair has also found the

identical form of S -- which resembles an ancient Chinese character --

along with other alphabetiform signs, on artifacts of this era from

western China.

 

Chinese scholars, it occurred to me, were unlikely to take much

comfort in the thought of these invaders. And they were unlikely to

be pleased by the pivotal role these intruders may have played in

ancient Chinese life. Western inventions, after all, shaped the

course of history. Fleet chariots enabled Chinese armies to vanquish

their enemies, and sturdy bronze swords reinforced dreams of empire.

And a secret system of writing bequeathed Chinese officials the means

to govern the conquered lands effortlessly.

 

But invention is only one small part of the story. What societies

make of technological leaps forward is as important as the act of

creation itself. It was the genius of others, after all, who

unwittingly made the West strong. It gave Europeans the compasses

that guided mariners overseas to Asia and America. It provided the

printing presses that disseminated knowledge of these new lands to

the masses. It bestowed the gunpowder that fuelled conquest. Indeed,

all these came from Chinese inventors.

 

There are many ironies joining East and West in the inseparable

embrace of history. Mair savours them. His trip to Shanghai in the

rain ended in disappointment. He left China empty-handed. But he is

now raising funds and fervently seeking permission to conduct further

dna tests on the mummies of Xinjiang. Until that day, Ur-David waits

in a museum storage room in China, unclaimed as a long- lost brother.

 

 

 

>From the Mummy Congress by Heather Pringle, to be published this

month by Penguin Canada. ©2001 by Heather Pringle. All photographs on

these pages provided by Discover Magazine

 

 

 

 

----

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Related Links:

 

Chinese mummies

 

Mummy news

 

Dr. Mair in the Taklamakhan Desert

 

Discover magazine

 

 

 

 

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