A 2009 Sibert Honor Book
In 1991, mountain climbers on the Niederjoch Glacier on the
Italian-Austrian border came across something unexpected: a body. It had
been a very warm summer, and five bodies had already turned up in the
area. But something here was different. The materials found with the
body suggested it might be very old, perhaps from the 1800s. But
radiocarbon dating proved the iceman was 5,300 years older, from the
Copper Age. He was named Ötzi and he is the oldest human mummy preserved
in ice ever found. In this Sibert Honor Book, James M. Deem takes us on
a captivating and creepy journey to learn about glaciers, hulking masses
of moving ice that are now offering up many secrets of the past.