Examining the Physical Signatures of Pre-Electric Tattooing Tools and Techniques

This paper presents the first experimental archaeological study to formally compare the physical characteristics of tattoos made on human skin using multiple pre-modern tools and tattooing techniques. Our project used eight tools fashioned from animal bone, obsidian, copper, and boar tusk, along wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aaron Deter-Wolf, Danny Riday, Maya Sialuk Jacobsen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/e3ea07807e884c92bf5c4691105ecb5f
Description
Summary:This paper presents the first experimental archaeological study to formally compare the physical characteristics of tattoos made on human skin using multiple pre-modern tools and tattooing techniques. Our project used eight tools fashioned from animal bone, obsidian, copper, and boar tusk, along with a modern steel needle, to create tattoos on the leg of co-author Danny Riday. Those tattoos were created through four different traditional, pre-electric techniques consisting of hand poking, hand tapping, incision, and subdermal tattooing. We then documented the tattoos over a six-month period to compare the results. This process revealed clear physical differences between tattoos created using different tools and methods. The resulting data is then used to assess preserved tattoos from archaeological sites in the Andes and Greenland in order to test assumptions about how those marks were created.