Researchers used 3D scans of a medieval man's skull to recreate a facial approximation of what he may have looked like when he was alive centuries ago.
In 1990, archaeologists unearthed the skeleton of a man who lived in Poland sometime between the ninth and 11th centuries. After conducting a 3D analysis of his skeletal remains, which were buried in a monastic cemetery alongside 400 other individuals, researchers determined that the medieval man had two forms of dwarfism, a condition so rare that it had never been recorded in a centuries-old skeleton.
Now, a new team of researchers has created a facial approximation of the man, who is known as Ł3/66/90, offering a glimpse of how he may have appeared when alive. The researchers created two black-and-white facial approximations. The first is an objective view showing a man with a round face and prominent forehead looking ahead in a neutral position, while the second is a more speculative reconstruction in which the individual has a full head of dark hair and a beard."The volume of the endocranium was quite significant, standing out in our sample as the second largest among all," Moraes said.
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