The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered was(1) found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Iceman" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees and foot were marked with(2) a series of small lines, made by(3) rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration at(4) the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe that(5) Otzi's people, ancestors of contemporary central and(6)northern Europeans, may have used tattoos as(7) medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on other(8) meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers from(9) around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos on(10) their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god of(11) fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found done(12) reason to celebrate tattoos, believing in(13) the purity of the humane from. Except as brands for criminals(14) and the condemned, tattoos changed. Fighting an army of Britons who wore their tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to admire(18) their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers were wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art of application and removal.
الاجابة 15و 16 و17 غير واضحة بس هذيالقطعة حملتها اليوم الصباح تابعةのя•Fάĵr