Ancient shoes beat most modern footwear

From the Hindustan Times: Ancient shoes beat most modern footwear.

Lined with hay and held together by a net of rough string, the leather shoes look bulky, itchy and downright uncomfortable.

But if they were good enough for Oetzi, the 5,300-year-old man found in an alpine glacier in 1991, they're good enough for the modern foot, insists Petr Hlavacek, a Czech shoe expert who has created replicas, taken them out for a walk and pronounced them far better than most modern footwear.

"These shoes are very comfortable. They are perfectly able to protect your feet against hard terrain, against hot temperatures, against cold temperatures," he said, showing off the replicas in his office at Tomas Bata University in this eastern Czech town. Despite their flimsy leather soles, the shoes offer a good grip and superb shock absorption, and are blister-free, Hlavacek said. It's like going barefoot, "only better," he said. "In the Oetzi shoes, you feel something like freedom, flexibility." Scientists have already learned much from the hunter nicknamed Oetzi (rhymes with curtsey), that his last meal included venison, that he was killed by an arrow, and that he probably spent most of his life within about 50 miles (80 kilometers) of where his body was found. [continue]

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Posted on July 6, 2005 09:50 AM. Filed under: history & archaeology.