A thousand-year-old Buddhist statue taken from Tibet in 1938 by an SS
team seeking the roots of Hitler's Aryan doctrine was carved from a
meteorite, scientists have reported.
In a paper published in an academic journal, German and Austrian
researchers recount an extraordinary tale where archaeology, the Third
Reich and cosmic treasure are intertwined like an Indiana Jones movie.
Called the Iron Man because of the high content of iron in its rock, the
24-centimetre-high statue was brought to Germany by an expedition led
by Ernst Schaefer, a zoologist and ethnologist.
Backed by SS chief Heinrich Himmler and heading a team whose members are
all believed to have been SS, Schaefer roamed Tibet in 1938-9 to search
for the origins of Aryanism, the notion of racial superiority that
underpinned Nazism.
Weighing 10.6 kilos, the statue features the Buddhist god Vaisravana
seated, with the palm of his right hand outstretched and pointing
downwards.
Chemical analysis shows that the rock from which it was carved came from a meteorite.
The rock survived a long trip through the Solar System and the
destructive friction with the atmosphere when it collided with Earth.
It is a particularly rare kind of meteorite called an ataxite, which has
iron and high contents of nickel, according to the study, published in
the journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science.
"The statue was chiselled from an iron meteorite, from a fragment of the
Chinga meteorite which crashed into the border areas between Mongolia
and Siberia about 15,000 years ago," said investigator Elmar Buchner of
Stuttgart University.
"While the first debris was officially discovered in 1913 by gold
prospectors, we believe that this individual meteorite fragment was
collected many centuries before."
The exact dating of the carving cannot be established accurately, but
its style links it to the pre-Buddhist Bon culture of the 11th century.
Vaisravana was the Buddhist god-king of the North, also known as Jambhala in Tibet.
How Schaefer came across the statue is unclear, but the big appeal is
likely to have been a large swastika, symbolising good fortune in
Buddhism, carved on its chest.
Once the statue arrived in Munich, it became part of a private
collection and only became available for study by Buchner following an
auction in 2009.
Other meteorites have become incorporated into religious worship. The
holy Black Stone in the Kaaba in Mecca is believed to be a stony
meteorite.
"The Iron Man statue is the only known illustration of a human figure to
be carved into a meteorite, which means we have nothing to compare it
to when assessing value," said Buchner.
"Its origins alone may value it at US$20,000 (NZ$24,000). However, if
our estimation of its age is correct and it is nearly a thousand years
old it could be invaluable."
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