![Archaeologists reconstruct face of 400-year-old "vampire" buried with iron sickle across her neck](https://assets2.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2022/09/08/b24f340b-832b-4632-830e-5997df1eb059/thumbnail/1200x630g6/c3434427f74952c93dd067afae91a6fa/cbsn-fusion-skeleton-of-woman-suspected-of-being-a-vampire-in-17th-century-found-in-poland-thumbnail-1268800-640x360.jpg?v=17b612a59ff4c1e4774d3d0d3ec005e8)
Archaeologists reconstruct face of 400-year-old "vampire" buried with iron sickle across her neck
CBSN
Two years ago, archaeologists in Poland made a discovery at a gravesite they could only describe as "astonishing" — the remains of a woman with a sickle around her neck and a triangular padlock on her foot.
Found in an unmarked cemetery in the village of Pien, the 400-year-old woman was thought to be deemed a vampire and those who buried her placed the farming tool across her throat, according to ancient beliefs, to prevent her from returning from the dead.
A research team from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun made the unique discovery in August 2022, and working with Swedish archaeologist Oscar Nilsson, the team used DNA, 3D printing and clay to reconstruct the face of Zosia, as she was called by locals.
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