Ancient bronze statue of Tollund Man, bog body from the Iron Age, at the Museum Silkeborg in Denmark A re-examination of the last meal of an Early Iron Age Denmark bog body called Tollund Man has revealed new details about his final hours.According to findings published Wednesday in the journal Antiquity, 12 to 24 hours before Tollund Man was killed he ate a bog-water porridge made of barley, pale persicaria, flax and likely fish.Researchers, led by the Silkeborg Museum's Nina Nielsen, also reported finding eggs and proteins from intestinal worms, indicating that the man was infected with parasites including tapeworm, whipworm and mawworm."Although the meal may reflect ordinary Iron Age fare, the inclusion of threshing waste could possibly.