Tattoos

Overview

Tattoos are permanent markings made by pigments injected beneath the outer layer of skin. They remain indelible by harnessing immune cells called macrophages, which perceive ink as a foreign body and try to digest it. Ink particles can't be broken down, so macrophages hold on to them, helping maintain the tattoo pattern. Historically, tattoos were tapped into the skin with sharpened objects. In fact, the word "tattoo" comes from "tatatau," the Polynesian word for "to strike."

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

Explore Society & Culture

Take a deep dive into the topics shaping our shared norms, values, and institutions. Art, music, and sports. Literature, architecture, and TV. Film, food, and philosophy. If it defines who we are as a society or how we express ourselves as a culture, then we're exploring it here.

View All Society & Culture