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B IOARCHAEOLOGICAL A PPROACHES TO THE P AST Archaeology, 6 th Edition.

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Presentation on theme: "B IOARCHAEOLOGICAL A PPROACHES TO THE P AST Archaeology, 6 th Edition."— Presentation transcript:

1 B IOARCHAEOLOGICAL A PPROACHES TO THE P AST Archaeology, 6 th Edition

2 This chapter will enable you to answer these questions: 1. How do bioarchaeologists contribute to a study of the past? 2. How do bioarchaeologists determine age and sex for a skeleton? 3. How do bioarchaeologists use paleopathology and bone chemistry to reconstruct the lives of ancient peoples? 4. How are genetic data used to reconstruct population relationships and the ages of migrations?

3 Outline  Introduction  Skeletal Analysis: The Basics  How Well Did the Stillwater People Live?  Reconstructing Diet from Human Bone  Lives of Affluence? Or Nasty, Brutish, and Short?  Cannibalism in the American Southwest?

4 Introduction  Bioarchaeology, the study of the human biological component of the archaeological record.  Exploring bone, bone chemistry, and DNA preserved in human tissues to:  Learn the origin and distribution of disease  Reconstruct human diets  Analyze evidence for biological stress in archaeological populations

5 Skeletal Analysis: The Basics  Osteology, the study of bone.  Burial population, a set of human burials that come from a limited region and a limited time period.  The more limited the region and the time period, the more accurate will be inferences drawn from analysis of the burials.

6 Skeletal Analysis: The Basics  Charnel house, a structure used by eastern North Americans to lay out the dead where the body would decompose.  The bones would later be gathered and buried or cremated.  Bundle burial, burial of a person’s bones, bundled together, after the flesh has been removed or allowed to decay off the bones.

7 Skeletal Analysis: Determining Sex  Men and women differ in the pelvic region.  Sciatic notch, the angled edge of both halves of the posterior (rear) side of the pelvis;  measurement of this angle is used to determine sex in human skeletons.  Although its width varies among populations, narrow notches indicate a male and wider notches indicate a female.

8 Skeletal Analysis: Determining Sex  Adult male skulls tend to be:  more robust than adult female’s,  with heavier brow ridges over and between the eyes,  larger mastoid processes (two protrusions of bone on the bottom of the skull, one beneath each ear)  more rugged muscle attachments.  Male skulls have squarer chins and eye orbits.

9 Skeletal Analysis: Determining Sex

10 Skeletal Analysis: Determining Age  Epiphyses, the ends of bones that fuse to the main shaft or portion of bone at various ages; most bones are fused by age 25. This fact can be used to age skeletons of younger individuals.

11 Skeletal Analysis: Determining Age  Pubic symphysis, where the two halves of the pelvis meet in the groin area; the appearance of its articulating surface can be used to age skeletons.  Degree of tooth wear and loss can help in estimating age, but tooth wear and loss can be related to diet.

12 How Well Did The Stillwater People Live?  Paleopathology, the study of ancient patterns of disease, disorders, and trauma.  Nonspecific indicators of stress in the Stillwater burial population included those caused by nutritional deficiencies and/or nonspecific infectious disease.

13 Stillwater Population: Disease and Trauma  No evidence of specific diseases, including syphilis, tuberculosis or leprosy.  Signs of iron deficiency anemia among the skeletal remains from Stillwater Marsh.

14 Stillwater Population: Disease and Trauma  Porotic hyperostosis, a symptom of iron deficiency anemia in which the skull takes on a porous appearance.  Cribra orbitalia, a symptom of iron deficiency anemia in the bone of the upper eye sockets takes on a spongy appearance.

15 Stillwater Population: Disease and Trauma  Harris Lines, horizontal lines near the ends of long bones indicating episodes of physiological stress.

16 Stillwater Population: Disease and Trauma  Enamel hypoplasias, horizontal linear defects in tooth enamel indicating episodes of physiological stress. Enamel hypoplasias

17 Stillwater Population: Workload  In at least one joint, every single adult skeleton in the Stillwater collection had osteoarthritis, a disorder in which the cartilage between joints wears away, often because of overuse of the joint, resulting in osteophytes and eburnation. A vertebra with osteoarthritis

18 Stillwater Population: Workload  Osteophyte, a sign of osteoarthritis in which bones develop a distinctive “lipping” of bone at the point of articulation.  Eburnation, a sign of osteoarthritis in which the epiphyses of long bones are worn smooth, causing them to take on a varnish- like appearance.

19 Stillwater Population: Workload  Men suffered from osteoarthritis more in hip, ankle and foot; women more in the lumbar vertebrae (lower back).  Long bone cross sections, cross sections of the body’s long bones (arms and legs) used to analyze bone shape and reconstruct the mechanical stresses placed on that bone – and hence activity patterns.

20 Stillwater Population: Workload  The femur cross sections and patterns in osteoarthritis indicated that the people living at Stillwater Marsh walked a great deal to make a successful living, males more than females.  Females carried more, resulting in strain on lower back.

21 Stillwater Population: Paleodemography  Paleodemography, the study of ancient demographic patterns and trends. Uses reconstructed parameters such as life expectancy at birth, the age profile of a population, and patterns in the ages of death.  Mortality profiles, charts that depict the various ages at death of a burial population; based on the age and sex data of burials.

22 The Stillwater Mortality Profile

23  Ethnographic data indicates that mortality of newborns and toddlers is very high among hunting and gathering populations: 50-60% do not survive to 5 years of age.  The female mortality profile shows an increase in deaths in the early child-bearing years; common for foraging populations.  Few individuals are assigned to the 46–50 and 50+ age categories. A 47-year-old in Stillwater was an elder.

24 Stillwater Population: Stature  Bioarchaeologists estimate stature with equations that relate the length of certain long bones to an individual’s height. The femur is the best bone for computing stature.  Height is a useful measure of overall health because it is related to diet.

25 Stillwater Population: Stature  Larsen found among St. Catherines Island populations that the average agriculturalist male was 1% and the average female was 3% shorter than earlier foraging populations.

26 Reconstructing Diet from Human Bone  Diet can be reconstructed from human bone in several ways.  Dental caries, or cavities, indicate a starchy diet of agriculturalists.

27 Reconstructing Diet from Human Bone  Because they were strictly hunter gatherers and their diet was low in simple carbohydrates, only 3% of Stillwater skeletons had cavities.  They lost their teeth by middle age, generally as a result of excessive tooth wear.

28 Bone and Stable Isotopes  Ancient diets can also be reconstructed by analyzing the carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes preserved in human bone.  Bone collagen, the organic component of bone.  Human bones reflect the isotopic ratios of plants ingested during life.

29 Bone and Stable Isotopes  We reconstruct the dietary importance of plants by measuring the ratio of carbon isotopes in bone collagen.  A diet rich in C4 plants (maize), can produce bones with a higher ratio of 13C to 12C.  Humans who consume large amounts of meat have a higher ratio of 15N to 14N.

30 Comparison of Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopes Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes for the Stillwater burial population compared with those of Archaic Ontario hunter-gatherers and of Pecos Pueblo maize horticulturalists.

31 Lives of Affluence? Or Nasty, Brutish, and Short?  Stillwater Marsh people were relatively healthy, free of disease, disorders, broken bones, and infection.  But they worked hard, suffered from periods of malnutrition, and few lived beyond age 50.

32 Cannibalism in the American Southwest?  Human bones evidencing tool cut marks in places that suggest flesh was stripped from them;  smashed and broken long bones and vertebrae in the same way animal bones are broken to extract marrow.

33 Cannibalism in the American Southwest?  Other bones evidence “pot polish”, abraded surfaces produced by stirring boiling bones in a ceramic pot.  May be evidence of cannibalism or burial rituals.

34 Anasazi Cannibalism? Northern ancestral Puebloans, c. 500-1300 CE Broken limb bones & skeletons with missing vertebrae


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