Osteobiographical re-individualisation of the Selk'nam human remains at the Natural History Museum Vienna

Constanze Schattke, Fernanda Olivares, Hema’ny Molina, L. Menéndez, S. Eggers
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Abstract

Osteological collections are key sources of information in providing crucial insight into the lifestyles of past populations. In this article, we conduct an osteobiographical assessment of the human remains of fourteen Selk'nam individuals, which are now housed in the Department of Anthropology, Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria. The aim is to bring these individuals closer to their communities of origin by using non-invasive methods aimed at rebuilding their biological profiles (i.e., age-at-death, biological sex and health status), adding to these with results from provenance research. This way, the human remains were assigned a new identity closer to their original one, through a process that we call ‘re-individualisation’. This is especially significant since it must be assumed that the individuals were exhumed against their cultural belief system. We conclude that building strong and long-lasting collaborations between Indigenous representatives and biological anthropologists has a pivotal role in research for reappraising Indigenous history.
维也纳自然历史博物馆的塞尔克南人类遗骸的骨骼传记再个性化
骨学收藏品是了解过去人群生活方式的关键信息来源。在这篇文章中,我们对14个塞尔克南人的遗骸进行了骨骼传记评估,这些遗骸现在被安置在奥地利维也纳自然历史博物馆的人类学系。目的是通过使用非侵入性方法,重建这些人的生物概况(即死亡年龄、生理性别和健康状况),并加上来源研究的结果,使这些人更接近其原籍社区。通过这种方式,人类遗骸被赋予了一个更接近其原始身份的新身份,我们称之为“再个性化”。这一点尤其重要,因为必须假设这些人是违背他们的文化信仰体系被挖掘出来的。我们的结论是,在土著代表和生物人类学家之间建立强大而持久的合作,对于重新评估土著历史的研究具有关键作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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