Subsistence and Behavioral Variation in the Neolithic Meuse Basin (BE): Insights From Dental Collections

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Ijk van Hattum, Joel D. Irish, Isabelle De Groote
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Abstract

Objectives

This study aims to investigate the Neolithic subsistence and population diversity in the 4th and 3rd millennia bce within Belgium's Meuse basin. The main objectives are to shed light on lifeways and cultural differences among groups known from collective cave burials. It focuses on dietary habits and behavioral practices through dental anthropology.

Materials and Methods

Commingled dental collections from four cave sites (Ben Ahin, La Faucille, Maurenne, and Bois Madame) were analyzed. A total of 1916 permanent teeth were examined for various oral conditions, including caries, calculus, dental wear patterns, trauma, and chipping.

Results

Oral health conditions and dental wear patterns were in line with those associated with terrestrial diets and farming-related subsistence. Inter-site comparisons revealed significant variability in dental indicators of diet, health, and behavior between groups. Variations were found in caries and calculus prevalence. Also, significant differences in chipping and extra-masticatory wear are evident.

Discussion

The findings support hypotheses of agricultural subsistence and provide evidence for group differentiation. Distinct habits for food processing or material cultures were evident among populations.

Conclusion

This study highlights inter-site variations within four Neolithic cave burials in the Belgian Meuse basin.

新石器时代默兹盆地(BE)的生存和行为变化:来自牙科收藏的见解
本研究旨在调查比利时默兹河流域公元前4至3千年新石器时代的生存和人口多样性。主要目的是阐明从集体洞穴埋葬中得知的群体之间的生活方式和文化差异。它通过牙科人类学关注饮食习惯和行为实践。材料与方法对四个洞穴遗址(Ben Ahin, La Faucille, Maurenne和Bois Madame)的混合牙齿收集物进行分析。总共检查了1916颗恒牙的各种口腔状况,包括龋齿、牙石、牙齿磨损模式、创伤和脱落。结果口腔健康状况和牙齿磨损模式与陆地饮食和与农业相关的生存方式一致。站点间比较揭示了组间饮食、健康和行为方面牙齿指标的显著差异。龋齿和牙石患病率存在差异。此外,咀嚼磨损和咀嚼外磨损的显著差异是明显的。研究结果支持了农业生存假说,并为群体分化提供了证据。不同的食品加工习惯或物质文化在人群中是明显的。本研究突出了比利时默兹盆地四个新石器时代洞穴墓葬的遗址间差异。
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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CiteScore
4.80
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