Guoshuai Gao , Shuxin Kong , Haiyang Xing , Long Wang , Quanchao Zhang , Qian Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Children skeletons bear a wealth of information about childhood biological and social lives. Hence, collection of these patterns from the children group would suggest the overall environmental and social stress levels of the entire population. In this study, the skeletal remains of 74 children from three cemeteries used during the Bronze-Iron Age in the Turpan Basin of northwestern China (10th to 2nd centuries BCE) were investigated. Signs of abnormal porosity, enamel hypoplasia, abnormal new bone tissue, limb and rib deformities, and other signs of lesions were recorded. All three sites belonged to the Subeixi Culture (1100–100 BCE) in the Western Regions. Results demonstrated that children of the mortuary populations in Yanghai (1000–700 BCE), Jiayi (800–400 BCE) and Shengjindian (250–100 BCE) had generally high apparent prevalence of developmental stresses and signs of pathology. These patterns suggest children vulnerability in the historic Western Regions of a semi-nomadic and semi-agricultural economic mode. The hardship these children faced might have also been related to environmental stress and increased interpersonal conflicts in a transitional zone between nomadic and settled populations that eventually ended the Subeixi Culture. The regional socio-cultural structure and evolution might have had a significant impact on the health, morbidity, resilience, and mortality of children and adults alike. This study is the first effort to survey the health status of ancient minors in China.
期刊介绍:
Archaeological Research in Asia presents high quality scholarly research conducted in between the Bosporus and the Pacific on a broad range of archaeological subjects of importance to audiences across Asia and around the world. The journal covers the traditional components of archaeology: placing events and patterns in time and space; analysis of past lifeways; and explanations for cultural processes and change. To this end, the publication will highlight theoretical and methodological advances in studying the past, present new data, and detail patterns that reshape our understanding of it. Archaeological Research in Asia publishes work on the full temporal range of archaeological inquiry from the earliest human presence in Asia with a special emphasis on time periods under-represented in other venues. Journal contributions are of three kinds: articles, case reports and short communications. Full length articles should present synthetic treatments, novel analyses, or theoretical approaches to unresolved issues. Case reports present basic data on subjects that are of broad interest because they represent key sites, sequences, and subjects that figure prominently, or should figure prominently, in how scholars both inside and outside Asia understand the archaeology of cultural and biological change through time. Short communications present new findings (e.g., radiocarbon dates) that are important to the extent that they reaffirm or change the way scholars in Asia and around the world think about Asian cultural or biological history.