Inferring the mobility of a middle Upper Paleolithic female skeleton from Caviglione (Liguria, Italy): Impact of trauma and mountainous terrain

IF 3.1 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Tony Chevalier , Thomas Colard
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Abstract

Mobility and territory occupation, the participation of injured individuals in group activities, and the role of women in early human groups are crucial issues in human evolution. Previously, a biomechanical study showed evidence of several traumas to the upper limb of the well-preserved middle Upper Paleolithic (UP) female skeleton from Caviglione (Caviglione 1, Liguria, Italy) but did not characterize their impact on locomotor behavior. Furthermore, mobility in the European UP context is thoroughly documented in males but not in females. Therefore, we examined whether this trauma-affected female skeleton shows bone adaptation to high mobility, as expected in UP groups, and to frequent foot eversion and inversion, as expected, given the mountainous area in which it was discovered. This study investigated the structural properties of the femur, tibia, fibula, and first metatarsal to infer the mobility level and pattern of Caviglione 1. We analyzed the diaphyseal ‘shape’, robusticity, fibular cortical distribution, and relative robusticity (fibula versus tibia). No substantial findings were derived from the first metatarsal. The fibular cortical distribution can discriminate ‘active’ (nomadic or settled) and recent sedentary human groups; these findings indicated Caviglione 1 belonged to the former. Interestingly, compared with ancient and recent sedentary humans and some UP individuals, Caviglione 1 had femurs with strong relative anteroposterior rigidity and robust tibias and fibulas reflecting an adaptation to extremely high levels of mobility. The very high relative fibular robusticity of Caviglione 1, higher than that of Middle UP males, is consistent with bone adaptation to frequent travel through mountainous terrain. Such fibular robusticity may also be a consequence of imbalance, due to upper limb traumas, when traveling downhill. These findings indicate that injured individuals may have participated in subsistence activities in past populations and describe an UP female with bone adaptations to habitual high mobility, notably in mountainous terrain.

推断Caviglione(意大利利古里亚)旧石器时代中晚期女性骨架的移动性:创伤和山区地形的影响。
流动性和领土占有、受伤个人参与群体活动以及妇女在早期人类群体中的作用是人类进化中的关键问题。此前,一项生物力学研究显示,有证据表明,Caviglione(Caviglione1,意大利利古里亚)保存完好的旧石器时代中期(UP)女性骨骼上肢有几处创伤,但没有说明其对运动行为的影响。此外,欧洲UP背景下的流动性在男性身上有充分的记录,但在女性身上没有。因此,我们检查了这种受创伤影响的女性骨骼是否如UP组所预期的那样表现出对高移动性的骨骼适应,以及考虑到发现它的山区,是否如预期的那样对频繁的足部外翻和内翻表现出骨骼适应。本研究调查了股骨、胫骨、腓骨和第一跖骨的结构特性,以推断Caviglione 1的活动水平和模式。我们分析了骨干的“形状”、坚固性、腓骨皮质分布和相对坚固性(腓骨与胫骨)。第一跖骨没有实质性的发现。腓骨皮质的分布可以区分“活跃”(游牧或定居)和最近定居的人类群体;这些发现表明Caviglione 1属于前者。有趣的是,与古代和近代久坐的人类和一些UP个体相比,Caviglione 1的股骨具有较强的相对前后刚性和强健的胫骨和腓骨,反映出对极高活动水平的适应。Caviglione 1的腓骨相对坚固性非常高,高于Middle UP雄性,这与骨骼对频繁穿越山区的适应一致。这种腓骨强健也可能是由于下坡时上肢创伤导致的不平衡造成的。这些发现表明,受伤个体可能参与了过去人群中的生存活动,并描述了UP女性对习惯性高移动性的骨骼适应,尤其是在山区。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
15.60%
发文量
104
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Human Evolution concentrates on publishing the highest quality papers covering all aspects of human evolution. The central focus is aimed jointly at paleoanthropological work, covering human and primate fossils, and at comparative studies of living species, including both morphological and molecular evidence. These include descriptions of new discoveries, interpretative analyses of new and previously described material, and assessments of the phylogeny and paleobiology of primate species. Submissions should address issues and questions of broad interest in paleoanthropology.
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