African Farmers, Not Stone Age Foragers: Reassessment of Human Remains from the Mumbwa Caves, Zambia

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Maryna Steyn, Anja Meyer, Rita Peyroteo-Stjerna, Cecile Jolly, Carina Schlebusch, Larry Barham, Marlize Lombard
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract

In this article, we reassess the human remains from the Mumbwa Caves housed in the Raymond A. Dart Archaeological Human Remains Collection at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. Based on new radiocarbon dates from human bone collagen and stable isotope analysis, our results revealed that the poorly preserved remains, comprising mostly crania and teeth, represent at least 16 individuals. Some of them have culturally modified anterior teeth. Enamel hypoplastic lesions were seen in a few individuals, which indicates disease and malnutrition during childhood. Radiocarbon dating revealed that all the individuals were buried at Mumbwa sometime between the late tenth and early twentieth century CE, with most dates clustering between the early sixteenth and the late nineteenth century. With the exception of a single individual who seems to have had a hunter-gatherer/forager diet, the carbon and nitrogen isotope values of others are consistent with what would be expected from a low-trophic farmer diet based on foodplants with C4 photosynthetic pathways. It is, therefore, our contention that, rather than being associated with the Stone Age as previously suggested, these individuals lived in more recent agricultural communities around the Mumbwa Caves.

Abstract Image

非洲农民,而不是石器时代的采集者:对赞比亚蒙巴洞穴中人类遗骸的重新评估
摘要在这篇文章中,我们重新评估了南非威特沃特斯兰德大学Raymond A.Dart考古人类遗骸收藏馆中Mumbwa洞穴的人类遗骸。根据人类骨胶原蛋白的新放射性碳年代和稳定同位素分析,我们的研究结果显示,这些保存较差的遗骸,主要包括头骨和牙齿,至少代表了16个人。他们中的一些人有经过文化改造的前牙。少数个体出现釉质发育不全病变,这表明儿童时期存在疾病和营养不良。放射性碳年代测定显示,所有个体都埋葬在公元十世纪末至二十世纪初的某个时候,大多数日期集中在十六世纪初至十九世纪末。除了一个似乎有狩猎-采集/觅食饮食的个体外,其他个体的碳和氮同位素值与基于具有C4光合途径的食用植物的低营养农民饮食的预期值一致。因此,我们的论点是,这些人并没有像之前所说的那样与石器时代联系在一起,而是生活在Mumbwa洞穴周围最近的农业社区。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: African Archaeological Review publishes original research articles, review essays, reports, book/media reviews, and forums/commentaries on African archaeology, highlighting the contributions of the African continent to critical global issues in the past and present. Relevant topics include the emergence of modern humans and earliest manifestations of human culture; subsistence, agricultural, and technological innovations; and social complexity, as well as topical issues on heritage. The journal features timely continental and subcontinental studies covering cultural and historical processes; interregional interactions; biocultural evolution; cultural dynamics and ecology; the role of cultural materials in politics, ideology, and religion; different dimensions of economic life; the application of historical, textual, ethnoarchaeological, and archaeometric data in archaeological interpretation; and the intersections of cultural heritage, information technology, and community/public archaeology.
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