Morphological dental trait examination of Ajnala skeletal remains and their possible population affinity.

Q3 Medicine
A B Acharya, J S Sehrawat
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: The metric and non-metric features of the fragmented, badly damaged and commingled human remains play a significant role in their identity establishment in forensic anthropology. The main objective of the present study was to assess the population specific attributes of the unknown human dental remains excavated from an abandoned well, found underneath a religious structure at Ajnala (Punjab, India). Written accounts mentioned that Ajnala skeletal remains belonged to 282 Indian origin soldiers of the British army who had revolted against the colonial rulers in 1857, who were killed after capture, and their bodies dumped in an abandoned well.

Materials and methods: Eleven non-metric dental traits were investigated in a sample of 1527 teeth (1200 dislodged teeth comprising of 300 canines, 300 premolars and 600 molars along with 93 jaw fragments having 327 teeth of different types) collected from this non-scientifically exhumed skeletal assemblage. These selected traits were examined with adequate magnification and lighting, using a flexible arm illuminated magnifier (Lensel Optics Pvt. Ltd., Pune, India), identified and scored in accordance with the descriptions provided in the Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System (ASUDAS).

Results: Eight of the eleven features examined (Carabelli trait, Hypocone absence, Cusp 5, Cusp 6, Tomes root, mesial canine ridge, Y-groove pattern, and four-cusp mandibular second molar) exhibited frequencies that were distinctly higher or lower than the three major continental ancestries.

Discussion: Some amateur historians doubted the authenticity of the written versions and argued that these remains might belong to the non-Indians. Present study results revealed that the studied dental trait frequencies were not similar to any major continental ancestry and were relatively unique in Ajnala teeth like previous Indian studies. While this in itself does not guarantee that these teeth belong to individuals of the Indian subcontinent, it endorses previous scientific analyses and supports the written accounts that the majority of Ajnala teeth were probably Indian in origin. However, the determination of ethnicity from dental morphological features remains debatable and can be used only as suggestive than diagnostic tool owing to possible bias in recording morphological features of teeth. Although determining the racial affinity from teeth is very difficult, caution must be exercised in concluding the racial identity of an individual from the teeth.

Ajnala骨骸的牙齿形态特征分析及其可能的群体亲缘关系。
目的:破碎的、严重受损的和混合的人类遗骸的度量和非度量特征在法医人类学中对其身份建立起重要作用。本研究的主要目的是评估从Ajnala(印度旁遮普)一座宗教建筑下的废弃井中挖掘出的未知人类牙齿遗骸的种群特征。书面记录提到,Ajnala的遗骸属于282名印度裔英国士兵,他们在1857年反抗殖民统治者,他们在被捕后被杀,尸体被扔在一口废弃的井里。材料和方法:从这个非科学发掘的骨骼组合中收集了1527个牙齿样本(1200个脱落的牙齿,包括300个犬齿,300个前磨牙和600个磨牙,以及93个颌骨碎片,包括327个不同类型的牙齿),研究了11个非公制牙齿特征。使用柔性臂照明放大镜(Lensel Optics Pvt. Ltd., Pune, India),在适当的放大倍率和照明下检查这些选定的特征,根据亚利桑那州立大学牙科人类学系统(ASUDAS)提供的描述进行识别和评分。结果:在研究的11个特征中,有8个特征(Carabelli特征、下锥体缺失、5尖、6尖、Tomes根、中犬齿脊、y型凹槽模式和下颌四尖第二磨牙)的频率明显高于或低于三个主要大陆祖先。讨论:一些业余历史学家怀疑书面版本的真实性,并认为这些遗骸可能属于非印第安人。目前的研究结果表明,所研究的牙齿特征频率与任何主要的大陆祖先都不相似,并且与之前的印度研究一样,在Ajnala牙齿中相对独特。虽然这本身并不能保证这些牙齿属于印度次大陆的个体,但它支持了之前的科学分析,并支持了大多数Ajnala牙齿可能起源于印度的书面记录。然而,从牙齿形态特征确定种族仍然存在争议,由于在记录牙齿形态特征时可能存在偏差,只能作为提示性的诊断工具。虽然从牙齿中确定种族亲缘关系是非常困难的,但在从牙齿中得出一个人的种族身份时必须谨慎。
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来源期刊
Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology
Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology Medicine-Pathology and Forensic Medicine
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology is the official publication of the: INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION FOR FORENSIC ODONTO-STOMATOLOGY (I.O.F.O.S
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