从狩猎采集者到食物生产者:对尼罗河谷人口历史(旧石器时代晚期-新石器时代)的牙科新见解。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Nicolas Martin, Adrien Thibeault, Lenka Varadzinová, Stanley H. Ambrose, Daniel Antoine, Petra Brukner Havelková, Matthieu Honegger, Joel D. Irish, Piotr Osypiński, Donatella Usai, Nicolas Vanderesse, Ladislav Varadzin, Rebecca J. Whiting, Petr Velemínský, Isabelle Crevecoeur
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究目的本研究介绍了尼罗河谷最后的狩猎-渔猎-采集者和最早的粮食生产社会之间的生物亲缘关系。我们研究了尼罗河中游流域这些人群之间的牙齿测量和牙齿组织比例变化,并确认了这些变化背后的生物过程:我们研究了努比亚和苏丹中部从更新世晚期到全新世中期的 329 个个体的牙齿遗骸。利用三维成像技术,我们对上中切牙、第一和第二上臼齿的外部和内部度量进行了研究:结果:旧石器时代晚期和中石器时代的觅食者显示出均匀的牙冠尺寸、牙齿组织比例和釉质厚度分布。这与新石器时代在内侧和外侧方面与早期样本存在显著差异的趋势形成鲜明对比。最后,在新石器时代的样本中,努比亚遗址和苏丹中部遗址之间也存在差异:公元前 6000 年左右,尼罗河谷出现了大量牙齿变异,这与该地区粮食生产社会的出现相吻合。考古和生物记录表明,在这一过渡时期,饮食习惯和牙齿健康方面的差异很小。此外,这里发现的巨大变化发生在极短的时间内,最多几个世纪。这并不支持与饮食有关的原地适应。相反,我们认为这些数据与本文所考虑的中石器时代和新石器时代样本之间某种程度的人口不连续性是一致的。复杂的定居过程也可以解释努比亚和苏丹中部之间的差异,以及之前基于非度量特征的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

From hunter-gatherers to food producers: New dental insights into the Nile Valley population history (Late Paleolithic–Neolithic)

From hunter-gatherers to food producers: New dental insights into the Nile Valley population history (Late Paleolithic–Neolithic)

Objectives

This study presents biological affinities between the last hunter-fisher-gatherers and first food-producing societies from the Nile Valley. We investigate odontometric and dental tissue proportion changes between these populations from the Middle Nile Valley and acknowledge the biological processes behind them.

Materials and Methods

Dental remains of 329 individuals from Nubia and Central Sudan that date from the Late Pleistocene to the mid-Holocene are studied. Using 3D imaging techniques, we investigated outer and inner metric aspects of upper central incisors, and first and second upper molars.

Results

Late Paleolithic and Mesolithic foragers display homogeneous crown dimensions, dental tissue proportions, and enamel thickness distribution. This contrasts with Neolithic trends for significant differences from earlier samples on inner and outer aspects. Finally, within the Neolithic sample differences are found between Nubian and Central Sudanese sites.

Discussion

Substantial dental variation appears to have occurred around 6000 bce in the Nile Valley, coinciding with the emergence of food-producing societies in the region. Archeological and biological records suggest little differences in dietary habits and dental health during this transition. Furthermore, the substantial variations identified here would have happened in an extremely short time, a few centuries at most. This does not support in situ diet-related adaptation. Rather, we suggest these data are consistent with some level of population discontinuity between the Mesolithic and Neolithic samples considered here. Complex settlement processes could also explain the differences between Nubia and Central Sudan, and with previous results based on nonmetric traits.

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