Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/41266
DC Field | Value | Language |
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dc.contributor.author | Santos, Ana Luísa | - |
dc.contributor.author | Allsworth-Jones, Philip | - |
dc.contributor.author | Rodriques, Esther | - |
dc.date.accessioned | 2017-03-28T00:28:32Z | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2020-09-14T11:13:24Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2017-03-28T00:28:32Z | |
dc.date.available | 2020-09-14T11:13:24Z | - |
dc.date.issued | 2002 | - |
dc.identifier.issn | 0870-0990 | - |
dc.identifier.issn | 2182-7982 (digital) | - |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/41266 | - |
dc.description.abstract | The Archaeology Laboratory in the Department of History and Archaeology at UWI has housed the James W. Lee Collection of Arawak artefacts and human remains since 2000. A complete database is being prepared by two of the authors (PAJ and ER) as part of a project under the auspices of the Jamaica Bauxite Institute. The collection spans a total of 265 sites and was collected over a 27 year period (1959-1986). Eight caves and 16 open-air sites produced human remains, with a minimal number of 46 individuals. Despite adverse taphonomic factors, age and sex estimation, metric analyses, and pathological case descriptions, could be carried out in a number of cases. This paper will focus on the paleopathological evidence. Two skulls (EC12, Bull Savannah #2 cave, St. Elizabeth, and CC15, Taylor's Hut cave, Clarendon) were artificially modified. CC15 was found inside a bowl. At E12 (Black River West) an increase in thickness in two fragments of tibiae and in one fibula is regarded as a pathological condition, possibly related to treponematosis. Signs of degenerative joint diseases, such as eburnation in an atlas and in a humerus, and osteoarthritis in several bones, were detected at J1 (Hartfield) and JC7 (Spot Valley cave). Finally a case of agenesis exists in the right decidual incisor in a mandible of a juvenile with an age-at-death around 4 years (Y4, Rio Nuevo, St. Mary). This study is a contribution to the understanding of extinct pre-Columbian populations in the Caribbean region. | eng |
dc.description.abstract | Os artefactos e os restos osteológicos recolhidos, entre 1959 e 1986, por James Lee em 265 locais arqueológicos transitaram em 2000 para o Archaeology Laboratory, Department of History and Archaeology, University of West Indies, Jamaica. Num projecto apoiado pelo Jamaica Bauxite Institute dois dos autores (PAJ e ER) preparam uma base de dados da coleção. Em oito grutas e 16 jazidas a céu aberto existiam restos humanos que correspondem a um número mínimo de 46 indivíduos. Apesar da adversidade da tafonomia puderam ser avaliados parâmetros paleogeográficos e referenciadas algumas patologias: modificações em dois crânios (CC15, Gruta de Taylor's Hut, e EC12, Gruta de Bull Savannah #2) um dos quais foi encontrado dentro de um vaso; evidências prováveis de treponematoses em fragmentos de dois fémures e duma tíbia de E12 (Black River West); sinais de doenças degenerativas das articulações, nomeadamente eburnação num atlas e num úmero, no material proveniente de J1 (Hartfield) e de JC7 (Gruta de Spot Valley); e, agenesia do incisivo direito decidual na mandíbula de uma criança com cerca de 4 anos de idade à morte (Y4, Rio Nuevo). Este estudo é, assim, uma contribuição para o conhecimento das populações pré-Colombianas extintas das Caraíbas. | por |
dc.language.iso | eng | - |
dc.publisher | CIAS - Centro de Investigação em Antropologia e Saúde | - |
dc.rights | open access | - |
dc.subject | Taino/Arawak | eng |
dc.subject | cranial modification | eng |
dc.subject | treponematosis | eng |
dc.subject | arthritis | eng |
dc.subject | dental agenesis | eng |
dc.subject | Jamaica | eng |
dc.subject | Taino/Arawak | por |
dc.subject | modificações cranianas | por |
dc.subject | treponematoses | por |
dc.subject | agenesia dentária | por |
dc.subject | Jamaica | por |
dc.title | Pathological evidence in the Pre-Columbian human remains from the Lee Collection (Jamaica) | por |
dc.type | article | - |
uc.publication.collection | Antropologia Portuguesa vol. 19 | - |
uc.publication.firstPage | 121 | - |
uc.publication.lastPage | 138 | - |
uc.publication.location | Coimbra | - |
uc.publication.journalTitle | Antropologia Portuguesa | - |
uc.publication.volume | 19 | por |
dc.identifier.doi | 10.14195/2182-7982_19_10 | - |
uc.publication.digCollection | IP | - |
uc.publication.digCollection | B1 | - |
uc.publication.orderno | 11 | - |
uc.publication.area | Ciências Sociais | - |
uc.publication.manifest | https://dl.uc.pt/json/iiif/10316.2/41266/214744/manifest?manifest=/json/iiif/10316.2/41266/214744/manifest | - |
uc.publication.thumbnail | https://dl.uc.pt/retrieve/11221742 | - |
uc.itemId | 70997 | - |
uc.thumbnail.uri | https://dl.uc.pt/iiif-imgsrv/11221704/dl!3!96!45!06!96450689411819799357067792761590875555 | - |
item.fulltext | With Fulltext | - |
item.grantfulltext | open | - |
Appears in Collections: | Antropologia Portuguesa |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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pathological_evidence.pdf | 2.51 MB | Adobe PDF |
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