4 resultados para Shellmound


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The contact of inland and coastal prehistoric groups in Brazil is believed to have been restricted to regions with no geographical barrier, as is the case in the Ribeira de Iguape valley. The inland osteological collection from the riverine shellmound Moraes (5800-4500 BP) represents a unique opportunity to test this assumption for this region. Despite cultural similarities between riverine and coastal shellmounds, important ecological and site distribution differences are expected to impact on lifestyle. The purpose of this study is thus to document and interpret health and lifestyle indicators in Moraes in comparison to coastal shellmound groups. Specifically we test if the rare evidence of fish and mollusc remains in the riverine shellmound led to (a) higher caries rates and (b) lower auditory exostosis frequency and (c) if the small size of the riverine shellmound translates into reduced demographic density and thus rarity of communicable infectious diseases. Of the three hypotheses, (a) was confirmed, (b) was rejected and (c) was partly rejected. Bioanthropological similarities between Moraes and coastal shellmounds include auditory exostoses with equally high frequencies; significantly more frequent osteoarthritis in upper than in lower limbs; cranial and dental morphological affinities and low frequencies of violent trauma. However, there are also important differences: Moraes subsisted on a much broader protein diet and consumed more cariogenic food, but showed a stature even shorter than coastal groups. Thus, despite the contact also suggested by treponematoses in both site types, there was enough time for the people at the riverine site to adapt to local conditions. (c) 2008 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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The Boyadjian et al dental wash technique provides, in certain contexts, the only chance to analyze and quantify the use of plants by past populations and is therefore an important milestone for the reconstruction of paleodiet. With this paper we present recent investigations and results upon the influence of this method on teeth. A series of six teeth from a three thousand years old Brazilian shellmound (Jabuticabeira II) was examined before and after dental wash. The main focus was documenting the alteration of the surfaces and microstructures. The status of all teeth were documented using macrophotography, optical light microscopy, and atmospheric Secondary Electron Microscopy (aSEM) prior and after applying the dental wash technique. The comparison of pictures taken before and after dental wash showed the different degrees of variation and damage done to the teeth but, also, provided additional information about microstructures, which have not been visible before. Consequently we suggest that dental wash should only be carried out, if absolutely necessary, after dental pathology, dental morphology and microwear studies have been accomplished. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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The coastal plains of the States of Parana and Santa Catarina, in Southern Brazil, were first settled around 6000 B.P. by shellmound builders, a successful fisher-hunter-gatherer population that inhabited the coastal lowlands practically unchanged for almost five thousand years. Shellmounds were typically occupied as residential sites as well as cemeteries, and are usually associated with rich alimentary zones. Around 1200 B.P., the first evidence of ceramics brought from the interior is found in coastal areas, and together with ceramics there is a progressive abandonment of shellmound construction in favor of flat cold shallow sites. Here we consider if these changes were reflected in the postmarital residence practice of coastal groups, i.e., if the arrival or intensification of contact with groups from the interior resulted in changes in this aspect of social structure among the coastal groups. To test the postmarital residence practice we analyzed within-group variability ratios between males and females, following previous studies on the topic. and between-group, correlations between Mahalanobis distances and geographic distances. The results suggest that in the pre-ceramic series a matrilocal, postmarital residential system predominated, while in the ceramic period there was a shift toward patrilocality. This favors the hypothesis that the changes experienced by coastal groups after 1200 B.P. affected not only their economy and material culture, but important aspects of their sociopolitical organization as well.

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O Sambaqui do Moa é um sítio arqueológico localizado em Itaúna, Saquarema, litoral do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. Três momentos de ocupação foram reconhecidos neste sítio: o estrato 3 na base correspondente ao início da ocupação deste sítio; o 2, intermediário, aponta para uma ocupação mais intensa, com grande concentração de carapaças de moluscos, ossos de peixes e sepultamentos humanos; e o 1, o mais superficial, relacionado à última ocupação. Para identificar as condições ambientais de desenvolvimento do Sambaqui do Moa foram coletadas amostras de sedimentos e material zooarqueológico nestes três estratos. O material zooarqueológico está representado por restos microscópicos de peixes (ictiólitos), compostos por microdentes com diferentes morfologias: caninos, incisivos e molares. Os sedimentos segundo análises por DRX são constituídos além de quartzo e caulinita, calcita, aragonita e por fluorapatita. Este último é o principal mineral do material zooarqueológico, enquanto calcita e aragonita refletem os restos de conchas contidos neles, abundantes no sítio. As análises mineralógicas foram confirmadas pelas análises químicas, em que os teores elevados de P2O5, CaO e PF (H2O, CO2), respondem pela fluorapatita, calcita e aragonita. Modificações químicas representadas pelas variações nos conteúdos de C e P nos microdentes sugerem que estes experimentaram mineralização, num processo inicial de fossilização, pósdeposição. Os dados de isótopos estáveis 13C e 15N permitiram definir a fonte de matéria orgânica do sambaqui do Moa como marinha/salobra, em que a vegetação representava-se, predominantemente, por plantas do tipo C3 de floresta tropical. As razões 87Sr/86Sr nos ictiólitos confirmam que o ambiente no entorno do sambaqui tenha sido estuarino. A morfologia dentária permitiu reconhecer cinco famílias até então não registradas para o sítio, como Labridae, Serranidae, Ariidae, Erythrinidae e Characidae, que confirmam o ambiente estuarino. A idade do sambaqui do Moa por datação radiocarbono a partir dos sedimentos mostrou perturbação no estrato 2, ocasionando a inversão das idades entre os estratos o que pode ser justificado por processos de formação e/ou mudanças dos rios que modificaram as configurações geológico-geomorfológicas da área. Outra explicação poderia ser a interferência humana, devido ao grande número de enterramentos (mais de 30), tenha perturbado a ordem dos momentos de ocupação do sambaqui do Moa, além de possíveis processos erosivos. O sambaqui do Moa se instalou, portanto, em uma área de transição marinho-estuarina.