利用营养孔在生物考古学和法医人类学中区分人类和非人类长骨碎片。

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology Pub Date : 2019-11-29 DOI:10.1127/homo/2019/1113
B. Corrieri, N. Márquez-Grant
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在考古和法医背景下,例如在大规模死亡事件中,可以发现孤立的长骨轴碎片。当诊断形态学标志不可见时,评估骨碎片的人类或非人类起源可能具有挑战性。需要开发更多的方法。在长骨中,没有任何诊断标志的碎片上存在营养孔,可以使骨起源的评估仍然是可能的。本文将人类长骨与鸡(Gallus Gallus domesticus)、鸭(Cairina moschata)、羊(Ovis aries)、猪(Sus scrofa domesticus)和鹿(黇鹿(Dama Dama)和狍子(Capreolus Capreolus Capreolus)进行了比较。本研究采用宏观评价椎管入口的位置、方向和外观,显微ct扫描测量椎管入口的角度和形状,对长骨轴上的人与非人营养孔进行鉴别。关于营养孔的位置和方向的观察被证明在人类和非人类骨骼之间是不同的;然而,这两个特征在骨骼高度破碎的情况下可能无法利用。尽管从显微ct扫描中获得的椎管入口的形状及其在皮质骨处的角度也是有用的参数,但孔的外观是最可靠的来源识别。为了正确识别一个片段,一个参数可能是不够的,建议使用尽可能多的特征。本研究表明,营养孔有潜力作为区分人类和非人类破碎和不完整长骨的可靠骨特征。
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Using nutrient foramina to differentiate human from non-human long bone fragments in bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology.
Long bone shaft fragments can be found isolated in archaeological and forensic contexts, such as in mass fatality incidents. When diagnostic morphological landmarks are not visible, the assessment of a human or non-human origin of a bone fragment can be challenging. Further methods need to be developed. In long bones, the presence of a nutrient foramen on fragments that do not show any diagnostic landmarks can make the assessment of the origin of the bone still possible. In this paper, human long bones were compared to those of the following species: chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus), duck (Cairina moschata), sheep (Ovis aries), pig (Sus scrofa domesticus), and deer (fallow deer, Dama dama, and roe deer, Capreolus capreolus). Macroscopic evaluation of location, direction and appearance, and micro-CT scanning in order to measure angle and shape of canal entrance, were applied in this study to differentiate human from non-human nutrient foramina on long bone shafts. Observations regarding the location and direction of nutrient foramina were proven to be different between human and non-human bones; however, these two features might not be exploitable in cases of highly fragmented bones. The foramina appearance was the most reliable for the origin identification, although the shape of the canal entrance and its angle at the cortical bone, obtained from micro-CT scans, were also useful parameters. For a correct identification of a fragment, one parameter may not be enough and it is advisable to employ as many features as possible. This research demonstrates that nutrient foramina have potential as a reliable bone feature for the distinction between human and non-human fragmented and incomplete long bones.
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