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1.
An. acad. bras. ciênc ; 83(2): 731-743, June 2011. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-589927

ABSTRACT

This study investigated strontium isotopes in the dental enamel of 32 human skeletons from Forte Marechal Luz sambaqui (shellmound), Santa Catarina, Brazil, aiming at identifying local and non-local individuals. The archeological site presents pot sherds in the uppermost archeological layers. Dental enamel was also examined from specimens of terrestrial fauna (87Sr/86Sr = 0. 71046 to 0. 71273) and marine fauna (87Sr/86Sr = 0. 70917). The 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratio for individuals classified as locals ranged from 0. 70905 to 0. 71064 and was closer to the isotope ratio of the seawater than to the ratio of the terrestrial fauna, indicating a strong influence of marine strontium on the inhabitants of this sambaqui. The results indicate the existence of three non-local individuals (87Sr/86Sr = 0. 70761 to 0. 70835), buried in both the level without pottery and the layer with pottery, possibly originated from the Santa Catarina Plateau, close to the municipality of Lages, or from the Curitiba Plateau. The occurrence of a slight difference between the isotope ratios of local individuals buried in the archeological layer without pottery, when compared to those in the layer with pottery, suggests a possible change in dietary patterns between these two moments in the site's occupation.


O presente estudo investigou isótopos de estrôncio em esmalte dentário de 32 remanescentes humanos do sambaqui do Forte Marechal Luz, Santa Catarina, Brasil, com o objetivo de identificar indivíduos locais e não-locais. O sítio arqueológico apresenta fragmentos de cerâmica em suas camadas arqueológicas mais recentes. Além das amostras humanas, foram analisadas amostras de esmalte dentário de espécimes de fauna terrestre (87Sr/86Sr = 0,71046 a 0,71273) e fauna marinha (87Sr/86Sr = 0,70917). A razão 87Sr/86Sr dos indivíduos classificados como locais variou de 0,70905 a 0,71064, sendo próxima a razão de estrôncio existente nos oceanos e distante da razão obtida para a fauna terrestre do mesmo sítio, indicando uma influência marinha na origem do estrôncio dos habitantes desse sambaqui. Foram identificados de três indivíduos não locais (87Sr/86Sr = 0,70761 a 0,70835), sepultados em ambas camadas arqueológicas sem evidência e com evidência de cerâmica. Estes indivíduos podem ter origem no planalto catarinense, no entorno do município de Lages, ou do planalto curitibano. A ocorrência de uma pequena diferença entre as razões isotópicas dos indivíduos locais sepultados nas camadas sem evidência de cerâmica, daqueles sepultados nas camadas ceramistas, sugere a possibilidade de uma mudança nos padrões de alimentação entre esses dois momentos de ocupação do sítio.


Subject(s)
Animals , History, Ancient , Humans , Archaeology , Dental Enamel/chemistry , Emigration and Immigration/history , Strontium Isotopes/analysis , Brazil
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 103(5): 514-516, Aug. 2008. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-491973

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the presence and distribution of Trypanosoma cruzi DNA in a mummy presenting with megacolon that was dated as approximately 560 ± 40 years old. The mummy was from the Peruaçu Valley in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. All samples were positive for T. cruzi minicircle DNA, demonstrating the presence and broad dissemination of the parasite in this body. From one sample, a mini-exon gene fragment was recovered and characterized by sequencing and was found to belong to the T. cruzi I genotype. This finding suggests that T. cruzi I infected humans during the pre-Columbian times and that, in addition to T. cruzi infection, Chagas disease in Brazil most likely preceded European colonization.


Subject(s)
Animals , History, Ancient , Humans , Chagas Disease/history , Megacolon/history , Mummies/parasitology , Paleopathology , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolation & purification , Brazil , Chagas Disease/parasitology , DNA, Protozoan/analysis , Genotype , Megacolon/parasitology
3.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 98(supl.1): 21-27, Jan. 15, 2003.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-333811

ABSTRACT

Paleopathology is the study of disease, physiological disruptions and impairment in the past. After two centuries of mainly descriptive studies, efforts are being made towards better methodological approaches to the study of diseases in human populations of ancient times whose remains are recovered by archaeology. Paleoepidemiology can be defined as an interdisciplinary area that aims to develop more suitable epidemiological methods, and to apply those in current use, to the study of disease determinants in human populations in the past. In spite of the limits of funerary or other archaeological series of human remains, paleoepidemiology tries to reconstruct past conditions of disease and health in those populations and its relation to lifestyle and environment. Although considering the limits of studying populations of deceased, most of them represented exclusively by bones and teeth, the frequency of lesions and other biological signs of interest to investigations on health, and their relative distribution in the skeletal remains by age and sex, can be calculated, and interpreted according to the ecological and cultural information available in each case. Building better models for bone pathology and bone epidemiology, besides a more complex theoretical frame for paleoepidemiological studies is a big job for the future that will need the incorporation of methods and technology from many areas, including the tools of molecular biology


Subject(s)
Humans , Archaeology , Epidemiologic Methods , Paleopathology
4.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 98(supl.1): 151-159, Jan. 15, 2003. ilus, mapas, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-333829

ABSTRACT

Tuberculosis is a prehistoric American human disease. This paper reviews the literature and discusses hypotheses for origins and epidemiological patterns of prehistoric tuberculosis. From the last decades, 24 papers about prehistoric tuberculosis were published and 133 cases were reviewed. In South America most are isolated case studies, contrary to North America where more skeletal series were analyzed. Disease was usually located at the deserts of Chile and Peru, Central Plains in USA, and Lake Ontario in Canada. Skeletal remains represent most of the cases, but 16 mummies have also been described. Thirty individuals had lung disease, 19 of them diagnosed by the ribs. More then 100 individuals had osseous tuberculosis and 26 also had it in other organs. As today, transmission of the infection and establishment of the disease were favored by cultural and life-style changes such as sedentarization, crowding, undernutrition, use of dark and insulated houses, and by the frequency of interpersonal contacts. The papers confirm that despite previous perceptions, tuberculosis seems to have occured in America for millennia. It only had epidemiological expression when special conditions favored its expansion. Occurring as epidemic bursts or low endemic disease, it had differential impact on groups or social segments in America for at least two millennia


Subject(s)
Humans , History, Ancient , Paleopathology , Tuberculosis , Americas , Emigration and Immigration , Population Dynamics , Tuberculosis
5.
In. Leal, Maria do Carmo; Sabroza, Paulo Chagastelles; Rodriguez, Rodolfo Hector; Buss, Paulo Marchiori. Saúde, ambiente e desenvolvimento: uma análise interdisciplinar. Säo Paulo, HUCITEC-ABRASCO, 1992. p.181-94. (Saúde em Debate, 48).
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-207728

ABSTRACT

Estuda a origem e evoluçäo das doenças no homem, desde os primórdios de sua história, como fundamentos para o entendimento da situaçäo atual. Aborda a ligaçäo do homem da pré-história com o homem atual, através da reconstruçäo do seu passado, com base em dados da arqueologia, paleopatologia e paleoparasitologia.(MINO)


Subject(s)
Disease/etiology , Residence Characteristics/history , Brazil , Sanitary Profiles
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