Molleson T
Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, U.K.
Anthropol Anz. 1992 Sep;50(3):179-89.
Poundbury Camp cemetery was in use for about 500 Years and was the burial ground for an Iron Age Durotrigian group, a rural Roman settlement and an urban Romano-British community. Low variance of metrical characters and persistence of familial traits in the three groups suggest a continuity of the population and in situ growth. However evidence for an anthropological response to the cultural romanisation of the population has been found in a number of skeletal traits including squatting which was most often adopted by Durotrigian females. Dietary changes are indicted by variation in concentrations of trace elements, including lead, in the bones.