Sealy J C, Patrick M K, Morris A G, Alder D
Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1992 Jun;88(2):123-34. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330880202.
Stable carbon isotope measurements and incidences of dental caries are presented for three groups of prehistoric human skeletons from different regions of the Cape Province, South Africa. The isotopic analyses of bone collagen demonstrate the importance of marine foods in the diet and vary through time, across space, and according to sex. The incidence of dental caries ranges from 0% among heavily marine-dependent individuals from the south-western Cape coast, to 17.7% among skeletons from an archaeological site on the south coast. The extremely high incidence of caries in a hunter-gatherer population may be related to lack of fluoride in the water.
本文展示了来自南非开普省不同地区的三组史前人类骨骼的稳定碳同位素测量结果和龋齿发病率。骨胶原的同位素分析表明了海洋食物在饮食中的重要性,且随时间、空间以及性别而变化。龋齿发病率从开普敦西南海岸严重依赖海洋食物的个体中的0%,到南海岸一个考古遗址骨骼中的17.7%不等。狩猎采集人群中极高的龋齿发病率可能与水中缺乏氟有关。