Halffman C M, Scott G R, Pedersen P O
Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks 99775.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1992 Jun;88(2):145-61. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330880204.
Physical anthropologists have long been intrigued by the distinctive oral tori expressed by the medieval Norse populations of Iceland and Greenland. To assess the temporal and spatial variation of one form of oral tori, palatine torus, observations were made on all available Greenlandic Norse skeletons, as well as on samples of medieval Icelanders and Norwegians. In terms of temporal variation, 12th to 14th century (medieval) Greenlanders from the Eastern and Western settlements exhibited higher frequencies and more pronounced expressions of palatine torus compared with early 11th century Greenlanders. The early Greenlandic sample closely approximated the medieval Icelandic and Norwegian samples for total torus frequency, although the Norwegians exhibited the trait to a less pronounced degree. As degree of expression is the most distinctive aspect of torus variation among the Norse, some combination of environmental factors, including increased masticatory stress and chronic undernutrition, probably accounts for most of the difference between settlement period and medieval Greenlanders. Although palatine torus may be hereditary in part, environmental factors play a significant role in the expression of this trait.
长期以来,体质人类学家一直对冰岛和格陵兰岛中世纪挪威人群所表现出的独特口腔隆起很感兴趣。为了评估一种口腔隆起——腭隆突的时间和空间变化,研究人员对所有现存的格陵兰挪威人骨骼以及中世纪冰岛人和挪威人的样本进行了观察。在时间变化方面,与11世纪早期的格陵兰人相比,来自东部和西部定居点的12至14世纪(中世纪)格陵兰人腭隆突的出现频率更高,表现也更明显。早期格陵兰人的样本在总的隆起频率上与中世纪冰岛人和挪威人的样本非常接近,尽管挪威人表现出该特征的程度较轻。由于隆起程度是挪威人群中隆起变化最显著的方面,一些环境因素的组合,包括咀嚼压力增加和长期营养不良,可能是定居时期格陵兰人与中世纪格陵兰人之间差异的主要原因。尽管腭隆突可能部分具有遗传性,但环境因素在这一特征的表现中起着重要作用。