Starling Anne P, Stock Jay T
Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, Department of Biological Anthropology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2007 Dec;134(4):520-8. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20700.
Although agriculture is now the globally predominant mode of food production, studies of the skeletal remains of early agriculturalists have indicated high levels of physiological stress and poor health relative to hunter-gatherers in similar environments. Previous studies identifying this trend in different regions prompt further research of the causes and effects of subsistence transitions in human societies. Here, 242 dentitions from five ancient Egyptian and Nubian populations are examined: 38 individuals from Jebel Sahaba (Upper Paleolithic), 56 from Badari (Predynastic), 54 from Naqada (Predynastic), 47 from Tarkhan (Dynastic), and 47 from Kerma (Dynastic). These populations span the early period of agricultural intensification along the Nile valley. Skeletal remains were scored for the presence of linear enamel hypoplasia (LEH) of the dentition, an established indicator of physiological stress and growth interruption. The prevalence of LEH was highest in the "proto-agricultural" (pastoralist) Badari population, with a gradual decline throughout the late Predynastic and early Dynastic periods of state formation. This suggests that the period surrounding the emergence of early agriculture in the Nile valley was associated with high stress and poor health, but that the health of agriculturalists improved substantially with the increasing urbanization and trade that accompanied the formation of the Egyptian state. This evidence for poor health among proto- and early agriculturalists in the Nile valley supports theories that agricultural intensification occurred as a response to ecological or demographic pressure rather than simply as an innovation over an existing stable subsistence strategy.
尽管农业如今是全球主要的粮食生产方式,但对早期从事农业者骨骼遗骸的研究表明,与处于类似环境中的狩猎采集者相比,他们承受着较高水平的生理压力且健康状况不佳。此前在不同地区发现这一趋势的研究促使人们进一步探究人类社会生存方式转变的原因及影响。在此,对来自五个古埃及和努比亚人群的242套牙列进行了检查:来自杰贝勒·萨哈巴(旧石器时代晚期)的38人,来自巴达里(前王朝时期)的56人,来自那加达(前王朝时期)的54人,来自塔尔汗(王朝时期)的47人,以及来自凯尔玛(王朝时期)的47人。这些人群跨越了尼罗河流域农业集约化的早期阶段。对骨骼遗骸的牙列线性釉质发育不全(LEH)情况进行了评分,LEH是生理压力和生长中断的既定指标。LEH的患病率在“原始农业”(牧民)巴达里人群中最高,在前王朝晚期和王朝早期国家形成期间逐渐下降。这表明尼罗河流域早期农业出现前后的时期与高压力和健康不佳有关,但随着埃及国家形成过程中城市化和贸易的增加,从事农业者的健康状况有了显著改善。尼罗河流域原始和早期从事农业者健康不佳的这一证据支持了这样的理论,即农业集约化是对生态或人口压力的一种反应,而不仅仅是对现有稳定生存策略的一种创新。