Pinhasi Ron, Eshed Vered, von Cramon-Taubadel Noreen
Earth Institute and School of Archaeology, Belfield, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem, Israel.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 4;10(2):e0117301. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117301. eCollection 2015.
While it has been suggested that malocclusion is linked with urbanisation, it remains unclear as to whether its high prevalence began 8,000 years earlier concomitant with the transition to agriculture. Here we investigate the extent to which patterns of affinity (i.e., among-population distances), based on mandibular form and dental dimensions, respectively, match across Epipalaeolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic samples from the Near East/Anatolia and Europe. Analyses were conducted using morphological distance matrices reflecting dental and mandibular form for the same 292 individuals across 21 archaeological populations. Thereafter, statistical analyses were undertaken on four sample aggregates defined on the basis of their subsistence strategy, geography, and chronology to test for potential differences in dental and mandibular form across and within groups. Results show a clear separation based on mandibular morphology between European hunter-gatherers, European farmers, and Near Eastern transitional farmers and semi-sedentary hunter-gatherers. In contrast, the dental dimensions show no such pattern and no clear association between the position of samples and their temporal or geographic attributes. Although later farming groups have, on average, smaller teeth and mandibles, shape analyses show that the mandibles of farmers are not simply size-reduced versions of earlier hunter-gatherer mandibles. Instead, it appears that mandibular form underwent a complex series of shape changes commensurate with the transition to agriculture that are not reflected in affinity patterns based on dental dimensions. In the case of hunter-gatherers there is a correlation between inter-individual mandibular and dental distances, suggesting an equilibrium between these two closely associated morphological units. However, in the case of semi-sedentary hunter-gatherers and farming groups, no such correlation was found, suggesting that the incongruity between dental and mandibular form began with the shift towards sedentism and agricultural subsistence practices in the core region of the Near East and Anatolia.
虽然有人认为错颌畸形与城市化有关,但尚不清楚其高患病率是否始于8000年前,与向农业的转变同时出现。在这里,我们研究了基于下颌形态和牙齿尺寸的亲和模式(即群体间距离)在近东/安纳托利亚和欧洲的旧石器时代晚期、中石器时代和新石器时代样本中的匹配程度。使用反映21个考古群体中相同292个人的牙齿和下颌形态的形态距离矩阵进行分析。此后,对根据生存策略、地理和年代定义的四个样本集合进行统计分析,以测试不同组之间和组内牙齿和下颌形态的潜在差异。结果显示,欧洲狩猎采集者、欧洲农民、近东过渡农民和半定居狩猎采集者在下颌形态上有明显的区分。相比之下,牙齿尺寸没有显示出这样的模式,样本位置与其时间或地理属性之间也没有明显的关联。虽然后来的农耕群体平均牙齿和下颌较小,但形状分析表明,农民的下颌不仅仅是早期狩猎采集者下颌的缩小版。相反,下颌形态似乎经历了一系列复杂的形状变化,与向农业的转变相适应,而这些变化并没有反映在基于牙齿尺寸的亲和模式中。在狩猎采集者中,个体间下颌和牙齿距离之间存在相关性,表明这两个密切相关的形态单位之间存在平衡。然而,在半定居狩猎采集者和农耕群体中,没有发现这样的相关性,这表明牙齿和下颌形态之间的不协调始于近东和安纳托利亚核心地区向定居和农业生存方式的转变。