University of Central Lancashire, United Kingdom.
Ann Anat. 2022 Feb;240:151876. doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2021.151876. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
Human teeth are storytellers, in that, through analysis of their size and shape osteoarchaeologists are able to 'talk' to the dead and translate biological data into social meaning. This concept has been explored in parts of the world through investigations of biological similarity and kinship, but few have focused in depth on early medieval populations who emphasized the importance of family and kinship. This paper presents the results from four early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries which highlight the utility of dental metrics in identifying biological similarity within the skeletal assemblages. 5988 mesiodistal and buccolingual measurements were recorded from the identifiable permanent dentition of adult individuals from early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in the UK counties of Cambridgeshire and Kent. Results from statistical hierarchical cluster analysis of dental metric data revealed that it was possible to identify individuals within the cemetery sites that were more similar to one another according to their dental metrics. This similarity was not attributed statistically to biological sex or shared familial environment, as similarity between individuals could be found between males and females and few significant differences were found across the sites sampled. It was found that tooth metrics provided a meaningful biological dataset from which current theories regarding the identity of Anglo-Saxon individuals and families could be refined and improved. These types of data are useful as building blocks which help to bridge the gap between social constructs and human skeletal remains in order to substantiate interpretations about past populations in more significant ways. This work supports the need for multidisciplinary approaches to bioarchaeological investigations of past people while highlighting the utility of human dentition to enhance such areas of study.
人类的牙齿是讲述故事的载体,通过分析牙齿的大小和形状,古骨骼学家能够与死者“交流”,并将生物数据转化为社会意义。这一概念在世界上的一些地区已经通过对生物相似性和亲属关系的研究得到了探索,但很少有人深入研究强调家庭和亲属关系重要性的中世纪早期人群。本文介绍了来自四个早期盎格鲁-撒克逊墓地的研究结果,这些结果强调了牙测量学在识别骨骼组合中生物相似性方面的效用。从英国剑桥郡和肯特郡的早期盎格鲁-撒克逊墓地中可识别的成人永久性牙齿中记录了 5988 个近远中向和颊舌向测量值。对牙测量数据进行统计层次聚类分析的结果表明,有可能根据牙测量数据在墓地中识别出彼此更相似的个体。这种相似性并不是由于生物性别或共同的家庭环境而在统计上归因于个体之间的相似性,因为在男性和女性之间可以发现相似之处,而且在采样的各个地点之间很少发现显著差异。研究发现,牙齿测量值提供了一个有意义的生物学数据集,可以从中改进和完善关于盎格鲁-撒克逊个体和家庭身份的当前理论。这些类型的数据是有用的构建块,可以帮助弥合社会结构和人类骨骼遗骸之间的差距,以更有意义的方式证实对过去人群的解释。这项工作支持对过去人群进行生物考古学多学科研究的必要性,同时强调了人类牙齿在增强这些研究领域方面的效用。