Dean M C, Stringer C B, Bromage T G
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1986 Jul;70(3):301-9. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330700305.
This study combines traditional methods of assessing dental developmental status based upon modern human standards with new techniques based upon histological observations in order to reassess the age at death of the Gibraltar child from Devil's Tower. The results indicate that the most likely age of this individual at death was 3 years of age. This result is in agreement with an independent assessment of the age of the temporal bone of this specimen (Tillier, AM [1982] Z. Morphol. Anthropol. 73:125-148) and is concordant with dental developmental ages given for modern humans. Moreover, the fact that this specimen appears at the low end of the age scale for calcification stages in modern humans is also supportive of the findings of Legoux (Legoux, P [1970] Arch. Inst. Paleontol. Hum. Mem. 33:53-87) and Wolpoff (Wolpoff, MH [1979] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 50:67-114) that dental eruption schedules in Neanderthals were also accelerated. If the cranial bones from Devil's Tower are associated with the dental material, as we believe, they indicate a remarkably precocious brain growth in this individual, which is consistent with what is known about general growth and development in Neanderthals.
本研究将基于现代人类标准评估牙齿发育状况的传统方法与基于组织学观察的新技术相结合,以便重新评估来自魔鬼塔的直布罗陀儿童的死亡年龄。结果表明,该个体最可能的死亡年龄为3岁。这一结果与对该标本颞骨年龄的独立评估结果一致(蒂利尔,AM [1982] 《形态学与人类学杂志》73:125 - 148),并且与现代人类的牙齿发育年龄相符。此外,该标本在现代人类钙化阶段年龄范围的低端出现这一事实,也支持了勒古(勒古,P [1970] 《古人类研究所纪要》33:53 - 87)和沃尔波夫(沃尔波夫,MH [1979] 《美国体质人类学杂志》50:67 - 114)的研究结果,即尼安德特人的牙齿萌出时间表也提前了。如果如我们所认为的那样,来自魔鬼塔的颅骨与牙齿材料相关联,那么它们表明该个体的大脑生长异常早熟,这与已知的尼安德特人的一般生长和发育情况相符。