Pietrusewsky M, Douglas M T, Ikehara-Quebral R M
Department of Anthropology, University of Hawai'i-Manoa, Honolulu 96822, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1997 Nov;104(3):315-42. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(199711)104:3<315::AID-AJPA4>3.0.CO;2-U.
Using a variety of skeletal and dental stress indicators, an assessment of the health and disease of the indigenous inhabitants of the Mariana Islands, the Chamorro, is made. The major hypothesis to be tested is that the Chamorro were relatively healthy and that deviations from the expected, as well as inter-island variation, may reflect environmental, ecological, and cultural differences. The major skeletal series surveyed include sites on Guam (N = 247 individuals), Rota (N = 14), Tinian (N = 20), and Saipan (N = 102). The majority of the specimens are from the transitional pre-Latte (AD 1-1000) and Latte (AD 1000-1521) periods. These data derive primarily from unpublished osteological reports. The indicators of health and disease surveyed include mortality and paleodemographic data, stature, dental paleopathology, cribra orbitalia, limb bone fractures, degenerative osteoarthritis, and infectious disease (including treponemal infection). Where appropriate, tests of significance are calculated to determine the presence of any patterning in the differences observed within and between the skeletal series. Information recorded in prehistoric Hawaiians provides a standard for external comparisons. Several of the larger skeletal series surveyed have paleodemographic features that are consistent with long-term cemetery populations. Females and subadults are typically underrepresented. Most subadult deaths occur in the 2-5 year age interval. Life expectancy at birth ranges from 26.4 to 33.7 years. A healthy fertility rate is indicated for these series. The prehistoric inhabitants of the Mariana Islands were relatively tall, exceeding living Chamorros measured in the early part of the present century. The greater prevalence of developmental defects in the enamel suggests that the Chamorro were exposed to more stress than prehistoric Hawaiians. The low frequency of cribra orbitalia further indicates iron deficiency anemia was not a problem. There are generally low frequencies of dental pathology in the remains from the Mariana Islands. Betel-nut staining is relatively common in all series which may help to explain the relatively low prevalence of dental pathology. Healed limb bone fractures are rare in these skeletal series; the frequency and patterns of fractures suggest accidental injury as the main cause. Greater physical demands involving the lower back region are indicated by a high frequency of spondylolysis, or stress fracture in the lumbar vertebrae in the Chamorro. Likewise, advanced degenerative bone changes, while of low occurrence, are significantly greater in the Chamorro than Hawaiians. The prevalence of skeletal and dental indicators of stress was generally higher in the smaller islands of the Mariansas chain (e.g., Rota), islands with fewer resources to buffer environmental catastrophe. Bony changes suggestive of treponemal (probably yaws) disease are common in most of these Marianas Islands skeletal series.
利用各种骨骼和牙齿压力指标,对马里亚纳群岛的原住民查莫罗人的健康和疾病状况进行了评估。待检验的主要假设是,查莫罗人相对健康,与预期情况的偏差以及岛屿间的差异可能反映了环境、生态和文化差异。所调查的主要骨骼系列包括关岛(N = 247人)、罗塔岛(N = 14人)、天宁岛(N = 20人)和塞班岛(N = 102人)的遗址。大多数标本来自过渡前拉泰时期(公元1 - 1000年)和拉泰时期(公元1000 - 1521年)。这些数据主要来自未发表的骨学报告。所调查的健康和疾病指标包括死亡率和古人口统计学数据、身高、牙齿古病理学、眶筛板、四肢骨折、退行性骨关节炎和传染病(包括密螺旋体感染)。在适当情况下,计算显著性检验以确定在骨骼系列内部和之间观察到的差异中是否存在任何模式。记录在史前夏威夷人身上的信息为外部比较提供了标准。所调查的几个较大骨骼系列具有与长期墓地人群一致的古人口统计学特征。女性和亚成年人的比例通常较低。大多数亚成年人死亡发生在2 - 5岁年龄区间。出生时的预期寿命在26.4至33.7岁之间。这些系列显示出健康的生育率。马里亚纳群岛的史前居民相对较高,超过了本世纪初测量的在世查莫罗人。牙釉质发育缺陷的患病率较高,这表明查莫罗人比史前夏威夷人面临更多压力。眶筛板的低频率进一步表明缺铁性贫血不是一个问题。马里亚纳群岛遗骸中牙齿病理学的频率普遍较低。槟榔染色在所有系列中相对常见,这可能有助于解释牙齿病理学患病率相对较低的原因。在这些骨骼系列中,愈合的四肢骨折很少见;骨折的频率和模式表明意外伤害是主要原因。查莫罗人腰椎椎弓峡部裂或应力性骨折的高频率表明对下背部区域的体力需求更大。同样,晚期退行性骨变化虽然发生率较低,但在查莫罗人中比夏威夷人显著更高。在马里亚纳群岛链中较小的岛屿(如罗塔岛),骨骼和牙齿压力指标的患病率通常较高,这些岛屿缓冲环境灾难的资源较少。在这些马里亚纳群岛骨骼系列中的大多数中,提示密螺旋体(可能是雅司病)疾病的骨质变化很常见。