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Dental pathology and diet at Apollonia, a Greek colony on the Black Sea

机译:黑海希腊殖民地Apollonia的牙齿病理学和饮食

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Dental pathology has the potential to provide insight into the composition of the diet and to reveal dietary differences based on age, sex and social status. Human skeletal remains from the Greek colonial site of Apollonia (5(th) to 2(nd) centuries BC) on the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria were analysed for various forms of dental pathology in order to: assess the prevalence of dental disease in the population; compare the dental pathology data from Apollonia with dietary data derived from ancient literary texts and from previous stable isotopic analysis of the colonists' remains; explore variations in dental disease with respect to age and sex; and compare the prevalence of dental pathology in the Apollonians with that of other Greek populations. The composition of the diet, as indicated by the dental pathology data, is consistent with the stable isotopic evidence from Apollonia and with the ancient literary texts, both of which indicate the consumption of a relatively soft, high carbohydrate diet. The higher frequency of dental caries, abscesses, calculus, and antemortem tooth loss in older adults compared with younger ones reflects the age-progressive nature of these conditions. The lack of significant sex differences in caries, abscesses, calculus and tooth loss corresponds with the stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic data derived from bone collagen, which indicate no significant sex differences in the consumption of dietary protein. In contrast, these findings conflict with the ancient literary texts, which refer to distinct dietary differences between males and females, and with the stable carbon isotopic values derived from bone carbonate, which indicate sex differences with respect to the overall diet. Despite the lack of marked sex differences in dental pathology, overall trends point to subtle dietary differences between males and females. A greater degree of tooth wear in males also hints at possible sex differences in the use of the teeth as tools. Copyright (C) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
机译:牙齿病理学有可能提供有关饮食组成的见解,并揭示基于年龄,性别和社会地位的饮食差异。分析了保加利亚黑海沿岸的希腊阿波罗尼亚殖民地遗址(公元前5(公元前)至2(公元前)世纪)的人体骨骼残留,以分析各种形式的牙齿病理,以:评估该地区牙齿疾病的患病率人口;将来自Apollonia的牙齿病理学数据与来自古代文学著作以及先前对殖民者遗骸进行的稳定同位素分析得出的饮食数据进行比较;探索牙齿疾病在年龄和性别方面的变化;并比较了阿波罗尼亚人与其他希腊人群的牙齿病理学患病率。如牙科病理数据所示,饮食结构与来自Apollonia的稳定同位素证据以及古代文学文献一致,两者均表明食用了相对较软的高碳水化合物饮食。与年轻人相比,老年人的龋齿,脓肿,牙结石和死前牙齿脱落的频率更高,这反映了这些疾病的年龄渐进性。龋齿,脓肿,牙结石和牙齿脱落缺乏明显的性别差异,这与源自骨胶原的稳定的碳和氮同位素数据相对应,这表明膳食蛋白质的摄入量没有明显的性别差异。相反,这些发现与古老的文学著作(指男性和女性在饮食上存在明显差异)以及源自骨碳酸盐的稳定碳同位素值(表明总体饮食上存在性别差异)相抵触。尽管在牙齿病理学上没有明显的性别差异,但总体趋势表明男性和女性之间的饮食差异微乎其微。男性牙齿磨损程度更高,也暗示在使用牙齿作为工具时可能存在性别差异。版权所有(C)2007 John Wiley&Sons,Ltd.

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