TY - JOUR
T1 - Alone in a cave
T2 - Examination of a 5200 BCE skeleton from the Judean Desert, Israel
AU - Nagar, Yossi
AU - Milevski, Ianir
AU - Hamer, Hagay
AU - Amichai, Oriya
AU - Klein, Eitan
AU - Boaretto, Elisabetta
AU - Fadida, Atalya
AU - May, Hila
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, University of Warsaw. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/9/1
Y1 - 2022/9/1
N2 - The remains of a >50-years-old male, thus far representing the only complete skeleton dated to the Early Chalcolithic (Wadi Rabah) period in Israel, were recovered in a cave in the Judaean desert (Nahal Mishmar, F1-003). The old male suffered ab-scesses in the maxilla following tooth caries, and a well-healed trauma in the left tibial midshaft. Skull and mandibular morphology were described using plain measurements, indices and angles, and compared with similarly taken Chalcolithic data. In addition, mandibular morphology was captured using a landmark-based geometric morphometrics method and compared to Natufian hunter-gatherers, Pre-Pottery Neolithic early farmers, and Late Chalcolithic populations. The results, although cautionary, reveal similarity to the succeeding Ghassulian Chalcolithic period populations and suggest population conti-nuity from the Early to the Late (Ghassulian) Chalcolithic period. Future ancient DNA study may clarify this hypothesis and further reveal population affinity in this period in Israel.
AB - The remains of a >50-years-old male, thus far representing the only complete skeleton dated to the Early Chalcolithic (Wadi Rabah) period in Israel, were recovered in a cave in the Judaean desert (Nahal Mishmar, F1-003). The old male suffered ab-scesses in the maxilla following tooth caries, and a well-healed trauma in the left tibial midshaft. Skull and mandibular morphology were described using plain measurements, indices and angles, and compared with similarly taken Chalcolithic data. In addition, mandibular morphology was captured using a landmark-based geometric morphometrics method and compared to Natufian hunter-gatherers, Pre-Pottery Neolithic early farmers, and Late Chalcolithic populations. The results, although cautionary, reveal similarity to the succeeding Ghassulian Chalcolithic period populations and suggest population conti-nuity from the Early to the Late (Ghassulian) Chalcolithic period. Future ancient DNA study may clarify this hypothesis and further reveal population affinity in this period in Israel.
KW - Early Chalcolithic period
KW - Judean Desert
KW - biological anthropology
KW - skeletal morphology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163597185&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.47888/bne-1602
DO - 10.47888/bne-1602
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AN - SCOPUS:85163597185
SN - 1898-9403
VL - 16
SP - 29
EP - 49
JO - Bioarchaeology of the Near East
JF - Bioarchaeology of the Near East
ER -