Patterns of Cranial Trauma in a Prehistoric Population from Central California
โ Scribed by Robert Jurmain; Viviana Ines Bellifemine
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 130 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1047-482X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Evidence of cranial trauma was investigated in a skeletal sample from the site CA-Ala-329 located on the eastern side of San Francisco Bay, Central California. The sample included 365 crania, including 134 adult males, 104 adult females, 22 adults of indeterminate sex and 105 subadults. Evidence of cranio-facial fracture was found in eight individuals, one of whom is an adolescent. Thus, the frequency in adult crania of traumatic injury is 7/260 (2.7 per cent). Of the seven individuals of known sex displaying such cranial trauma, all are male. The injuries are generally suggestive of some form of interpersonal aggression, with ยฎve healed vault fractures, one lesion with an embedded obsidian fragment (a probable projectile point) and two healed facial fractures. Further clear evidence of interpersonal aggression has been previously determined in this sample and has been reported at even higher levels elsewhere in California.
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A small pit in the articular surfaces of the third tarsometatarsal joint has been noted with particularly high frequency in North American Indians. This pit varies in depth, and covers most of the inferior third of the articular surfaces of the third metatarsal and the lateral cuneiform; it is accom
## Abstract Canine/premolar transposition is rare in both historic and prehistoric __Homo sapiens__ with a known occurrence of less than 0.10%. This report describes a prehistoric population sample from one site (SCrIโ3) on Santa Cruz Island, California in which the rate of __C__/P^3^ transposition