| Literature DB >> 27503560 |
Manon Galland1,2, Denis P Van Gerven3, Noreen Von Cramon-Taubadel4, Ron Pinhasi1.
Abstract
The transition to agriculture was a key event in human history. The extent to which this transition is associated with biological changes in different world regions remains debated. Cultural and osteological records in Lower Nubia throughout the Holocene have been interpreted as a result of in situ differentiation or alternatively as migratory events and possible admixture with surrounding populations. Here we investigated the patterns of craniofacial and mandibular variation from Mesolithic hunting-gathering to late farming, a period spanning 11,000 years. We analyzed 102 adult specimens spanning five cultural horizons: Mesolithic, A-group, C-group, Pharaonic and Meroitic, by means of 3D geometric morphometric methods, in order to assess shape variation and diachronic patterns at the transition to farming and in subsequent periods. Our results highlight a strong morphometric distinction between Mesolithic hunter-gatherers and farmers as well as differences between transitional and intensive farmers in mandibular variation which is consistent with differential impact of selective pressures on different regions of the skull. This study corroborates a major biological change during the transition from hunting to farming, supporting the masticatory-functional hypothesis for the mandible and suggesting population continuity among farming populations throughout the Holocene based on the overall shape of the cranium.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27503560 PMCID: PMC4977491 DOI: 10.1038/srep31040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map showing the area of the samples analysed (map created using Inkscape 0.91, www.inkscape.org).
Samples and related information.
| Sample | Dietary group | Date | N Crania (m/f/u) | N Mandibles (m/f/u) | Museum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mesolithic | Hunter-gatherers (HG) | 8,000–11,000 BCE | 8 (2/6) | 18 (8/9/1) | University of Colorado, Boulder |
| A-group | Early farmers (EF) | 3,300–2,800 BCE | 10 (4/5/1) | 21 (9/11/1) | Panum Institute, Copenhagen |
| C-group | Early farmers (EF) | 2,300–1,800 BCE | 28 (14/12/2) | 27 (12/13/2) | Panum Institute, Copenhagen |
| Pharaonic | Farmers (F) | 1,800–1,200 BCE | 13 (6/7) | 23 (14/9) | Panum Institute, Copenhagen |
| Meroitic | Farmers (F) | 100 BCE–350 CE | 10 (5/4/1) | 8 (4/3/1) | Panum Institute, Copenhagen |
Figure 2Boxplot of the centroid sizes by cultural horizon for the cranium (left) and the mandible (right).
Figure 3Impact of allometric effects observed on the crania and the mandibles.
Figure 4Between-group PCA based on Procrustes residuals of landmark configurations and shape differences observed for the cranium and the mandible.
Mahalanobis distances between cultural groups for the cranium (upper triangle) and the mandible (lower triangle).
| Mahal. dist. | A-group | C-group | Meroitic | Pharaonic | Mesolithic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A-group | 0 | 2.942074 | 3.142982 | 3.346135 | 6.408830 |
| C-group | 1.738055 | 0 | 2.477643 | 3.060727 | 6.016817 |
| Meroitic | 2.519526 | 2.727493 | 0 | 2.922747 | 5.738018 |
| Pharaonic | 2.451742 | 2.069805 | 2.346177 | 0 | 7.414554 |
| Mesolithic | 4.448209 | 3.766902 | 5.189174 | 4.030918 | 0 |
Figure 5Neighbor-Joining trees based on Mahalanobis distances with bootstrap values for the cranium (left) and the mandible (right).
Results of MANOVA performed on the cranium and mandible from the chrono-cultural groups.
| Cranium | Mandible | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MANOVA | R2 | P | R2 | P | |
| Cultural groups | All samples | 0.127 | 0.002 (**) | 0.099 | <0.001 (***) |
| Without Mesolithic sample | 0.072 | 0.395 | 0.050 | 0.009 (**) | |
| Dietary groups | All groups (HG, EF, F) | 0.087 | <0.001 (***) | 0.080 | <0.001 (***) |
| Farmers combined (HG, F) | 0.061 | <0.001 (***) | 0.057 | <0.001 (***) | |
| Without HG sample (EF, F) | 0.028 | 0.236 | 0.027 | 0.005 (**) | |
Significant results are in bold (***p < 0.001; **0.001 < p < 0.01; *0.01 < p < 0.05).
Figure 6Facial and lateral views of a cranium and a mandible with 39 and 33 landmarks, respectively.