| Literature DB >> 34697324 |
Barbara Veselka1,2, Christophe Snoeck3,4,5.
Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency has hugely impacted the health of past societies. Its identification in skeletal remains provides insights into the daily activities, cultural habits, and the disease load of past populations. However, up till now, this approach remained impossible in cremated bones, because temperatures reached during cremations destroyed all macroscopic evidence of vitamin D deficiency. This precluded the analyses of a large fraction of the archaeological record, as cremation was an important burial ritual from the Late Neolithic until the Early Medieval period in Europe. Here, the identification of interglobular dentine (IGD), a dental mineralisation defect attributed to vitamin D deficiency, in experimentally burnt teeth, demonstrates this deficiency to be observable in human teeth burned to temperatures as high as 900 °C. In most cases, it becomes even possible to assess the ages-of-occurrence as well as the severity of the IGD and possibly vitamin D deficiency intensity. This study represents a major step forward in the fields of biological anthropology, archaeology, and palaeopathology by opening up a variety of new possibilities for the study of health and activities related to sunlight exposure of numerous past populations that practiced cremation as their funerary ritual.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34697324 PMCID: PMC8545959 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-00380-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
IGD occurrence per tooth noted for the 1st and 2nd observation of BV and the observation of CS per group. The grey boxes represent the burnt teeth.
LM1 = left permanent first molar, RM1 = right permanent first molar, LdM1 = left deciduous first molar, RdM1 = right deciduous first molar, U = unobservable, n/a = not applicable, RC = right mandibular canine, LC = left mandibular canine.
Figure 1IGD (white ovals) in unburnt RM1 (A) and burnt LM1 (B) from B121 at approximately the same location. Note the heat-induced cracks in LM1 (see arrows).
Figure 2IGD appearance in unburnt (dark semi-circular spaces, see arrows) and burnt dentine (separately visible globules, calcospherites, see arrows). Burnt dentine Grade 1 is depicted in dentine burned at 800 °C (2 h), visible as dark semi-circular spaces, Grade 2 in dentine burned at 900 °C (2 h), and Grade 3 in dentine burned at 600 °C (2 h).
Figure 3Two bands of IGD in the permanent left 1st mandibular molar from B121 after burning at 800 °C for 2 h. Band A has Grade 3 and shows both partially fused calcospherites (close to the A) as well as the dark semi-circular spaces towards the end of the band. Band B (see orange oval) has Grade 1. Note the heat-induced damage (white cracks) to the dentine (light brown).
Figure 4IGD in B61 (Grade 2) burned at 900 °C for 2 h, visible as a band of not fully fused calcospherites just above the dashed orange line. Note the heat-induced damage (white cracks) to the dentine (light brown).
Figure 5Burnt dental roots from an Early Medieval cremation deposit from Broechem, Belgium, showing a variation in burning degree.