| Literature DB >> 35577834 |
Federico Lugli1,2, Alessia Nava3, Rita Sorrentino4,5, Antonino Vazzana4, Eugenio Bortolini4,6, Gregorio Oxilia4, Sara Silvestrini4, Nicola Nannini7,8, Luca Bondioli4,9, Helen Fewlass10,11, Sahra Talamo10,12, Edouard Bard13, Lucia Mancini14,15, Wolfgang Müller16,17, Matteo Romandini4,8,18, Stefano Benazzi4.
Abstract
We present the results of a multi-disciplinary investigation on a deciduous human tooth (Pradis 1), recently recovered from the Epigravettian layers of the Grotte di Pradis archaeological site (Northeastern Italian Prealps). Pradis 1 is an exfoliated deciduous molar (Rdm2), lost during life by an 11-12-year-old child. A direct radiocarbon date provided an age of 13,088-12,897 cal BP (95% probability, IntCal20). Amelogenin peptides extracted from tooth enamel and analysed through LC-MS/MS indicate that Pradis 1 likely belonged to a male. Time-resolved 87Sr/86Sr analyses by laser ablation mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICPMS), combined with dental histology, were able to resolve his movements during the first year of life (i.e. the enamel mineralization interval). Specifically, the Sr isotope ratio of the tooth enamel differs from the local baseline value, suggesting that the child likely spent his first year of life far from Grotte di Pradis. Sr isotopes are also suggestive of a cyclical/seasonal mobility pattern exploited by the Epigravettian human group. The exploitation of Grotte di Pradis on a seasonal, i.e. summer, basis is also indicated by the faunal spectra. Indeed, the nearly 100% occurrence of marmot remains in the entire archaeozoological collection indicates the use of Pradis as a specialized marmot hunting or butchering site. This work represents the first direct assessment of sub-annual movements observed in an Epigravettian hunter-gatherer group from Northern Italy.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35577834 PMCID: PMC9110381 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-12193-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1(a) Modeled Alpine glacier[83] extent at 13 ka with the location of the Pradis site indicated by a star. (b) Direct radiocarbon dating of Pradis 1 likely placed this individual within the Bølling–Allerød interstadial (oxygen isotope data are from North Greenland Ice Core Project[84]). (c) Photographic record of Pradis 1 dm2 tooth; scale bar is 2 mm; B buccal, D distal, L lingual, M mesial, O occlusal.
Figure 2(a) Virtual reconstruction of Pradis 1 dm2 tooth showed through a 3D surface rendering, where white is enamel and dark yellow is the underlying dentine; scale bar is 2 mm; B buccal, M mesial, L lingual, D distal, O occlusal. (b) LC–MS ion chromatograms of peptides SM(ox)IRPPY and SIRPPYPSY[29]; the presence of SM(ox)IRPPY suggests that Pradis 1 was a male.
Figure 3Principal component analyses (PCA) of left dm2crown outline of Upper Paleolithic (UPHS) and recent H. sapiens (Africa, India, Western Europe, and South America). The green star represents the Pradis 1 (right dm2 mirrored) reconstructed based on the pooled sample mean. The Pradis tooth is projected in the PCA plot (PC1 vs. PC2 on the left and PC1 vs. PC3 on the right).
Figure 4(a) Histological section of Pradis 1. (b) Time-resolved Sr isotope profile of Pradis 1 tooth enamel, smoothed through a locally weighted polynomial regression fit (LOWESS), with its associated standard error (± 2 SE). Note that the standard error bands are color-coded according to the isoscape ranges (see c); local marmot enamel and Pradis 1 dentine are reported as comparison. (c) Northern Italy isoscape based on Lugli et al.[52]; several relevant archaeological sites close to Pradis are reported.
Figure 5(a) Time-resolved Sr isotope profile of tooth enamel of Pradis 1 relative to respective results from other North-Italian Middle-Upper Palaeolithic Homo sp.[12]. (b) Same profiles as a. but normalized for their respective mean value. (c) First order derivative of the 87Sr/86Sr profiles from (a). NEA Neanderthal, UPMH upper palaeolithic modern human.
Figure 6Box plot representing intra-tooth 87Sr/86Sr data of Northern Italy Neanderthals and UP humans from this study and from Nava et al.[12]. Data distribution is also reported and color-coded following the palette of the isoscape in the inset. Grey areas are local baselines, defined through micromammal tooth enamel. NEA neanderthal, UPMH upper palaeolithic modern human.