Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Mireia Coca. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Mireia Coca. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 19 de junio de 2017

Nuevo Artículo sobre morfología dental en el Neolítico

Con gran ilusión nos complace presentaros el nuevo artículo que sobre morfología dental han publicado varios de los investigadores del equipo: Diego López-Onaindia, Mireia Coca, Juan Francisco Gibaja y Maria Eulàlia Subirà,

Este trabajo lleva por título: Biological differences related to cultural variability during the Neolithic in a micro-geographical area of the Iberian Peninsula y ha sido publicado en la revista
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences

Desde aquí les damos nuestras mayores felicitaciones. 

Abstract 

This paper presents dental morphological data of Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age populations from the Catalan Pre-Pyrenean area. The Neolithic group, in particular, differs from those of surrounding areas in its funerary culture: the building of cists, which is not present in the Sepulcres de Fossa Culture. A minimum number of 118 individuals from this area were studied for this work, and the data were compared with those of other Iberian and European groups. The results indicate that the two micro-regional groups from the Catalan area (Pre-Pyrenean and Pre-Coastal) were biologically different during the Neolithic and the Chalcolithic, but not in the Bronze Age, when they also appeared to be more homogeneous culturally. In addition, both areas differ biologically from coetaneous Italian groups, although those closer to the coast show slightly smaller differences.
Finally, the Bronze Age groups also present fewer differences with regard to the Italian Bronze Age’s group. Therefore, the results suggest that the Catalan Neolithic population had two separate origins, related to cultural patterns, and that differences between the groups decreased within time, probably due to trade-related activities. Moreover, the fact that the difference with Italian populations decreased during the Bronze Age suggests major population movements through the Mediterranean that would affect the biological composition of the human groups.