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Journal ArticleDOI

Porotic hyperostosis in a marine-dependent California Indian population.

TLDR
The prevalence of porotic hyperostosis in a population with a heavy dietary dependence on marine resources shows that among prehistoric American Indians, this condition is not always associated with an iron- and protein-deficient diet of cultigens.
Abstract
A maize-based iron- and protein-deficient diet is commonly cited as the most important cause of porotic hyperostosis among American Indian agriculturalists. An alternative to this maize dependence hypothesis is suggested by the analysis of 432 crania from the nonagricultural, fish-dependent population of the Channel Island area of southern California. Cribra orbitalia, a form of porotic hyperostosis associated with iron deficiency anemia, is just as common among these fisherpeople, whose diet was rich in iron and essential amino acids, as it is among maize-dependent agriculturalists. Northern Channel Island crania have much more cribra orbitalia than those from the California mainland. The highest incidence is on San Miguel, a small geographically isolated island with a shortage of fresh water and terrestrial resources. The Indians who lived on Santa Cruz, the largest of the northern Channel Islands with the greatest diversity of terrestrial plants and animals, have less cribra orbitalia than those who lived on Santa Rosa or San Miguel Island. This geographical distribution appears to be explained by island-mainland and interisland differences in water contamination, exposure to fish-borne parasites, and nutritional adequacy of the diet. The prevalence of porotic hyperostosis in a population with a heavy dietary dependence on marine resources shows that among prehistoric American Indians, this condition is not always associated with an iron- and protein-deficient diet of cultigens. It seems likely that high nutrient losses associated with diarrheal disease are often more significant in the etiology of porotic hyperostosis than a low dietary intake of essential nutrients.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The causes of porotic hyperostosis and cribra orbitalia: a reappraisal of the iron-deficiency-anemia hypothesis.

TL;DR: Several lines of evidence suggest that the accelerated loss and compensatory over-production of red blood cells seen in hemolytic and megaloblastic anemias is the most likely proximate cause of porotic hyperostosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological changes in human populations with agriculture

TL;DR: Findings indicate that the shift from food collection to agriculture involved an overall decline in oral and general health, and changes in food composition and preparation technology contributed to craniofacial and dental alterations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cranial injuries as evidence of violence in prehistoric southern California

TL;DR: The frequency of cranial injuries increases significantly between the early and late prehistoric periods on the Channel Islands and this temporal variation appears to reflect changes in patterns of violence associated with population growth and environmental instability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Complex Hunter-Gatherer-Fishers of Prehistoric California: Chiefs, Specialists, and Maritime Adaptations of the Channel Islands

TL;DR: The Chumash of the Santa Barbara Channel region were among the most economically and politically complex hunter-gatherer cultures of the New World as discussed by the authors, and rich ethnohistorical documents pertaining to chumash culture were analyzed, providing an excellent foundation for understanding the simple chiefdom that was in place as explorers and missionaries arrived in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Porotic hyperostosis: a new perspective.

TL;DR: It is now understood that, rather than being detrimental, hypoferremia (deficiency of iron in the blood) is actually an adaptation to disease and microorganism invasion, thus increasing their susceptibility to iron deficiency anemia.
References
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Book

Human nutrition and dietetics

S. Davidson, +1 more
TL;DR: The Human Nutrition & Dietetics (HND) major is part of the Department of Animal Science, Food, and Nutrition and offers two specializations: Didactic Program in dietetics (DPD); and Nutrition for Wellness (NW).
Journal ArticleDOI

Porotic hyperostosis: representative of a childhood condition.

TL;DR: A synthesis of data from a Romano-British site Poundbury Camp, anthropological and clinical studies, and information on bone physiology suggests that lesions of porotic hyperostosis seen in adults are most probably representative of a childhood episode of anemia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Part Two: The role of constitutional factors, diet, and infectious disease in the etiology of porotic hyperostosis and periosteal reactions in prehistoric infants and children.

TL;DR: Investigation of the etiology of porotic hyperostosis and periosteal reactions in infants and children from the Libben Site shows that the skeletal lesion strongly fits the age-specific distribution of hypochromic microcytic iron-deficiency anemia in infant and children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paleoceanography of the Santa Barbara Basin during the last 8000 years

TL;DR: Turekian et al. as mentioned in this paper used radiolaria found in recent surface sediment samples from the eastern North Pacific to identify four assemblages which can be related to the physical oceanography of the California Current.
Journal ArticleDOI

The chronological distribution of enamel hypoplasias from prehistoric Dickson Mounds populations.

TL;DR: The chronological distributions of enamel hypoplasias (indicators of nonspecific stress) are assessed for 111 individuals from two prehistoric populations from Dickson Mounds, Lewiston, Illinois to demonstrate that populations may vary in their chronological distribution of hypoplasia and that these variations may provide useful information on age-related patterns of exposure to environmental stressors.
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