Abstract
El Geili, located in the region of the Middle Nile, was occupied successively by Neolithic, Meroitic, and Christian populations at betweenn 3,500 BC and 1,500 AD. The scant archaeological evidence suggests that the Meroitic and Christian populations at Geili were patoral nomads. Dental enamel hypoplasias, indicators of general stress (malnutrition/disease), were studied in order to characterize and compare the health of these groups. A total of 130 individuals comprise the skeletal populations examined, from which a variety of appropriate sub-samples were analysed for defect presence, type, and age of occurence. Permanent incisors and canines represent the period of enamel development between birth and 6.5 years of age. Sample consisting of sets of incisors and canines (n=29) showed a negligibile difference of 77,8% vs. 81.8% in the Meroitic and Christian groups, respectively. Frequency differences by hypoplasia type reveal no obvious consistencies. Chronological analyses show chronic stress between 1 and 6 years of age.
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The research was supported by the Italian Ministery of Education (M.P.I. quota 40%) and the Italian Council of Research C.N.R. grant n. 89.00902.15).
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Blakey, M.L., Coppa, A., Damadio, S. et al. A comparison of dental enamel defects in Christian and Meroitic populations from Geili, central Sudan. Int. J. Anthropol. 5, 193–202 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02446244
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02446244