A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia
Human skeletal morphology is a dynamic system affected by both physiological and environmental factors, due to the functional adaptation and remodeling responses of bones. To further explore the adaptation of bone to the environment and the consequent subsistence strategies determined by the diverse...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1540652023-03-11T20:05:55Z A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia Zhang, Qun Yeh, Hui-Yuan School of Humanities Humanities::General East Asia Tibial Morphology Human skeletal morphology is a dynamic system affected by both physiological and environmental factors, due to the functional adaptation and remodeling responses of bones. To further explore the adaptation of bone to the environment and the consequent subsistence strategies determined by the diverse natural contexts in the Anthropocene, this study presents a comparative study on the tibiae of seven ancient populations located in different regions of East Asia. Through the analysis of the tibial shaft morphology, a comparative analysis between the populations and genders was conducted to evaluate the differences in external morphology and sexual division of labor. The cnemic indices of the tibial shaft were selected to quantify the external shape. Results showed that different populations had different tibial morphology. Among males, those of Jinggouzi had the flattest tibia while those of Changle had the widest tibia. Among the females, females of Hanben had the flattest tibia, whereas tibia from females of Shiqiao, Changle, and Yinxu were among the widest. The sexual dimorphism was relatively larger in Shiqiao and Jinggouzi and smaller in Tuchengzi and Changle. Through a combination of previous archaeological findings, historical records, and ethnography of the aboriginal Taiwanese, it is concluded that the terrain and ecological environments laid basis for varied subsistence strategies. In addition, the mobility and social labor division under a particular subsistence strategy further contributed to the adaptation of the lower limb morphology to its context. The comparative analysis provides further insight on habitual activities, terrestrial mobility patterns, and subsistence strategies of the populations, which lived in different environmental contexts during the Bronze Age and early Iron Age, thus demonstrating the diverse interactions between human populations and natural environment in the Anthropocene. Nanyang Technological University Published version This research was supported by the NAP Start-Up Grant from Nanyang Technological University. 2022-05-24T07:49:01Z 2022-05-24T07:49:01Z 2021 Journal Article Zhang, Q. & Yeh, H. (2021). A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia. Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene, 9(1), 00071-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1525/elementa.2021.00071 2325-1026 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154065 10.1525/elementa.2021.00071 2-s2.0-85104892633 1 9 00071 en Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene © 2021 The Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. application/pdf |
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Humanities::General East Asia Tibial Morphology Zhang, Qun Yeh, Hui-Yuan A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
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Human skeletal morphology is a dynamic system affected by both physiological and environmental factors, due to the functional adaptation and remodeling responses of bones. To further explore the adaptation of bone to the environment and the consequent subsistence strategies determined by the diverse natural contexts in the Anthropocene, this study presents a comparative study on the tibiae of seven ancient populations located in different regions of East Asia. Through the analysis of the tibial shaft morphology, a comparative analysis between the populations and genders was conducted to evaluate the differences in external morphology and sexual division of labor. The cnemic indices of the tibial shaft were selected to quantify the external shape. Results showed that different populations had different tibial morphology. Among males, those of Jinggouzi had the flattest tibia while those of Changle had the widest tibia. Among the females, females of Hanben had the flattest tibia, whereas tibia from females of Shiqiao, Changle, and Yinxu were among the widest. The sexual dimorphism was relatively larger in Shiqiao and Jinggouzi and smaller in Tuchengzi and Changle. Through a combination of previous archaeological findings, historical records, and ethnography of the aboriginal Taiwanese, it is concluded that the terrain and ecological environments laid basis for varied subsistence strategies. In addition, the mobility and social labor division under a particular subsistence strategy further contributed to the adaptation of the lower limb morphology to its context. The comparative analysis provides further insight on habitual activities, terrestrial mobility patterns, and subsistence strategies of the populations, which lived in different environmental contexts during the Bronze Age and early Iron Age, thus demonstrating the diverse interactions between human populations and natural environment in the Anthropocene. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Zhang, Qun Yeh, Hui-Yuan |
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Article |
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Zhang, Qun Yeh, Hui-Yuan |
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Zhang, Qun |
title |
A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
title_short |
A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
title_full |
A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
title_fullStr |
A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
title_full_unstemmed |
A comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient East Asia |
title_sort |
comparative study on the tibial morphology among several populations in ancient east asia |
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2022 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154065 |
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1761781354948722688 |