1999
DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1096-8644(199910)110:2<201::aid-ajpa6>3.0.co;2-n
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Bone histology of prehistoric inhabitants of the Canary Islands: Comparison between El Hierro and Gran Canaria

Abstract: The trabecular bone mass (TBM) of the proximal epiphyses of right tibiae belonging to 273 prehispanic inhabitants of Gran Canaria (60. 81% males and 35.53% females) were assessed by histomorphometrical analysis of undecalcified samples and compared with that of 41 samples from El Hierro (52.63% males and 47.37% females). Among the prehispanic population of Gran Canaria 19.05% showed TBM values below 13.5% and 30.40% below 15%, although individual variability was high (range 6.71-35.4%). In sharp contrast with … Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…In 27 cases, most of the remaining skeleton was preserved. The vast majority of these samples were included in a study comparing prevalence of osteoporosis between the prehistoric population of Gran Canaria and that of El Hierro (Velasco-Vá zquez et al, 1999). The samples were obtained from the following mass burials: Guayadeque (68 cases), Tifaracas (1 case), El Agujero (13 cases), Hormiguero (5 cases), Dragonal (1 case), Charquitos (1 case), Santa Lucía (1 case), Andén de Tabacalete (2 cases), Tejeda (2 cases), and Montañ a de Juan Tello (1 case) ( Fig.…”
Section: Samplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In 27 cases, most of the remaining skeleton was preserved. The vast majority of these samples were included in a study comparing prevalence of osteoporosis between the prehistoric population of Gran Canaria and that of El Hierro (Velasco-Vá zquez et al, 1999). The samples were obtained from the following mass burials: Guayadeque (68 cases), Tifaracas (1 case), El Agujero (13 cases), Hormiguero (5 cases), Dragonal (1 case), Charquitos (1 case), Santa Lucía (1 case), Andén de Tabacalete (2 cases), Tejeda (2 cases), and Montañ a de Juan Tello (1 case) ( Fig.…”
Section: Samplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the 27 complete skeletons, sex was determined by inspection of the pelvis. In the remaining cases, sex was estimated by adapting the discriminant functions analysis of Iscan and Miller-Shaivitz (1984) to the population of Gran Canaria, as previously described (Velasco-Vá zquez et al, 1999). In total, 27 tibiae were classified as belonging to female individuals, and 65 to males.…”
Section: Samplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The first inhabitants of these islands arrived around the middle of the second millennium BC, and anthropological studies indicate a close relationship between these early colonizers and the North African Berbers, although this aboriginal population was probably not a homogeneous group (Murdock, 1959;Schwidetzky, 1963;Velasco-Vásquez et al, 1999;Flores et al, 2003). Although the Greeks and Romans explored the Canary Islands (giving them that name), it was not until the 15th century that the archipelago was settled by Europeans, when it was incorporated into the expanding Spanish Empire.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this case, the greatest and most important difference resides in the marked hierarchy of the ancient Canarian society where inequalities were institutionalized imposing asymmetric access to the ownership of land, livestock, as well as to any other fundamental resource vital to survival. Such a scenario has been linked, among other issues, to a nutritional deficit affecting part of Gran Canaria's pre‐Hispanic population due to unequal access to food, and in particular to livestock (Delgado‐Darias, Velasco‐Vázquez, Arnay‐de‐la‐Rosa, Martín‐Rodríguez, & González‐Reimers, ; Velasco‐Vázquez et al, ). Therefore, if we add the interpersonal competition of political and social order to the conditions described above, it becomes simpler to explain a model of widespread physical violence extending to large sectors of the population, including subadults.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%