Implications of the prevalence of Ascaris sp. in the funerary context of a Late Antique population (5th-7th c.) in Granada (Spain).

Autor: López-Gijón, Ramón, Camarós, Edgard, Rubio-Salvador, Ángel, Duras, Salvatore, Botella-López, Miguel C., Alemán-Aguilera, Inmaculada, Rodríguez-Aguilera, Ángel, Bustamante-Álvarez, Macarena, Sánchez-Barba, Lydia P., Dufour, Benjamin, Le Bailly, Matthieu
Zdroj: International Journal of Paleopathology; Dec2023, Vol. 43, p45-50, 6p
Abstrakt: To evaluate the prevalence of gastro-intestinal parasites in human remains from Late Antiquity (5th – 7th c.) Granada (Spain). The study included pelvic and cranial control samples from 17 skeletons from the archaeological sites of Los Mondragones (n = 13) and Rafael Guillén (n = 4). In the paleoparasitological study, soil samples from pelvic area and cranium were analyzed using the rehydration, homogenization, and micro-sieving method and visualization under brightfield microscopy. Ascaris sp. eggs were detected in pelvic samples from seven individuals. These findings may indicate that this parasite was endemic. Its detection frequency is one of the highest reported at group level in an osteological series from Late Antiquity. The prevalence of Ascaris sp. associated with skeletal remains has implications for assessing the lifestyle and health of populations in southern Spain during the Late Antique period. The number of individuals is small and taphonomic processes could have limited paleoparasitological findings Future interdisciplinary studies of this type are warranted in larger osteological series to improve knowledge of parasitosis in the past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index