1. Nutrition and health at contact in late prehistoric central Gulf Coast Florida.
- Author
-
Hutchinson DL and Norr L
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbon Isotopes analysis, Female, Florida, History, 16th Century, Humans, Indians, North American, Infections pathology, Inflammation pathology, Male, Nitrogen Isotopes analysis, Plants chemistry, Shellfish analysis, Vertebrates metabolism, Bone and Bones pathology, Dental Enamel Hypoplasia pathology, Diet, Health Status, Nutritional Status, Paleopathology
- Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of human remains from Tatham Mound, a dual-component mortuary site from central Gulf Coast Florida. The human remains from Tatham are significant because they come from a limited time period during the initial contact with Europeans at AD 1525-1550. Dietary reconstruction demonstrates that at the time of European contact, maize was not a predominant dietary item. Low frequencies for several dental and skeletal pathological indicators are consistent with relatively good health as compared to other Southeastern late prehistoric and protohistoric populations. Despite the limited time period represented by the mound population, critical interactions occurred between Native Americans and Spaniards, as indicated by skeletal elements severed by metal weapons. The Tatham population is significant because it is one of the earliest studied populations contacted by Europeans in North America, and the only one with well-documented sharp-force trauma that represents intergroup hostility., ((c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2006
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