59 results on '"Rosa Boano"'
Search Results
2. Bioarchaeological and paleogenomic profiling of the unusual Neolithic burial from Grotta di Pietra Sant’Angelo (Calabria, Italy)
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Francesco Fontani, Rosa Boano, Alessandra Cinti, Beatrice Demarchi, Sarah Sandron, Simone Rampelli, Marco Candela, Mirko Traversari, Adriana Latorre, Rocco Iacovera, Paolo Abondio, Stefania Sarno, Meaghan Mackie, Matthew Collins, Anita Radini, Chantal Milani, Enrico Petrella, Emanuela Giampalma, Antonella Minelli, Felice Larocca, Elisabetta Cilli, and Donata Luiselli
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The Neolithic burial of Grotta di Pietra Sant’Angelo (CS) represents a unique archaeological finding for the prehistory of Southern Italy. The unusual placement of the inhumation at a rather high altitude and far from inhabited areas, the lack of funerary equipment and the prone deposition of the body find limited similarities in coeval Italian sites. These elements have prompted wider questions on mortuary customs during the prehistory of Southern Italy. This atypical case requires an interdisciplinary approach aimed to build an integrated bioarchaeological profile of the individual. The paleopathological investigation of the skeletal remains revealed the presence of numerous markers that could be associated with craft activities, suggesting possible interpretations of the individual’s lifestyle. CT analyses, carried out on the maxillary bones, showed the presence of a peculiar type of dental wear, but also a good density of the bone matrix. Biomolecular and micromorphological analyses of dental calculus highlight the presence of a rich Neolithic-like oral microbiome, the composition of which is consistent with the presence pathologies. Finally, paleogenomic data obtained from the individual were compared with ancient and modern Mediterranean populations, including unpublished high-resolution genome-wide data for 20 modern inhabitants of the nearby village of San Lorenzo Bellizzi, which provided interesting insights into the biodemographic landscape of the Neolithic in Southern Italy.
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- 2023
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3. Experimental Archaeology and the Sustainability of Dental Calculus Research: The Case of Chocolate and the Nuns Of S. Maria Della Stella’s Church, Saluzzo, Italy
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Sarah Sandron, Anita Radini, Dominique Scalarone, Beatrice Demarchi, Rosa Boano, Alison Beach, and Cynthianne Spiteri
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food ,newer era ,italy ,health ,Museums. Collectors and collecting ,AM1-501 ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
In Italy, chocolate (Theobroma cacao L.) was introduced during the Columbian exchange, and it quickly became both an important and accessible part of the Italian culinary tradition. Today, Italy is Europe’s second-largest chocolate producer. This project explored the potential of a new methodological approach to investigate the history of chocolate by combining experimental archaeology with micromorphological and chemical analysis of dental calculus from the skeletal remains of a post-medieval monastic community (Saluzzo, Italy) known from historical documents to have consumed chocolate products. Although the results obtained showed no traces of chocolate in the analyzed dental calculus from the nuns of Saluzzo, through experimental work, we were able to identify markers diagnostic for T. cacao both in the experimental chocolate recipes, which we recreated, and in modern dental calculus, showing the potential for the application of these methodologies.
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- 2023
4. Un patrimonio da valorizzare: l’Egitto antico e l’Egitto moderno nelle collezioni del Museo di Antropologia ed Etnografia di Torino / A Heritage to be enhanced. The Ancient and the modern Egypt throughout the Collections of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnology, Turin
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Gianluigi Mangiapane, Elisa Campanella, Erika Grasso, and Rosa Boano
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Arts in general ,NX1-820 ,Auxiliary sciences of history - Abstract
Il Museo di Antropologia ed Etnografia del Sistema Museale di Ateneo dell’Università degli Studi di Torino è chiuso al pubblico da più di trenta anni e questa inacessibilità ha contribuito sia a una mancata valorizzazione delle collezioni sia alla dispersione di molte informazioni che le riguardano. In occasione del suo recente trasferimento e del suo prossimo riallestimento, il Museo ha avviato uno studio sull’intero patrimonio (molto eterogeneo per provenienza e tipologia) favorito anche dalla partecipazione a eventi espositivi o a specifici progetti di ricerca. In particolare, il presente contributo vuole restituire le ricerche realizzate di recente sulle raccolte arrivate a Torino a inizio Novecento grazie alla Missione Archeologica Italiana in Egitto, attraverso un approccio multidisciplinare che coinvolge antropologi fisici e culturali, storici ed egittologi, con l’obiettivo di ricostruire un’importante pagina dimenticata del MAET. The Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University Museum System of the Torino University has been kept closed for more than thirty years: this fact has not contributed to the promotion of the collections while has contributed to the loss of much information. When the museum was transferred and reorganized, a study on the entire heritage (very heterogeneous both in terms of origin and in terms of type) has been launched; it has also been fostered by the participation of the Museum in exhibition events or specific research projects. In particular, the present contribution aims to restore recent researches on the collections that the Italian Archaeological Mission in Egypt brought in Turin in the early twentieth century. The mission had a multidisciplinary approach that involved both physical and cultural anthropologists, historians and Egyptologists whose main goal was to restore an important chapter of the MAET.
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- 2020
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5. Facial reconstruction project
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Federico Cesarani, Maria Cristina Martina, Valter Capussotto, Andrea Giuliano, Renato Grilletto, Rosa Boano, Anna Maria Donadoni Roveri, Maurizio Celia, and Giovanni Gandini
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Facial reconstruction of mummies and corpses is important in anthropological, medical and forensic studies. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the role of three- Dimensional Multidetector CT examination for 3D facial reconstruction. We present a multidisciplinary work performed by radiologists, anthropologists and forensic police in reconstructing the possible physiognomy of an ancient Egyptian mummy. Three-Dimensional data were obtained from a well-preserved completely wrapped Egyptian mummy from the collection of the Egyptian Museum in Torino, Italy, dated from XXII or XXIII dynasty (945-715 BC). Data were used as a model for the rapid prototyping stereolithographic technique, a method which allows the creation of 3D model with digital data using synthetic materials such as resin or nylon.
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- 2021
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6. CT scan and 3D reconstructions of Pre-Dynastic child mummy 527 B* (Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of Turin)
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Raffaella Bianucci, Rosa Boano, Gino Carnazza, Rudy Lallo, Grazia Mattutino, Carlo Torre, and Emma Rabino Massa
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Mummy 527 B* belongs to the “Giovanni Marro” Egyptian Collection of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. This mummy of a oneyear- old pre-dynastic child was found in Gebelein in 1935 in a small necropolis discovered during excavations of the “Missione Archeologica Italiana” led by G. Farina, the new Director of the Egyptian Museum of Turin, with the participation of Prof. G. Marro as anthropologist. A whole body spiral CT scan with thin slices (1,00 mm thickness, 0,5 mm reconstruction interval) was followed by multiplanar and 3D reconstruction. The aim was to evaluate the child’s age at death and the presence of lethal pathologies. This study confirms the fundamental role of non-invasive techniques in the study of such rare pre-dynastic specimens.
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- 2021
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7. A South American embalmed head
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Rudi Lallo, Roberto Testi, Massimo Massimelli, Raffaella Bianucci, Rosa Boano, and Emma Rabino Massa
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The embalmed head of a young South American man is housed in the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. This man, who suffered a violent facial trauma, was intentionally beheaded after his death, and his head was embalmed. The aim of this study was to determine the age at death, the cause of death and the embalming techniques by means of CT scanning, 3D reconstruction, X-rays, histology, endoscopy and scanning electron microscopy followed by microanalysis.
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- 2021
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8. The 'mummy in the dress' of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin
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Lidia Pedrini, Valeria Cortese, Maria Cristina Martina, Andrea Ferraris, Renato Grilletto, Rosa Boano, Raffaella Bianucci, Richard P. Evershed, Katherine A. Clark, Tom Higham, Chris Ramsey, Giovanni Gandini, and Emma Rabino Massa
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The “Mummy in the Dress” belongs to the Egyptian Collection Giovanni Marro of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. It was recovered in Gebelein during an excavation campaign carried out at the beginning at the XX century by the Missione Archeologica Italiana under the leadership of its founder, E. Schiaparelli, Director of the Egyptian Museum of Turin. The mummy wore a pleated dress over its bandages. The body lies in a natural position, resting on its left side, on the remains of a wooden coffin. A team of anthropologists, chemists, Egyptologists and radiologists is studying the mummy with the aim of determining sex, age, embalming techniques and date of deposition. CT scans and 3D reconstruction of the mummy were carried out to enable the researchers to ascertain its sex and age, to verify what clothes enshrouded the body, to investigate its state of preservation and to learn more about the ancient techniques employed to assemble the wooden coffin.
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- 2021
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9. Kha and Merit:multidetector computed tomography and 3D reconstructions of two mummies from the Egyptian Museum of Turin
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Maria Cristina Martina, Federico Cesarani, Rosa Boano, Anna Maria Donadoni Roveri, Andrea Ferraris, Renato Grilletto, and Giovanni Gandini
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The Mummies of the architect, Kha, (Suppl.8431) and his wife, Merit, (Suppl. 8471) belong to the XVIII Dynasty of ancient Egypt. They were discovered at Deir el- Medina, during the Italian Archaeological Mission directed by E. Schiaparelli (1903- 1906). Recently they underwent diagnostic investigation with helical CT at the Molinette hospital in Turin in order to verify the state of preservation of the bodies and to increase our knowledge of the funerary objects inside the bandages. A whole body helical CT acquisition with a multidetector CT unit was performed. Thin slices (2.5 mm thickness, 1.25 mm reconstruction interval), followed by multiplanar and 3D reconstructions were obtained. CT allowed a careful evaluation of body conditions, stature, age, embalming technique, pathological findings (some of which not revealed by previous conventional X-ray studies), and it allowed confirming and evaluating the presence of foreign bodiesjewels in particular. Once more CT, especially supported by new post-processing techniques, confirmed its fundamental role in the non-invasive study of mummies.
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- 2021
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10. The identification of archaeological eggshell using peptide markers
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Samantha Presslee, Julie Wilson, Jos Woolley, Julia Best, Douglas Russell, Anita Radini, Roman Fischer, Benedikt Kessler, Rosa Boano, Matthew Collins, and Beatrice Demarchi
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Eggshell ,birds ,zooarchaeology ,proteomics ,mass spectrometry (ZooMS) ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Avian eggshell survives well in alkaline and neutral soils, but its potential as an archaeological resource remains largely unexplored, mainly due to difficulties in its identification. Here we exploit the release of novel bird genomes and, for the first time on eggshell, use MALDI-ToF (matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight) mass spectrometry in combination with peptide sequencing by LC-MS/MS. The eggshell proteome is revealed as unexpectedly complex, with 5755 proteins identified for a reference collection comprising 23 bird species. We determined 782 m/z markers useful for eggshell identification, 583 of which could be assigned to known eggshell peptide sequences. These were used to identify eggshell fragments recovered from a medieval site at Freeschool Lane, Leicester. We discuss the specificity of the peptide markers and highlight the importance of assessing the level of taxonomic identification achievable for archaeological interpretation.
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- 2017
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11. The matrimonial behavior of a rural population in Haute-Vienne, France
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Gian Luigi Mangiapane, Sergio De Iasio, Marilena Girotti, Rosa Boano, and Gilles Boëtsch
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biodemography, matrimonial behaviour, family reconstruction ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Although biodemography prefers to focus on isolated human populations, in our analysis we have considered an opened community, neither culturally nor geographically separated from the nearby communities. The aim of the present study was to reconstruct the degree of consanguinity and assess the level of openness of a certain French population through the observation of its people’s matrimonial behavior. Marriages and, in general, the choice of the partner, are often affected by culture and society which affect, in the end, the community’s genic pool.
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- 2014
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12. Biodemographic characteristics of North-Western Italian population (Giaglione - Susa Valley) between 18th and 19th century
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Sergio De Iasio, Giulia Levati, Marilena Girotti, Marcello Fagiano, and Rosa Boano
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households structure, Alpine populations, biodemography ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
For the study of genetic changes that occur over time in human communities (microevolution) anthropologists and biodemographers have favored the use of renewable flow, in particular the registers of marriage. Indeed they allow to easily estimate several biodemographic parameters (endogamy and exogamy; repeated pairs; immigration), even for long periods of time, since it is quite common to have consecutive series of documents relating to the marriage of a population. However, the sources of flow do not always allow to study in depth the factors that have given continuity to the community because they provide only partial information on demographic structure, the mode of aggregation of its members and the processes of change within families. A good alternative to sources of flow may be the use of sources of state, civil (censuses) or parish sources (the status animarum), which give a very detailed picture of the state of the population at a given time. The retrieval and analysis of census documentation assume therefore a primary role in order to obviate the intrinsic weaknesses of the sources of flow. In the perspective of biodemographic studies, the integration of the two types of sources is in actual fact the operating optimum. It must be remembered that it is quite difficult to find contemporary sources of flow and of state for the Italian populations of the past.
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- 2014
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13. Study of skin degradation in ancient Egyptian mummies: complementarity of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and histological analysis
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Mariachiara Stani, Andrea Baraldi, Rosa Boano, Rosangela Cinquetti, and Maria Grazia Bridelli
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dynastic and pre-dynastic mummy, skin, secondary structure of proteins, FTIR spectroscopy, histology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Some dynastic and pre-dynastic Egyptian mummies from the Giovanni Marro Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, University of Turin, Italy have been studied by means of the combined approach of both Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and histological analysis, with the aim of investigating the preservation state of the skin of ancient archaeological remains, as a consequence of the differences between the two kinds of mummification processes, i.e. natural and by means of embalming substances. The results suggest that the balms used in the dynastic mummies embalming process really could have played an important role in the prevention of corpse deterioration.
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- 2014
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14. The mummies of the Archaeology Museum of Palmyra
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Marilena Girotti, Khalil Al-Hariri, Salem Al-Kayem, Rosa Boano, Stepahanie Harter-Lailheugue, Charbel El-Bcheraoui, Dominique Chevé, Ezio Fulcheri, Emma Rabino Massa, and Gilles Boetsch
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Anthropological collections, particularly those of mummies, constitute invaluable material for the reconstruction of human history.Therefore, efforts to protect these museum collections are a priority.These efforts must include particular care and attention in the study of the specimens and application of the most sophisticated techniques to acquire precise information without causing damage. The mummies in the Archaeology Museum of Palmyra are a cultural and biological patrimony of inestimable value for the Syrian city, since they are the only ones remaining after past dispersions. [...]
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- 2005
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15. The three sisters:multidetector computed tomography and 3D reconstructions of three sister mummies from the Egyptian Museum of Turin
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Federico Cesarani, Maria Cristina Martina, Rosa Boano, Anna Maria Donadoni Roveri, Andrea Ferraris, Renato Grilletto, and Giovanni Gandini
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The “three sisters” is a particular group of mummies from the Drovetti collection of the Egyptian Museum in Turin. They were purchased in 1824 by King Carlo Felice of Savoy for the new Museum. The mummies come from the area of Tebe in Upper Egypt. Their names are Tapeni (CGT 13002–Cat. 2215), Tamiu (CGT 13003–Cat. 2218), and Renpetnefert (CGT 13007–Cat.2231). They were evaluated the same day with multidetector CT (GE Light Speed Qx/I). In all three cases whole body CT helical acquisition with thin slices (2.5 mm thickness, 1.25 mm reconstruction interval) followed by multiplanar and 3D reconstructions were performed. Stature, anthropometric measurements, sex, and approximate age, were estimated. Also embalming techniques, condition of the skeleton and of the soft tissues, and the presence of foreign objects were analyzed. The similarities and differences of embalming methods were also evaluated. To our knowledge, there are no other reports of CT studies on mummies belonging to the same family. We believe these results are of particular interest for archaeology and computed imaging technology.
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- 2005
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16. Ostéochondronécroses articulaires
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Silvia Boccone, Rosa Boano, Enzo Fulcheri, and Emma Rabino Massa
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articular osteochondrosis ,osteochondritis dissecans ,articular palaeopathology ,History of Civilization ,CB3-482 - Abstract
As part of investigations carried out in the Dauphiné region of France during the past few years, ancient human remains discovered in the Church of Puy-Saint-Pierre in Briançon and in the church of La Salle les Alpes, 6-7 km from Briançon (Haute-Alpes), have undergone anthropological and palaeopathological studies.In our studies of the medieval and modern samples, we were able to observe a significant frequency of bone and joint lesions. By their morphology and location, they can be attributed to osteochondronecrosis. Osteochondronecrosis is a generic term which defines lesions of vascular origin in the joints, characterized by localized cartilage detachment and associated with or subsequent to localized subchondral bone necrosis. The lesions differ in appearance, depending on the stage of development. Generically defined by some authors as ostechondritis dissecans, osteochondrosis includes lesions that can be very different aetiologically (post-traumatic, genetic, arthritic/degenerative).
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- 2004
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17. Ancient proteins resolve controversy over the identity of Genyornis eggshell
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Beatrice Demarchi, Josefin Stiller, Alicia Grealy, Meaghan Mackie, Yuan Deng, Tom Gilbert, Julia Clarke, Lucas J. Legendre, Rosa Boano, Thomas Sicheritz-Pontén, John Magee, Guojie Zhang, Michael Bunce, Matthew James Collins, Gifford Miller, Demarchi, Beatrice [0000-0002-8398-4409], Stiller, Josefin [0000-0001-6009-9581], Mackie, Meaghan [0000-0003-0763-7592], Legendre, Lucas J [0000-0003-1343-8725], Zhang, Guojie [0000-0001-6860-1521], Collins, Matthew James [0000-0003-4226-5501], Miller, Gifford [0000-0002-8225-2740], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Multidisciplinary ,Genyornis eggshell ,Fossils ,Australia ,DNA ,Biological Evolution ,paleoproteomics ,Birds ,Egg Shell ,Animals ,Humans ,megafaunal extinction ,DNA, Ancient ,ancient DNA ,Phylogeny - Abstract
The controversy over the taxonomic identity of the eggs exploited by Australia’s first people around 50,000 y ago is resolved. The birds that laid these eggs are extinct, and distinguishing between two main candidates, a giant flightless “mihirung” Genyornis and a large megapode Progura, had proven impossible using morphological and geochemical methods. Ancient DNA sequencing remains inconclusive because of the age and burial temperature of the eggshell. In contrast, ancient protein sequences recovered from the eggshell enabled estimation of the evolutionary affinity between the egg and a range of extant taxa. The eggs are those of a Galloanseres (a group that includes extinct Dromornithidae, as well as extant landfowl and waterfowl), Genyornis, and not of the megapode (Megapodiidae, crown Galliformes). The realization that ancient biomolecules are preserved in “fossil” samples has revolutionized archaeological science. Protein sequences survive longer than DNA, but their phylogenetic resolution is inferior; therefore, careful assessment of the research questions is required. Here, we show the potential of ancient proteins preserved in Pleistocene eggshell in addressing a longstanding controversy in human and animal evolution: the identity of the extinct bird that laid large eggs which were exploited by Australia’s indigenous people. The eggs had been originally attributed to the iconic extinct flightless bird Genyornis newtoni (†Dromornithidae, Galloanseres) and were subsequently dated to before 50 ± 5 ka by Miller etnbsp;al. [Nat. Commun. 7, 10496 (2016)]. This was taken to represent the likely extinction date for this endemic megafaunal species and thus implied a role of humans in its demise. A contrasting hypothesis, according to which the eggs were laid by a large mound-builder megapode (Megapodiidae, Galliformes), would therefore acquit humans of their responsibility in the extinction of Genyornis. Ancient protein sequences were reconstructed and used to assess the evolutionary proximity of the undetermined eggshell to extant birds, rejecting the megapode hypothesis. Authentic ancient DNA could not be confirmed from these highly degraded samples, but morphometric data also support the attribution of the eggshell to Genyornis. When used in triangulation to address well-defined hypotheses, paleoproteomics is a powerful tool for reconstructing the evolutionary history in ancient samples. In addition to the clarification of phylogenetic placement, these data provide a more nuanced understanding of the modes of interactions between humans and their environment.
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- 2022
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18. Ancient proteins resolve controversy over the identity of
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Beatrice, Demarchi, Josefin, Stiller, Alicia, Grealy, Meaghan, Mackie, Yuan, Deng, Tom, Gilbert, Julia, Clarke, Lucas J, Legendre, Rosa, Boano, Thomas, Sicheritz-Pontén, John, Magee, Guojie, Zhang, Michael, Bunce, Matthew James, Collins, and Gifford, Miller
- Abstract
SignificanceThe controversy over the taxonomic identity of the eggs exploited by Australia's first people around 50,000 y ago is resolved. The birds that laid these eggs are extinct, and distinguishing between two main candidates, a giant flightless "mihirung"
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- 2022
19. Strange remains in strange places: diagnostic criteria to identify teratomas
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Rossetti, Chiara, Rosa, Boano, Valerio Gaetano Vellone, Larentis, Omar, Birkhoff, JUTTA MARIA, and Ezio, Fulcheri
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- 2022
20. CT scan and 3D reconstructions of Pre-Dynastic child mummy 527 B* (Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of Turin)
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Rosa Boano, Carlo Torre, Rudy Lallo, Raffaella Bianucci, E. Rabino Massa, Grazia Mattutino, and G Carnazza
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Anthropology ,QH301-705.5 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biochemistry (medical) ,3D reconstruction ,Computed tomography ,Plant Science ,Art ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Ethnography ,medicine ,Biology (General) ,media_common - Abstract
Mummy 527 B* belongs to the “Giovanni Marro” Egyptian Collection of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. This mummy of a oneyear- old pre-dynastic child was found in Gebelein in 1935 in a small necropolis discovered during excavations of the “Missione Archeologica Italiana” led by G. Farina, the new Director of the Egyptian Museum of Turin, with the participation of Prof. G. Marro as anthropologist. A whole body spiral CT scan with thin slices (1,00 mm thickness, 0,5 mm reconstruction interval) was followed by multiplanar and 3D reconstruction. The aim was to evaluate the child’s age at death and the presence of lethal pathologies. This study confirms the fundamental role of non-invasive techniques in the study of such rare pre-dynastic specimens.
- Published
- 2021
21. Facial reconstruction project
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Capussotto, Maria Cristina Martina, Giovanni Gandini, M Celia, R. Grilletto, A Giuliano, Rosa Boano, A.M Donadoni, and Federico Cesarani
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three-dimensional MDCT ,business.industry ,Computer science ,QH301-705.5 ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Manchester protocol ,Plant Science ,mummy ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Facial Reconstruction ,Facial reconstruction ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Biology (General) ,business - Abstract
Facial reconstruction of mummies and corpses is important in anthropological, medical and forensic studies. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the role of three- Dimensional Multidetector CT examination for 3D facial reconstruction. We present a multidisciplinary work performed by radiologists, anthropologists and forensic police in reconstructing the possible physiognomy of an ancient Egyptian mummy. Three-Dimensional data were obtained from a well-preserved completely wrapped Egyptian mummy from the collection of the Egyptian Museum in Torino, Italy, dated from XXII or XXIII dynasty (945-715 BC). Data were used as a model for the rapid prototyping stereolithographic technique, a method which allows the creation of 3D model with digital data using synthetic materials such as resin or nylon.
- Published
- 2021
22. The 'mummy in the dress' of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin
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T Higham, R Bianucci, Andrea Ferraris, R. Grilletto, Maria Cristina Martina, Federico Cesarani, Rosa Boano, R.P Evershed, C Ramsey, Giovanni Gandini, Cortese, L Pedrini, and K.A Clark
- Subjects
law ,Anthropology ,QH301-705.5 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Ethnography ,Plant Science ,Radiocarbon dating ,Art ,Biology (General) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,law.invention ,media_common - Abstract
The “Mummy in the Dress” belongs to the Egyptian Collection Giovanni Marro of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. It was recovered in Gebelein during an excavation campaign carried out at the beginning at the XX century by the Missione Archeologica Italiana under the leadership of its founder, E. Schiaparelli, Director of the Egyptian Museum of Turin. The mummy wore a pleated dress over its bandages. The body lies in a natural position, resting on its left side, on the remains of a wooden coffin. A team of anthropologists, chemists, Egyptologists and radiologists is studying the mummy with the aim of determining sex, age, embalming techniques and date of deposition. CT scans and 3D reconstruction of the mummy were carried out to enable the researchers to ascertain its sex and age, to verify what clothes enshrouded the body, to investigate its state of preservation and to learn more about the ancient techniques employed to assemble the wooden coffin.
- Published
- 2021
23. A South American embalmed head
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Rosa Boano, Rudi Lallo, Emma Rabino Massa, Massimo Massimelli, Roberto Testi, and Raffaella Bianucci
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History ,QH301-705.5 ,South american ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Head (vessel) ,Plant Science ,Anatomy ,Biology (General) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
The embalmed head of a young South American man is housed in the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin. This man, who suffered a violent facial trauma, was intentionally beheaded after his death, and his head was embalmed. The aim of this study was to determine the age at death, the cause of death and the embalming techniques by means of CT scanning, 3D reconstruction, X-rays, histology, endoscopy and scanning electron microscopy followed by microanalysis.
- Published
- 2021
24. The study of ancient archaeological finds through X-ray tomography: the case of the 'Tintinnabulum' from the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of Torino
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Luisa Vigorelli, Alessandro Re, Laura Guidorzi, Rosa Brancaccio, Cristina Bortolin, Novella Grassi, Giorgia Mila, Nadia Pastrone, Roberto Sacchi, Sabrina Grassini, Gianluigi Mangiapane, Rosa Boano, and Alessandro Lo Giudice
- Subjects
tomography ,Tintinnabulum ,x-ray ,antropology ,etnography ,History ,Computer Science Applications ,Education - Abstract
X-ray Computed Tomography (CT) is a widely used diagnostic technique in the field of Cultural Heritage and beyond, above all thanks to its non-invasiveness. The high penetrating power of X-rays allows us to investigate the internal structure of the analysed objects, thus obtaining valuable information related to the history of artistic and archaeological finds. In particular, CT provides useful data on the entire volume of the objects, to finally obtain a 3D model of the studied artworks. In this field, the goal of the “neu_ART” project, a collaboration among different institutions in Torino funded by Regione Piemonte in 2010, was to develop radio-tomographic set-ups for X-ray imaging analysis dedicated to Cultural Heritage studies. In this paper, a computed tomography investigation on an ancient ceramic rattle from the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Torino is presented. This is the first analysis carried out at the Physics Department of University of Torino, using the imaging set-up based on a TDI linear detector moved by a high precision mechanical system. Thanks to this study, much information on the technique of execution and the state of conservation was obtained.
- Published
- 2022
25. AN ATYPICAL MEDIEVAL BURIAL AT THE MONTE DEI CAPPUCCINI MONASTERY IN TORINO (ITALY): A CASE STUDY WITH HIGH-PRECISION RADIOCARBON DATING
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Rosa Boano, Carla Taricco, Roberto Giustetto, Irka Hajdas, Sara Rubinetti, Silvia Maria Alessio, and Luca P G Isella
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,060102 archaeology ,Human bones ,Human bone ,06 humanities and the arts ,Historical evidence ,Human bones, Radiocarbon AMS dating ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Geography ,law ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Radiocarbon dating ,Radiocarbon AMS dating ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
In 1989 an ancient burial consisting of a skeleton and a few objects was discovered at the Monte dei Cappuccini Monastery, in Torino (Italy). Anthropological analysis of the skeleton revealed that it belonged to a young man, and the archaeometric characterization of the objects suggested that most of them are compatible with the Medieval period. As a proper archeological survey was not conducted at the time of the finding, due to the religious nature of the site, a high-precision radiocarbon (14C) dating has been performed. The samples were processed with three different methods: besides the ultrafiltration (UF) treatment, we applied the “collagen” (COL) and the Longin-base (LB) methods. While UF and COL treatments provided compatible results, LB method returned ages older with respect the UF one, with significant disagreements in some cases and this evidence is supported by several measurements on the same individual. Thanks to the reduction of the uncertainty with the high number of measured samples and the availability of historical evidence, the possible age of the burial has been limited to the time interval 1464–1515 cal AD.
- Published
- 2020
26. Never boring: Non-invasive palaeoproteomics of mummified human skin
- Author
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Jos Woolley, Sarah Fiddyment, Pier Giorgio Righetti, Gianluigi Mangiapane, Rosa Boano, Gleb Zilberstein, Marco Mattonai, Arianna Ceron, Cecilia Pennacini, Federica Dal Bello, Beatrice Demarchi, Erika Ribechini, Sergio E. Favero-Longo, Elisa Fiore Marochetti, Bello, FD [0000-0003-0726-3025], Fiddyment, S [0000-0002-8991-2318], Mangiapane, G [0000-0003-3271-0050], Woolley, J [0000-0001-6427-5618], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,Tissue Preservation ,EVA ,Sample (material) ,Non invasive ,Biodeteriogens ,Palaeoproteomics ,Mummy ,Genealogy ,Mummy,Palaeoproteomics, Metaproteomics, EVA, Non-invasive sampling, Ancient molecules, Biodeteriogens ,Scientific analysis ,Non-invasive sampling ,Metaproteomics ,Ancient molecules ,Embalming ,Non invasive sampling - Abstract
The scientific analysis of mummified individuals can reveal important details on the way people lived and died in the past. Palaeoproteomic approaches are theoretically suitable for obtaining information on the extent of tissue preservation, on the use of protein-based substances for embalming and/or restoration, as well as for characterising the microbiota from both the individual and the environment. However, these analyses usually require the destruction of a sample of tissue, a practice which is (obviously) discouraged by most museums. Unfortunately, this means that in-depth studies, for example by taking multiple samples from each individual, are seldom feasible. Here we show that a non-invasive sampling technique, based on mixed-bed chromatographic media embedded on ethylene vinyl acetate membranes (EVA), which had previously been used exclusively on historical material, was successful in extracting ancient proteins from the surface of Egyptian mummies. We tested the method on a decontextualised fragment of skin and assessed the endogeneity of its metaproteome by comparison with a procedural blank. Furthermore, we retrieved and authenticated sequences of human collagen and keratin, as well as potential bacterial/fungal biodeteriogens, from the mummy of a young woman (Supp. 16747 of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of the University of Turin) who lived and died during the Old Kingdom of Egypt.
- Published
- 2020
27. The supracondylar process in subadult skeletal remains from Northern Italy (15th–18th century A.D.)
- Author
-
Ezio Fulcheri, Andrea Palamenghi, Rosa Boano, Robert W. Mann, Giorgia Viano, Francesca Garanzini, Marilena Girotti, and Alessandra Cinti
- Subjects
Archeology ,supracondylar process ,business.industry ,bone variants ,humerus ,immature individuals ,Struthers' ligament ,Archaeology ,Northern italy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anthropology ,Medicine ,Humerus ,business - Published
- 2020
28. Petamenophis (Padiamenemipet), an Egyptian Child Mummy Protected for Eternity
- Author
-
Federico Cesarani, Giovanni Gandini, Rosa Boano, Elisa Fiore Marochetti, and Maria Cristina Martina
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Ancient history ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Multidetector computed tomography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Whole Body Imaging ,0601 history and archaeology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Foreign Bodies ,History, Ancient ,media_common ,Embalming ,060102 archaeology ,business.industry ,Museums ,Mummies ,06 humanities and the arts ,mummy ,Eternity ,amulet ,Ancient egypt ,Child, Preschool ,mummy, Egypt, amulet, CT ,Egypt ,Amulet ,business ,CT - Abstract
Objective The objective of our work was to report the most recent findings obtained with multidetector computed tomography of a child mummy from the Roman period (119-123 CE) housed at the Egyptian Museum in Turin, Italy. Methods Multidetector computed tomography and postprocessing were applied to understand the embalming techniques, the nature of a foreign object, and anthropometrical values. The information was compared with that from other mummies that were buried in the same tomb, but today housed in different museums. Results New information regarding the embalming technique was revealed. Multidetector computed tomography allowed the identification of a knife-like metallic object, probably an amulet for the child's protection in the afterlife. Conclusions Multidetector computed tomography and image postprocessing confirm their valuable role in noninvasive studies in ancient mummies and provided evidence of a unique cultural practice in the late history of Ancient Egypt such as placing a knife possibly as an amulet.
- Published
- 2018
29. The identification of archaeological eggshell using peptide markers
- Author
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Julie Wilson, Matthew J. Collins, Anita Radini, Beatrice Demarchi, Julia Best, Samantha Presslee, Douglas G. D. Russell, Rosa Boano, Benedikt M. Kessler, Roman Fischer, Jos Woolley, Presslee, S [0000-0003-2936-525X], Wilson, J [0000-0002-5171-8480], Best, J [0000-0002-8943-5427], Russell, D [0000-0002-1799-7842], Fischer, R [0000-0002-9715-5951], Kessler, B [0000-0002-8160-2446], Boano, R [0000-0003-4421-9816], Collins, M [0000-0003-4226-5501], Demarchi, B [0000-0002-8398-4409], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Archeology ,Eggshell, birds, zooarchaeology, proteomics, mass spectrometry (ZooMS) ,mass spectrometry (ZooMS) ,Peptide ,Biology ,Proteomics ,Genome ,03 medical and health sciences ,proteomics ,zooarchaeology ,0601 history and archaeology ,lcsh:CC1-960 ,Eggshell ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,060102 archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Archaeology ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,birds ,Proteome ,Peptide sequencing ,lcsh:Archaeology ,Identification (biology) - Abstract
Avian eggshell survives well in alkaline and neutral soils, but its potential as an archaeological resource remains largely unexplored, mainly due to difficulties in its identification. Here we exploit the release of novel bird genomes and, for the first time on eggshell, use MALDI-ToF (matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight) mass spectrometry in combination with peptide sequencing by LC-MS/MS. The eggshell proteome is revealed as unexpectedly complex, with 5755 proteins identified for a reference collection comprising 23 bird species. We determined 782 m/z markers useful for eggshell identification, 583 of which could be assigned to known eggshell peptide sequences. These were used to identify eggshell fragments recovered from a medieval site at Freeschool Lane, Leicester. We discuss the specificity of the peptide markers and highlight the importance of assessing the level of taxonomic identification achievable for archaeological interpretation.
- Published
- 2017
30. Sex- and status-based differences in medieval food preparation and consumption: dental microwear analysis at Trino Vercellese, Italy
- Author
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Frank L'Engle Williams, Laurie J Reitsema, April K Smith, Rosa Boano, and Giuseppe Vercellotti
- Subjects
Archeology ,education.field_of_study ,Field emission scanning electron microscopy ,Population ,Biocultural ,Europe ,Nutritional anthropology ,Paleodiet ,Scanning electron microscopy ,Biology ,Anthropology ,Food preparation ,education ,Demography - Abstract
Food preparation is of key importance in the medieval period where the manner of preparing ingredients had major sociocultural significance. We examine sex- and status-based differences in dental occlusal microwear from a human skeletal population from medieval Trino Vercellese, Italy, to assess intrapopulation differences in food preparation. We compare microwear results with previously reported stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data to determine the extent to which these two methods for dietary reconstruction correspond. Epoxy casts of second molars from 27 males and females of high- and low-status from medieval Trino Vercellese, Italy, were studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy. Feature tally, pit percentage, pit width, and striation width are compared between subgroups. Whereas previous isotopic data identified low-status males as outliers, dental microwear analysis indicates no differences in diet between the four sex- and status-based subgroups. However, the percentage of pitting is statistically different between males and females when status groups are pooled, with males exhibiting significantly higher values (p = 0.017). When sexes are pooled, low-status individuals are found to have significantly more features compared with high-status individuals (p = 0.030). This study demonstrates the applicability of dental microwear analysis for uncovering intra-group dietary patterns in socially stratified societies.
- Published
- 2019
31. Patologia Dentaria Come Specchio Di Complessi Quadri Clinici
- Author
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Fulcheri, Ezio, Alessandra, Cinti, Vellone, VALERIO GAETANO, and Rosa, Boano
- Published
- 2019
32. Subadult dietary variation at Trino Vercellese, Italy, and its relationship to adult diet and mortality
- Author
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Giuseppe Vercellotti, Rosa Boano, and Laurie J Reitsema
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,060101 anthropology ,060102 archaeology ,Life span ,Population ,Age categories ,06 humanities and the arts ,Biology ,Phys anthropol ,Animal protein ,Anthropology ,Bioarchaeology ,parasitic diseases ,Weaning ,0601 history and archaeology ,Anatomy ,Life history ,education ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives Early-life nutrition is a predisposing factor for later-life outcomes. This study tests the hypothesis that subadults from medieval Trino Vercellese, Italy, who lived to adulthood consumed isotopically different diets compared with subadults who died before reaching adulthood. We have previously used a life history approach, comparing dentine and bone of the same adult individuals (“subadults who lived”), to elucidate dietary variation across the life span. Here, we examine diets of “subadults who died” from the same population, estimated from subadult rib collagen, to explore whether dietary behaviors of subadults who lived differed from those of subadults who died. Methods Forty-one subadults aged six months to 14.5 years were studied through stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of collagen. Results Individuals were weaned by age 4 years, with considerable variation in weaning ages overall. Post-weaning, diets of subadults who died comprised significantly less animal protein than diets of subadults who lived. Isotopic values of the two oldest individuals, 13.5 and 14.5 years, show the same status-based variation in diet as do adults from the population. Conclusions Our results suggest that incorporating animal protein in diet during growth and development supported medieval subadults' ability to survive to adulthood. Isotopic similarities between adults and older subadults suggest “adult” dietary behaviors were adopted in adolescence. Stable isotope evidence from subadults bridges a disparity between ontogenetic age categories and socioculturally meaningful age categories in the past, and sheds light on the underpinnings of health, mortality, growth, and disease in the bioarchaeological record. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2016
33. Corrigendum to 'Never boring: Non-invasive palaeoproteomics of mummified human skin' [J. Archaeol. Sci. (2020) 105145]
- Author
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Gleb Zilberstein, Sarah Fiddyment, Pier Giorgio Righetti, Marco Mattonai, Beatrice Demarchi, Gianluigi Mangiapane, Cecilia Pennacini, Jos Woolley, Erika Ribechini, Federica Dal Bello, Elisa Fiore Marochetti, Sergio E. Favero-Longo, Rosa Boano, and Arianna Ceron
- Subjects
Archeology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,Medicine ,Human skin ,Anatomy ,business ,Archaeol - Published
- 2020
34. Body size and social status in medieval Alba (Cuneo), Italy
- Author
-
Giuseppe Vercellotti, Rosa Boano, Marilena Girotti, Sam D. Stout, and Nicole M. Weiss
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Male ,Burial ,bioarchaeology ,Body size ,Biology ,bioarchaeology, socioeconomic status, stature ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Bone and Bones ,socioeconomic status ,stature ,medicine ,Body Size ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,Femur ,Humerus ,Tibia ,History, 15th Century ,060101 anthropology ,Anthropometry ,Ulna ,06 humanities and the arts ,Body Height ,History, Medieval ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Archaeology ,Italy ,Social Class ,Anthropology ,High status ,Female ,Anatomy ,Foot (unit) ,Social status ,Demography - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Previous work by Vercellotti et al. in 2011 found significant status-related differences in body size in males but not in females from the Italian bioarchaeological assemblage of San Michele di Trino (8th-14th centuries CE). The purpose of the present work is twofold: (a) to determine if status-related body size differences could be observed in the nearby collection of San Lorenzo di Alba (7th-15th centuries CE) and (b) to add to the emerging narrative of medieval Italians. MATERIALS AND METHODS Osteometric data (maximum length for the humerus, radius, ulna, femur, tibia, and fibula; bicondylar length of the femur, condylo-malleolar length of the tibia, foot height, maximum vertebral heights, and basion-bregma height) were collected for 50 (20 female, 30 male) individuals from Alba, and Monte Carlo analysis was used to assess differences in skeletal element size, skeletal height, living stature, and body mass across sex and status. RESULTS Significant differences were detected between high status and low status males in Alba for radial maximum length (p = 0.013), tibial maximum length (p = 0.011), tibial condylo-malleolar length (p = 0.012), skeletal height estimated from condylo-malleolar tibial length (p = 0.002), and stature estimated from condyle-malleolar tibial length with the age component (p = 0.003). In contrast, no significant status-based differences were observed between female subsamples (p > 0.05). DISCUSSION The patterns of intrapopulation variation observed at Alba are similar but not as pronounced as those observed at Trino, suggesting that overall life conditions experienced by the two groups were comparable.
- Published
- 2018
35. Spatial diffusion of surnames by long transhumance routes between highland and lowland: A study in Sardinia
- Author
-
Marilena Girotti, S. De Iasio, A. Orrù, Patrizio Frederic, Rosa Boano, and Emanuele Sanna
- Subjects
Male ,Population Dynamics ,Human Migration ,Names ,Anthropology ,0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Montuosa ,Altitude ,Agriculture ,History, 19th Century ,030105 genetics & heredity ,biology.organism_classification ,History, 21st Century ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,Italy ,Humans ,Montane ecology ,Female ,Point of departure ,Spatial diffusion ,Humanities - Abstract
We explored the relationships among Sardinian populations by means of a spatial analysis of surnames in five villages in the historical–geographical zone of Barbagia di Belvi, a mountainous area traditionally devoted to sheep-herding and the point of departure of transhumance toward lowland areas. We collected the surnames of 19th century Sardinian populations through the Status Animarum (parish censuses). The structures of past populations were compared with current structures based on surnames reported in telephone directories. The lowland villages studied have been the final destination of transhumance and have a different historical, cultural and economic background. The spread of surnames in Sardinia may have occurred also by means of transhumance which took place every year along precise routes from the pastoral mountain zones to the agricultural plains. The standardized index of Chen and Cavalli-Sforza was used to calculate relationships among the five villages of Barbagia di Belvi (Aritzo, Belvi, Desulo, Gadoni and Tonara). An application of non-metric multidimensional scaling to the isonymy matrices showed that the villages of Barbagia di Belvi form a group that have changed very little over time. Transhumance routes were studied by spatial autocorrelation (Moran’s I) applied to surnames. The results suggest that there has been an appreciable admixture between the Sardinian populations of the mountain villages of the central areas and the populations of southern lowland villages. Riassunto Nel presente lavoro sono state esaminate le relazioni tra le popolazioni sarde attraverso l’analisi dei cognomi in cinque comuni della zona storico-geografica della Barbagia di Belvi (Aritzo, Belvi, Desulo, Gadoni e Tonara), area montuosa tradizionalmente dedita all'allevamento delle pecore e punto di partenza della transumanza verso zone di pianura. I cognomi della popolazione sono stati rilevati dai registri parrocchiali (Status Animarum) del XIX secolo. La struttura cognominale di questo periodo e stata confrontata con quella attuale, ricavata dallo studio dei cognomi riportati negli elenchi telefonici, dei comuni di pianura, transito e destinazione finale della transumanza, che hanno un differente fondo storico, culturale ed economico. La diffusione dei cognomi in Sardegna, infatti, potrebbe essere avvenuta anche attraverso la transumanza, che si verifica ogni anno lungo percorsi precisi dalle zone montane pastorali alle pianure dedite all’agricoltura. E stato utilizzato l'indice standardizzato di Chen e Cavalli-Sforza per calcolare le relazioni tra i cinque comuni della Barbagia di Belvi. L'applicazione del non-metric multidimensional scaling alle matrici di isonimia ha mostrato che questi comuni formano un gruppo che e cambiato molto poco nel tempo. Le direttrici di transumanza sono state studiate mediante la spatial autocorrelation (Moran's I) applicata ai cognomi. I risultati suggeriscono che vi e stata un'apprezzabile commistione tra le popolazioni sarde dei comuni di montagna delle aree centrali e quelle dei comuni della pianura meridionale.
- Published
- 2018
36. X-ray, CT and DXA study of bone loss on medieval remains from North-West Italy
- Author
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Anna Castiglione, Giovannino Ciccone, A Borrè, Carlo Faletti, G.C. Isaia, Rosa Boano, Gian Luigi Panattoni, and Marco Di Stefano
- Subjects
Male ,Osteoporosis ,Population ,Dentistry ,Computed tomography ,Absorptiometry, Photon ,bone loss ,Cadaver ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,education ,DXA ,Bone mineral ,Italian medieval population ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,x-ray ,cortical index ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,History, Medieval ,Lifestyle factors ,Italy ,North west ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Rural population ,Demography ,Social status - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate whether the population differences in osteoporosis observed nowadays is a reflection of the times and modern lifestyle factors, or whether they were also present in the past. The study was performed on the skeletal remains of medieval and post-medieval populations from a burial ground in the North–West of Italy. Some individuals had been buried inside the church (privileged subjects), others outside in the parvis (members of rural population), and others still to the north of the church. X-ray, computed tomography and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry studies were carried out on the lumbar spines and/or femurs of 27 male and 28 female individuals to determine any associations between cortical index, bone mineral density (BMD), gender, age and social status. No statistically significant differences were observed in cortical index values according to gender, age or place of burial. Conversely, statistically significant differences in average BMD values were observed according to place of burial; in particular, among those buried inside the church, a lower BMD was observed compared to the parvis group (1.09 vs. 1.42, p
- Published
- 2015
37. Exploring the multidimensionality of stature variation in the past through comparisons of archaeological and living populations
- Author
-
Darna L. Dufour, Hedy M. Justus, Amanda M. Agnew, Warren M. Wilson, Clark Spencer Larsen, Barbara A. Piperata, Julio C. Reina, Paul W. Sciulli, Giuseppe Vercellotti, Sam D. Stout, and Rosa Boano
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Population ,Tall Stature ,Context (language use) ,Enamel hypoplasia ,medicine.disease ,Archaeology ,Early life ,Geography ,Variation (linguistics) ,Anthropology ,medicine ,Social inequality ,Anatomy ,education ,Demography ,Porotic hyperostosis - Abstract
Adult stature variation is commonly attributed to differential stress-levels during develop- ment. However, due to selective mortality and heteroge- neous frailty, a population's tall stature may be more indicative of high selective pressures than of positive life conditions. This article examines stature in a biocultural context and draws parallels between bioarchaeological and living populations to explore the multidimensional- ity of stature variation in the past. This study investi- gates: 1) stature differences between archaeological populations exposed to low or high stress (inferred from skeletal indicators); 2) similarities in growth retardation patterns between archaeological and living groups; and 3) the apportionment of variance in growth outcomes at the regional level in archaeological and living popula- tions. Anatomical stature estimates were examined in relation to skeletal stress indicators (cribra orbitalia, porotic hyperostosis, linear enamel hypoplasia) in two medieval bioarchaeological populations. Stature and bio- cultural information were gathered for comparative liv- ing samples from South America. Results indicate 1) significant (P < 0.01) differences in stature between groups exposed to different levels of skeletal stress; 2) greater prevalence of stunting among living groups, with similar patterns in socially stratified archaeological and modern groups; and 3) a degree of regional variance in growth outcomes consistent with that observed for highly selected traits. The relationship between early stress and growth is confounded by several factors— including catch-up growth, cultural buffering, and social inequality. The interpretations of early life conditions based on the relationship between stress and stature should be advanced with caution. Am J Phys Anthropol
- Published
- 2014
38. Multidetector CT of an Antillean Zemi Idol
- Author
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Giovanni Gandini, Federico Cesarani, C. Venturi, Emma Rabino Massa, Maria Cristina Martina, and Rosa Boano
- Subjects
Artifact (error) ,Burial ,business.industry ,Multidetector CT ,Skull ,zemi idol ,Mummies ,Multidetector ct ,History, Medieval ,Religion ,Tomography x ray computed ,Italy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,History, 15th Century - Abstract
Volumetric multidetector computed tomography (CT) was performed on an anthropomorphic cotton zemi idol from the Taino culture, which flourished in the Antilles between the 13th and 15th centuries ad. The zemi belongs to the permanent collection of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography at the University of Torino in Italy. According to some researchers of Taino culture, this is the only known cotton figure functioning as a reliquary that contains a partially preserved human skull. Postprocessing consisted of multiplanar and three-dimensional reformation of the axial CT scans. The built-in capacity of CT to measure the density of materials allowed detailed characterization of the structure of the zemi, which includes vegetable fibers, wood, stone, shells, and bone-in particular, the anterior part of a human skull. The results of this multidisciplinary study involving radiologists and physical anthropologists confirm the importance of multidetector CT in the noninvasive study of delicate museum objects and have awakened anthropologic interest in the form of multidisciplinary studies that are currently underway to better identify the social meaning of the object. These studies will undoubtedly provide new information about Taino culture.
- Published
- 2010
39. Multidetector CT Study of Gallbladder Stones in a Wrapped Egyptian Mummy
- Author
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R. Grilletto, Federico Cesarani, Elvira D’Amicone, C. Venturi, Maria Cristina Martina, Giovanni Gandini, and Rosa Boano
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Gallbladder ,Multidetector computed tomography ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Anatomy ,Gallbladder Stone ,Multidetector ct ,business - Abstract
A whole-body examination was performed with multidetector computed tomography (CT) of a completely wrapped Egyptian mummy from the collection at the Egyptian Museum in Turin, Italy. The mummy dates from the Eighteenth Dynasty. Although embalmment of the deceased man should have included evisceration in accordance with his social rank, no canopic jars containing internal organs had been found at the discovery of his tomb, and at CT, all the organs were found to have desiccated inside the body. Numerous calcified stones that were incidentally identified in the gallbladder had attenuation characteristics indicative of a predominant bile pigment content. This case demonstrates the superior capabilities of multidetector CT for the noninvasive study of embalmed bodies. The intrinsic capacity of CT for depicting the density of materials allowed not only the identification of the gallbladder stones but also their characterization.
- Published
- 2009
40. Evidence of syphilis in a noble burial discovered in Piedmont dating back to the eighteenth century
- Author
-
Abrate, M., ROSA BOANO, and Fulcheri, E.
- Subjects
Piemonte ,sifilide, scheletri, Piemonte ,scheletri ,sifilide - Published
- 2015
41. Exploring the Multidimensionality of Stature Variation in the Past Through Comparisons of Archaeological and Living Populations
- Author
-
Giuseppe, Vercellotti, Barbara A, Piperata, Amanda M, Agnew, Warren M, Wilson, Darna L, Dufour, Julio C, Reina, Rosa, Boano, Hedy M, Justus, Clark Spencer, Larsen, Sam D, Stout, and Paul W, Sciulli
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,middle ages ,anatomical method ,White People ,Article ,Anthropology, Physical ,Young Adult ,interdisciplinarity ,Reference Values ,Stress, Physiological ,Humans ,Aged ,biocultural ,Indians, South American ,stunting ,Middle Aged ,South America ,Body Height ,History, Medieval ,Archaeology ,Italy ,Social Class ,indicators of stress, stunting, middle ages, anatomical method, interdisciplinarity, biocultural ,indicators of stress ,Female ,Poland - Abstract
Adult stature variation is commonly attributed to differential stress-levels during development. However, due to selective mortality and heterogeneous frailty, a population’s tall stature may be more indicative of high selective pressures than of positive life conditions. This article examines stature in a biocultural context and draws parallels between bioarchaeological and living populations to explore the multidimensionality of stature variation in the past. This study investigates: 1) stature differences between archaeological populations exposed to low or high stress (inferred from skeletal indicators); 2) similarities in growth retardation patterns between archaeological and living groups; and 3) the apportionment of variance in growth outcomes at the regional level in archaeological and living populations. Anatomical stature estimates were examined in relation to skeletal stress indicators (cribra orbitalia, porotic hyperostosis, linear enamel hypoplasia) in two medieval bioarchaeological populations. Stature and biocultural information were gathered for comparative living samples from South America. Results indicate 1) significant (P < 0.01) differences in stature between groups exposed to different levels of skeletal stress; 2) greater prevalence of stunting among living groups, with similar patterns in socially stratified archaeological and modern groups; and 3) a degree of regional variance in growth outcomes consistent with that observed for highly selected traits. The relationship between early stress and growth is confounded by several factors—including catch-up growth, cultural buffering, and social inequality. The interpretations of early life conditions based on the relationship between stress and stature should be advanced with caution.
- Published
- 2014
42. The matrimonial behavior of a rural population in Haute-Vienne, France
- Author
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Gianluigi Mangiapane, Marilena Girotti, Sergio De Iasio, Gilles Boëtsch, and Rosa Boano
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Biodemography ,biodemography ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Population ,family reconstruction ,Plant Science ,Consanguinity ,matrimonial behaviour ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Geography ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Openness to experience ,biodemography, matrimonial behaviour, family reconstruction ,Socioeconomics ,education ,Rural population ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Demography - Abstract
Although biodemography prefers to focus on isolated human populations, in our analysis we have considered an opened community, neither culturally nor geographically separated from the nearby communities. The aim of the present study was to reconstruct the degree of consanguinity and assess the level of openness of a certain French population through the observation of its people’s matrimonial behavior. Marriages and, in general, the choice of the partner, are often affected by culture and society which affect, in the end, the community’s genic pool.
- Published
- 2014
43. Biodemographic characteristics of North-Western Italian population (Giaglione - Susa Valley) between 18th and 19th century
- Author
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Rosa Boano, Giulia Levati, Marcello Fagiano, Sergio De Iasio, and Marilena Girotti
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Biodemography ,Exogamy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Immigration ,Population ,Alpine populations ,Microevolution ,Plant Science ,Census ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Genealogy ,Documentation ,households structure ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Endogamy ,education ,households structure, Alpine populations, biodemography ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
For the study of genetic changes that occur over time in human communities (microevolution) anthropologists and biodemographers have favored the use of renewable flow, in particular the registers of marriage. Indeed they allow to easily estimate several biodemographic parameters (endogamy and exogamy; repeated pairs; immigration), even for long periods of time, since it is quite common to have consecutive series of documents relating to the marriage of a population. However, the sources of flow do not always allow to study in depth the factors that have given continuity to the community because they provide only partial information on demographic structure, the mode of aggregation of its members and the processes of change within families. A good alternative to sources of flow may be the use of sources of state, civil (censuses) or parish sources (the status animarum), which give a very detailed picture of the state of the population at a given time. The retrieval and analysis of census documentation assume therefore a primary role in order to obviate the intrinsic weaknesses of the sources of flow. In the perspective of biodemographic studies, the integration of the two types of sources is in actual fact the operating optimum. It must be remembered that it is quite difficult to find contemporary sources of flow and of state for the Italian populations of the past.
- Published
- 2014
44. Biodemography and Alpine populations: the human isolate of the Queyras
- Author
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S. De Iasio, Emma Rabino, Rosa Boano, Michel Prost, and Marilena Girotti
- Subjects
Biodemography ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Ecology ,Endogamy ,Evolutionary biology ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Alpine populations, Endogamy, Surnames, Genetic isolate ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Genetic isolate ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Not available.
- Published
- 2013
45. Small effective population size and genetic homogeneity in the Val Borbera isolate
- Author
-
Stefano Mona, Cinzia Sala, Vincenza Colonna, Giovanni Gambaro, Fiammetta Viganò, Nicole Soranzo, Rosa Boano, Lorenzo Bomba, Giuseppe Matullo, Giovanni Malerba, Giorgio Pistis, Alessandro Achilli, Antonio Torroni, Daniela Toniolo, Baharak Hooshiar Kashani, Universita Vita Salute San Raffaele = Vita-Salute San Raffaele University [Milan, Italie] (UniSR), Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB ), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Genetics, Biology and Biochemistry, Università degli studi di Torino = University of Turin (UNITO), Institute for Scientific Interchange Foundation, Genetics and Cell Biology, Università degli Studi di Pavia = University of Pavia (UNIPV), Dipartimento di Chimica [Perugia], Università degli Studi di Perugia = University of Perugia (UNIPG), Dipartimento di Biologia e Biotecnologie 'L. Spallanzani', Section of Biology & Genetics, Università degli studi di Verona = University of Verona (UNIVR), Division of Nephrology [Rome], Catholic University-Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS, and IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute [Milan, Italie]
- Subjects
Adult ,Adolescent ,Population ,genetic homogeneity ,genetic isolate ,Biology ,Settore MED/03 - GENETICA MEDICA ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Article ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Young Adult ,Effective population size ,Genetic drift ,Val Borbera ,Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Genetic variability ,meta-analysis, population genetics, sequencing, polymorphisms, genetic isolate ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Population Density ,education.field_of_study ,Models, Genetic ,Genetic heterogeneity ,Genetic Drift ,Homozygote ,population genetics ,Genetic Variation ,sequencing ,Middle Aged ,Genetic isolate ,effective population size ,linkage disequilibrium ,Pedigree ,meta-analysis ,Genetics, Population ,Haplotypes ,Italy ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology ,polymorphisms ,Imputation (genetics) - Abstract
Population isolates are a valuable resource for medical genetics because of their reduced genetic, phenotypic and environmental heterogeneity. Further, extended linkage disequilibrium (LD) allows accurate haplotyping and imputation. In this study, we use nuclear and mitochondrial DNA data to determine to what extent the geographically isolated population of the Val Borbera valley also presents features of genetic isolation. We performed a comparative analysis of population structure and estimated effective population size exploiting LD data. We also evaluated haplotype sharing through the analysis of segments of autozygosity. Our findings reveal that the valley has features characteristic of a genetic isolate, including reduced genetic heterogeneity and reduced effective population size. We show that this population has been subject to prolonged genetic drift and thus we expect many variants that are rare in the general population to reach significant frequency values in the valley, making this population suitable for the identification of rare variants underlying complex traits.
- Published
- 2012
46. [Medical recollections. Open a King's body: why and how? The case of Henry IV]
- Author
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Philippe, Charlier, Renato, Grilletto, Rosa, Boano, Danielle, Gourevitch, Bruno, Galland, Jean-Pierre, Babelon, and Jacques, King Henry IV
- Subjects
History, 17th Century ,Famous Persons ,History, 16th Century ,Forensic Anthropology ,France - Published
- 2011
47. Intrapopulation Variation in Stature and Body Proportions: Social Status and Sex Differences in an Italian Medieval Population (Trino Vercellese, VC)
- Author
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Sam D. Stout, Rosa Boano, Giuseppe Vercellotti, Paul W. Sciulli, Dept Anthropol,Ohio State Univ, Ohio State University [Columbus] (OSU), UMR 6578 : Anthropologie Bio-Culturelle (UAABC), Université de la Méditerranée - Aix-Marseille 2-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Università degli studi di Torino = University of Turin (UNITO), Dipartimento Biol Anim & Uomo, Univ Turin, and Università degli studi di Torino (UNITO)
- Subjects
Male ,Population ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,Postcrania ,Population genetics ,Biology ,Trino Vercellese ,middle-ages ,Italy ,body proportions ,stature ,body mass ,Bone and Bones ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Anthropology, Physical ,Sex Factors ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Principal Component Analysis ,060101 anthropology ,Body proportions ,060102 archaeology ,Regression analysis ,06 humanities and the arts ,Anthropometry ,Body Height ,History, Medieval ,Variation (linguistics) ,Genetics, Population ,Social Class ,Anthropology ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Anatomy ,Demography ,Social status - Abstract
The phenotypic expression of adult body size and shape results from synergistic interactions between hereditary factors and environmental conditions experienced during growth. Variation in body size and shape occurs even in genetically relatively homogeneous groups, due to different occurrence, duration, and timing of growth insults. Understanding the causes and patterns of intrapopulation variation can foster meaningful information on early life conditions in living and past populations. This study assesses the pattern of biological variation in body size and shape attributable to sex and social status in a medieval Italian population. The sample includes 52 (20 female, 32 male) adult individuals from the medieval population of Trino Vercellese, Italy. Differences in element size and overall body size (skeletal height and body mass) were assessed through Monte Carlo methods, while univariate non-parametric tests and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) were employed to examine segmental and overall body proportions. Discriminant Analysis was employed to determine the predictive value of individual skeletal elements for social status in the population. Our results highlight a distinct pattern in body size and shape variation in relation to status and sex. Male subsamples exhibit significant postcranial variation in body size, while female subsamples express smaller, nonsignificant differences. The analysis of segmental proportions highlighted differences in trunk/lower limb proportions between different status samples, and PCA indicated that in terms of purely morphological variation high status males were distinct from all other groups. The pattern observed likely resulted from a combination of biological factors and cultural practices.
- Published
- 2011
48. Scenes from the past: multidetector CT study of gallbladder stones in a wrapped Egyptian mummy
- Author
-
Federico, Cesarani, Maria Cristina, Martina, Rosa, Boano, Renato, Grilletto, Elvira, D'Amicone, Claudio, Venturi, and Giovanni, Gandini
- Subjects
Male ,Embalming ,Humans ,Egypt ,Gallstones ,Mummies ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
A whole-body examination was performed with multidetector computed tomography (CT) of a completely wrapped Egyptian mummy from the collection at the Egyptian Museum in Turin, Italy. The mummy dates from the Eighteenth Dynasty. Although embalmment of the deceased man should have included evisceration in accordance with his social rank, no canopic jars containing internal organs had been found at the discovery of his tomb, and at CT, all the organs were found to have desiccated inside the body. Numerous calcified stones that were incidentally identified in the gallbladder had attenuation characteristics indicative of a predominant bile pigment content. This case demonstrates the superior capabilities of multidetector CT for the noninvasive study of embalmed bodies. The intrinsic capacity of CT for depicting the density of materials allowed not only the identification of the gallbladder stones but also their characterization.
- Published
- 2009
49. [The School of Palaeopathology of Turin: from the histology of mummified tissues to the monitoring and programmed conservation of the mummies of the Egyptian Museum and the Anthropology Museum]
- Author
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Rosa, Boano
- Subjects
Quality Control ,Schools, Health Occupations ,Italy ,Paleopathology ,Anthropology ,Museums ,Egypt ,Mummies ,Organ Preservation ,History, 20th Century - Abstract
Scientific analyses, frequent revisions of historical collections and unsuitable preservation conditions in storage and display environments can cause damage to the anthropological patrimony. Therefore, there is an urgent need to establish criteria for the correct conservation of anthropological material according to a "standard of quality". Within the context of a broad and complex view of the protection of anthropological materials, the methodology followed by the research group is aimed at identifying a series of primary (diagnostic) and supportive (therapeutic) interactive processes. The final purpose of these processes is the programmed management of each specimen which is able to identify and control the activities necessary for conservation of the material.
- Published
- 2008
50. A case of bifid rib from the 'G.Marro' egyptian osteological collection
- Author
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Rosa Boano, E. Rabino Massa, and Ezio Fulcheri
- Subjects
History ,Osteology ,Biochemistry (medical) ,bifid rib ,Plant Science ,Bifid rib ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Skeleton (computer programming) ,Egypt ,archaeological specimens ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,medicine ,Skeletal malformation ,Right fourth rib ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Paleopathology - Abstract
The study was conducted on a skeleton belonging to the "G. Marro"Egyptian anthropological collection. The skeleton came from a single grave at Gebelein (Upper Egypt) ; the archaelogical evidence dates it to the Dynastic period. The skeleton is well preserved and complete in all its anatomical parts. The remains are referable to a child of around 4 years. The excellent state of preservation of the skeleton allowed a detailed macroscopic study of all the skeletal regions, which revealed a congenital defect of the right fourth rib : anterior end of the rib is bifucated. The present case documents a skeletal malformation rarely observed in archaelogical material
- Published
- 2006
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