The Archaeology Laboratory in the Department of History and
Archaeology at UWI has housed the James W. Lee Collection of Arawak
artefacts and human remains since 2000. A complete database is being
prepared by two of the authors (PAJ and ER) as part of a project under the
auspices of the Jamaica Bauxite Institute. The collection spans a total of
265 sites and was collected over a 27 year period (1959-1986). Eight caves
and 16 open-air sites produced human remains, with a minimal number
of 46 individuals. Despite adverse taphonomic factors, age and sex
estimation, metric analyses, and pathological case descriptions, could be
carried out in a number of cases. This paper will focus on the
paleopathological evidence. Two skulls (EC12, Bull Savannah #2 cave, St.
Elizabeth, and CC15, Taylor's Hut cave, Clarendon) were artificially
modified. CC15 was found inside a bowl. At E12 (Black River West) an
increase in thickness in two fragments of tibiae and in one fibula is
regarded as a pathological condition, possibly related to treponematosis.
Signs of degenerative joint diseases, such as eburnation in an atlas and in
a humerus, and osteoarthritis in several bones, were detected at J1
(Hartfield) and JC7 (Spot Valley cave). Finally a case of agenesis exists in
the right decidual incisor in a mandible of a juvenile with an age-at-death
around 4 years (Y4, Rio Nuevo, St. Mary). This study is a contribution to
the understanding of extinct pre-Columbian populations in the
Caribbean region.
Os artefactos e os restos osteológicos recolhidos, entre 1959 e
1986, por James Lee em 265 locais arqueológicos transitaram em 2000
para o Archaeology Laboratory, Department of History and Archaeology,
University of West Indies, Jamaica. Num projecto apoiado pelo Jamaica
Bauxite Institute dois dos autores (PAJ e ER) preparam uma base de dados
da coleção. Em oito grutas e 16 jazidas a céu aberto existiam restos
humanos que correspondem a um número mínimo de 46 indivíduos.
Apesar da adversidade da tafonomia puderam ser avaliados parâmetros
paleogeográficos e referenciadas algumas patologias: modificações em
dois crânios (CC15, Gruta de Taylor's Hut, e EC12, Gruta de Bull
Savannah #2) um dos quais foi encontrado dentro de um vaso; evidências
prováveis de treponematoses em fragmentos de dois fémures e duma
tíbia de E12 (Black River West); sinais de doenças degenerativas das
articulações, nomeadamente eburnação num atlas e num úmero, no
material proveniente de J1 (Hartfield) e de JC7 (Gruta de Spot Valley); e,
agenesia do incisivo direito decidual na mandíbula de uma criança com
cerca de 4 anos de idade à morte (Y4, Rio Nuevo). Este estudo é, assim,
uma contribuição para o conhecimento das populações pré-Colombianas
extintas das Caraíbas.
The Archaeology Laboratory in the Department of History and
Archaeology at UWI has housed the James W. Lee Collection of Arawak
artefacts and human remains since 2000. A complete database is being
prepared by two of the authors (PAJ and ER) as part of a project under the
auspices of the Jamaica Bauxite Institute. The collection spans a total of
265 sites and was collected over a 27 year period (1959-1986). Eight caves
and 16 open-air sites produced human remains, with a minimal number
of 46 individuals. Despite adverse taphonomic factors, age and sex
estimation, metric analyses, and pathological case descriptions, could be
carried out in a number of cases. This paper will focus on the
paleopathological evidence. Two skulls (EC12, Bull Savannah #2 cave, St.
Elizabeth, and CC15, Taylor's Hut cave, Clarendon) were artificially
modified. CC15 was found inside a bowl. At E12 (Black River West) an
increase in thickness in two fragments of tibiae and in one fibula is
regarded as a pathological condition, possibly related to treponematosis.
Signs of degenerative joint diseases, such as eburnation in an atlas and in
a humerus, and osteoarthritis in several bones, were detected at J1
(Hartfield) and JC7 (Spot Valley cave). Finally a case of agenesis exists in
the right decidual incisor in a mandible of a juvenile with an age-at-death
around 4 years (Y4, Rio Nuevo, St. Mary). This study is a contribution to
the understanding of extinct pre-Columbian populations in the
Caribbean region.
Os artefactos e os restos osteológicos recolhidos, entre 1959 e
1986, por James Lee em 265 locais arqueológicos transitaram em 2000
para o Archaeology Laboratory, Department of History and Archaeology,
University of West Indies, Jamaica. Num projecto apoiado pelo Jamaica
Bauxite Institute dois dos autores (PAJ e ER) preparam uma base de dados
da coleção. Em oito grutas e 16 jazidas a céu aberto existiam restos
humanos que correspondem a um número mínimo de 46 indivíduos.
Apesar da adversidade da tafonomia puderam ser avaliados parâmetros
paleogeográficos e referenciadas algumas patologias: modificações em
dois crânios (CC15, Gruta de Taylor's Hut, e EC12, Gruta de Bull
Savannah #2) um dos quais foi encontrado dentro de um vaso; evidências
prováveis de treponematoses em fragmentos de dois fémures e duma
tíbia de E12 (Black River West); sinais de doenças degenerativas das
articulações, nomeadamente eburnação num atlas e num úmero, no
material proveniente de J1 (Hartfield) e de JC7 (Gruta de Spot Valley); e,
agenesia do incisivo direito decidual na mandíbula de uma criança com
cerca de 4 anos de idade à morte (Y4, Rio Nuevo). Este estudo é, assim,
uma contribuição para o conhecimento das populações pré-Colombianas
extintas das Caraíbas.