🇮🇨🇮🇨 Hallazgo inédito en un excavación arqueológica a los pies del Roque Bentayga #Patrimonio #arqueología #canarias
www.eldiario.es/canariasahor...
🇮🇨🇮🇨 Hallazgo inédito en un excavación arqueológica a los pies del Roque Bentayga #Patrimonio #arqueología #canarias
www.eldiario.es/canariasahor...
📢 Our latest article is out!
We present the first direct evidence of cereal harvesting during the Indigenous period of the Canary Islands, identified through use-wear analysis of lithic tools from the C008 granary at Roque Bentayga 🌾🪨
@ulpgc.es @jonsantana.bsky.social
¡Nuestra última investigación en prensa! 🤩🪨🌾
@ulpgc.es @jonsantana.bsky.social
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti... @ulpgc.es @idaba15.bsky.social @gorgojito.bsky.social
Hi Sam, would love to be added to the list too. Cheers
Results support the plasticity/constraint model: early-life stress constrained later survival and resilience, showing how diet, demography & ecology shaped Indigenous Canarian life histories. #islandarchaeology #dentalanthropology #humanadaptation
🧑🤝🧑 Sex differences: males consistently showed higher LEH than females—supporting the male vulnerability hypothesis.
Those with LEH were underrepresented in older age groups → early stress reduced survival odds.
Findings reveal striking differences in stress prevalence across islands. La Palma showed the lowest LEH prevalence. Its mixed subsistence. buffered stress.Gran Canaria & Tenerife had higher LEH, linked to agricultural reliance and its vulnerabilities.
🦷 This paper explores how early-life stress shaped Indigenous populations of the Canary Islands (2nd–15th c. CE). The team studied 409 individuals from six islands, focusing on linear enamel hypoplasia (LEH)—a marker of childhood stress episodes recorded in teeth.
🚨🏝️🦷Stress, Life History, and Linear Enamel Hypoplasia: Insights From the Indigenous Populations of the Canary Islands - by Aarón Morquecho Izquier, Rebeca García-González and Ame J Biol Anthr onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
@erc.europa.eu, @ulpgc.es, @ubuinvestiga.bsky.social
🌍📜 New study on the Amazigh period in the Canary Islands (1st–15th c. CE):
Radiocarbon data reveal how climate & biogeography shaped population trends 🏝️🌦️🌿 #IslandArchaeology #ClimateHistory #CanaryIslands @ulpgcresearch @ERC_Research @DUlpgc www.nature.com/articles/s41...