Darrera modificació: 2020-02-21 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Anđelinović, Šimun - Anterić, Ivana - Škorić, Ela - Bašić, Željana, "Skeleton changes induced by horse riding on medieval skeletal remains from Croatia", The International Journal of the History of Sport, 32/5 (2015), 708-721.
- Resum
- Skeletal remains of 35 individuals from the Croatian excavation site Kamen Most – Kaldrma from the fourteenth to fifteenth centuries were analyzed anthropologically. Due to specific skeletal characteristics, eight of them were analyzed in great detail in this study. The results of additional analysis indicated that all bone elements, except pelves, of all eight persons belonged to males. All pelvic girdle have characteristics of female sex and pronounced muscle attachments that are both indicative of horse riding. All eight persons had at least two of six changes on femora indicative of horse riding. Vertebrae of seven persons (one person did not have preserved vertebrae) have Schmorl's nodes. Signs of advanced osteoarthritis were found on all joints in all eight persons. All of them also have visible signs of periostitis especially on lower extremities. Pathological signs of trauma were found in five persons. Two of them had skull fractures and the rest had fractures of extremities which are also characteristic for horse riders. The average age of all eight persons was above 45 years at death. DNA analysis confirmed male sex for seven individuals. The results were additionally confirmed by later archeological findings of tombstones with illustrations of horse riders.
- Matèries
- Arqueologia
Història de la medicina Medicina - Pesta i altres malalties
- URL
- https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/095233 ...
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