Bridging the Gap: Using Biological Data from Teeth to Comment on Social Identity of Archaeological Populations from Early Anglo-Saxon, England

Stewart, Allison (2021) Bridging the Gap: Using Biological Data from Teeth to Comment on Social Identity of Archaeological Populations from Early Anglo-Saxon, England. Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger . ISSN 0940-9602

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2021.151876

Abstract

Human teeth are storytellers, in that, through analysis of their size and shape osteoarchaeologists are able to ‘talk’ to the dead and translate biological data into social meaning. This concept has been explored in parts of the world through investigations of biological similarity and kinship, but few have focused in depth on early medieval populations who emphasised the importance of family and kinship. This paper presents the results from four early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries which highlight the utility of dental metrics in identifying biological similarity within the skeletal assemblages. 5988 mesiodistal and buccolingual measurements were recorded from the identifiable permanent dentition of adult individuals from early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in the UK counties of Cambridgeshire and Kent. Results from statistical hierarchical cluster analysis of dental metric data revealed that it was possible to identify individuals within the cemetery sites that were more similar to one another according to their dental metrics. This similarity was not attributed statistically to biological sex or shared familial environment, as similarity between individuals could be found between males and females and few significant differences were found across the sites sampled. It was found that tooth metrics provided a meaningful biological dataset from which current theories regarding the identity of Anglo-Saxon individuals and families could be refined and improved. These types of data are useful as building blocks which help to bridge the gap between social constructs and human skeletal remains in order to substantiate interpretations about past populations in more significant ways. This work supports the need for multidisciplinary approaches to bioarchaeological investigations of past people while highlighting the utility of human dentition to enhance such areas of study.


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