Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431

We present the first application of high-resolution micro computed tomography in an analysis of both the internal and external morphology of the lumbar region of StW 431 - a hominin skeleton recovered from Member 4 infill of the Sterkfontein Caves (South Africa) in 1987. The lumbar vertebrae of the individual present a number of proliferative and erosive bony processes, which were investigated in this study. Investigations suggest a complex history of taphonomic alteration to pre-existing spinal degenerative joint disease (SDJD) as well as post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. This study is in agreement with previous pathological diagnoses of SDJD which affected StW 431 and is the first time insect traces on this hominin are described. The results of this analysis attest to the complex series of post-mortem processes affecting the Sterkfontein site and its fossil assemblages. SIGNIFICANCE: • First application of high-resolution micro computed tomography of the lumbar region of StW 431, a partial skeleton of Australopithecus africanus, attests to pre-existing degenerative joint disease and identifies post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. • The co-occurrence of degenerative pathology and insect modification may not be unique to StW 431. A combination of traditional morphoscopic analysis and non-invasive high-resolution tomography is recommended.

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Main Authors: Odes,Edward J., Parkinson,Alexander H., Randolph-Quinney,Patrick S., Zipfel,Bernhard, Jakata,Kudakwashe, Bonney,Heather, Berger,Lee R.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2017
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532017000100013
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spelling oai:scielo:S0038-235320170001000132017-02-23Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431Odes,Edward J.Parkinson,Alexander H.Randolph-Quinney,Patrick S.Zipfel,BernhardJakata,KudakwasheBonney,HeatherBerger,Lee R. Sterkfontein micro computed tomography spinal degenerative joint disease palaeopathology taphonomy We present the first application of high-resolution micro computed tomography in an analysis of both the internal and external morphology of the lumbar region of StW 431 - a hominin skeleton recovered from Member 4 infill of the Sterkfontein Caves (South Africa) in 1987. The lumbar vertebrae of the individual present a number of proliferative and erosive bony processes, which were investigated in this study. Investigations suggest a complex history of taphonomic alteration to pre-existing spinal degenerative joint disease (SDJD) as well as post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. This study is in agreement with previous pathological diagnoses of SDJD which affected StW 431 and is the first time insect traces on this hominin are described. The results of this analysis attest to the complex series of post-mortem processes affecting the Sterkfontein site and its fossil assemblages. SIGNIFICANCE: • First application of high-resolution micro computed tomography of the lumbar region of StW 431, a partial skeleton of Australopithecus africanus, attests to pre-existing degenerative joint disease and identifies post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. • The co-occurrence of degenerative pathology and insect modification may not be unique to StW 431. A combination of traditional morphoscopic analysis and non-invasive high-resolution tomography is recommended.Academy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science v.113 n.1-2 20172017-02-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532017000100013en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
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databasecode rev-scielo-za
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region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Odes,Edward J.
Parkinson,Alexander H.
Randolph-Quinney,Patrick S.
Zipfel,Bernhard
Jakata,Kudakwashe
Bonney,Heather
Berger,Lee R.
spellingShingle Odes,Edward J.
Parkinson,Alexander H.
Randolph-Quinney,Patrick S.
Zipfel,Bernhard
Jakata,Kudakwashe
Bonney,Heather
Berger,Lee R.
Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
author_facet Odes,Edward J.
Parkinson,Alexander H.
Randolph-Quinney,Patrick S.
Zipfel,Bernhard
Jakata,Kudakwashe
Bonney,Heather
Berger,Lee R.
author_sort Odes,Edward J.
title Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
title_short Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
title_full Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
title_fullStr Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
title_full_unstemmed Osteopathology and insect traces in the Australopithecus africanus skeleton StW 431
title_sort osteopathology and insect traces in the australopithecus africanus skeleton stw 431
description We present the first application of high-resolution micro computed tomography in an analysis of both the internal and external morphology of the lumbar region of StW 431 - a hominin skeleton recovered from Member 4 infill of the Sterkfontein Caves (South Africa) in 1987. The lumbar vertebrae of the individual present a number of proliferative and erosive bony processes, which were investigated in this study. Investigations suggest a complex history of taphonomic alteration to pre-existing spinal degenerative joint disease (SDJD) as well as post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. This study is in agreement with previous pathological diagnoses of SDJD which affected StW 431 and is the first time insect traces on this hominin are described. The results of this analysis attest to the complex series of post-mortem processes affecting the Sterkfontein site and its fossil assemblages. SIGNIFICANCE: • First application of high-resolution micro computed tomography of the lumbar region of StW 431, a partial skeleton of Australopithecus africanus, attests to pre-existing degenerative joint disease and identifies post-mortem modification by an unknown insect. • The co-occurrence of degenerative pathology and insect modification may not be unique to StW 431. A combination of traditional morphoscopic analysis and non-invasive high-resolution tomography is recommended.
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2017
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532017000100013
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