A morphological and molecular approach to investigating infectious disease in early medieval Iberia: The necropolis of La Olmeda (Palencia, Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Coppola Bove, L.; L. Kirkpatrick, C.; Vigil-Escalera Guirado, A.; Botella López, M. C.; I. Bos, K.Editorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
ancient DNA brucellosis malaria
Fecha
2024-07-04Referencia bibliográfica
Coppola Bove, L. et. al. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, e24994. [https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24994]
Patrocinador
European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: 805268; Erasmus+ Traineeship Program Scholarship; Junta de Andalucía and SEPIE; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellowship, Grant/Award Number: 756-2023-0246Resumen
Objective: Here we investigate infectious diseases that potentially contribute to
osteological lesions in individuals from the early medieval necropolis of La Olmeda
(6th-11th c. CE) in North Iberia.
Materials and methods: We studied a minimum number of 268 individuals (33 adult
females; 38 adult males, 77 unknown/indeterminate sex; and 120 non-adults), including
articulated and commingled remains. Individuals with differential diagnoses suggesting
chronic systemic infectious diseases were sampled and bioinformatically
screened for ancient pathogen DNA.
Results: Five non-adults (and no adults) presented skeletal evidence of chronic systemic
infectious disease (1.87% of the population; 4.67% of non-adults). The preferred
diagnoses for these individuals included tuberculosis, brucellosis, and malaria.
Ancient DNA fragments assigned to the malaria-causing pathogen, Plasmodium spp.,
were identified in three of the five individuals. Observed pathology includes lesions
generally consistent with malaria; however, additional lesions in two of the individuals
may represent hitherto unknown variation in the skeletal manifestation of this disease
or co-infection with tuberculosis or brucellosis. Additionally, spondylolysis was
observed in one individual with skeletal lesions suggestive of infectious disease.
Conclusions: This study sheds light on the pathological landscape in Iberia during a
time of great social, demographic, and environmental change. Genetic evidence challenges
the hypothesis that malaria was absent from early medieval Iberia and demonstrates
the value of combining osteological and archaeogenetic methods. Additionally, all of the preferred infectious diagnoses for the individuals included in
this study (malaria, tuberculosis, and brucellosis) could have contributed to the febrile
cases described in historical sources from this time.





