Implications of the prevalence of Ascaris sp. in the funerary context of a Late Antique population (5th-7th c.) in Granada (Spain) López-Gijón, Ramón Rubio Salvador, Ángel Duras, Salvatore Botella López, Miguel Cecilio Alemán Aguilera, María Inmaculada Bustamante Álvarez, Macarena de los Sant Sánchez-Barba Muñoz, Lydia Paz Paleoparasitology Roman Era Agriculture Hygiene E. Camarós is funded by the Ramón y Cajal Program. A. Rubio Salvador is funded by the Postdoctoral Margaritas Salas grant from the Ministerio de Universidades [UNI/551/2021] and by a Next Generation EU grant from the University of Granada. Objective: To evaluate the prevalence of gastro-intestinal parasites in human remains from Late Antiquity (5th – 7th c.) Granada (Spain). Materials: The study included pelvic and cranial control samples from 17 skeletons from the archaeological sites of Los Mondragones (n = 13) and Rafael Guillén (n = 4). Methods: In the paleoparasitological study, soil samples from pelvic area and cranium were analyzed using the rehydration, homogenization, and micro-sieving method and visualization under brightfield microscopy. Results: Ascaris sp. eggs were detected in pelvic samples from seven individuals. Conclusions: These findings may indicate that this parasite was endemic. Its detection frequency is one of the highest reported at group level in an osteological series from Late Antiquity. Significance: The prevalence of Ascaris sp. associated with skeletal remains has implications for assessing the lifestyle and health of populations in southern Spain during the Late Antique period. Limitations: The number of individuals is small and taphonomic processes could have limited paleoparasitological findings Suggestions for further research: Future interdisciplinary studies of this type are warranted in larger osteological series to improve knowledge of parasitosis in the past. 2023-10-31T11:03:30Z 2023-10-31T11:03:30Z 2023-12 journal article R. López-Gijón et al. Implications of the prevalence of Ascaris sp. in the funerary context of a Late Antique population (5th-7th c.) in Granada (Spain). International Journal of Paleopathology 43 (2023) 45–50. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpp.2023.09.002] https://hdl.handle.net/10481/85369 10.1016/j.ijpp.2023.09.002 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ open access Atribución 4.0 Internacional Elsevier