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Pinworm Infection at Salmon Ruins and Aztec Ruins: Relation to Pueblo III Regional Violence
- Source :
- The Korean Journal of Parasitology
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- The study of coprolites has been a theme of archaeology in the American Southwest. A feature of archaeoparasitology on the Colorado Plateau is the ubiquity of pinworm infection. As a crowd parasite, this ubiquity signals varying concentrations of populations. Our recent analysis of coprolite deposits from 2 sites revealed the highest prevalence of infection ever recorded for the region. For Salmon Ruins, the deposits date from AD 1140 to 1280. For Aztec Ruins, the samples can be dated by artifact association between AD 1182-1253. Both sites can be placed in the Ancestral Pueblo III occupation (AD 1100-1300), which included a period of cultural stress associated with warfare. Although neither of these sites show evidence of warfare, they are typical of large, defensible towns that survived this time of threat by virtue of large populations in stonewalled villages with easily accessible water. We hypothesize that the concentration of large numbers of people promoted pinworm infection and, therefore, explains the phenomenal levels of infection at these sites.
- Subjects :
- Colorado
Archaeoparasitology
Aztec Ruins
Coprolite
Colorado plateau
Brief Communication
pinworm infection
03 medical and health sciences
Pinworm infection
medicine
Animals
Humans
0601 history and archaeology
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
Artifact (archaeology)
060102 archaeology
Enterobiasis
06 humanities and the arts
medicine.disease
Archaeology
History, Medieval
Infectious Diseases
Geography
Salmon Ruins
Parasitology
Enterobius
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17380006
- Volume :
- 57
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Korean journal of parasitology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c42f770a19d3f06cf52b93b7108ab722