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ANTHROPOLOGY-MATTERS  November 2008

ANTHROPOLOGY-MATTERS November 2008

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Subject:

RAI: urgent_rai_announcements.html

From:

Marsland Rebecca <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Marsland Rebecca <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 18 Nov 2008 13:13:49 +0000

Content-Type:

multipart/mixed

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (187 lines) , text/plain (25 lines)

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For information on the RAI please contact the Office Manager  and  
about the website contact the webmaster.	
Urgent RAI announcements

FORTHCOMING EVENTS


The Wellcome Trust and The Royal Anthropological Institute

A
Wellcome Medal Lecture

will be given by

Professor Luigi Capasso
Professor of Physical Anthropology
Università G. d'Annunzio - Chieti e Pescara

Title

PALEOBIOLOGY OF THE VICTIMS OF THE VOLCANIC ERUPTION OF HERCULANEUM

Monday 8 December 2008
at 6.00 pm

at the Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE

This is a FREE event.
However places must be booked in advance as space is very limited.
Contact: [log in to unmask] or call 020 7611 8744.
Please reply by 1 December 2008.
Abstract

In his lecture, Professor Capasso describes the sequence of events  
that destroyed Herculaneum during the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD,  
and the effects on the human population. The 162 skeletons that have  
been brought to light provide the author with invaluable material for  
the reconstruction of the palaeobiology of the Roman population.

The eruption began on the morning of August 24, and during that day  
the worried, albeit not frantic, citizens prepared themselves for the  
evacuation that probably allowed most of the 5000 inhabitants to  
escape. Tragedy struck those who were still in town at 01.00 the next  
day, when a burning cloud of up to 400°C caught them and killed them  
instantly. A wave of incandescent material and a second burning cloud  
subsequently buried the city under 23m of debris. Although today only  
bones are left of these people, the relatively low temperature and  
force to which the bones were subjected aided in the preservation of  
their structure and their arrangement in relation to one another.

An important preliminary issue for Professor Capasso is whether the  
sample under examination represents a cross section of the population  
living in Herculaneum at that time. He gives plausible reasons for  
this being the case. The data is synchronic and can, therefore, be  
recognized as equivalent to a census. The information it provides is  
therefore quite different from that resulting from bones found in  
graves.

Professor Capasso presents data on the composition of the population  
and their habits and occupations. There seem to have been more men  
than women in the population, and all the inhabitants were of small  
stature. There was a high degree of endogamy and the population was  
living on a predominantly vegetarian diet. The birth rate in 79 AD  
was probably between 24 and 30 live births per 1000 people, and the  
first pregnancy was estimated to occur at the age of 20 years.
The paleopathology includes fractures, congenital lesions (including  
a few cases of spina bifida) tumours, and infectious diseases.  
Tuberculosis was known to be endemic in those days, not due to the  
use of cows’ milk, which Romans did not drink, but due to the  
practice of eating poorly cooked entrails during religious  
ceremonies. In fact, Romans used ovine milk to produce cheese, and  
this produced a very high prevalence of bone lesions due to  
brucellosis. Other pathological data, such as the presence of  
specific bone alterations in children, suggests that child labour was  
used by the Romans.

The microbiological analysis of the carbonized remains of food found  
in the houses of Herculaneum provides new information about the  
possible relationship between infectious diseases and the  
microbiological contamination of Roman foods. In particular,  
Professor Capasso demonstrates the presence of Brucellae in the  
carbonized cheese from Herculaneum. Additional microbiological  
studies show the presence of viruses in the eggs, and bacteria in the  
wine, bread yeast and bread sourdough. Finally, the dried  
pomegranates and figs contain an intense proliferation of  
Streptomiycetes spp, that provide a possible source of natural  
antibodies. These were demonstrated on the human bones with a special  
microscopic technique using fluorescent light. All this data opens a  
new perspective and a possible link between the microbiological  
contamination of food and the diseases in the Roman world.
NEWS


GCE A level qualification in Anthropology

The Royal Anthropological Institute and AQA Awarding Body are pleased  
to announce that they will work together in 2008 to develop an A  
level qualification in anthropology. Preliminary work on an A level  
has been carried out by the RAI over several years, with financial  
support from the Higher Education Funding Council for England and  
Economic and Social Research Council. AQA will now develop the  
qualification in detail, in consultation with specialists drawn from  
the RAI. AQA will then seek accreditation of the qualification by the  
Qualifications and Curriculum Authority. Following (and subject to)  
accreditation, the RAI and AQA anticipate working together in the  
longer term to support delivery and resourcing of the A level, which  
is expected to become the flagship of the RAI’s programme of  
education in anthropology at pre-University and FE levels.

www.aqa.org.uk
www.therai.org.uk





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