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1.
West Indian Med J ; 58(1): 33-49, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19565997

ABSTRACT

The disease environment, health problems and causes of mortality of enslaved Barbadians are described. Data are derived mainly from documentary sources; also included are bio-archaeological data from analyses of skeletons recovered from Newton Plantation cemetery. Major topics include infectious diseases transmitted from person to person, as well as those contracted through water soil, and other environmental contaminations, and diseases transmitted by insects, parasites and other animals; nutritional diseases, including protein energy malnutrition, vitamin deficiencies, anaemia, and geophagy or "dirt eating"; dental pathologies, lead poisoning, alcoholism, traumas, and other disorders, including psychogenic death or illness caused by beliefs in witchcraft or sorcery.


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons/history , Disease/history , Social Problems/history , Anthropology , Antigua and Barbuda , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans
2.
West Indian Med J ; 57(6): 605-20, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19580242

ABSTRACT

The disease environment, health problems and causes of mortality of enslaved Barbadians are described. Data are derived mainly from documentary sources; also included are bio-archaeological data from analyses of skeletons recovered from Newton Plantation cemetery. Major topics include infectious diseases transmitted from person to person, as well as those contracted through water soil, and other environmental contaminations, and diseases transmitted by insects, parasites, and other animals; nutritional diseases, including protein energy malnutrition, vitamin deficiencies, anaemia, and geophagy or "dirt eating"; dental pathologies; and lead poisoning, alcoholism, traumas, and other disorders, including psychogenic death or illness caused by beliefs in witchcraft or sorcery.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases/history , Health Status , Social Problems/history , Barbados , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans , Nutrition Disorders/history , Parasitic Diseases/history , Sanitation , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history , Social Problems/statistics & numerical data
4.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 89(2): 145-58, 1992 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1443091

ABSTRACT

Hutchinson's incisors and Moon's molars are specific lesions of congenital syphilis. The extensive but fragmentary clinical literature on these conditions describes reduced dimensions and thin enamel in the permanent incisors and first molars, crowding and infolding of the first molar cusps, notching of the upper incisors, and apical hypoplasias of the permanent canines. A Barbados slave cemetery (ca. 1660-1820 AD) includes three individuals with these features, suggesting a frequency at birth of congenital syphilis in the population approaching 10%. These three cases show triple the frequency of all hypoplasias and more than seven times the frequency of pitting hypoplasia present in the remainder of the series. The recognizable congenital syphilis cases account for much of the remarkably high frequency of hypoplasias in the series as a whole. We infer that syphilis contributed substantially to morbidity, infant mortality, and infertility in this population. Presence or absence of congenital syphilis may account for much of the variability in health and mortality seen among nineteenth century African-American populations.


PIP: 2 anthropologists examined the teeth of 104 slaves buried between 1660 and 1820 who had worked on Newton Plantation in Barbados, West Indies, and were excavated between 1971 and 1973 to look for obvious evidence of congenital syphilis. 84 bodies still possessed either incisors or first molars in good enough shape for the anthropologists to examine. 3 young adult or adolescent slaves had dental lesions indicating congenital syphilis (Hutchinson's incisors and/or Moon's molars). These 3 cases had a frequency of all hypoplasias 3 times that of the remaining slaves and a frequency of 7.5 times of pitting hypoplasia. The frequency of congenital syphilis was at least 3%. Literature data indicate that congenital syphilis features are evident in 33% of cases; therefore, the frequency of congenital syphilis at birth was likely to be around 10%. None of the cases were less than 5 years old. Further, wear and cavity-related tooth loss eliminated evidence of congenital syphilis in people at least 30 years old. The anthropologists gathered that syphilis was responsible for sizeable illness, infant deaths, and infertility among these slaves. They also reviewed 3 dental studies of 3 US African American cemeteries. The individuals in 2 cemeteries had no evidence of congenital syphilis and were in relatively good health, while individuals from the postslavery period had evidence of congenital syphilis (5%). The researchers suggested that presence of absence of congenital syphilis may explain much of the variance in mortality and health noted among 19th century African American populations.


Subject(s)
Dentition , Syphilis, Congenital/pathology , Tooth/anatomy & histology , Adolescent , Adult , Archaeology/methods , Barbados/epidemiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Demography , Dental Enamel/pathology , Health Status , Humans , Incisor/anatomy & histology , Incisor/pathology , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Molar/anatomy & histology , Molar/pathology , Syphilis, Congenital/epidemiology , Tooth/pathology
6.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 74(2): 179-84, 1987 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3322025

ABSTRACT

A 17th- to 19th-century cemetery sample of 104 slaves from Newton Plantation (Barbados) shows uniquely high hypercementosis prevalence, as well as unexpectedly high and variable skeletal lead content. A variety of biological and archeological factors indicates that individuals with lower amounts of these anomalies (relative to age at death) were probably African-born, first-generation slaves. The hypercementosis is related to the progression of periodontal disease as assessed from alveolar bone. Although the hypercementosis is endemic in the Caribbean black population, it does not as yet have a clear explanation. We suggest the etiology might relate to chronic malnutrition involving periodic, seasonal rehabilitation.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/history , Hypercementosis/history , Tooth Diseases/history , Barbados , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans , Hypercementosis/epidemiology , Hypercementosis/ethnology , Lead Poisoning/epidemiology , Lead Poisoning/ethnology , Lead Poisoning/history , Male
11.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 59(4): 443-59, 1982 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6762099

ABSTRACT

A unique seventeenth-nineteenth century slave cemetery population from Newton plantation, Barbados, allows examination of craniodental characters in relation to ethnohistorical data. Age-at-death estimates suggest life expectancy at birth of 29 years and low infant mortality; historical demography, however, suggests life expectancy of 20 years and very high infant mortality. Tooth decay, bilateral tooth loss, periodontal disease, root hypercementosis, and severe enamel hypoplasia are high in frequency. The teeth yield evidence of such cultural practices as pipe-smoking and incisor mutilation. Several skeletal features reflect periodic near-starvation. Directional and fluctuating dental asymmetry, relative tooth size, and hypoplasia distribution suggest slaves experienced considerable weaning trauma; metabolic stress at this time exceeded that of prenatal and immediate postnatal periods. Odontometrics and dental and cranial nonmetric traits indicate that modern Blacks are intermediate between the ancestral slaves and modern Whites but more similar to the latter, suggesting effects of environmental covariance exceed those of genetic admixture. Nonmetric trait distributions show nonrandom patterns according to area of burial in the cemetery, a possible result of family segregation.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/history , Dentition/anatomy & histology , Paleopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Barbados , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Jaw/pathology , Life Expectancy , Male , Malocclusion/pathology , Middle Aged , Mortality , Periodontal Diseases/pathology , Tooth/pathology , Tooth Diseases/pathology
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