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1.
Int J Paleopathol ; 25: 30-38, 2019 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30986655

RESUMO

This paper integrates our knowledge from traditional Chinese medical texts and archeological findings to discuss parasitic loads in early China. Many studies have documented that several different species of eukaryotic endoparasites were present in early human populations throughout China. Nevertheless, comprehensive paleoparasitological records from China are patchy, largely due to taphonomic and environmental factors. An examination of early Chinese medical texts allows us to fill in some of the gaps and counteract apparent biases in the current archeoparasitological records. By integrating the findings of paleoparasitology with historic textual sources, we show that parasites have been affecting the lives of humans in China since ancient times. We discuss the presence and prevalence of three groups of parasites in ancient China: roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides), Asian schistosoma (Schistosoma japonicum), and tapeworm (Taenia sp.). We also examine possible factors that favored the spread of these endoparasites among early humans. Therefore, this paper not only aims to reveal how humans have been affected by endoparasites, but also addresses how early medical knowledge developed to cope with the parasitic diseases.


Assuntos
Múmias/parasitologia , Parasitos/classificação , Doenças Parasitárias/epidemiologia , Terminologia como Assunto , Animais , Arqueologia , Ascaris lumbricoides/anatomia & histologia , Ascaris lumbricoides/classificação , China/epidemiologia , Feminino , História do Século XV , História do Século XVI , História do Século XVII , História Antiga , História Medieval , Humanos , Paleopatologia , Parasitos/anatomia & histologia , Doenças Parasitárias/parasitologia , Prevalência , Schistosoma japonicum/anatomia & histologia , Schistosoma japonicum/classificação , Taenia/anatomia & histologia , Taenia/classificação
2.
Science ; 355(6332): 1382, 2017 03 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28360294

RESUMO

Wu et al, Han, and Huang et al question our reconstruction of a large outburst flood and its possible relationship to China's Great Flood and the Xia dynasty. Here, we clarify misconceptions concerning geologic evidence of the flood, its timing and magnitude, and the complex social-cultural response. We also further discuss how this flood may be related to ancient accounts of the Great Flood and origins of the Xia dynasty.

3.
Science ; 353(6299): 579-82, 2016 Aug 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27493183

RESUMO

China's historiographical traditions tell of the successful control of a Great Flood leading to the establishment of the Xia dynasty and the beginning of civilization. However, the historicity of the flood and Xia remain controversial. Here, we reconstruct an earthquake-induced landslide dam outburst flood on the Yellow River about 1920 BCE that ranks as one of the largest freshwater floods of the Holocene and could account for the Great Flood. This would place the beginning of Xia at ~1900 BCE, several centuries later than traditionally thought. This date coincides with the major transition from the Neolithic to Bronze Age in the Yellow River valley and supports hypotheses that the primary state-level society of the Erlitou culture is an archaeological manifestation of the Xia dynasty.

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