Dr Melandri Vlok
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Dr Melandri Vlok
@melandrivlok.com
Bioarchaeologist ☠️
National Geographic Explorer
South African Australian 🇿🇦 🇦🇺
Ancient tropical diseases 🦟
Living with ME/CFS and POTS
All are welcome here 🏳️‍🌈
Note: following does not mean endorsement.
#anthropology #archaeology #diseases #epidemiology
Have seen the terrible use of PCA for shape analysis for years in SE Asia. For anatomical modern humans it has always led to essentially racist conclusions.
November 9, 2025 at 12:55 AM
Reposted by Dr Melandri Vlok
Analysis of skeletons found that, whilst scurvy increased during this period, it did not cause people to die earlier, suggesting Jōmon people adapted their food sharing practices to survive the ecological stress. 2/2

🔗 from 2024 🆓 doi.org/10.15184/aqy...
Nutritional deficiency and ecological stress in the Middle to Final western Jōmon
Despite significant research, the direct and indirect causes of a population decline in the eponymous foragers of the Late Jōmon period (c. 4500–2300 BP) in Japan remains undetermined. Here, the authors examine the impact of nutritional stress, using scurvy as a case study, on Middle and a Late/Final Jōmon populations. While an increase in the prevalence of scurvy between the time periods is apparent, no associated change in age at death was observed. The authors argue that the Late Jōmon adapted their food-sharing practices in times of ecological stress, and they highlight the need to consider morbidity and mortality together in palaeopathological assessments and the growing evidence for a non-nutritional cause in the Late Jōmon population decline.
doi.org
October 1, 2025 at 7:13 AM