Reconstructing Human Population History of Southeast Asia from Cranial and Dental Characteristics Perspective
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Cranial metric analysis demonstrates the close affinities between the early Malay and Flores samples such as the Gua Gunung, Gua Cha and Liang Momer, Hoabinian Vietnamese, and Autralo-Melanseian samples. These specimens, as well as other fossils from Tabon and Niah were members of population that originated in the late Pleistocene Sundaland, the ancestors of modern Australian Aboriginal peoples. On the other hand, dental characteristics of the subsequent Neolithic samples, as well as the modern people, from most of Southeast Asia, have dual traits of the North/East Asians and Australo-Melanesians, supporting the hypothesis that there was a diffusion of migrants from the Asian Continent into Southeast Asia since the Neolithic period. These people interblended with indigenous Australo-Melanesoid stock as they diffused.
- 国立科学博物館の論文
著者
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Matsumura Hirofumi
Department Of Anthropology National Science Museum
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Matsumura Hirofumi
Department Of Anatomy Sapporo Medical University
関連論文
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- Biological affinities of Okhotsk-culture people with East Siberians and Arctic people based on dental characteristics
- On the origin of pre-Angkorian peoples: perspectives from cranial and dental affinity of the human remains from Iron Age Phum Snay, Cambodia
- Morphometric affinity of the late Neolithic human remains from Man Bac, Ninh Binh Province, Vietnam: key skeletons with which to debate the ‘two layer’ hypothesis
- Morphologic and Genetic Evidence for the Kinship of Juvenile Skeletal Specimens from a 2,000 Year-old Double Burial of the Usu-Moshiri Site, Hokkaido, Japan
- Which morphology of dry bone articular surfaces suggests socalled fibrous ankylosis in the elderly human sacroiliac joint?
- Mitochondrial DNA haplogrouping of the Okhotsk people based on analysis of ancient DNA : an intermediate of gene flow from the continental Sakhalin people to the Ainu
- Biological affinities of Okhotsk-culture people with East Siberians and Arctic people based on dental characteristics
- Paralysis and severe disability requiring intensive care in Neolithic Asia
- Terminal Pleistocene human skeleton from Hang Cho Cave, northern Vietnam : implications for the biological affinities of Hoabinhian people
- Morphometric affinity of the late Neolithic human remains from Man Bac, Ninh Binh Province, Vietnam : key skeletons with which to debate the 'two layer' hypothesis
- On the origin of pre-Angkorian peoples : perspectives from cranial and dental affinity of the human remains from Iron Age Phum Snay, Cambodia
- Dental characteristics of Tohoku residents in Japan : implications for biological affinity with ancient Emishi
- Reconstructing Human Population History of Southeast Asia from Cranial and Dental Characteristics Perspective
- Population history of northern Vietnamese inferred from nonmetric cranial trait variation
- Population history of northern Vietnamese inferred from nonmetric cranial trait variation
- Metric characteristics of human limb bones in Asian and Japanese populations