Entheseal changes and activity patterns in southern African hunter-gatherer/herders from the Holocene

Am J Biol Anthropol. 2024 Jan;183(1):107-124. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24847. Epub 2023 Oct 5.

Abstract

Objectives: Activity patterns and lifeways in southern African hunter-gatherer/herders (sAHGH) during the Holocene were dynamic, with subsistence activities and mobility varying through space and time. In this study, spatial and temporal variations in entheseal changes (ECs) are assessed as physical activity markers in sAHGH from the Holocene.

Methods: The Coimbra method was used to assess fibrocartilaginous ECs in the upper and lower limbs of 118 sAHGH from the Holocene. Descriptive statistics and generalized estimating equations were used to explore the association between ECs, sex, age, ecological biomes, and temporality.

Results: A total of 118 individuals were sampled, comprising 67 males, and 42 females, mostly from the fynbos (59/118), forest (30/118) and succulent karoo biomes (16/118). ECs were identified in 94% of the sample. Interobserver scoring suggests our findings are likely to underrepresent the extent of EC score differences in sAHGH. Findings indicate a complex pattern of physical activity in sAHGH with differences attributable to regional ecology rather than age or sex. More prominent ECs were identified in individuals from the forest biome, relative to the fynbos and succulent karoo biomes. These were consistent with resource search and processing costs, and terrain differences in these ecozones. ECs were only detected temporally relative to the infiltration of pastoralism (at 2000 BP) when the data were stratified by ecological biome.

Discussion: This study provides evidence that regional ecology plays a central role in driving activity patterns regardless of social or cultural organization. Ecological biomes provide a gradient along which the temporal impact of resource limitations on human biology, activity patterns and sociocultural behaviors can be studied.

Keywords: Coimbra method; Khoekhoe; Later Stone Age; San; entheses; musculoskeletal markers.

MeSH terms

  • Ecosystem*
  • Female
  • Fibrocartilage
  • Forests
  • Humans
  • Lower Extremity*
  • Male