Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel: a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death

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Standard

Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel : a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death. / Griffin, R. C.; Chamberlain, A. T.; Hotz, G.; Penkman, K. E. H.; Collins, M. J.

I: American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Bind 140, Nr. 2, 2009, s. 244-252.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Griffin, RC, Chamberlain, AT, Hotz, G, Penkman, KEH & Collins, MJ 2009, 'Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel: a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death', American Journal of Physical Anthropology, bind 140, nr. 2, s. 244-252. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.21058

APA

Griffin, R. C., Chamberlain, A. T., Hotz, G., Penkman, K. E. H., & Collins, M. J. (2009). Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel: a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 140(2), 244-252. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.21058

Vancouver

Griffin RC, Chamberlain AT, Hotz G, Penkman KEH, Collins MJ. Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel: a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2009;140(2):244-252. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.21058

Author

Griffin, R. C. ; Chamberlain, A. T. ; Hotz, G. ; Penkman, K. E. H. ; Collins, M. J. / Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel : a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death. I: American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2009 ; Bind 140, Nr. 2. s. 244-252.

Bibtex

@article{06e151fd34aa4aefa50a0d3b9f833719,
title = "Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel: a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death",
abstract = "The poor accuracy of most current methods for estimating age-at-death in adult human skeletal remains is among the key problems facing palaeodemography. In forensic science, this problem has been solved for unburnt remains by the development of a chemical method for age estimation, using amino acid racemization in collagen extracted from dentine. Previous application of racemization methods to archaeological material has proven problematic. This study presents the application to archaeological human remains of a new age estimation method utilizing amino acid racemization in a potentially closed system - the dental enamel. The amino acid composition and extent of racemization in enamel from two Medieval cemeteries (Newcastle Blackgate and Grantham, England) and from a documented age-at-death sample from a 19th century cemetery (Spitalfriedhof St Johann, Switzerland) were determined. Alterations in the amino acid composition were detected in all populations, indicating that diagenetic change had taken place. However, in the Medieval populations, these changes did not appear to have substantially affected the relationship between racemization and age-at-death, with a strong relationship being retained between aspartic acid racemization and the morphological age estimates. In contrast, there was a poor relationship between racemization and age in the post-medieval documented age-at-death population from Switzerland. This appears to be due to leaching of amino acids post-mortem, indicating that enamel is not functioning as a perfectly closed system. Isolation of amino acids from a fraction of enamel which is less susceptible to leaching may improve the success of amino acid racemization for archaeological age estimation.",
keywords = "Age-at-death, Amino acid composition, Diagenesis",
author = "Griffin, {R. C.} and Chamberlain, {A. T.} and G. Hotz and Penkman, {K. E. H.} and Collins, {M. J.}",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1002/ajpa.21058",
language = "English",
volume = "140",
pages = "244--252",
journal = "American Journal of Physical Anthropology",
issn = "0002-9483",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Age estimation of archaeological remains using amino acid racemization in dental enamel

T2 - a comparison of morphological, biochemical, and known ages-at-death

AU - Griffin, R. C.

AU - Chamberlain, A. T.

AU - Hotz, G.

AU - Penkman, K. E. H.

AU - Collins, M. J.

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - The poor accuracy of most current methods for estimating age-at-death in adult human skeletal remains is among the key problems facing palaeodemography. In forensic science, this problem has been solved for unburnt remains by the development of a chemical method for age estimation, using amino acid racemization in collagen extracted from dentine. Previous application of racemization methods to archaeological material has proven problematic. This study presents the application to archaeological human remains of a new age estimation method utilizing amino acid racemization in a potentially closed system - the dental enamel. The amino acid composition and extent of racemization in enamel from two Medieval cemeteries (Newcastle Blackgate and Grantham, England) and from a documented age-at-death sample from a 19th century cemetery (Spitalfriedhof St Johann, Switzerland) were determined. Alterations in the amino acid composition were detected in all populations, indicating that diagenetic change had taken place. However, in the Medieval populations, these changes did not appear to have substantially affected the relationship between racemization and age-at-death, with a strong relationship being retained between aspartic acid racemization and the morphological age estimates. In contrast, there was a poor relationship between racemization and age in the post-medieval documented age-at-death population from Switzerland. This appears to be due to leaching of amino acids post-mortem, indicating that enamel is not functioning as a perfectly closed system. Isolation of amino acids from a fraction of enamel which is less susceptible to leaching may improve the success of amino acid racemization for archaeological age estimation.

AB - The poor accuracy of most current methods for estimating age-at-death in adult human skeletal remains is among the key problems facing palaeodemography. In forensic science, this problem has been solved for unburnt remains by the development of a chemical method for age estimation, using amino acid racemization in collagen extracted from dentine. Previous application of racemization methods to archaeological material has proven problematic. This study presents the application to archaeological human remains of a new age estimation method utilizing amino acid racemization in a potentially closed system - the dental enamel. The amino acid composition and extent of racemization in enamel from two Medieval cemeteries (Newcastle Blackgate and Grantham, England) and from a documented age-at-death sample from a 19th century cemetery (Spitalfriedhof St Johann, Switzerland) were determined. Alterations in the amino acid composition were detected in all populations, indicating that diagenetic change had taken place. However, in the Medieval populations, these changes did not appear to have substantially affected the relationship between racemization and age-at-death, with a strong relationship being retained between aspartic acid racemization and the morphological age estimates. In contrast, there was a poor relationship between racemization and age in the post-medieval documented age-at-death population from Switzerland. This appears to be due to leaching of amino acids post-mortem, indicating that enamel is not functioning as a perfectly closed system. Isolation of amino acids from a fraction of enamel which is less susceptible to leaching may improve the success of amino acid racemization for archaeological age estimation.

KW - Age-at-death

KW - Amino acid composition

KW - Diagenesis

U2 - 10.1002/ajpa.21058

DO - 10.1002/ajpa.21058

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19358293

AN - SCOPUS:70349096013

VL - 140

SP - 244

EP - 252

JO - American Journal of Physical Anthropology

JF - American Journal of Physical Anthropology

SN - 0002-9483

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 229397249