Proposed complementary osteological indicators: Advancing the estimation of puberty stages in Bioarcheology

Author:

Bareggi Alessia12ORCID,Giuffra Valentina1,Riccomi Giulia13

Affiliation:

1. Division of Paleopathology, Department of Translational Research and New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery University of Pisa Pisa Italy

2. BoCAS, Bonn Center for ArchaeoSciences, Institute for Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology University of Bonn Bonn Germany

3. Department of Archaeology Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology Jena Germany

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe study of puberty is a well‐established area of bioarcheological research, which greatly enhances our understanding of adolescence and growth in the past. Since the publications of Shapland and Lewis' works, which have become “standards” for estimating puberty in skeletal material, no additional osteological indicators of puberty have been proposed. Nevertheless, clinical practice constantly develops skeletal maturation markers that could be useful in bioarcheology. This study aims to assess the applicability and reliability of novel puberty indicators as a complementary tool to estimate puberty in skeletal remains.Materials and MethodsFour new maturation markers including spheno‐occipital synchondrosis, humeral head ossification, calcaneal apophysis ossification, and mandibular premolar mineralization were selected and applied to a sample of 85 adolescents from pre‐Roman southern Italy (Pontecagnano, 7th–4th BCE).ResultsDespite some limits in adapting the original clinical methods to osteoarcheological material, the use of these novel skeletal indicators had moderate to excellent scoring repeatability and an overall high agreement with the puberty and menarche status previously estimated with standard methods. These results encourage us to apply these markers in bioarcheology. In some cases, minor adaptations of the original scoring systems are suggested to enhance reliability.DiscussionIncluding the proposed indicators in routine puberty data collection allows us to refine puberty estimation and improve the ability to identify key growth milestones in poorly preserved skeletons. Further application to osteological collections with diverse chronology and geographical differences is needed to assess how and to what extent the newly proposed maturation markers perform.

Publisher

Wiley

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