Unique Marine Taphonomy in Human Skeletal Material Recovered from the Medieval Warship Mary Rose

被引:53
作者
Bell, L. S. [1 ]
Elkerton, A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Simon Fraser Univ, Sch Criminol, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
[2] HM Naval Base, Portsmouth PO1 3LX, Hants, England
关键词
marine taphonomy; marine decomposition; human remains; mass fatality; exposure; microscopy; skeletal remains; diagenesis;
D O I
10.1002/oa.952
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The effect of skeletal exposure in a marine environment is an area of taphonomy that has been little investigated at the microscopic level. Understanding the peri-mortem and subsequent postmortem history of deposition and/or redeposition is extremely important for event reconstruction and to identify deliberate or accidental redeposition. The material used for this study comes primarily from the Mary Rose shipwreck (a marine mass fatality dated AD 1545), and forensic material recovered from marine, lacustrine and terrestrial contexts is retrospectively referenced. Work presented here outlines a definitive type of marine exposure seen in temperate shallow off-shore and intertidal marine contexts, and illustrates how it may be differentially identified from terrestrial deposition and exposure. Furthermore, the effects of rapid deposition on skeletal remains have been documented, and results indicate that marine organism fouling activity can be fully inhibited by rapid deposition of sediment. The responsible organism itself remains unidentified, but produces tunnels which are peripheral in their distribution and maintain fixed dimensions and morphology and are here associated with marine exposure. This type of microstructural change is unique and is not found in terrestrial or freshwater contexts, The study demonstrates a taphonomic microstructural change to bone and teeth which may be identified microscopically and interpreted as evidence of marine exposure. Secondarily, the history of depositional exposure between the two main Tudor layers has provided a new level of detail concerning exposure and site formation processes. The earliest Tudor layer formed rapidly over a period of months and contained no evidence of microstructural tunnelling, whereas microstructural tunnelling was seen exclusively in the second Tudor layer, formed over a period of decades, a period during which the ship's hull collapsed and a more open marine environment dominated. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:523 / 535
页数:13
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]  
ARNAUD G, 1978, J HUM EVOL, V7, P409
[2]   BONE-BORING MARINE MICROORGANISMS - AN EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION [J].
ASCENZI, A ;
SILVESTRINI, G .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION, 1984, 13 (06) :531-536
[3]   DIAGENETIC ALTERATION TO TEETH INSITU ILLUSTRATED BY BACKSCATTERED ELECTRON IMAGING [J].
BELL, LS ;
BOYDE, A ;
JONES, SJ .
SCANNING, 1991, 13 (02) :173-183
[4]   The speed of post mortem change to the human skeleton and its taphonomic significance [J].
Bell, LS ;
Skinner, MF ;
Jones, SJ .
FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 1996, 82 (02) :129-140
[5]  
BELL LS, 1998, GRAVE CONCERNS, P238
[6]   THE THRAUSTOCHYTRIDS - A PROTIST GROUP WITH MIXED AFFINITIES [J].
CHAMBERLAIN, AHL ;
MOSS, ST .
BIOSYSTEMS, 1988, 21 (3-4) :341-349
[7]  
Golubic S., 1975, The study of trace fossils: a synthesis of principles, problems, and procedures in ichnology, P229, DOI DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-65923-2_12
[8]   LIME-BORING ALGAE IN HERMATYPIC CORAL SKELETONS [J].
HIGHSMITH, RC .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 1981, 55 (2-3) :267-281
[9]   ANALYSIS OF HUMAN REMAINS RECOVERED FROM A SHARK [J].
ISCAN, MY ;
MCCABE, BQ .
FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 1995, 72 (01) :15-23
[10]  
LONDON MR, 1997, FORENSIC TAPHONOMY P, P615