Tepexpan man
The Tepexpan Man is the name of a skeleton, which was found on the shore of the former Lake Texcoco in central Mexico.[1] Archaeologist Helmut de Terra discovered it in February 1947. It is at least 10,000 years old.[2] Even though it is called the Tepexan Man, the skeleton is that of a woman. The skeleton was found lying face down with the arms under the chest and the legs drawn up to the stomach.[3] The body most likely sunk into the mud surrounding it, leaving the shoulder, back, and hips exposed, which might explain why those elements are missing. It is possible that the body was originally put in a lake. Skeleton Skeleton discovered by archaeologist Helm ut de Terra in February 1947, on the shores of the former Lake Texcoco in central Mexico; found near mammoth remains.[4]
Analysis
changeAge
changeThe deposits of the area where the skeleton was found dated the site where Tepexpan Man was found to about 8,000 to 10,000 years ago.[5] Near the skeleton, there were the remains of five mammoths. They could be associated with obsidian flakes. Therefore, it was originally believed that Tepexpan Man dated to about 10,000 years ago. However, years later, researchers looked at the skeleton again and dated the remains using radiocarbon methods.[2] It was then found to be closer to 2,000 years old. Dr. Silvia Gonzalez, a professor of geoarchaeology at John Moore University in Liverpool, used uranium isotope analysis to date the skeleton. Results showed that Tepexpan Man was 4,700 years old. She argues that contamination of the remains led to the wrong radiocarbon dates. Other critics have claimed that Tepexpan Man was an intrusion in that he was buried at a later date but dug into Pleistocene materials.[6]
An analysis of Tepexpan Man that was published in the 1947 issue of The Science Newsletter claims that the individual was at least 40 at the time of death. This was determined by "united seams in the skull" (referring to sutures), and fused epiphyses in long bones.
Sex
changeIn his first report, Helmut de Terra claims that "The other bones, in conjunction with the skull, indicate that the person was of male sex."[3] Based on DNA analysis, a Mexican archaeologist has proposed that Tepexpan 'man' was actually a woman.
Trauma
changeTepexpan Man has a healed fracture on his right ulna. De Terra thought that due to this fracture and the proximity to mammoth fossils, Tepexpan Man may have been a hunter who was either killed by his fellow men or mortally wounded while hunting.[3][6] The Science Newsletter claims that the individual suffered from a stiff neck due to the many limy deposits on the cervical vertebrae. This means that Tepexpan Man most likely suffered from arthritis.
Other
changeThe Science Newsletter described Tepexpan man in its 1947 edition. It described Tepexpan Man as having "a high-domed, thin-walled skull" which contained "a brain the same size as those of present-day Indians." The writers described a "solidly built" jawline and "prominent" brow ridges, as well as a "sharply prominent chin" which would separate him from earlier Neanderthals. Tepexpan Man only had three teeth left in his upper jaw. In his lower jaw, all of the molars had disappeared before his death. This was evidenced by the alveolar sockets being healed and smoothed over in the mandible. What was left on the mandible included incisors, "eye-teeth," and premolars that were worn but still in decent condition.
Environment of Lake Texcoco
changeDr. Gonzalez also reconstructed the environment of Lake Texcoco around the time of Tepexpan Man by analyzing sediments and fossils from the area. With her team, she analyzed sand, clay, and volcanic ash, as well as fossils of diatoms (microscopic algae) and ostracods. Ostracods are small crustaceans. When Tepexpan Man was alive, the lake was very deep, full of fish, and surrounded by trees. The environment surrounding Lake Texcoco changed a lot over the past 20,000 years: There were several volcanic eruptions. Water levels, and several types of vegetation also changed. These environmental changes clearly affected populations living in the area. Today, Lake Texcoco has almost dried up. It is on the northeast outskirts of Mexico City.[2]
AMS radiocarbon dates of the sediments at Tepexpan show ages between 19,110±90 and 612±2214C years BP. New uranium-series date the skeleton to 4,700±200 years BP, which would indicate a Holocene age. The evidence suggests that there were large changes around Lake Texcoco in terms of the balance between water and land plants, C3 and C4 plants, saline, alkaline and freshwater conditions, volcanic activity, reworking of lake sediments, and input from the drainage basin throughout the late Pleistocene and late Holocene. These changes also had large effects on the prehistoric human populations living around the lake at this time.
References
change- ↑ "Science: American Face". Time. 20 October 1947. Archived from the original on 2009-04-29. Retrieved 2010-04-01.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Isotope analysis dates ancient Mexican". Planet Earth online. 14 July 2009. Archived from the original on 9 November 2009. Retrieved 2010-04-01.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Terra, Helmut de (1947-07-01). "Preliminary Note on the Discovery of Fossil Man at Tepexpan in the Valley of Mexico". American Antiquity. 13 (1): 40–44. doi:10.2307/275752. JSTOR 275752. S2CID 163184882.
- ↑ Camila, Q. "The Tepepan man".
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(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ Black, Glenn A. (1949-04-01). ""Tepexpan Man," A Critique of Method". American Antiquity. 14 (4): 344–346. doi:10.2307/276279. JSTOR 276279. S2CID 164122045.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Helms, Mary W. (1982-01-01). Middle America: A Culture History of Heartland and Frontiers. University Press of America. ISBN 9780819122308.