On the biological affinity between the populations of Iron Age and Roman central southern England, using dental non-metrics as evidence
Date
2003
Authors
Martin, Letresha
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This study examines the impact of the Roman invasion and occupation of central
southern England on the genetic variation of the local Iron Age population. Three
models are examined that purport to explain the relationship between the populations of
the Iron Age and Roman periods. The first, biological continuity, sees no discemable
change in the genetic variation of the population from the Iron Age to the end of the
Roman occupation. The second model, biological replacement, proposes that the
Roman occupation of Britain brought with it such high levels of immigration that the
local Iron Age population was replaced by a new population from other parts of the
Roman Empire. The third proposed model is increased genetic diversity. Under this
model, the population of central southern England during the Roman occupation is seen
to consist of the descendents of the local Iron Age population with the addition of a
significant number of immigrants. The levels of immigration expected under this model
are such that the total Iron Age and Romano-British populations were biologically
distinct.
Dental non-metric data from the skeletal populations of Iron Age and Romano-British
central southern England are used as a source of evidence with which to examine the
validity of these three models. Various statistical analyses and computer applications
are used to generate information on the relatedness of the subpopulations from the area,
including principle component analysis, canonical variant analysis, mean measure of
divergence, and PAUP (Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony). Very strong support
for a model of increased diversity is observed. A lower level of support for a model of
no discemable change is revealed. A lack of support for a model of replacement is also
observed.
This study concludes that an examination of the dental non-metrics of the skeletal
populations of Iron Age and Roman central southern England demonstrates a
relationship of strong biological affinity. This correlation signifies a close relationship
between the living populations of Iron Age and Roman central southern England. That
a statistically significant difference between the skeletal populations was observed,
however, implies that the Roman occupation resulted in a discemable impact on the
genetic variation of the local Iron Age population. The increased genetic diversity of
the population in central southern England during the Roman occupation most likely
resulted from a significant level of immigration from other regions of the Roman
Empire.
Description
Keywords
Roman, invasion, occupation, central southern England, genetic, variation, Iron Age, local, population
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Thesis (PhD)
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description