Skip Navigation

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Dietary variation and stress among prehistoric Jomon foragers from Japan

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Temple DH
2007
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 133 (4): 1035-1046

Current archaeological evidence indicates that greater dietary reliance on marine resources is recorded among the eastern Jomon, while plant dependence prevailed in western/inland Japan. The hypothesis that the dietary choices of the western/inland Jomon will be associated with greater systemic stress is tested by comparing carious tooth and enamel hypoplasia frequencies between the eastern and western/inland Jomon. Demographic collapse coincides with climate change during the Middle to Late Jomon period, suggesting dwindling resource availability. It is hypothesized that this change was associated with greater systemic stress and/or dietary change among the Middle to Late Jomon. This hypothesis is tested by comparing enamel hypoplasia and carious tooth frequencies between Middle to Late and Late to Final Jomon foragers. Enamel hypoplasia was significantly more prevalent among the western/inland Jomon. Such findings are consistent with archaeological studies that argue for greater plant consumption and stresses associated with seasonal resource depletion among the western/inland Jomon. Approximately equivalent enamel hypoplasia frequencies between Middle to Late and Late to Final Jomon foragers argues against a demographic collapse in association with diminished nutritional returns. Significant differences in carious tooth frequencies are, however, observed between Middle to Late and Late to Final Jomon foragers. These results suggest a subsistence shift during the Middle to Late Jomon period, perhaps in response to a changed climate. The overall patterns of stress documented by this study indicate wide-spread environmentally directed biological variation among the prehistoric Jomon.

Expand Abstract

Resource Description

    Ecosystem Change, Food Quality, Food Security
    • Ecosystem Change, Food Quality, Food Security: Nutritional quality
    • Ecosystem Change, Food Quality, Food Security: Availability/Distribution, Crop/Plant Food Security
    Ocean/Coastal, Rural
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Asia
    Developmental Impact, Other Health Impact, Specify
    • Developmental Impact, Other Health Impact, Specify: Other Developmental Impact, Specify
    • Developmental Impact, Other Health Impact, Specify: carious teeth
    Research Article
    Adaptation
    • Adaptation: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Vulnerability Assessment
Back
to Top