Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-mmrw7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-08T03:13:19.672Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Relationship between Diet and Porous Cranial Lesions in the Southwest United States: A Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2025

Lexi O'Donnell*
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, College of Population Health, and University of New Mexico, Department of Anthropology, Albuquerque, NM, USA University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Department of Pathology, Albuquerque, NM, USA
Cait McPherson
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Department of Pathology, Albuquerque, NM, USA
*
Corresponding author: Lexi O'Donnell; Email: ao@unm.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Bioarchaeologists commonly record porous cranial lesions (PCLs). They have varied etiologies but are frequently associated with nutritional anemia without a differential diagnosis. This article provides a literature review, evaluates diet in the US Southwest over time, and identifies issues with associating PCLs with poor diet in this region. Generally, diet was adequate across time and space. Although maize was a dietary staple, other food items such as rabbits and amaranth provided complementary micronutrients. PCLs exhibit varied morphologies, which generally correspond with age: those characterized by fine, scattered porosity are associated with younger ages at death. Variation in PCL morphology indicates different and sometimes unrelated etiologies. Nutritional anemia is an insufficient explanation for PCL frequency in the Southwest, partly because the diet was adequate across time.

Resumen

Resumen

Las lesiones craneales porosas (LCP) son se encuentran comúnmente en análisis bioarqueologicos. LCP tienen variedad de etiologías, pero frecuentemente se asocian con anemia nutricional sin diagnóstico diferencial. Este artículo propone una revisión de la literatura, evaluación la dieta en el suroeste de los Estados Unidos a través del tiempo e identifica problemas con la asociación de las LCP con mala alimentación en esta región. En general, la dieta fue adecuada a través del tiempo y región. Aunque el maíz era considerado como un alimento básico, otros alimentos (por ejemplo, conejos y amaranto) proporcionaban micronutrientes complementarios. Las LCP exhiben variedad en morfologías, que generalmente corresponden con la edad. Las LCP, caracterizadas por una porosidad fina y dispersa, se asocian con la mortalidad en poblaciones jóvenes. La variación en la morfología de LCP indica etiologías diferentes y a veces sin relación. La anemia nutricional es insuficiente para justificar la frecuencia de LCP en el suroeste americano, en parte porque la dieta fue apropiada a lo través del tiempo.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Alexis O'Donnell, University of New Mexico, 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Society for American Archaeology
Figure 0

Table 1. Individuals Included in This Study; Counts of Individuals by Site and Age Group (One-Year Intervals).

Figure 1

Table 2. Lesion Types (Morphology) and Definitions Used in the Study.

Figure 2

Figure 1a. Illustrations of CO and PH morphology (Types 1–6) described in Table 2. 1a-a Type 1, capillary-like impressions; 1a-b Type 2, scattered, small foramina; 1a-c Type 3, large and small scattered foramina; 1a-d Type 4, foramina linked in a trabecular structure; 1a-e Type 5, trabecular outgrowth from the outer table; 1a-f Type 6, new bone deposited on outer cortex. All illustrations by the first author.

Figure 3

Figure 1b. Illustrations of cross sections of vault (Figure 1b-a and 1b-c) and orbit bones (1b-d, 1b-e). (1b-a) Normal vault cross section; (1b-b) lamination of diploë without expansion of the marrow space; (2c) expansion of the marrow space and thickening, coupled with thinned outer/inner cortices; (1b-d) normal orbit; (1b-e) orbit with expansion of the marrow space accompanied by thickening of the bone. Orbit illustrations are from the posterior (looking into the endocranium). All illustrations by the first author. (See also Brickley and colleagues 2020:Figure 9-2; O'Donnell et al. 2023:Figure 1).

Figure 4

Figures 2a–2b. Balloon plots show the percent frequency of coprolites with pollen or plant (2a) / animal remains (2b) across time. The “balloon” increases in size with increasing frequency, and the color increases in temperature following that same pattern. For the number of coprolites per site, see also Supplemental Figure 1 and Supplemental Table 2; references for data are shown in Table 3. Abbreviations: BMII (1500 BC–AD 50), BMIII (AD 500–750), PI (AD 750–900), PII (AD 900–1150), PIII (AD 1150–1325), PIV (AD 1325–1550). (Color online)

Figure 5

Table 3. Sources of Coprolite Dietary Data.

Figure 6

Figures 3a–3b. These figures provide density curves by age at death for lesion Types 1–6. (3a) CO, orbit; (3b) PH, frontal bone; (3c) PH, parietal bones; (3d) PH, occipital bone. Along the x-axis at the bottom of each figure are points indicating each individual in the assemblage. (Color online)

Figure 7

Figures 3c–3d. These figures provide density curves by age at death for lesion Types 1–6. (3c) PH, parietal bones; (3d) PH, occipital bone. Along the x-axis at the bottom of each figure are points indicating each individual in the assemblage. (Color online)

Figure 8

Figures 4a–4c. Each figure presents odds ratios depicting the relationship between PCL location, type, and age at death in individuals 6 months to 15 years; Figure 4a presents results for CO (triangle) and PH (square) presence, regardless of morphology, by age at death. Figures 4b and 4c present the same analyses, but Figure 4c provides results for individuals under ten years of age. These analyses focus on lesion types and age at death. Type 1 is represented with a filled circle (purple), Type 2 with a red diamond, Type 3 with an orange square, Type 4 with a purple triangle, Type 5 with an open green square, and Type 6 with an open blue circle. Significance values are provided for “p” at three levels: 0.01, 0.05 (threshold for statistical significance) and 0.1. p ≤ 0.1 is provided for the reader as some of these values are p < 0.07 but p > 0.05. Lines represent 95% confidence intervals. Of note, no individuals with type 4 PH were observed for the frontal bone. (Color Online)

Figure 9

Figure 5. Balloon plot shows the percent frequency of CO and PH across time. The “balloon” increases in size with increasing frequency, and the color increases in temperature following the same pattern. References for data are shown in Table 3. Abbreviations: BMII (1500 BC–AD 50), BMIII (AD 500–750), PI (AD 750–900), PII (AD 900–1150), PIII (AD 1150–1325), and PIV (AD 1325–1550). (Color online)

Supplementary material: File

O'Donnell and McPherson supplementary material

O'Donnell and McPherson supplementary material
Download O'Donnell and McPherson supplementary material(File)
File 521.4 KB