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A Late Pleistocene woman from Tham Lod, Thailand: the influence of today on a face from the past

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 April 2017

Susan Hayes*
Affiliation:
Centre for Archaeological Science, University of Wollongong, Northfields Avenue, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia Museum Geologi Bandung, Jalan Diponegoro No. 57 Bandung, Jawa Barat 40122, Indonesia
Rasmi Shoocongdej
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Archaeology, Silpakorn University, Bangkok 10200, Thailand The Interaction between Humans and their Environments in Highland Pang Mapha, Mae Hong Son Province Project (IHE), Sirindhon Anthropological Centre, 20 Baromaratchachonnani Road, Taling Chan, Bangkok 10170, Thailand
Natthamon Pureepatpong
Affiliation:
The Interaction between Humans and their Environments in Highland Pang Mapha, Mae Hong Son Province Project (IHE), Sirindhon Anthropological Centre, 20 Baromaratchachonnani Road, Taling Chan, Bangkok 10170, Thailand
Sanjai Sangvichien
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy, Mahidol University, Rama VI Road, Ratchathewi, Bangkok 10400, Thailand
Kanoknart Chintakanon
Affiliation:
The Interaction between Humans and their Environments in Highland Pang Mapha, Mae Hong Son Province Project (IHE), Sirindhon Anthropological Centre, 20 Baromaratchachonnani Road, Taling Chan, Bangkok 10170, Thailand
*
*Author for correspondence (Email: susan_hayes@uow.edu.au)
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Abstract

Creating a facial appearance for individuals from the distant past is often highly problematic, even when verified methods are used. This is especially so in the case of non-European individuals, as the reference populations used to estimate the face tend to be heavily biased towards the average facial variation of recent people of European descent. To evaluate the problem, a facial approximation of a young woman from the Late Pleistocene rockshelter of Tham Lod in north-western Thailand was compared against the average facial variation of datasets from recent populations. The analysis indicated that the Tham Lod facial approximation was neither overtly recent in facial morphology, nor overtly European. The case is of particular interest as the Tham Lod individual probably belonged to a population ancestral to extant Australo-Melanesian peoples.

Information

Type
Research
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2017 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Tham Lod estimation of facial soft tissue depths (fSTDs) and the facial features (eyes, nose, mouth, ears). Table 1 summarises research articles referenced to estimate the location, shape and size of the facial features. The online supplementary material (OSM) contains details of the methods used to estimate the face and a table of the fSTDs.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The completed Tham Lod facial approximation.

Figure 2

Table 1. Population affinity associated with the facial approximation methods applied. Non-European populations are in bold type.

Figure 3

Figure 3. The comparative populations. The 25 international population groups (Farkas et al. 2005) are shown shaded. The Thai village of Tham Lod is indicated by a black circle (northern Thailand). Map modified from unscaled ‘Simplified angular world map’, accessed under the Creative Commons licence CC0 1.0.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Comparison of global weighted means with fSTD collected from 36 recent Thai female cadavers. The reported Thai standard deviations are indicated with dashed grey lines. The two datasets contain 15 homologous landmarks described in the OSM. The fSTDs applied in this facial approximation are indicated with an asterisk.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Cluster analysis of all features using Ward's Method in PAST v.3.08 (Hammer et al. 2001) of the Tham Lod facial approximation and 25 extant female populations (Farkas et al. 2005).

Figure 6

Figure 6. Scatter plot of principal components analysis in PAST v.3.08 (Hammer et al. 2001). The Tham Lod facial approximation is indicated by an arrow on the horizontal axis to the far right of the PC1 axis. The four East and Southeast Asian populations cluster (blue-coloured dots), and are indicated by an ellipse.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Cluster analysis using Ward's Method in PAST v.3.08 (Hammer et al. 2001) of the facial features of the Tham Lod individual and the 25 populations measured by Farkas et al. (2005). a) Facial height and width; b) eye spacing; c) nose height and width; d) mouth width. For the key to population abbreviations, see Figure 5.

Supplementary material: PDF

Hayes supplementary material

Hayes supplementary material

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