人类学学报 ›› 2023, Vol. 42 ›› Issue (06): 779-792.doi: 10.16359/j.1000-3193/AAS.2023.0063

• 研究论文 • 上一篇    下一篇

河南开封御龙湾遗址人骨的创伤

孙蕾1,2(), 万军卫4, 唐静2,3, 任婷1,2   

  1. 1.河南省东亚现代人起源国际联合实验室,郑州 450000
    2.河南省文物考古研究院,郑州 450000
    3.河南省文物科技保护中心,郑州 450000
    4.开封市文物考古研究院,开封 475000
  • 收稿日期:2023-03-16 接受日期:2023-06-16 出版日期:2023-12-15 发布日期:2023-12-14
  • 作者简介:孙蕾,副研究员,主要从事体质人类学研究。E-mail: 649724910@qq.com
  • 基金资助:
    河南省属科研院所基本科研业务费项目“豫北地区西晋至明清时期人群的种系特征与健康状况研究”

Traumas of human bones from the Yulongwan site in Kaifeng, Henan

SUN Lei1,2(), WAN Junwei4, TANG Jing2,3, REN Ting1,2   

  1. 1. Henan Provincial International Joint Laboratory on Origins of Modern Humans in East Asia, Zhengzhou 450000
    2. Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, Zhengzhou 450000
    3. Henan Provincial Center for Conservation, Zhengzhou 450000
    4. Kaifeng Municipal Research Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, Kaifeng 475000
  • Received:2023-03-16 Accepted:2023-06-16 Online:2023-12-15 Published:2023-12-14

摘要:

本文对开封城东南部一处明代晚期御龙湾建筑遗址出土的人骨遗骸进行鉴定,将其中存在死前创伤的人骨标本(R2、R3、R5、R6、R11和R12)作为研究材料,对人骨上的砍、砸、切及灼烧痕迹作辨析。结果显示:1)R6浅埋于明文化层,仰身直肢,头部有多处砍痕,被砍原因不明;2)R3在淤积黏土层中,侧身屈肢,除头部以外身体其余部位完好无缺,头部两处砸痕可能是房屋倒塌、砖块或房梁砸击头部导致;3)容器(R2、R5、R12)和房屋(R11)中人骨的砍、砸、切痕等属于暴力砍砸并存在肢解痕迹,扫描电子显微镜(SEM)图片显示容器中的人骨经过了低温加热。第三点中所述人骨在出土地点、骨骼部位出现情况、伤痕位置与类型或灼烧痕迹等方面,都符合同类相食的基本标准,从生物考古学角度印证了史料记载“人相食”的人类惨剧。御龙湾明代建筑遗址出土的部分死前创伤人骨,是我国目前所见最有可能属于同类相食事件的人类骨骼标本,为深入了解古代人相食现象及明代的社会历史等问题提供了人类学资料。

关键词: 明代, 人骨, 创伤, 同类相食

Abstract:

In this paper, human bone remains excavated from the Yulongwanan site, an architectural site of Ming Dynasty, in the southeast Kaifeng City were identified, and the human bone specimens (R2, R3, R5, R6, R11 and R12) with premortem traumas were used as research materials to distinguish the marks of chopping, smashing, cutting and burning on human bones. The marks were measured with a vernier caliper, including maximum length, width and depth. Three traits of type, location and quantity for describing the morphology of the marks were recorded. According to the macroscopic and microscopic criteria of indirect heat exposure at low temperature, the surface morphology of human bones in containers was observed and analyzed respectively by naked eye and scanning electron microscope (SEM). The results showed that: 1) R6 (female, 40~45 years old) in an supine extended position, which was shallowly buried in the Ming culture layer, only had multiple chopmarks on the skull, but the postcranial bones were complete, so it is unclear why the skull was chopped; 2) R3 (gender unknown, about 9 years old) lied on its right side with flexed limbs in the silted clay layer; the postcranial bones were complete, so two smashmarks on R3’s skull could have been caused by bricks’ or beams’ hitting when the house collapsed; 3) The human bones in containers (R2, R5, R12) and house (R11) showed signs of violent hacking and mutilation. The micromorphometric analysis of cutting and chopping marks on human bones suggests that these marks occured in slaughtering of fresh bodies. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images also indicated that R2 and R5 presented the diffusion and degradation of collagen fibrils, smooth and compact surfaces, and closed bone pores. The low temperature burning of R12 made collagen degrade, formed gelatinous mass, and made the pores indistinguishable. Those bones (R2, R5, R12) were significantly different from R11, which had the hierarchical structure, typical of cortical bone morphology. Therefore the human bones in containers were supposed to be heated at a low temperature. The bones of R2, R5, R11 and R12 shared a number of characteristics that had come to be recognized as baseline criteria for identifying cannibalism in the archaeological record: Lack of formal burial, under-representation of bones, extensive perimortem lesions, and burning. These bones can be used as the evidence of cannibalism, which corroborate the human tragedy recorded in historical data from the perspective of bioarchaeology. The human bones unearthed from the Yulongwan Ming Dynasty architecture site may be the most credible evidence of cannibalism, which provide anthropological data for understanding deeply the cannibalism of ancient human and the social history of the Ming Dynasty.

Key words: Ming Dynasty, Human bones, Trauma, Cannibalism

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