人类学学报 ›› 2025, Vol. 44 ›› Issue (01): 78-91.doi: 10.16359/j.1000-3193/AAS.2024.0069

• 研究论文 • 上一篇    下一篇

西安北沈家桥墓地人颅骨的形态及其族源

王舒1(), 王春雪1, 张翔宇2, 周亚威3()   

  1. 1.吉林大学考古学院生物考古实验室,长春 130012
    2.西安市文物保护考古研究院,西安 710054
    3.郑州大学历史学院,郑州 450001
  • 收稿日期:2023-11-07 修回日期:2024-03-06 出版日期:2025-02-15 发布日期:2025-02-13
  • 通讯作者: 周亚威,教授,主要从事人类骨骼考古学研究。E-mail: zhouyawei469@163.com
  • 作者简介:王舒,博士研究生,研究方向为动物考古。E-mail: wsmercy@163.com
  • 基金资助:
    2023年度河南省高校哲学社会科学创新人才支持计划(2023-CXRC-17);国家重点研发专项(2020YFC1521607);国家社科基金重大项目(19ZDA227)

Skull morphology and ethnic origin of the people from the Beishenjiaqiao cemetery in Xi’an

WANG Shu1(), WANG Chunxue1, ZHANG Xiangyu2, ZHOU Yawei3()   

  1. 1. Bioarchaeology Laboratory, School of Archaeology, Jilin University, Changchun 130012
    2. Xi’an Institute of Cultural Relics Protection and Archaeology, Xi’an 710054
    3. School of history, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou 450001
  • Received:2023-11-07 Revised:2024-03-06 Online:2025-02-15 Published:2025-02-13

摘要:

北沈家桥墓地坐落于陕西省西安市雁塔区,乃是分布于关中平原的一处战国时期的秦人墓地。研究表明:北沈家桥组具有以中颅型、高颅型与狭颅型相结合为主,呈偏阔面型,上颌中门齿多为铲形等特征;相较于亚洲蒙古人种各近代组,北沈家桥组与抚顺组等关系紧密,与蒙古组等较为疏远,应归属于东亚蒙古人种。与先秦早期古代组相较,北沈家桥组和仰韶合并组等“古中原类型”居民关系密切,与庙子沟组等“古华北类型”居民也相对相近;与青铜-早期铁器时代古代组对比,其与中小墓2组等殷商群体,以及湾李组、瓦窑沟组等秦、周人群体关系紧密。鉴于长时段内北沈家桥居民与黄河中下游居民在人种学上存在密切联系,尤其与殷商群体关系更为接近,结合文献考证等多学科证据,推测秦人或许为殷商群体的部族之一,进而印证了“东来说”。

关键词: 墓地, 颅骨, 族源, 人种

Abstract:

The Beishenjiaqiao cemetery, located in Yanta District, Xi’an City, Shaanxi Province, is a burial ground of the Qin people during the Warring States Period on the Guanzhong Plain. Through the observation and measurement of 63 basically intact skulls unearthed from this cemetery, the following conclusions have been reached: The Beishenjiaqiao group exhibits a combination of mesocranium, high cranial vault, and narrow cranial shape, along with a relatively broad facial type. The maxillary central incisors are mostly spade-shaped, and the canine fossae and nasal root concavities are weakly developed. In comparison with modern Asian Mongoloid groups, it shows the closest affinity with the Fushun group, North China group, and South China group, while maintaining a greater distance from the Mongolian group and Turgus group. Therefore, the inhabitants of Beishenjiaqiao should be classified as the East Asian Mongoloid race. When contrasted with ancient groups in the early pre-Qin period, the Beishenjiaqiao group is closely related to the residents of the “ancient Central Plains type” such as the Yangshao Merged group, Miaodigou group, Taosi group, Chengzi Phase II group, and Dawenkou group, and is also proximate to the residents of the “ancient North China type” like the Miaozigou group. In comparison with ancient groups of the Bronze-early Iron Age, it has a strong connection with the Yin Shang groups such as the Small and Medium Tombs Group 2 and Group C of the Yin ruins, as well as the Qin and Zhou groups including the Wanli group, the Wayaogou group, and the Matengkong group. Considering the long-term and close associations between the residents of Beishenjiaqiao and those in the middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River, especially the closer relationship with the Yin Shang group, and in combination with literature research and other multidisciplinary evidence, it is hypothesized that the Qin people might have been one of the tribes of the Yin Shang group, thereby corroborating the “theory of originating from the east”. Based on the records in the Tsinghua Bamboo Slips “Chronicle”, we can deduce the development trajectory of the Qin people: The Qin might have initially been an eastern ethnic group, either closely affiliated with or even an integral part of the Yin-Shang tribes. After the fall of the Shang Dynasty, they were banished by the Zhou people to the northwest to defend against the Rong tribes. During this period, they coexisted and interacted with the Rong, leading to cultural and genetic exchanges. However, the main body of the Qin people retained numerous cultural traditions and physical characteristics from the Yin-Shang era. In contrast, the Qin people who assimilated into the Gansu-Qinghai region, such as the residents of Maojiaping, perpetuated more of the local physical traits. In the late Western Zhou period, the Qin were rewarded for their efforts in safeguarding the Zhou royal family during its eastward migration and subsequently took control of the Guanzhong region, further enhancing the interaction and integration among the groups along the Yellow River basin.

Key words: cemetery, skull, ethnic origin, race

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