Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/72991
Title: Exploring the risks accompanying child-bearing in aboriginal society on Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, 13th-15th cal. CE): death of a pregnant woman during her third trimester
Authors: Santana Cabrera, Jonathan Alberto 
Alamón-Núñez, Martha
Alberto Barroso, Carmen Verónica 
Delgado Darias, Teresa 
UNESCO Clasification: 550501 Arqueología
Issue Date: 2019
Journal: HOMO- Journal of Comparative Human Biology 
Abstract: In the pre-Hispanic necropolis of Juan Primo, northwest Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, Spain) a grave was found containing a 20-25 year-old woman with a foetus in her abdominal region, whose age at death was estimated at 33-35 weeks of gestation. The purpose of this study is to discuss the possible cause of death of the woman and foetus. Skeletons of both individuals were well preserved, permitting a good record of the bones found in the burial, which is compatible with a pregnancy at preterm. The age of the foetus and the position of the left upper limb raise the possibility that their death was the result of a difficult birth (dystocia). However, a number of alternative disorders can be put forward to explain this death in the third trimester of pregnancy, such as eclampsia and abruption placentae. In this case, pertinent ethnohistorical and osteoarchaeological information about the ancient canaries allows us to assess some of the stressors that would increase their maternal mortality. The lack of similar evidence in archaeological contexts makes this an important finding, providing a likely case of obstetric problems and their impact on pre-industrial societies.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/72991
ISSN: 0018-442X
DOI: 10.1127/homo/2019/1011
Source: HOMO- Journal of Comparative Human Biology [0018-442X], vol. 70(1), p. 45-56
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