Abstract :
During the approximately 2500-year history of the site (ca. late-5th to early-2nd millennium bce), Tepe Hissar experienced a
number of cultural, economic, and social transformations, which were accompanied by conflict, population movements, an increase in
industrial activities, as well as episodes of site abandonment and reoccupation. This study investigates the impact of these socio-culturaleconomic
changes on the health of the people buried at Tepe Hissar. This study examines the pathological indicators of nutritional
stress and skeletal metabolic disease using a sample of 313 adult individuals, stratified by sex and age, as well as by chronology. The
chi-square test was employed to compare the significant differences in the prevalence of metabolic disease within and between the Tepe
Hissar populations grouped by sex and age category. For those samples too small to be subjected to chi-squared significance testing,
Fisher’s exact test was used. Both calculations were conducted in Excel and SPSS 20. The results of these tests showed that males
and females of all age groups from each of the three periods at Tepe Hissar experienced similar episodes of health and stress during
their lives. Specifically, approximately half of the individuals from each period experienced some form of metabolic skeletal disease.
Statistical analyses did not show any significant increase or decrease in the prevalence of nutritional stress or other metabolic diseases
among this population between periods. The results of this research indicate that the socio-cultural-economic changes and events that
occurred at this site, particularly during Hissar II and III, did not have a significant impact on the general health and disease of the
population. This research suggests that the society at Tepe Hissar had access to similar levels of food resources and experienced similar
living conditions over time from the late-5th to the early-2nd millennium bce. The high rate of metabolic bone diseases in each period,
however, could have been due to exposure to toxic elements such as lead and arsenic which were widely utilized in metallurgical
production at Tepe Hissar throughout its history.
Keywords :
Metabolic Diseases , Human Skeletal Remains , Chalcolithic and Bronze Age , Lead and Arsenic Poisoning , Tepe Hissar