Vol. 19 No. 55 (2012): La mexicanidad y el neoindianismo hoy
Diversas temáticas desde las disciplinas antropológicas

Afinidad biológica a través de la morfología dental de dos muestras de la Península de Yucatán, México

Martha Pimentel Merlín
Centro Peninsular en Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, UNAM
Alfonso Gallardo Velázquez
Centro INAH Yucatán
Héctor Cisneros Reyes
Unidad Multidisciplinaria de Docencia e Investigación, UNAM

Published 2012-12-01

Keywords

  • dental anthropology,
  • Average Divergence Measurement,
  • multidimentional analysis,
  • miscegenation,
  • Yucatan

How to Cite

Afinidad biológica a través de la morfología dental de dos muestras de la Península de Yucatán, México. (2012). Cuicuilco Revista De Ciencias Antropológicas, 19(55), 69-87. https://www.revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/cuicuilco/article/view/392

Abstract

This paper presents the results obtained from an anthropolgical dental analysis carried out on two contemporary samples obtained from the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico; to do this, first, the Average Divergence Measurement between the two samples was taken, then, applying the same methodology, a comparative analysis was carried out on several populations worldwide, along with a multivariate analysis of multidimensional scaling, which provided results that demonstrate that the Yucatan populations, although very similar to each other, registered a differing level of mixed-race European influence, given that the locality of Xpujil, in the Southern part of the Yucatan Peninsula, demonstrates a lower grade of European influence compared with the average, thus supporting the position that throughout the contemporary history of the Mexican Republic, the mixing process has been unequal in different regions of the national territory and that the most (geographically) marginalized populations have seen lower levels of mixing, thus demonstrating that the ancestral Mesoamerican gene pool has —to a certain extent— been maintained.

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