The Aymara : strategies in human adaptation to a rigorous environment

Bibliographic Information

The Aymara : strategies in human adaptation to a rigorous environment

edited by William J. Schull and Francisco Rothhammer ; with collaborating editor, Sara A. Barton

(Studies in human biology, v. 2)

Kluwer Academic, c1990

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-242) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

South America's Andean highlands have seen the rise and decline of several impressive, indigenous civilizations. Separated somewhat in time and place, each developed its distinctive socio-cultural accouterments but all shared a need to adjust to the individual, societal and environmental limitations imposed by life at high altitude. Partial oxygen pressure, temperature and humidity fall systematically as altitude rises, but there are other changes as well. Darwin, Forbes, von Humboldt, von Tschudi and other naturalists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries who weaved their way through South America commented repeatedly on the tolerance or apparent indifference of the indigenes to the rigors of life at altitudes above 3000 meters but its impact upon lowlanders. Von Tschudi (1847), for example, observed 'in the cordillera the effect of the diminished atmospheric pressure on the human frame shows itself in intolerable symptoms of weariness and an extreme difficulty of breathing . . . . The first symptoms are usually felt at the elevation of 12,600 feet (3800 m) above the sea. These symptoms are vertigo, dimness of sight and hearing, pains in the head and nausea . . . . Inhabitants of the coast and Europeans, who for the first time visit the lofty regions of the cordillera, are usually attacked with this disorder. ' But von Tschudi's description of acute mountain sickness was hardly the first; his Spanish predecessors had known and commented upon it too.

Table of Contents

1: Introduction: The place and the study.- 2: Flora and fauna.- 3: Trace metals.- 4: The Aymara: An outline of their pre and post-Columbian history.- 5: Paleopathology.- 6: Nutritional characteristics of the Aymara of northern Chile.- 7: The Chilean Aymara and their reproductive patterns.- 8: Ecologic determinants of the health of Aymara children.- 9: Disease and disability among the Aymara.- 10: Heterozygosity and physical growth in an Andean population.- 11: Hearing and hypoxia among the Aymara.- 12: Altitude and cardiopulmonary relationships.- 13: Oral characteristics of the Aymara.- 14: Intratribal genetic differentiation as assessed through electrophoresis.- 15: Ethnogenesis and affinities to other South American aboriginal populations.- 16: Epilogue.- References.- Multinational Andean Genetic and Health Program Publications.

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