Dental Morphological Markers as a Proxy for Ethnicity in Robinson Crusoe Islanders
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2015Metadata
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Villanueva Bianchini, Pía
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Dental Morphological Markers as a Proxy for Ethnicity in Robinson Crusoe Islanders
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Abstract
Chilean Robinson Crusoe Island is a semi-isolated location with unusually high rates of both consanguinity and
language disorder. The current population of 633 inhabitants is descended almost exclusively from the colonization at the end of the 19th
century, as there were few preceding immigrations to the island. This study investigates the genetic composition and degree of miscegenation
within the island population, using dental morphological markers. The universe of island children was studied (n= 128, 3 to 15 years of
age) using clinical exams, dental cast, and identification of each individual within a previously-constructed extensive genealogy for the
island. The frequencies for Carabelli's cusp (61.7%), shovel-shaped incisor (9.4%), and sixth cusp (2.3%), along with the absence of
seventh cusp, are consistent with a primarily Caucasian population. The estimated degree of miscegenation suggests an Amerindian
component of 4.3%, which is consistent with the extensive known genealogies of the founders. Characterizing the genetic profile of
Robinson Crusoe Island, a location with a remarkably high prevalence of language disorder, facilitates the comparison of the genetic
variants underlying this pathology with those identified in European populations
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Vicerrectoria de Investigacion, Universidad de Chile
UCHILE DID TNAC 01-02/01
UCHILE DI MULT 05-05/02
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Int. J. Morphol., 33(2):538-543, 2015
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