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Assessing the Parasitic Burden in a Late Antique Florentine Emergency Burial Site
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Assessing the Parasitic Burden in a Late Antique Florentine Emergency Burial Site

The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2019;57(6):587-593.
Published online: December 31, 2019

1University of Bordeaux Montaigne, CNRS UMR 5607 Ausonius, Maison de l’Archéologie, Domaine universitaire, 8 esplanade des Antilles, 33607 Pessac cedex, France

2University of Bourgogne Franche-Comté, CNRS UMR 6249 Chrono-Environment, 16 route de Gray, 25030 Besançon cedex, France

3Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paesaggio of Firenze, Pistoia and Prato, Italy

4Legal Medicine Section, Department of Public Health and Paediatric Sciences, University of Turin, C.so Galileo Galilei, 22, 10126 Torino, Italy

5Warwick Medical School, Biomedical Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry, 4CV 7 AL, United Kingdom

6ADES (UMR 7268), Laboratoire d’Anthropologie bio-culturelle, Droit, Éthique & Santé (Adés), Faculté de Médecine de Marseille, 51 Boulevard Pierre Dramard, France

• Received: August 30, 2019   • Revised: September 25, 2019   • Accepted: September 30, 2019

Copyright © 2019 by The Korean Society for Parasitology and Tropical Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Assessing the Parasitic Burden in a Late Antique Florentine Emergency Burial Site
Korean J Parasitol. 2019;57(6):587-593.   Published online December 31, 2019
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Korean J Parasitol. 2019;57(6):587-593.   Published online December 31, 2019
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Assessing the Parasitic Burden in a Late Antique Florentine Emergency Burial Site
Image Image
Fig. 1 Pit grave T9 (Uffizi Gallery, Florence) containing 8 aligned individuals deposed simultaneously. The bodies were closely joined, with alternating orientation and diversified position of the upper limbs.
Fig. 2 Ascaris sp. eggs. (A) the lower part is still coated with the outer shell (dark brown). (B) decorticated egg (morphotype “ascarid”) with preserved inner content in the lower part. Scale: 50 μm.
Assessing the Parasitic Burden in a Late Antique Florentine Emergency Burial Site

Paleoparasitological observations among 18 individuals. Five showed remains of Ascaris sp.

Lab sample ID Tomb/Individual ID Localization Ascaris sp./Ascarid
UFF17 P1 T8 IND C Lumbar vertebrae yes
UFF17 P2 T8 IND E coccyx -
UFF17 P3 T8 IND E pelvis -
UFF17 P4 T9 IND A pelvis yes
UFF17 P5 T9 IND C sacrum yes
UFF17 P6 T9 IND E pelvis -
UFF17 P7 T9 IND E sacrum -
UFF17 P8 T10 IND C pelvis -
UFF17 P9 T16 pelvis -
UFF17 P10 T17 IND B pelvis -
UFF17 P11 T18 IND B pelvis -
UFF17 P12 T18 IND C pelvis -
UFF17 P13 T18 IND D pelvis -
UFF17 P14 T19 IND A pelvis -
UFF17 P15 T19 IND B pelvis -
UFF17 P16 T19 IND C pelvis -
UFF17 P17 T19 IND D pelvis -
UFF17 P18 T20 IND C pelvis -
UFF17 P19 T22 IND A pelvis yes
UFF17 P20 T22 IND A coccyx -
UFF17 P21 T22 IND B coccyx yes
UFF17 P22 T22 IND B sacrum yes

Paleoparasitological data in Italy

Site Period Sampling context Helminths Protozoa Reference
Italy Roman Latrines Trichuris sp. [19]
Pompei 1st c. CE Pipes Trichuris sp. [20,21]
Ostia Roman Sediment core Ascaris sp., Capillaria sp., Strongyle type eggs, Dicrocoelium sp., Opisthorchis sp., Fasciola sp. [22]
Parma 3rd-2nd c. BCE
10th–12th c. CE
Layers
Pits
Trichuris sp.
Ascaris sp., Trichuris sp., Diphyllobothrium sp.,
Dicrocoelium sp., Capillaria sp., Taenia sp.
[23]
[24]
Velia 1st–2nd c. CE Human bone Plasmodium falciparum [26]
Vagnari 1st–4th c. CE Human bone P. falciparum [26]
Lugano 5th c. CE Human bone P. falciparum [27]
Rome Roman Sediment core Entamoeba histolytica [25]
Pisa 16th c. CE Human bone P. falciparum, Leishmania infantum [2830]
Table 1 Paleoparasitological observations among 18 individuals. Five showed remains of Ascaris sp.
Table 2 Paleoparasitological data in Italy