In a pre-Hispanic burial cave of the northwestern corner of Tenerife (Canary Archipelago), the right tibia of a young (25-30-year-old Guanche (radiocarbon dating ≈ 650 BP)) man showed avulsion of the anterior tibial tuberosity, perhaps related to Osgood-Schlatter disease. The burial cave was located in the steep slope of a ravine, in a complex archaeological site composed of at least 23 caves (dwelling places + burial caves). This young male was probably exposed during late childhood/adolescence to lasting economic activities that required climbing up and down several times from his dwelling place to agricultural fields, to the seashore, or to the bottom of the ravine in search of fresh water, or to goat herding in such a rough landscape.
Osgood Schlatter Disease: A possible case from El Palmar, Buenavista del Norte (Tenerife, Canary Islands
Samuel J. Cockerill2, 3, Emilio González-Reimers1, Efraín Marrero-Salas2,3, Hacomar Ruiz-González2, Matilde Arnay-de-la-Rosa1,3
1 Grupo de Investigación ULL “Bioantropología, Paleopatología, Dieta y Nutrición en poblaciones antiguas”, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain)
2 PRORED (Soc. Coop. Patrimonio, Arqueología y Sociedad, Tenerife)
3 Departamento de Geografía e Historia, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain)
SUMMARY
Eur. J. Anat.
, 29
(5):
727-
732
(2025)
ISSN 2340-311X (Online)
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