Alan M. Leventhal
San Jose State University
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Featured researches published by Alan M. Leventhal.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2009
Robert Jurmain; Eric J. Bartelink; Alan M. Leventhal; Viviana Bellifemine; Irina Nechayev; Melynda Atwood; Diane DiGiuseppe
Interpersonal aggression is assessed paleoepidemiologically in a large skeletal population from the CA-ALA-329 site located on the southeastern side of San Francisco Bay, California. This comprehensive analysis included all currently recognized skeletal criteria, including craniofacial fracture, projectile injury, forearm fracture, and perimortem bone modification. Craniofacial injury is moderately common, showing an adult prevalence of 9.0% with facial lesions accounting for >50% of involvement. Clinical studies suggest that such separate evaluation of facial involvement provides a useful perspective for understanding patterns of interpersonal aggression. In this group male facial involvement is significantly greater than in females, paralleling the pattern found widely in contemporary populations as well as in African apes. When compared to other North American skeletal samples the prevalence of adult cranial vault injury (3.3%) and especially projectile injury (4.4%) are quite high. However, well documented populations from southern California show markedly higher prevalence for both types of skeletal markers of aggression. Forearm fracture is also assessed using a rigorous radiographic methodology and results suggest that these injuries are not reliable indicators of interpersonal aggression. Lastly, perimortem bone modification was not observed in this population, although it has been recorded from other (older) sites nearby. This study provides an evaluation of multiple skeletal markers of interpersonal aggression in the largest sample from a single site yet reported in North America and, joined with consideration of cultural context, helps further illuminate both geographic and temporal patterns of interpersonal aggression in California.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2013
Fernando A. Villanea; Deborah A. Bolnick; Cara Monroe; Rosita Worl; Rosemary Cambra; Alan M. Leventhal; Brian M. Kemp
In this study, we explore the geographic and temporal distribution of a unique variant of the O blood group allele called O1v(G542A) , which has been shown to be shared among Native Americans but is rare in other populations. O1v(G542A) was previously reported in Native American populations in Mesoamerica and South America, and has been proposed as an ancestry informative marker. We investigated whether this allele is also found in the Tlingit and Haida, two contemporary indigenous populations from Alaska, and a pre-Columbian population from California. If O1v(G542A) is present in Na-Dene speakers (i.e., Tlingits), it would indicate that Na-Dene speaking groups share close ancestry with other Native American groups and support a Beringian origin of the allele, consistent with the Beringian Incubation Model. If O1v(G542A) is found in pre-Columbian populations, it would further support a Beringian origin of the allele, rather than a more recent introduction of the allele into the Americas via gene flow from one or more populations which have admixed with Native Americans over the past five centuries. We identified this allele in one Na-Dene population at a frequency of 0.11, and one ancient California population at a frequency of 0.20. Our results support a Beringian origin of O1v(G542A) , which is distributed today among all Native American groups that have been genotyped in appreciable numbers at this locus. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that Na-Dene and other Native American populations primarily derive their ancestry from a single source population.
Science | 2018
Christiana L. Scheib; Hongjie Li; Tariq Desai; Vivian Link; Christopher Kendall; Genevieve Dewar; Peter William Griffith; Alexander Mörseburg; John R. Johnson; Amiee Potter; Susan L. Kerr; Phillip Endicott; John Lindo; Marc Haber; Yali Xue; Chris Tyler-Smith; Manjinder S. Sandhu; Joseph G. Lorenz; Tori D. Randall; Zuzana Faltyskova; Luca Pagani; Petr Danecek; Tamsin C. O’Connell; Patricia Martz; Alan Boraas; Brian F. Byrd; Alan M. Leventhal; Rosemary Cambra; Ronald F. Williamson; Louis Lesage
Founder effects in modern populations The genomes of ancient humans can reveal patterns of early human migration (see the Perspective by Achilli et al.). Iceland has a genetically distinct population, despite relatively recent settlement (∼1100 years ago). Ebenesersdóttir et al. examined the genomes of ancient Icelandic people, dating to near the colonization of Iceland, and compared them with modernday Icelandic populations. The ancient DNA revealed that the founders had Gaelic and Norse origins. Genetic drift since the initial settlement has left modern Icelanders with allele frequencies that are distinctive, although still skewed toward those of their Norse founders. Scheib et al. sequenced ancient genomes from the Channel Islands of California, USA, and Ontario, Canada. The ancient Ontario population was similar to other ancient North Americans, as well as to modern Algonquian-speaking Native Americans. In contrast, the California individuals were more like groups that now live in Mexico and South America. It appears that a genetic split and population isolation likely occurred during the Ice Age, but the peoples remixed at a later date. Science, this issue p. 1028, p. 1024; see also p. 964 Two parallel, terminal Pleistocene lineages gave rise to Californian, Central, and South American populations. Little is known regarding the first people to enter the Americas and their genetic legacy. Genomic analysis of the oldest human remains from the Americas showed a direct relationship between a Clovis-related ancestral population and all modern Central and South Americans as well as a deep split separating them from North Americans in Canada. We present 91 ancient human genomes from California and Southwestern Ontario and demonstrate the existence of two distinct ancestries in North America, which possibly split south of the ice sheets. A contribution from both of these ancestral populations is found in all modern Central and South Americans. The proportions of these two ancestries in ancient and modern populations are consistent with a coastal dispersal and multiple admixture events.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013
Brian F. Byrd; Anna Cornellas; Jelmer W. Eerkens; Jeffrey S. Rosenthal; Tim R. Carpenter; Alan M. Leventhal; Jennifer A. Leonard
California History | 1992
Les Field; Alan M. Leventhal; Dolores Sanchez; Rosemary Cambra
Environmental Science & Policy | 2008
Davinna Ohlson; Katherine Cushing; Lynne A. Trulio; Alan M. Leventhal
Archive | 1994
Alan M. Leventhal; Les Field; Henry Alvarez; Rosemary Cambra
Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology | 2011
Alan M. Leventhal; Karen S. Gardner; Rosemary Cambra; Eric J. Bartelink; Antoinette Martinez
Archive | 1993
Alan M. Leventhal; Laura Jones; Rosemary Cambra; Norma Sanchez
Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology | 2014
Jelmer W. Eerkens; Gry H. Barfod; Alan M. Leventhal; Gina A. Jorgenson; Rosemary Cambra