Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
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Featured researches published by Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2011
Alvaro Rodríguez-Larralde; José Edgardo Dipierri; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Chiara Scapoli; E. Mamolini; G. Salvatorelli; Sonia De Lorenzi; Alberto Carrieri; I. Barrai
In Bolivia, the Hispanic dual surname system is used. To describe the isonymic structure of Bolivia, the surname distribution of 12,139,448 persons registered in the 2006 census data was studied in 9 districts and 112 provinces of the nation, for a total of 23,244,064 surnames. The number of different surnames found was 174,922. Matrices of isonymic distances between the administrative units (districts and provinces) were constructed and tested for correlation with geographic distance. In the 112 provinces, isonymic distances were correlated with geographic distance (r = 0.545 ± 0.011 for Euclidean, 0.501 ± 0.012 for Neis, and 0.556 ± 0.010 for Laskers distance). The multiple regression of the surname effective number (α), equivalent to the allele effective number in a genetic system, was nonsignificant on latitude and longitude; however, it was highly significant and negative on altitude (r = -0.72). Because the Andes extend from north to south in west-central Bolivia, random inbreeding was lowest in the eastern districts, and highest in mountainous western Bolivia. Average α for the provinces was 122 ± 2; for the districts, it was 216 ± 29, and for the whole of Bolivia it was 213. The geographical distribution of α in the provinces is compatible with the settlement of subsequent groups of migrants moving from east and north toward the center and south of Bolivia. The relative frequency of indigenous surnames is correlated positively with altitude. This suggests that the country was populated by recent low-density demic diffusion over a low-density indigenous population. This may have been a common phenomenon in the immigration to tropical South America.
Human Biology | 2016
José Edgardo Dipierri; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Alvaro Rodríguez-Larralde; Virginia Ramallo
abstract When migrating, people carry their cultural and genetic history, changing both the transmitting and the receiving populations. This phenomenon changes the structure of the population of a country. The question is how to analyze the impact on the border region. A demographic and geopolitical analysis of borders requires an interdisciplinary approach. An isonymic analysis can be a useful tool. Surnames are part of cultural history, sociocultural features transmitted from ancestors to their descendants through a vertical mechanism similar to that of genetic inheritance. The analysis of surname distribution can give quantitative information about the genetic structure of populations. The isonymic relations between border communities in southern Bolivia and northern Argentina were analyzed from electoral registers for 89 sections included in four major administrative divisions, two from each country, that include the international frontier. The Euclidean and geographic distance matrices where estimated for all possible pairwise comparisons between sections. The average isonymic distance was lower between Argentine than between Bolivian populations. Argentine sections formed three clusters, of which only one included a Bolivian section. The remaining clusters were exclusively formed by sections from Bolivia. The isonymic distance was greater along the border. Regardless of the intense human mobility in the past as in the present, and the presence of three major transborder conurbations, the Bolivian-Argentine international boundary functions as a geographical and administrative barrier that differentially affects the distribution and frequency of surnames. The observed pattern could possibly be a continuity of pre-Columbian regional organization.
Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica | 2001
Ignacio Felipe Bejarano; Luis Quero; José Edgardo Dipierri; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez
Diversidad humana y antropología aplicada, 2010, ISBN 978-84-614-2257-9, págs. 221-228 | 2010
Juan Francisco Romero Collazos; María Dolores Marrodán Serrano; M.S. Mesa Santurino; Ignacio Felipe Bejarano; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Aurora Martinez; B. Méndez de Pérez; J. Meléndez; Delia Beatriz Lomaglio
Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica | 1996
Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; José Edgardo Dipierri
Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica | 1999
Ignacio Felipe Bejarano; José Edgardo Dipierri; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Alberto Fiorito; T. Garcia; Natalia García; Osvaldo Kinderman
Anthropologie | 2005
Alberto Andrade; Alvaro Rodríguez Larralde; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Estela Chaves; José Edgardo Dipierri; I. Barrai
Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica | 2003
Jorge Morales; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; José Edgardo Dipierri; Ignacio Felipe Bejarano
Genes, ambiente y enfermedades en poblaciones humanas, 2008, ISBN 978-84-92521-49-4, págs. 521-530 | 2008
José Edgardo Dipierri; Ignacio Bejarano; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Graciela Cabrera; Susana Moreno Romero; M. H. Tanuz; María Dolores Marrodán Serrano
Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica | 2001
Verónica Lucrecia Martínez Marignac; Graciela Bailliet; José Edgardo Dipierri; Emma Laura Alfaro Gómez; Jorge S. López Camelo; Néstor O. Bianchi