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Dive into the research topics where Mario F. Rolfo is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario F. Rolfo.


Annals of Human Biology | 2010

Mitochondrial DNA variation in an isolated area of Central Italy.

Francesco Messina; Gabriele Scorrano; Cristina Martínez Labarga; Mario F. Rolfo; Olga Rickards

Abstract Background: The genetic variation in Italy is the result of ancient population movement, demographic change, and geography. The increasing possibility of studying the maternal genetic structure of selected Italian population samples at a high level of phylogenetic resolution provides a particularly useful model to assess the presence of genetic traces of the ancient people who lived in Italy in pre-Roman times in present populations Aim: In this study we reconstructed the genetic maternal history of Jenne and Vallepietra, two mountain communities in the Aniene Valley in the Simbruini Mountains near Rome. Both communities have been spared external invasion due to their geographic location, which very likely preserved the genetic pool of these autochthonous populations. Subjects and methods: The study population (124 individuals from Jenne and Vallepietra) were investigated for D-loop mtDNA hypervariable segments I (HVS-I) and II (HVS-II) and for informative single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the coding region. The detected haplotypes were then compared with those of other Italian, European and Mediterranean populations. Results: The distribution of mtDNA diversity in Jenne and Vallepietra, although similar to that found in other European populations, shows a basic variability and the typical signs of a certain degree of isolation between them and other populations analysed; in particular, the Vallepietra sample showed an unusually high frequency (71.3%) of mtDNA haplogroups which are typical of Near Eastern and South-Western Asian populations. Conclusion: The high degree of differentiation between the two villages is intriguing, since it suggests a low level of gene flow between them, despite their close geographic proximity and shared linguistic features. The degree of their genetic isolation, also in comparison to other Italian, European and Mediterranean populations, is consistent with isolation among geographically separated populations.


Annals of Human Biology | 2015

Methodological strategies to assess the degree of bone preservation for ancient DNA studies

Gabriele Scorrano; Federica Valentini; Cristina Martínez-Labarga; Mario F. Rolfo; Antonella Fiammenghi; Domenico Lo Vetro; Fabio Martini; Antonella Casoli; Giovanni Ferraris; Giuseppe Palleschi; Antonio Palleschi; Olga Rickards

Abstract Background: Archaeological bones contain only small amounts of DNA due to post-mortem DNA degradation and the changes endogenous DNA is subjected to during diagenesis. An important step before undertaking such time-consuming and costly analyses as ancient DNA investigation is to predict the presence of DNA in ancient samples. To date, the leading screening method has been amino acid racemization; however, other analytical techniques can also be used to assess the degree of bone preservation. Aim: The aim of the present study was to relate the presence of DNA with bone preservation in order to select samples potentially suitable for ancient DNA analysis. Subjects and methods: Bones collected from several archaeological sites, different locations (cave, rockshelter or sub divo) and diachronic periods were selected for analytical and spectroscopic analysis in order to correlate bone tissue preservation with the presence of DNA. Different techniques were combined to assess the degree of preservation of organic and inorganic components. Results: As determined by different analytical methods, preservation of the inorganic component was best associated with the presence of DNA. Conclusion: Evaluation of the bone preservation state may be an efficient step to predict the presence of DNA in ancient samples prior to aDNA analysis.


American Journal of Human Biology | 2015

Traces of forgotten historical events in mountain communities in Central Italy: A genetic insight

Francesco Messina; Andrea Finocchio; Mario F. Rolfo; Flavio De Angelis; Cesare Rapone; Martina Coletta; Cristina Martínez-Labarga; Gianfranco Biondi; Andrea Berti; Olga Rickards

Analysis of human genetic variation in mountain communities can shed light on the peopling of mountainous regions, perhaps revealing whether the remote geographic location spared them from outside invasion and preserved their gene pool from admixture. In this study, we created a model to assess genetic traces of historical events by reconstructing the paternal and maternal genetic history of seven small mountain villages in inland valleys of Central Italy.


PLOS ONE | 2017

The Aggradational Successions of the Aniene River Valley in Rome: Age Constraints to Early Neanderthal Presence in Europe

Fabrizio Marra; Piero Ceruleo; Luca Pandolfi; Carmelo Petronio; Mario F. Rolfo; Leonardo Salari; Michael D. Petraglia

We revise the chronostratigraphy of several sedimentary successions cropping out along a 5 km-long tract of the Aniene River Valley in Rome (Italy), which yielded six hominin remains previously attributed to proto- or archaic Neanderthal individuals, as well as a large number of lithic artefacts showing intermediate characteristics somewhere between the local Acheulean and Mousterian cultures. Through a method of correlation of aggradational successions with post-glacial sea-level rises, relying on a large set of published 40Ar/39Ar ages of interbedded volcanic deposits, we demonstrate that deposition of the sediments hosting the human remains spans the interval 295–220 ka. This is consistent with other well constrained ages for lithic industries recovered in England, displaying transitional features from Lower to Middle Paleolithic, suggesting the appearance of Mode 3 during the MIS 9-MIS 8 transition. Moreover, the six human bone fragments recovered in the Aniene Valley should be regarded as the most precisely dated and oldest hominin remains ascribable to Neanderthal-type individuals in Europe, discovered to date. The chronostratigraphic study presented here constitutes the groundwork for addressing re-analysis of these remains and of their associated lithic industries, in the light of their well-constrained chronological picture.


World Archaeology | 2017

Bioarchaeological remains as indicators of costly signalling: two case studies from the Middle Bronze Age of Central Italy

Letizia Silvestri; Katia Francesca Achino; Maurizio Gatta; Mario F. Rolfo

ABSTRACT This paper concerns the role of costly signalling in the ritual expressions of Middle Bronze Age human culture of Central Italy. A wide overview of the existing literature and the accurate examination of recent case studies enabled us to demonstrate that costly signalling is especially identifiable through the study of the ecofactual remains found in caves that are central ritual sites in Apennine protohistory. The dozens of perinatal domesticates from Grotta Mora Cavorso and the quintals of burnt seeds from Grotta di Pastena, had they not been considered in their burial and strongly ritual framework – which has been identified with certainty also thanks to these ecofacts – could have provided only a general and highly unreliable palaeoenvironmental and palaeoeconomic subsistence reconstruction. The same remains, analysed in a social perspective, have allowed us to recognize a complex set of symbolic practices and to clarify some possible features of the society that performed these rituals.


Rivista Italiana Di Paleontologia E Stratigrafia | 2017

LATE PLEISTOCENE LAST OCCURRENCES OF THE NARROW-NOSED RHINOCEROS STEPHANORHINUS HEMITOECHUS (MAMMALIA, PERISSODACTYLA) IN ITALY

Luca Pandolfi; Paolo Boscato; Jacopo Crezzini; Maurizio Gatta; Adriana Moroni; Mario F. Rolfo; Antonio Tagliacozzo

Several taxa belonging to the so called megafauna became extinct during the late Quaternary in Eurasia. The extinction chronology of the narrow-nosed rhinoceros, Stephanorhinus hemitoechus , in Europe is still uncertain and only estimated around 45 ka. A systematic revision of several rhinoceros findings reveals that this species occurred in Italy at least untill 41 ka BP, at the onset of the Heinrich Event 4. Climatic fluctuations during MIS 3 and habitat fragmentation probably created an increase of small S. hemitoechus populations in southern Europe which had a tendency to become extinct.


Quaternary International | 2007

Mid-distal occurrences of the Albano Maar pyroclastic deposits and their relevance for reassessing the eruptive scenarios of the most recent activity at the Colli Albani Volcanic District, Central Italy

Biagio Giaccio; Andrea Sposato; Mario Gaeta; Fabrizio Marra; Danilo M. Palladino; Jacopo Taddeucci; Mario Barbieri; Paolo Messina; Mario F. Rolfo


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2012

Identification of ancient Olea europaea L. and Cornus mas L. seeds by DNA barcoding.

Angelo Gismondi; Mario F. Rolfo; Donatella Leonardi; Olga Rickards; Antonella Canini


IL QUATERNARIO | 2011

First Data on the latest Pleistocene mammals from Mora Cavorso cave (Jenne, Latium, Central Italy)

Leonardo Salari; Daria Passacantando; Mario F. Rolfo


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Reassessing human occupation patterns in the inner central Apennines in prehistory: The case-study of Grotta Mora Cavorso

Mario F. Rolfo; Katia Francesca Achino; Ivana Fusco; Leonardo Salari; Letizia Silvestri

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Leonardo Salari

Sapienza University of Rome

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Olga Rickards

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Luca Pandolfi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carmelo Petronio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Katia Francesca Achino

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Fabrizio Marra

University of California

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Angelo Gismondi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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