Yukio Dodo
Tohoku University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Yukio Dodo.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1997
Hajime Ishida; Yukio Dodo
Nonmetric cranial variation and facial flatness of the Pacific and circum-Pacific populations are investigated. The peoples of the Marianas, eastern Polynesia and Hawaii form a cluster and show affinities in terms of nonmetric cranial variation with the Southeast and East Asians rather than with the Jomon-Ainu, a view which is widely supported by others. Facial flatness analysis also indicates that Polynesians have different patterns of facial prominence as compared with the Jomon-Ainu. These results increase the difficulty of accepting the Jomon-Pacific cluster proposed by Brace and his coworkers. Although genetic and nonmetric cranial variation reveal relatively close relationships, the Mariana skeletons are markedly different in facial flatness and limb bone morphology from those of Polynesians.
Radiocarbon | 2010
Yuichi I. Naito; Yoshito Chikaraishi; Naohiko Ohkouchi; Hitoshi Mukai; Yasuyuki Shibata; Noah V. Honch; Yukio Dodo; Hajime Ishida; Tetsuya Amano; Hiroko Ono; Minoru Yoneda
The relative contribution of marine-derived carbon in the ancient diet is essential for correcting the marine reservoir effect on the radiocarbon age of archaeological human remains. In this study, we evaluated the marine protein consumption of 3 human populations from the Okhotsk culture (about AD 550-1200) in Hokkaido, Japan, based on stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic compositions in bulk bone collagen as well as the nitrogen isotopic composition of glutamic acid and phenylalanine. Despite the similarity of carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of bulk collagens, nitrogen isotopic composition of their constituent amino acids suggests differences in fur seal contributions among northern Hokkaido (0-24% for Kafukai 1, 0-10% for Hamanaka 2) and eastern Hokkaido (78-80% for Moyoro) populations. It suggests that nitrogen composition of glutamic acid and phenylalanine could provide a detailed picture of ancient human subsistence.
Journal of Anatomy | 1998
Tsunehiko Hanihara; Hajime Ishida; Yukio Dodo
The frequency of the Os zygomaticum bipartitum was examined in major human populations around the world. Eastern Asians have a higher frequency of the bipartite zygomatic bone than any other geographical groups. The arctic peoples, Amerindians and the Oceanians, who all may have derived from eastern Asian population stocks, have a considerably low frequency of this trait. The frequency distribution from East/Southeast Asia to Africa and Europe through South/Central/West Asia suggests some clinality for the bipartite zygomatic bone. The second peak in the frequency is seen in Subsaharan Africa. The clinal variation with no identifiable regulation by subsistence patterns and environmental factors suggested a genetic background for the occurrence of the Os zygomaticum bipartitum.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2010
Takehiro Sato; Hisako Kazuta; Tetsuya Amano; Hiroko Ono; Hajime Ishida; Haruto Kodera; Hirofumi Matsumura; Minoru Yoneda; Yukio Dodo; Ryuichi Masuda
To investigate the genetic characteristics of the ancient populations of Hokkaido, northern Japan, polymorphisms of the ABO blood group gene were analyzed for 17 Jomon/Epi-Jomon specimens and 15 Okhotsk specimens using amplified product-length polymorphism and restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses. Five ABO alleles were identified from the Jomon/ Epi-Jomon and Okhotsk people. Allele frequencies of the Jomon/Epi-Jomon and Okhotsk people were compared with those of the modern Asian, European and Oceanic populations. The genetic relationships inferred from principal component analyses indicated that both Jomon/Epi-Jomon and Okhotsk people are included in the same group as modern Asian populations. However, the genetic characteristics of these ancient populations in Hokkaido were significantly different from each other, which is in agreement with the conclusions from mitochondrial DNA and ABCC11 gene analyses that were previously reported.
Archive | 2002
Yukio Dodo; Osamu Kondo; Sultan Muhesen; Takeru Akazawa
A human infant skeleton was discovered in the Mousterian formation at Dederiyeh Cave, northern Syria, in 1993 by the team of the Japan-Syrian joint expedition (Akazawa et al. 1995a,b). The skeleton was lying in the expected anatomical position embedded in a stratigraphic entity that contained a “Tabun B-type” Mousterian industry. The preservation of the bones was remarkably good, and all the vertebrae and the left ribs were identifiable (Figure 1). This paper will focus only on the anatomical aspects of the skeleton. The good preservation will allow us to assign the specimen to a taxon fairly easily despite its immature state.
The Journal of Anthropological Society of Nippon | 1990
Yukio Dodo; Hajime Ishida
The Journal of Anthropological Society of Nippon | 1974
Yukio Dodo
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2003
Tsunehiko Hanihara; Hajime Ishida; Yukio Dodo
The Journal of Anthropological Society of Nippon | 1987
Yukio Dodo
Anthropological Science | 2006
Nancy Suzanne Ossenberg; Yukio Dodo; Tomoko Maeda; Yoshinori Kawakubo