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Anthropology
Related: About this forumSkulls With 'Surfer's Ear' Suggest Ancient Pearl Divers in Panama
Surfer's Ear
The bony growths found in pre-Hispanic skulls in Panama suggest communities were diving for oysters and pearls thousands of years ago. (Smith-Guzmán et al.)
By Lorraine Boissoneault
SMITHSONIAN.COM
JANUARY 3, 2019
The first time anthropologist Nicole Smith-Guzmán noticed a nob of bone protruding from the ear canal of an ancient skull in Panama, she didnt know what to make of it. I never expected to find this sort of bony growth because were taught this is a cold-water thing. And the isthmus of Panama is nothing if not tropical.
The little spur Smith-Guzmán identified had created a slight mound in the skulls ear canalan annoying impediment for the person who once had to deal with it. Known as external auditory exostoses, or EAE, the bony masses can be globular or shaped like teardrops. Depending on their severity, these growths, commonly called surfers ear today, can cause repeat ear infections and even deafness.
Scientists still dont understand the precise mechanisms behind the formation of EAE. For a time, the growths were thought to be caused by some genetic anomaly. Further research, however, pointed to a different source: repeated exposure to and submersion in cold water. Just how cold the water has to be and how often people have to swim in it remains up for debate. But for such ear canal growths to be found in human remains in a place like Panama was unexpected and perplexing.
Maybe, Smith-Guzmán thought, the first EAE she saw in 2015 was an anomaly. But she kept an eye out for more while continuing her work as a research collaborator at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Smith-Guzmán had been tasked to review the skeletons excavated by Richard Cooke in the 1970s. As she worked, more skulls afflicted by EAE appeared. And then came another surprise.
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/bony-growths-ear-canal-plagued-pre-columbian-divers-panama-180971164/#91LUI76eLyDGPGB8.99
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Skulls With 'Surfer's Ear' Suggest Ancient Pearl Divers in Panama (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Jan 2019
OP
Your post just sent me down the internet rabbit hole for half an hour. Fascinating!
JudyM
Jan 2019
#3
Wow, the article says 84% of surfers get these ear deformities after 10 years!
SunSeeker
Jan 2019
#5
TEB
(13,665 posts)1. Judy Lynn
I love your post as I share them with my wife our sons and friends especially a close friend who like i is fascinated by the idea of ancient civilizations
rampartc
(5,835 posts)2. the article made me think of "the descent of woman"
the theory that humans spent some time as aquatic mammals during our evolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_ape_hypothesis
JudyM
(29,517 posts)3. Your post just sent me down the internet rabbit hole for half an hour. Fascinating!
Welcome to DU, rampartc!
rampartc
(5,835 posts)4. thank you, judy
scientists don't like the idea, but, of course most humans even today live near water and mate on the beach. the more bipedal i am the deeper the water in which i can wade, a fact that we old timers notice at our "water aerobics" classes. and don't get me started on subcutaneous fat............
SunSeeker
(53,616 posts)5. Wow, the article says 84% of surfers get these ear deformities after 10 years!
I had no idea. I better check my son's ears!