Twenty six coprolites from an archaeological site in the province of Iquique, northern Chile, were examined for parasites. Coprolites were found in two excavation units, I and II (Tiliviche site), dated respectively at 5,900 B.C. to 4,110 B.C. and 4,110 B.C. to 1,950 B.C., and identified as of human origin. Only at the unit II coprolites containing helminth eggs identified as Diphyllobothrium pacificum were found. The presence of this tapeworm, a parasite of the American Sea Lion, in human coprolites, points to a diet which included marine fishes and provides information on the antiquity of infection by Diphyllobothrium pacificum. It is interesting to note that Baer (1969) suggests the presence of this tapeworm in pre-Columbian populations when diagnosing the first human cases in today's population in Peru.
CITATION STYLE
Ferreira, L. F., de Araújo, A. J., Confalonieri, U. E., & Nuñez, L. (1984). The finding of eggs of Diphyllobothrium in human coprolites (4,100-1,950 B.C.) from northern Chile. Memórias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 79(2), 175–180. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0074-02761984000200004
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