The sex profile of skeletal remains from a cemetery of Chinese indentured labourers in South Africa

  • Victoria E. Gibbon Purdue University
  • Goran Å trkalj Macquarie University
  • Maria Paximadis AIDS Virus Research Unit, National Institute of Communicable Diseases
  • Paul Ruff University of the Witwatersrand
  • Clem Penny University of the Witwatersrand
Keywords: amelogenin, ancient DNA, gold mines, Chinese indentured labour, South Africa

Abstract

For a short period of time in the early 20th century, indentured labourers from China were imported to work on the South African gold mines. The Raymond A. Dart Collection of Human Skeletons contains 36 skeletons sourced from a Chinese cemetery of this time period on the site of the old Witwatersrand Deep Gold Mine. An earlier morphometric study on this collection recorded a high number of female individuals. However, the general historical records from the early gold mining era conflict with the results of this study, stating that very few Chinese females were among those to arrive in South Africa. In this study, the sex profile of this collection was analysed using molecular sex identification through the amelogenin gene. Results were obtained for 13 (41.93%) specimens, all of which were determined to be male – data that correspond well with the historical records.

Author Biographies

Victoria E. Gibbon, Purdue University
School of Anatomical Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Department of Internal Medicine, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Institute for Human Evolution, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Goran Å trkalj, Macquarie University
Institute for Human Evolution, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Published
2010-08-02