Ars Technica - All content 05月01日 03:21
Research roundup: Tattooed tardigrades and splash-free urinals
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四月份的科学界涌现诸多有趣发现,但限于篇幅未能全面报道。本月集锦包括:身披纹身的缓步动物研究,首次拍摄到的巨型鱿鱼宝宝的 live 影像,新发现的梅林手稿的数字化展开,以及一位古罗马角斗士的骨骼,其上显示曾被狮子啃咬的痕迹。其中,角斗士与狮子的遭遇,通过骨骼上的咬痕,提供了直接的考古学证据,印证了古罗马角斗士与野兽搏斗的场景。

🐾考古学家在英国约克附近发现了一具公元200-300年间埋葬的年轻男性骨骼,年龄在26至35岁之间,骨骼上的创伤痕迹表明这可能是一个角斗士的墓地。

🦁通过对骨骼的研究,发现其骨盆上有大型猫科动物(很可能是狮子)啃咬的痕迹,这为罗马角斗士与野兽搏斗提供了直接的骨骼证据,此前此类证据主要来自文字、图像和文物。

💡研究人员使用了一种名为“结构光扫描”的方法来研究这具骨骼,该方法通过光栅创建3D模型,仅记录表面特征,具有安全、经济、便携等优点,已广泛应用于考古和法医领域。

It's a regrettable reality that there is never time to cover all the interesting scientific stories we come across each month. In the past, we've featured year-end roundups of cool science stories we (almost) missed. This year, we're experimenting with a monthly collection. April's list includes new research on tattooed tardigrades, the first live image of a colossal baby squid, the digital unfolding of a recently discovered Merlin manuscript, and an ancient Roman gladiator whose skeleton shows signs of being gnawed by a lion.

Gladiator vs lion?

Puncture injuries by large felid scavenging. Credit: Thompson et al., 2025/PLOS One/CC-BY 4.0

Popular depictions of Roman gladiators in combat invariably include battling not just human adversaries but wild animals. We know from surviving texts, imagery, and artifacts that such battles likely took place. But hard physical evidence is much more limited. Archaeologists have now found the first direct osteological evidence: the skeleton of a Roman gladiator who encountered a wild animal in the arena, most likely a lion, based on bite marks evident on the pelvic bone, according to a paper published in the journal PLoS ONE.

The skeleton in question was that of a young man, age 26 to 35, buried between 200–300 CE near what is now York, England, formerly the Roman city of Eboracum. It's one of several such skeletons, mostly young men whose remains showed signs of trauma—hence the suggestion that it could be a gladiator burial site. "We used a method called structured light scanning [to study the skeleton]," co-author Tim Thompson of Maynooth University told Ars. "It's a method of creating a 3D model using grids of light. It's not like X-ray or CT, in that it only records the surface (not internal) features, but since it uses light and not X-rays etc, it is much safer, cheaper, and more portable. We have published a fair bit on this and shown its use in both archaeological and forensic contexts."

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考古学 角斗士 动物 科学发现
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