“…In the past, evidence from artistic, archaeological, epigraphic, ethnographic, and osteological materials on disproportionate dwarfism was documented from both skeletal remains and material culture depictions during various periods throughout the world from ancient populations of Egypt (Kozma, 2006(Kozma, , 2008Molto & Kirkpatrick, 2018), the Near East (Slon et al, 2013), Europe (Arcini & Frölund, 1996;Bianucci et al, 2012;Dasen, 1988Dasen, , 1990Dasen, , 1993Frayer et al, 1988;Garcia & Santos, 2020;Gladykowska-Rzeczycka, 1980;Minozzi et al, 2013;Nater et al, 2016;Sables, 2010;Traversaria et al, 2020;Waters-Rist & Hoogland, 2013), Asia (Halcrow et al, 2020;Woo et al, 2015), Latin America (Miller, 1985;Rodríguez et al, 2012), South America (Pachajoa et al, 2009;Rodríguez et al, 2012), and North America (Cormier & Buikstra, 2017;Hoffman, 1976). The earliest case of achondroplasia was found in late Paleolithic tombs in Italy, the remains of an adolescent male named "Romito 2" (Frayer et al, 1988).…”