Palaeopathology (Other Keyword)

26-32 (32 Records)

Database E.7 Individual Records of Hypoplasias and Carious Lesions in Permanent Dentitions in Children, Adolescents, and Adults (2002)
DATASET Michael Pietrusewsky. Michele Toomay Douglas.

This database is part of Appendix E, from Ban Chiang, a Prehistoric Village Site in Northeast Thailand, Volume 1: The Human Skeletal Remains (tDAR ID #: 376592). Database E.7 contains non-metric observations (Hypoplasias and Carious Lesions in Permanent Dentitions in Children, Adolescents, and Adults) by individual burial excavated from the BC and BCES locales at Ban Chiang, Thailand. Coding information is pasted at the bottom of this abstract, and can also be downloaded as a .txt document at...


Database E.8 Individual Records of Infracranial Measurements in Adults from Ban Chiang (2002)
DATASET Michael Pietrusewsky. Michele Toomay Douglas.

This database is part of Appendix E, from Ban Chiang, a Prehistoric Village Site in Northeast Thailand, Volume 1: The Human Skeletal Remains (tDAR ID #: 376592). Database E.8 contains metric observations (Infracranial Measurements in Adults from Ban Chiang) by individual burial excavated from the BC and BCES locales at Ban Chiang, Thailand. Coding information is pasted at the bottom of this abstract, and can also be downloaded as a .txt document at tDAR ID#: SPECID = Individual Burial...


Database E.9 Individual Records of Infracranial Non-metric Variation in Adults and Adolescents (2002)
DATASET Michael Pietrusewsky. Michele Toomay Douglas.

This database is part of Appendix E, from Ban Chiang, a Prehistoric Village Site in Northeast Thailand, Volume 1: The Human Skeletal Remains (tDAR ID #: 376592). Database E.9 contains non-metric observations (Infracranial Non-metric Variation in Adults and Adolescents) by individual burial excavated from the BC and BCES locales at Ban Chiang, Thailand. Coding information is pasted at the bottom of this abstract, and can also be downloaded as a .txt document at tDAR ID#: SPECID = Individual...


Digitised Diseases: seeing beyond the specimen, understanding disease and disability in the past (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Andrew Wilson. Keith Manchester. Jo Buckberry. Rebecca Storm. Karina Croucher.

Digitised Diseases is a major web-based 3D resource of chronic disease conditions that manifest change to the human skeleton. The resource was established through funds from Jisc, the University of Bradford and Bradford Visualisation. The multi-disciplinary team involving project partners MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) and the Royal College of Surgeons of England undertook a programme of mass digitisation of pathological type specimens from world-renowned archaeological, historic and...


Interpersonal violence among the prehistoric hunter-gatherers of Cis-Baikal, southern Siberia (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Rick Schulting. Angela Lieverse. Vladimir Bazaliiskii. Andrzej Weber.

The large number of mid-Holocene cemeteries from Lake Baikal and its surrounding river valleys provide an unrivalled archaeological resource for the study of northern Eurasian hunter-gatherers. In this paper we present an overview of the skeletal evidence for interpersonal violence, comparing the Early Neolithic (7550–6800 cal BP) and Late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age (5700–3700 cal BP), two broad periods exhibiting different mortuary traditions and subsistence practices. Despite the nomenclature,...


Paleopathology analysis of animal bones found inside the Templo Mayor offerings (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Israel Elizalde Mendez. Amaranta Argüelles Echevarría. Ximena Chávez Balderas.

In the excavations conducted by the Templo Mayor Project during the last decade, more than 100 individuals –including birds and mammals- have been found. Thanks to interdisciplinary research combining biology, ecology and veterinarian medicine approaches, it has been possible to study bone anomalies produced by different diseases and trauma in several specimens, such as golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos), roseate spoonbills (Platalea ajaja), jaguars (Panthera onca) and wolves (Canis lupus). These...


The skeletal findings from excavations in the Batinah, Oman (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Alyson Caine.

Background. The presence of limited settlements has limited the understanding of prehistoric occupation in the Arabian Peninsula (Potts 1990). Interest and research of Arabia during the Bronze (3200-1200 BC) and Iron Age (1200-400 BC) has increased producing a greater understanding of the people from the region and their culture. Methods. A total of sixty-four tombs were excavated with twenty-seven yielding human remains. These twenty-seven tombs originated from various periods of the Bronze...