Format:
Online-Ressource (244 p)
ISBN:
9780817304843
Content:
A Dan Josselyn Memorial Publication Until recently, archaeological projects that included analysis of human remains had often lacked active collaboration between archaeologists and physical anthropologists from the planning stages onward. During the 1980s, a conjunctive approach developed; known as "bioarchaeology," it draws on the methodological and theoretical strengths of the two subdisciplines to bridge a perceived communications gap and promote a more comprehensive understanding of prehistoric and historic cultures. This volume addresses questions of human adaptation in a variety of
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
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Contents; Figures; Tables; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction; 2. Bioarchaeology and Subsistence in the Central and Lower Portions of the Mississippi Valley; 3. Ranked Status and Health in the Mississippian Chiefdom at Moundville; 4. Health and Cultural Change in the Late Prehistoric American Bottom, Illinois; 5. Mississippian Cultual Terminations in Middle Tennessee: What the Bioarchaelogical Evidence Can Tell Us; 6. Skeletal Evidence of Changes in Subsistence Activities Between the Archaic and Mississippian Time Periods in Northwestern Alabama
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7. Biomechanical Adaptation and Behavior onthe Prehistoric Georgia Coast8. Sifting the Ashes: Reconstruction of a Complex Archaic Mortuary Program in Louisiana; 9. The Prehistoric People of Fort Center: Physical and Health Characteristics; 10. Status and Health in Colonial South Carolina: Belleview Plantation 1738-1756; 11. Bioarchaeology in a Broader Context; 12. Out of the Appendix and Into the Dirt: Comments on Thirteen Years of Bioarchaeological Research; References Cited; Contributors; Index;
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9780817384715
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9780817304843
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe What Mean These Bones? : Studies in Southeastern Bioarchaeology
Language:
English
Keywords:
Electronic books