Cremated bone from archaeological contexts are typically subjected to macroscopic analyses, whereby the colour of bone, presence of heat-induced fractures, evidence of shrinkage, and warping are recorded alongside biological attributes of the deceased. Histomorphometry has been used since the first half of the twentieth century as a means of understanding the affects of burning on bone microstructure. However, over the past two decades researchers have increasingly identified the potential of histomorphometry in bioarchaeological studies. The aim of this paper is to explore how histomorphometry can provide an insight into the identities of the dead and funerary rites in the past. A case study from early Anglo-Saxon (5th – 7th century AD) En...
It is generally a challenge to interpret incomplete and degraded skeletal assemblages found during a...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The study of bioarchaeological evidence associated with burials is essential for achieving a global ...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
Cremation is a burial practice that has been adopted by numerous cultures throughout time. In the pa...
Cremation is a burial practice that has been adopted by numerous cultures throughout time. In the pa...
The microscopic examination of burned bone has allowed cremation research to infer a wealth of infor...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
Macroscopic examination, histomorphometry and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) are app...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
During the Middle Ages in Europe, a different post-mortem funerary custom came to be used in order t...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
The anthropological analysis of cremated bone material originating from the archaeo-logical context ...
Methodological options for differentiating commingled human from nonhuman calcined remains are limit...
It is generally a challenge to interpret incomplete and degraded skeletal assemblages found during a...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The study of bioarchaeological evidence associated with burials is essential for achieving a global ...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
Cremation is a burial practice that has been adopted by numerous cultures throughout time. In the pa...
Cremation is a burial practice that has been adopted by numerous cultures throughout time. In the pa...
The microscopic examination of burned bone has allowed cremation research to infer a wealth of infor...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
Macroscopic examination, histomorphometry and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) are app...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
During the Middle Ages in Europe, a different post-mortem funerary custom came to be used in order t...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
The anthropological analysis of cremated bone material originating from the archaeo-logical context ...
Methodological options for differentiating commingled human from nonhuman calcined remains are limit...
It is generally a challenge to interpret incomplete and degraded skeletal assemblages found during a...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The study of bioarchaeological evidence associated with burials is essential for achieving a global ...