Since the 1950s, a decline in stature has been offered as evidence of increasing nutritional stress in prehistoric Maya populations, particularly during the Late Classic collapse. A review of the extant skeletal data, however, reveals very inconsistent support for such a decline. The primary explanation for the variation may reside in the small number of skeletal series that have representatives of more than one time period. Other possible explanations include methodological problems associated with stature reconstruction, reliability in sex determination, and variation in health response according to site size and location
hippocampal hypothesis By W i l l i a m Fe inde l, MD., CM, FRCS(C), FRS(C) Fig. 1 Archeological s...
The cultural and human biological outcomes of Spanish colonization of the Americas were diverse. Thi...
Studies of age-related bone loss in archaeology provide a valuable tool for understanding past healt...
This thesis presents updated sex and stature estimates for ancient Maya females and males who lived ...
A reliance on maize among the ancient and modern Maya has been reasoned to cause short statures and ...
Stature and the pattern of body proportions were investigated in a series of six time-successive Egy...
Population mean stature and patterns of health are often linked in anthropological studies, yet few ...
Stature estimation of individuals from extinct human populations is a classic topic in anthropology....
The Maya, a once great civilization, seemingly vanished without an obvious reason, before the Spanis...
Research investigates ancient Mayan sociopolitical practices regarding individuals with congenital p...
In bioarchaeology, there has been considerable interest in understanding whether social status – der...
The Late and Terminal Classic periods were times of great social, economic, and political change in ...
Th e stature of the fi rst anatomically modern Europeans decreases dramatically following the Last G...
Nonadults are particularly sensitive and reactive to stress, illness, and injury and, as such, they ...
This thesis explores juvenile health at the contact Maya site of Tipu in western Belize. The associa...
hippocampal hypothesis By W i l l i a m Fe inde l, MD., CM, FRCS(C), FRS(C) Fig. 1 Archeological s...
The cultural and human biological outcomes of Spanish colonization of the Americas were diverse. Thi...
Studies of age-related bone loss in archaeology provide a valuable tool for understanding past healt...
This thesis presents updated sex and stature estimates for ancient Maya females and males who lived ...
A reliance on maize among the ancient and modern Maya has been reasoned to cause short statures and ...
Stature and the pattern of body proportions were investigated in a series of six time-successive Egy...
Population mean stature and patterns of health are often linked in anthropological studies, yet few ...
Stature estimation of individuals from extinct human populations is a classic topic in anthropology....
The Maya, a once great civilization, seemingly vanished without an obvious reason, before the Spanis...
Research investigates ancient Mayan sociopolitical practices regarding individuals with congenital p...
In bioarchaeology, there has been considerable interest in understanding whether social status – der...
The Late and Terminal Classic periods were times of great social, economic, and political change in ...
Th e stature of the fi rst anatomically modern Europeans decreases dramatically following the Last G...
Nonadults are particularly sensitive and reactive to stress, illness, and injury and, as such, they ...
This thesis explores juvenile health at the contact Maya site of Tipu in western Belize. The associa...
hippocampal hypothesis By W i l l i a m Fe inde l, MD., CM, FRCS(C), FRS(C) Fig. 1 Archeological s...
The cultural and human biological outcomes of Spanish colonization of the Americas were diverse. Thi...
Studies of age-related bone loss in archaeology provide a valuable tool for understanding past healt...