The second millennium BC was a period of significant social and environmental changes in prehistoric India. After the disintegration of the Indus civilization, in a phase known as the Early Jorwe (1400–1000 BC), hundreds of agrarian villages flourished in the Deccan region of west-central India. Environmental degradation, combined with unsustainable agricultural practices, contributed to the abandonment of many communities around 1000 BC. Inamgaon was one of a handful of villages to persist into the Late Jorwe phase (1000–700 BC), wherein reliance on dry-plough agricultural production declined. Previous research demonstrated a significant decline in body size (stature and body mass index) through time, which is often used to infer increased...
grantor: University of TorontoA growth deficit in juveniles, specifically toddlers, has be...
Just as modern nation-states struggle to manage the cultural and economic impacts of mi-gration, anc...
This paper introduces on-going research by presenting the original proposal for this work. This rese...
Rethinking new perspectives in South Asian archaeology necessitates wider appreciation for insights ...
Human skeletal remains from a burial site in southern India excavated in the 1960s by the Department...
In the third millennium B.C., the Indus Civilization flourished in northwest India and Pakistan. The...
Human skeletal material from archaeological sites is the most important source of evidence about emb...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
Estimates of age at death that are both accurate and precise and provide information about the patte...
Human skeletal remains offers the most direct insight into the health, well-being, and the lifestyle...
The health status of the subadult skeletal remains from the South Tombs Cemetery at Tell el-Amarna w...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Archaeological human skeletons provide direct evidence of the physical features, lifestyle, diseases...
The bioarchaeological model of health change predicts a deterioration inpopulation health with the a...
In the past, archaeology was less concerned with the study of human skeletons than with the analyses...
grantor: University of TorontoA growth deficit in juveniles, specifically toddlers, has be...
Just as modern nation-states struggle to manage the cultural and economic impacts of mi-gration, anc...
This paper introduces on-going research by presenting the original proposal for this work. This rese...
Rethinking new perspectives in South Asian archaeology necessitates wider appreciation for insights ...
Human skeletal remains from a burial site in southern India excavated in the 1960s by the Department...
In the third millennium B.C., the Indus Civilization flourished in northwest India and Pakistan. The...
Human skeletal material from archaeological sites is the most important source of evidence about emb...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
Estimates of age at death that are both accurate and precise and provide information about the patte...
Human skeletal remains offers the most direct insight into the health, well-being, and the lifestyle...
The health status of the subadult skeletal remains from the South Tombs Cemetery at Tell el-Amarna w...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Archaeological human skeletons provide direct evidence of the physical features, lifestyle, diseases...
The bioarchaeological model of health change predicts a deterioration inpopulation health with the a...
In the past, archaeology was less concerned with the study of human skeletons than with the analyses...
grantor: University of TorontoA growth deficit in juveniles, specifically toddlers, has be...
Just as modern nation-states struggle to manage the cultural and economic impacts of mi-gration, anc...
This paper introduces on-going research by presenting the original proposal for this work. This rese...