Humans have long had an ambiguous relationship with physical activity. From the Greek idolization of the young athlete, over the condescending attitudes towards manual labor, to Olympic performers who push their bodies beyond all limits for prestige. This fascination with how we use our bodies extends into the questions we ask about past societies.This dissertation examines how we can reconstruct physical activity by looking at variations in the shape of muscle attachment sites ( ‘entheses’) on the human skeleton. It evaluates two post-medieval contexts; rural Middenbeemster and urban Aalst. Findings show societal differences in the sexual division of labor, but also remind us not to over-simplify the lives of people in the past, nor undere...
In bioarchaeology, enthesopathies i.e. "musculoskeletal stress markers" are assumed to reflect the a...
Over the past thirty years , biological anthropologists have attempted to reconstruct human behavio...
Activity stresses are an important factor in the development, patterning, and severity of osteoarthr...
Humans have long had an ambiguous relationship with physical activity. From the Greek idolization of...
The first objective of this study is to reconstruct levels and types of physical activity and associ...
This research investigates the impact of socioeconomic developments on the p...
Since it plays such a critical role in the movements of the upper body, the human clavicle is likely...
This dissertation presents the results of a comparison of human skeletons from two historic villages...
The central Mediterranean during the 4th-3rd millennia BC is traditionally considered a period of ec...
The present study aims to evaluate the frequency of entheseal changes (EC) in a modern skeletal coll...
Entheseal changes (ECs), that is the visible appearance at the attachment sites of tendons to bones,...
Clinical and osteological studies have provided evidence that patterns in human skeletal morphologic...
Over the past thirty years, biological anthropologists have attempted to reconstruct human behaviora...
Abstract The purpose of my thesis is to improve the reliability of physical activity reconstruction...
Utilizing skeletal remains from an urban, colonial hospital in Central Mexico, this dissertation str...
In bioarchaeology, enthesopathies i.e. "musculoskeletal stress markers" are assumed to reflect the a...
Over the past thirty years , biological anthropologists have attempted to reconstruct human behavio...
Activity stresses are an important factor in the development, patterning, and severity of osteoarthr...
Humans have long had an ambiguous relationship with physical activity. From the Greek idolization of...
The first objective of this study is to reconstruct levels and types of physical activity and associ...
This research investigates the impact of socioeconomic developments on the p...
Since it plays such a critical role in the movements of the upper body, the human clavicle is likely...
This dissertation presents the results of a comparison of human skeletons from two historic villages...
The central Mediterranean during the 4th-3rd millennia BC is traditionally considered a period of ec...
The present study aims to evaluate the frequency of entheseal changes (EC) in a modern skeletal coll...
Entheseal changes (ECs), that is the visible appearance at the attachment sites of tendons to bones,...
Clinical and osteological studies have provided evidence that patterns in human skeletal morphologic...
Over the past thirty years, biological anthropologists have attempted to reconstruct human behaviora...
Abstract The purpose of my thesis is to improve the reliability of physical activity reconstruction...
Utilizing skeletal remains from an urban, colonial hospital in Central Mexico, this dissertation str...
In bioarchaeology, enthesopathies i.e. "musculoskeletal stress markers" are assumed to reflect the a...
Over the past thirty years , biological anthropologists have attempted to reconstruct human behavio...
Activity stresses are an important factor in the development, patterning, and severity of osteoarthr...