Bioarchaeologists and palaeopathologists have recently turned their attention towards one critical aspect of the study of the history of disease: health-related caregiving. In response, an approach, the bioarchaeology of care, and, within it, the web-based Index of Care (IoC) have been developed to enable the identification and interpretation of past caregiving. Here, we apply the IoC to Burial 86, a young adult (18–25 years) female from the late Mississippian period, Dallas cultural phase Holliston Mills site (40HW11; ca. ad 1348–1535), TN. Burial 86 exhibits pathologies specific to treponematosis. They also exhibit a suite of pathologies indicative of physical impairment, including a varus angular deformity in the right tibia that is pote...
Human skeletal remains have been recovered from prehistoric and early historic sites in Louisiana wi...
This thesis assesses the ways in which social status was embodied by the Mississippian period occupa...
Caring practices provided to diseased individuals in past populations are of interest in Bioarchaeol...
This project employs a modified version of the Bioarchaeology of Care (BoC) in an analysis of Burial...
This project employs a modified version of the Bioarchaeology of Care (BoC) in an analysis of Burial...
Characteristics of the care given to those experiencing disability provide a window into important a...
Disease and disability are intractable realities of human life. Traditional practice of archaeology ...
The impact of contemporary urbanisation on health has been studied extensively but the study into to...
Illness and injury are universal human experiences which are endowed with cultural meaning. Bioarcha...
A good deal of what we know regarding the prehistoric Mississippian period (1000-1600 AD) in the Sou...
The Index of Care is a web-based application designed to support the recently proposed four-stage 'b...
Interpreting the health of ancient populations can be an arduous undertaking. Often, the only eviden...
YesObjective: This research introduces ‘The Bioarchaeology of Disability’ (BoD), a population-scale ...
Anthropologists have been interested in the interaction of health and status in prehistoric populati...
In archaeology, human skeletal remains are often dealt with separately from their social context. Ho...
Human skeletal remains have been recovered from prehistoric and early historic sites in Louisiana wi...
This thesis assesses the ways in which social status was embodied by the Mississippian period occupa...
Caring practices provided to diseased individuals in past populations are of interest in Bioarchaeol...
This project employs a modified version of the Bioarchaeology of Care (BoC) in an analysis of Burial...
This project employs a modified version of the Bioarchaeology of Care (BoC) in an analysis of Burial...
Characteristics of the care given to those experiencing disability provide a window into important a...
Disease and disability are intractable realities of human life. Traditional practice of archaeology ...
The impact of contemporary urbanisation on health has been studied extensively but the study into to...
Illness and injury are universal human experiences which are endowed with cultural meaning. Bioarcha...
A good deal of what we know regarding the prehistoric Mississippian period (1000-1600 AD) in the Sou...
The Index of Care is a web-based application designed to support the recently proposed four-stage 'b...
Interpreting the health of ancient populations can be an arduous undertaking. Often, the only eviden...
YesObjective: This research introduces ‘The Bioarchaeology of Disability’ (BoD), a population-scale ...
Anthropologists have been interested in the interaction of health and status in prehistoric populati...
In archaeology, human skeletal remains are often dealt with separately from their social context. Ho...
Human skeletal remains have been recovered from prehistoric and early historic sites in Louisiana wi...
This thesis assesses the ways in which social status was embodied by the Mississippian period occupa...
Caring practices provided to diseased individuals in past populations are of interest in Bioarchaeol...