Bioarchaeology of frontiers and borderlands /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Gainesville : University of Florida Press, [2019] |
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Description: | 1 online resource |
Language: | English |
Series: | Bioarchaeological interpretations of the human past : local, regional, and global perspectives Bioarchaeological interpretations of the human past. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12486031 |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: bioarchaeology and the study of frontiers / Cristina I. Tica and Debra L. Martin
- Complexity and liminality of the frontier
- Across the river: romanized "barbarians" and barbarized "Romans" on the edge of the empire. Bioarchaeology of Romania in late antiquity (third-sixth centuries ce) / Cristina I. Tica
- Funerary practice and local interaction on the imperial frontier, first century AD: a case study in the??rur Valley, Azerbaijan / Selin E. Nugent
- Queering prehistory on the frontier: a bioarchaeological investigation of gender in Mierzanowice communities of the early Bronze Age / Mark P. Toussaint
- Movement across borders
- Isotopes, migration, and sex: investigating the mobility of Roman Egypt's frontier inhabitants / Amanda T. Groff and Tosha L. Dupras
- Temporal and spatial biological kinship variation at Campovalano and Alfedena, Iron Age central Italy / Evan Muzzall and Alfredo Coppa
- Adaptability and resilience on the frontier
- Living on the border: health and identity during the colonial Egyptian New Kingdom Period in Nubia / Katie Marie Whitmore, Michele R. Buzon and Stuart Tyson Smith
- Life on the northern frontier: bioarchaeological reconstructions of 11th century households in North Iceland / Gu?n? Zoga and Kimmarie Murphy
- Violence on the frontier
- A mass grave outside the walls: the commingled assemblage from Ibida / Andrei Soficaru, Claudia Radu, and Cristina I. Tica
- A line in the sand: bioarchaeological interpretations of life along the borders of the Great Basin and American Southwest / Aaron R. Woods and Ryan P. Harrod
- Challenges and limitations of bioarchaeological method and theory
- Mortuary practices in the first Iron Age Romanian frontier: the commingled assemblages of the M?gura Uroiului / Anna J. Osterholtz, Virginia Lucas, Claira Ralston, Andre Gonciar, and Angelica B?los
- Marginalized motherhood: infant burial in 17th century Transylvania / Jonathan D. Bethard, Anna J. Osterholtz, Nyárádi Zsolt, and Andre Gonciar
- Conclusion: the future of bioarchaeology and studies at the edges / Cristina I. Tica.