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Series: Monographs 76
ISBN: 978-1-931745-68-0
Publication Date: February 1, 2013
Price: Hb $84.00, eBook $50.00
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Honoring Jane Buikstra’s pioneering work in the development of archaeobiological research, the essays in this volume stem from a symposium held at an annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Buikstra’s redefinition of the term “bioarchaeology” to focus specifically on human skeletal data in historical and anthropological contexts, and the impact of her mentorship on developing scholars in the field, are acknowledged and celebrated by the wide-ranging contributions in The Dead Tell Tales.
They highlight the dynamism of bioarchaeology, documenting the degree to which this discipline has become integrated into anthropological research, and has become essential to the interpretation of archaeological data. Sections organized geographically present topics in North America, Central and South America, and the Old World, and discuss such diverse subjects as animal effigies, the archaeology of cemeteries, childhood diets in Copan, an analysis of skeletal trauma in samples from a medieval to early modern Danish cemetery, the social aspects of leprosy, and the role and origins of individuals who labored in a Byzantine prison mining camp in southern Jordan.
Table of Contents
- Introduction by María Cecilia Lozada and Barra O’Donnabhain
Part I: Buikstra’s General Contributions to Anthropology
- Ch. 01: The Anthropological Praxis of Jane Buikstra by Thomas C. Patterson
- Ch. 02: Life in Print: The Publication Record of Jane E. Buikstra by Gordon F. M. Rakita
- Ch. 03: Grave Concerns: The Intersection of Biological and Social Approaches to the Archaeology of Cemeteries by Douglas K. Charles
- Ch. 04: Methodological and Ethical Considerations When Sampling Human Osteological Remains by Cecil Lewis Jr. and Tiffiny A. Tung
Part II: Bioarchaeological Research in North America
- Ch. 05: Negotiating the Gateway: Working with Multiple Lines of Evidence to Determine Identity by Lynne Goldstein
- Ch. 06: An Ancient Cave Mummy from Kentucky by Patty Jo Watson
- Ch. 07: Ossuary III from the Juhle Site, Nanjemoy Maryland: Bioarchaeological Features by Douglas H. Ubelaker
- Ch. 08: Interpreting Animal Effigies from Precontact Native American Sites: Applying an Interdisciplinary Method to Illinois Mississippian Artifacts by Dave Aftandilian
- Ch. 09: Ethnogenetic Theory and New Directions in Biodistance Research by Christopher Stojanowski
Part III: Bioarchaeological Research in Central and South a America
- Ch. 10: What’s on the Bone? Interdisciplinary Approaches in Reconstructing the Posthumous Body Treatments of the Ancient Maya Aristocracy of Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico by Vera Tiesler, Andrea Cucina, Patricia Quintana Owen, Daniel H. Aguilar, Iván Oliva Arias,J. V. Cauich-Rodríguez, William J. Folan, and María del Rosario Domínquez Carrasco
- Ch. 11: An Isotope Study of Childhood Diet and Mobility at Copan, Honduras by Lori E. Wright