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pro vyhledávání: '"Rhonda R. Bathurst"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science. 37:2920-2928
Diatoms recovered from archaeological features on a Viking Age farmstead excavation in the Mosfell Valley in southwestern Iceland are utilized as microscopic indicators of turf-based structures. Eroded turf can be difficult to distinguish macroscopic
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 139:109-125
Porosities in the outer table of the cranial vault (porotic hyperostosis) and orbital roof (cribra orbitalia) are among the most frequent pathological lesions seen in ancient human skeletal collections. Since the 1950s, chronic iron-deficiency anemia
Autor:
Rhonda R. Bathurst, Jodi Lynn Barta
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science. 31:917-925
A fully articulated dog skeleton excavated from a 16th-century Neutral Iroquoian site in Ontario, Canada displays a distinctive osteological condition known as hypertrophic osteopathy (HPO). Ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis of the dog has isolated Mycobac
Autor:
Rhonda R. Bathurst
Publikováno v:
NEXUS: The Canadian Student Journal of Anthropology. 14
Archaeology is all about questions, and seeking the best answers for them; it has the potential to tell such wonderful tales. The issue of representing the past, primarily to an interested public, often takes a back seat to excavation or analysis. Th