No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Variations in hunter-gatherer skeletal health in prehistoric Australia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
Abstract
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above for information on how to access this content.
- Type
- Review articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1996
References
Bogin, B.
1995. Plasticity in the growth of Mayan refugee children living in the United States, in Mascie-Taylor, & Bogin, (ed.): 46–74.Google Scholar
Bridges, P. S.
1992. Prehistoric arthritis in the Americas,
Annua! Review of Anthropology
21: 67–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, N. H.
1989. Health and the rise of civilization.
New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, M. N. & Armelagos, G. J. (ed.) 1984. Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture.
Orlando (FI.): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Dettwyler, K. A.
1992. Nutritional status of adults in rural Mali,
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
88 (3): 309–21.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Flood, J.
1983. Archaeology of the Dreamtime: the story of prehistoric Australia and its people.
Sydney: Collins.Google Scholar
Goodman, A. H. & Armelagos, G. J.. 1989. Infant and childhood morbidity and mortality in archaeological populations,
World Archaeology
21 (2): 225–43.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hershkovitz, I., Bedford, L., Jellema, L. & Latimer, B.. 1996. Injuries to the skeleton due to prolonged activity in hand-to-hand combat, international
Journal of Osteoarchaeology
6 (2): 167–78.3.0.CO;2-8>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jurmain, R. D.
1977. Stress and etiology of osteoarthritis, American
Journal of Physical Anthropology
46: 353–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kent, S. & Dunn, D.. 1996. Anemia and the transition of nomadic hunter-gatherers to a sedentary life-style: follow-up study of a Kalahari community,
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
99 (3): 455–72.3.0.CO;2-V>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Knüsel, C.J.
1995. Review of D. W. Owsley & R. L. Jantz,
Skeletal biology in the Great Plains: migration, warfare, health, and subsistence, Journal of Human Evolution
29: 197–200.Google Scholar
Larsen, C.S. & Milner, G. R. (ed.). 1993. In the wake of contact: biological response to conquest.
New York (NY): Wiley-Liss.Google Scholar
Mascie-Taylor, C. G.N. & Bogin, B. (ed. i. 1995. Human variability and plasticity.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mascie-Taylor, C. G.N. & Mohamed, H.G.E.. 1995. A biological approach to measuring societal stress of parasitic disease: a case study of schistosomiasis, in Mascie-Taylor, & Bogin, (ed.): 159–89.Google Scholar
Rao, V. V., Vasulu, T.S. & Rector Babu, W.A.D.. 1996. Possible evidence of treponematosis from a Megalithic site at Agripalle, India,
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
100: 49–55.3.0.CO;2-8>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rothschild, B. M. & Rothschild, C.. 1996. Treponemal disease in the New World,
Current Anthropology
37 (3): 555–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stirland, A.
1990. The late Sir Thomas Reynes: a medieval identification,
Journal of the Forensic Science Society
30 (1): 39–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warne, G. L., MacLean, H. E. & Zajac, J. D.. 1993. Genetic disorders of human sex differentiation, in Reed, K. C. & Marshall Graves, J. A. (ed.), Sex chromosomes and sex determining genes.
Harwood Academic Publishers (GB).Google Scholar
Wood, J. W., Milner, G. R., Harpending, H. C. & Weiss, K. M.. 1992. The osteological paradox: problems of inferring prehistoric health from skeletal samples,
Current Anthropology
33 (4): 343–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar