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2. Using ancient DNA analysis in palaeopathology: a critical analysis of published papers, with recommendations for future work
3. Dental anthropology. Simon Hillson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1996. ISBN 0-521-56439-5. Price L19.95, US$29.95 (paper); ISBN 0-521-45194-9. Price L55.00, US$74.95 (hardback)
4. Bones of the ancestors: the archaeology and osteobiography of the Moatfield Ossuary. R. F. Williamson & S. Pfeiffer (eds). Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 163, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau, PQ, 2003. ISBN 0 660 190 77 X
5. A study of reviewing at the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology: Accepting, declining, fairness, and responsibilities.
6. Book review: Dental anthropology by Simon Hillson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1996. Paper (ISBN 0-521-56439-5; L19.95, US$29.95), Hardback (ISBN 0-521-45194-9; L55.00, US$74.95)
7. Using ancient DNA analysis in palaeopathology: a critical analysis of published papers, with recommendations for future work
8. Bones of the ancestors: the archaeology and osteobiography of the Moatfield Ossuary. R. F. Williamson & S. Pfeiffer (eds). Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 163, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau, PQ, 2003. ISBN 0 660 190 77 X
9. The Archaeology of Medicine: Papers Given at a Session of the Annual Conference of the Theoretical Archaeology Group held at the University of Birmingham on 20 December 1998. Robert Arnott(ed). BAR International Series 1046, 2002. 129pp. ISBN 1 84171 434 8. ?42.00
10. on the variability of middle palaeolithic procurement tactics: the case of salzgitter lebenstedt, northern germany<fnr href="fn1">1</fnr><fn id="fn1">an extended version of this paper has been published in the journal of human evolution 38, 2000, 497521. by the author and wil roebroeks under the title: adults only: reindeer hunting at the middle palaeolithic site salzgitter lebenstedt, northern germany.</fn>
11. Dental anthropology. Simon Hillson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1996. ISBN 0‐521‐56439‐5. Price L19.95, US$29.95 (paper); ISBN 0‐521‐45194‐9. Price L55.00, US$74.95 (hardback)
12. Dental anthropology. Simon Hillson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1996. ISBN 0-521-56439-5. Price L19.95, US$29.95 (paper); ISBN 0-521-45194-9. Price L55.00, US$74.95 (hardback)
13. Book review: Bioarchaeology of the Stillwater Marsh. Prehistoric human adaptation in the western great basin. C.S. Larsen and R.L. Kelley. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 77. American Museum of Natural History, New York, 170 pages. ISBN 0065-9452. Price $20.50
14. Book review: Bioarchaeology of the Stillwater Marsh. Prehistoric human adaptation in the western great basin. C.S. Larsen and R.L. Kelley. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 77. American Museum of Natural History, New York, 170 pages. ISBN 0065-9452. Price $20.50.
15. Book review: Dental anthropology by Simon Hillson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1996. Paper (ISBN 0-521-56439-5; L19.95, US$29.95), Hardback (ISBN 0-521-45194-9; L55.00, US$74.95)
16. Book review: Bioarcheology of ancient Egypt and Nubia. A bibliography by J. C. Rose. British Museum Occasional Paper Number 112. British Museum Press, London, 110 pages. Price £7.50
17. Book review: Bioarchaeology of the Stillwater Marsh. Prehistoric human adaptation in the western great basin. C.S. Larsen and R.L. Kelley. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 77. American Museum of Natural History, New York, 170 pages. ISBN 0065-9452. Price $20.50
18. Stable isotope variation in pathological bone<FNR HREF="fn1">1</FNR><FN ID="fn1">A version of this paper was presented to the European Paleopathology Association, Czech Republic, August 1998. </FN>
19. Book review: Bioarcheology of ancient Egypt and Nubia. A bibliography by J. C. Rose. British Museum Occasional Paper Number 112. British Museum Press, London, 110 pages. Price £7.50
20. Zoonotic diseases: New directions in human–animal pathology
21. Analysis of enamel defects in a cave bear maxillary molar, with remarks on incremental markings in bear enamel.
22. Palaeopathology in Britain: a critical analysis of publications with the aim of exploring recent trends (1997-2006).
23. Testing interobserver and intraobserver agreement of the original and revised Coimbra Methods.
24. Fractures of the lower limbs and their secondary skeletal adaptations: a 20th century example of pre-modern healing (This paper was originally presented at the 14th European Meeting of the Palaeopathology Association in Coimbra, Portugal, in 2002.).
25. STARC OSTEOARCH: An open access resource for recording and sharing human osteoarchaeological data.
26. The decade under review: Recent trends and challenges in the use of macroscopic age‐at‐death estimation methods in bioarchaeology.
27. Pediatric paleoradiology: Applications and best practice protocols for image acquisition and reporting.
28. A life course study of the Beixin culture residents from the Neolithic site of Xiaheqiadong, Shandong Province, China.
29. Sheep Ahoy: Exploring sheep management and its role in Viking Age economy through multiproxy analyses at Löddeköpinge, Sweden.
30. Transformation processes in the osteoarchaeological record between the Iron Age and the Roman times with reference to the civitas Treverorum.
31. Synthesis of human isotopic data (8000–5000 BP) reveals subsistence strategies and social complexity at the southeast edge of the Loess Plateau, China.
32. Continuity and change in animal husbandry during the Later Iron Age of Britain.
33. Understanding “local”: Prehispanic Maya mobility and diet at Pacbitun, Belize, using strontium, oxygen, sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen isotope values.
34. Perimortem cranial injury in the Bronze Age. A blunt object to the right parietal caused trauma in a preadolescent individual from Mokarta (Salemi‐Sicily).
35. More on the identification of fish bones from southeast Arabia.
36. A community in transition: Analysis of health and well‐being in people living during and following aridification.
37. Neanderthal use of animal bones as retouchers at the Level XV of the Sopeña rock shelter (Asturias, northern Spain).
38. Dental disease and dietary patterns in coastal Phoenicia during the Roman period.
39. An aid to the identification of fish bones from southeast Arabia: The influence of reference collections on taxonomic diversity.
40. The Archaeology of Medicine: Papers Given at a Session of the Annual Conference of the Theoretical Archaeology Group held at the University of Birmingham on 20 December 1998. Robert Arnott (ed). BAR International Series 1046, 2002. 129pp. ISBN 1 84171 434 8. ?42.00
41. Death at distance: Mobility, memory, and place among the late precontact Oneota in the central Illinois River Valley.
42. Reviewing the palaeopathological evidence for bovine tuberculosis in the associated bone groups at Wetwang Slack, East Yorkshire.
43. Zoonotic diseases: New directions in human–animal pathology.
44. Insights into the diagnostic efficacy and macroscopic appearance of endocranial bony changes indicative of tuberculous meningitis: Three example cases from the Robert J. Terry Anatomical Skeletal Collection.
45. Using the morphometric approach to analyze artificially modified crania from the late fifth millennium BCE settlement of Chega Sofla, southwestern Iran.
46. Halal and Makruk: Muslim archaeological fish assemblages as cultural identifiers in the Iberian Middle Ages?
47. Bird bone artifact from the Late Eneolithic/Early Bronze Age site of Zók (Hungary).
48. Bird remains from Vilnius Lower Castle, Lithuania (13th–19th centuries) reveal changes in social status and unusual bird pathologies.
49. An elusive ghost: Searching for the Eagle Owl (Bubo bubo) in the past of Britain.
50. Accumulation agents and bird assemblages: The case of the TE9d level at Sima del Elefante (Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain).
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