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5. Novel multidisciplinary approach detects multiple individuals within the same Late Bronze–Early Iron Age cremation graves.

6. Divergence, diet, and disease: the identification of group identity, landscape use, health, and mobility in the fifth- to sixth-century AD burial community of Echt, the Netherlands

8. FINAL NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGE FUNERARY PRACTICES AND POPULATION DYNAMICS IN BELGIUM, THE IMPACT OF RADIOCARBON DATING CREMATED BONES

9. FINAL NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGE FUNERARY PRACTICES AND POPULATION DYNAMICS IN BELGIUM, THE IMPACT OF RADIOCARBON DATING CREMATED BONES

10. Mobility and Diet: Studying the Population of the Vicus of Tienen, Belgium (1-4th c.AD)

11. How did Romans cremate? Investigating the cremation conditions during the Roman period in Belgium

13. Le project CRUMBEL-Archéometrie et os incinéres du Néolithique final à l’époque Mérovingienne

15. Strontium isotopic and elemental differences between Metal Ages and Roman individuals in Destelbergen, Belgium

16. Cremated bones reveal secrets: Investigating the differences in cremation conditions between the Metal Ages and the Roman period in Belgium using FTIR-ATR and carbon and oxygen isotope analysis

17. Radiocarbon dating and strontium isotope analyses reveal plural burials in the Belgian Meuse Valley

19. These boots are made for burnin’: Inferring the position of the corpse and the presence of leather footwears during cremation through isotope (δ13C, δ18O) and infrared (FTIR) analyses of experimentally burnt skeletal remains

20. 50 jaar archeologie Kemmelberg

21. These boots are made for burnin’: Inferring the position of the corpse and the presence of leather footwears during cremation through isotope (δ13C, δ18O) and infrared (FTIR) analyses of experimentally burnt skeletal remains

22. Revisiting metric sex estimation of burnt human remains via supervised learning using a reference collection of modern identified cremated individuals (Knoxville, USA)

23. Revisiting metric sex estimation of burnt human remains via supervised learning using a reference collection of modern identified cremated individuals (Knoxville, USA )

24. Seed security in theory and practice : a comparative study of seed security frameworks and their use

25. Estimating age-at-death in burnt adult human remains using the Falys–Prangle method

26. Cremation vs. inhumation: Modeling cultural changes in funerary practices from the mesolithic to the middle ages in belgium using kernel density analysis on 14C data

27. The Late Iron Age cemetery of Kemzeke/Kwakkel (prov. of East-Flanders, Belgium): first radiocarbon dates on cremated bone and new insights in the funerary practices of the Iron Age

29. Is it Hot Enough? A Multi-Proxy Approach Shows Variations in Cremation Conditions During the Metal Ages in Belgium

31. Estimating age‐at‐death in burnt adult human remains using the Falys–Prangle method

33. CREMATION VS. INHUMATION: MODELING CULTURAL CHANGES IN FUNERARY PRACTICES FROM THE MESOLITHIC TO THE MIDDLE AGES IN BELGIUM USING KERNEL DENSITY ANALYSIS ON14C DATA

34. Le projet Crumbel et l’apport de la recherche archéométrique

35. Crémations, urnes et mobilité - la dynamique du peuplement de la Belgique

36. Dressed to be burnt - Experimental approach to detect the presence of garments worn by the deceased through stable isotope analysis (d13C, d18O)

37. Clothes for dead – An attempt to detect the presence of garments worn by the deceased. Contribution of stable isotope analysis on cremated bones.

38. Cremation vs inhumation, modelling the cultural change in funerary practices from the Mesolithic to the Middle Age in Belgium

39. Cremations, 87Sr/86Sr and 14C: computational approaches to analyse past human mobility in Belgium

40. Cremation urns from top to bottom: excavation methods and contribution of 3D imagery

41. The study of mobility in Belgium through the interpretation of the burial landscape and strontium isotope analysis

42. Changes in funerary practices of Belgian Late Bronze age/Early Iron age urnfields

43. CRUMBEL: Integrated approaches to study populations and mobility in Belgium. Where are you going? Reconsidering Migrations in the Metal Ages

44. MNI determination in cremated human remains through osteological and strontium isotope analysis of multiple bones

45. Shoed or not: experiments to detect garments worn by the deceased. Contribution of biochemical analyses on cremated bones

46. Burning shoes: an experimental approach for detecting the presence of garments worn by the deceased. Contribution of biogeochemical analyses on cremated bones

47. Roman non-adult cremations from Belgium: an osteological perspective

48. Osteoarchaeological analysis of cremated human remains from Belgium

49. A tale of two communities during the Late Bronze Age – Early Iron Age at the site of Velzeke (Prov. of East-Flanders, Belgium)

50. Le projet CRUMBEL “Cremated remains, urns and mobility in Belgium. Buts et premiers résultats”

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