Children and childhood in bioarchaeology

Weitere Verfasser: Beauchesne, Patrick , [HerausgeberIn]
Agarwal, Sabrina C. , [HerausgeberIn]
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Gainesville : University Press of Florida, [2018].
Umfang/Format: xv, 392 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Schriftenreihe: Bioarchaeological interpretations of the human past
Schlagworte:
Inhalte/Bestandteile: 1 Datensätze
Inhaltsangabe:
  • Introduction: Excavating childhood from the skeletal record / Patrick Beauchesne and Sabrina C. Agarwal
  • The biocultural study of childhood in the past
  • The bioarchaeology of childhood: theoretical development in the field / Raelene M. Inglis and Si¿n E. Halcrow
  • Biocultural influences of total versus exclusive breastfeeding: stable isotope evidence of European and Asian trends for the last 10,000 years / Jessica Pearson
  • Biocultural and bioarchaeological approaches to infant and young child feeding in the past / Tina Moffat and Tracy Prowse
  • Life, death, and burial of children on the north coast of Peru: an integrative and interpretive bioarchaeological perspective (650 b.c. - A.D. 1750) / Haagen Klaus
  • A childhood of violence: a bioarchaeological comparison of mass death assemblages from ancient Peru / J.M. Toyne
  • Approaches to life history and the lifecourse in teeth and bone
  • Human transitions: current perspectives on skeletal development / James H. Gosman, David A. Raichlen and Timothy M. Ryan
  • Exploring linear enamel hypoplasia as an embodied product of childhood stress in late/final Jomon period foragers using incremental microstructures of enamel / Daniel H. Temple
  • Dietary histories: tracing food consumption practices from childhood through adulthood using stable isotope analysis / Melanie J. Miller, Sabrina C. Agarwal and Carl H. Langebaek Rueda
  • Children of the revolution: childhood health inequalities and the life course during industrialization of the 18th and 19th centuries in England / Rebecca Gowland and Sophie Newman
  • Bioarchaeological analyses of children and childhood from the Kellis 2 Cemetery, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt / Sandra Wheeler, Lana Williams and Tosha Dupras.