000025 (2015) |
Rebecca L. Gowland [Royaume-Uni] | Entangled lives: Implications of the developmental origins of health and disease hypothesis for bioarchaeology and the life course. |
000275 (1999) |
A. M. Mannion [Royaume-Uni] | Domestication and the origins of agriculture: an appraisal |
000344 (1991) |
George J. Armelagos [États-Unis] ; Alan H. Goodman [Royaume-Uni] ; Kenneth H. Jacobs [Canada] | The origins of agriculture: Population growth during a period of declining health |
000024 (2015) |
Don Walker [Royaume-Uni] ; Natasha Powers ; Brian Connell ; Rebecca Redfern | Evidence of skeletal treponematosis from the medieval burial ground of St. Mary Spital, London, and implications for the origins of the disease in Europe. |
000078 (2011) |
Peter D. Gluckman [Singapour, Royaume-Uni, Nouvelle-Zélande] ; Mark A. Hanson [Nouvelle-Zélande] ; Felicia M. Low [Singapour, Royaume-Uni] | The role of developmental plasticity and epigenetics in human health |
000085 (2011) |
Piers D. Mitchell [Royaume-Uni] ; Rebecca C. Redfern [Royaume-Uni] | Brief communication: Developmental dysplasia of the hip in medieval London |
000142 (2008) |
P. D. Mitchell [Royaume-Uni] ; R. C. Redfern [Royaume-Uni] | Diagnostic criteria for developmental dislocation of the hip in human skeletal remains |
000276 (1999) |
Marsha A. Levine [Royaume-Uni] | Botai and the Origins of Horse Domestication |
000010 (2016) |
B P Hedrick [États-Unis] ; C. Gao [République populaire de Chine] ; A R Tumarkin-Deratzian [États-Unis] ; C. Shen [République populaire de Chine] ; J L Holloway [États-Unis] ; F. Zhang [République populaire de Chine] ; K D Hankenson [États-Unis] ; S. Liu [République populaire de Chine] ; J. Anné [Royaume-Uni] ; P. Dodson [États-Unis] | An Injured Psittacosaurus (Dinosauria: Ceratopsia) From the Yixian Formation (Liaoning, China): Implications for Psittacosaurus Biology. |
000022 (2015) |
Oussama Baker [France] ; Oona Y-C Lee [Royaume-Uni] ; Houdini H T. Wu [Royaume-Uni] ; Gurdyal S. Besra [Royaume-Uni] ; David E. Minnikin [Royaume-Uni] ; Gareth Llewellyn [Royaume-Uni] ; Christopher M. Williams [Royaume-Uni] ; Frank Maixner [Italie] ; Niall O'Sullivan [Italie] ; Albert Zink [Italie] ; Bérénice Chamel [France] ; Rima Khawam [France] ; Eric Coqueugniot [France] ; Daniel Helmer [France] ; Françoise Le Mort [France] ; Pascale Perrin [France] ; Lionel Gourichon [France] ; Bruno Dutailly [France] ; György Pálfi [Hongrie] ; Hélène Coqueugniot [Allemagne] ; Olivier Dutour [Canada] | Human tuberculosis predates domestication in ancient Syria. |
000082 (2011) |
C. Roberts [Royaume-Uni] ; S. Mays [Royaume-Uni] | Study and restudy of curated skeletal collections in bioarchaeology: A perspective on the UK and the implications for future curation of human remains |
000098 (2010) |
Sharon N. Dewitte [États-Unis] ; Jelena Bekvalac [Royaume-Uni] | Oral health and frailty in the medieval English cemetery of St Mary Graces |
000104 (2010) |
C. Roberts [Royaume-Uni] | Adaptation of populations to changing environments: Bioarchaeological perspectives on health for the past, present and future |
000144 (2008) |
Kate Robson Brown [Royaume-Uni] ; Phill Pollintine [Royaume-Uni] ; Mike A. Adams [Royaume-Uni] | Biomechanical implications of degenerative joint disease in the apophyseal joints of human thoracic and lumbar vertebrae |
000147 (2007) |
R C Griffin [Royaume-Uni] ; D. Donlon | Dental enamel hypoplasias and health changes in the Middle Bronze Age - Early Iron Age transition at Pella in Jordan. |
000154 (2007) |
Anne P. Starling [Royaume-Uni, États-Unis] ; Jay T. Stock [Royaume-Uni] | Dental indicators of health and stress in early Egyptian and Nubian agriculturalists: A difficult transition and gradual recovery |
000203 (2003) |
Piers D. Mitchell [Royaume-Uni] | Pre‐Columbian treponemal disease from 14th century AD Safed, Israel, and implications for the medieval eastern Mediterranean |
000206 (2003) |
John Landers [Royaume-Uni] | Human biologists in the archives: Demography, health, nutrition and genetics in historical populations |
000280 (1998) |
Anne Keenleyside [Royaume-Uni] | Skeletal evidence of health and disease in pre‐contact Alaskan Eskimos and Aleuts |