Osteophageous insect damage on human bone from Je'reftheel, a Maya mortuary cave site in west-central Belize
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] J. Biggs,et al. Maya mortuary landscapes, Central Belize , 2017, Antiquity.
[2] O. Dutour,et al. Using classifications to identify pathological and taphonomic modifications on ancient bones: Do “taphognomonic” criteria exist? , 2017, BMSAP.
[3] Nicholas V. Passalacqua,et al. Beyond Taphonomy: Exploring Craniometric Variation Among Anatomical Material , 2016, Journal of forensic sciences.
[4] Amy R. Michael. Investigations of micro- and macroscopic dental defects in pre-Hispanic Maya cave and rockshelter burials in central Belize , 2016 .
[5] R. B. Pape. BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY OF BAT CAVE, GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, ARIZONA , 2014 .
[6] H. Buckley,et al. First bioarchaeological evidence of probable scurvy in Southeast Asia: Multifactorial etiologies of vitamin C deficiency in a tropical environment. , 2014, International journal of paleopathology.
[7] M. Binder,et al. On the Antiquity of Cancer: Evidence for Metastatic Carcinoma in a Young Man from Ancient Nubia (c. 1200BC) , 2014, PloS one.
[8] Andrew K. Scherer,et al. Danse Macabre: Death, Community, and Kingdom at El Kinel, Guatemala , 2014 .
[9] G. Wrobel. The bioarchaeology of space and place: Ideology, power, and meaning in Maya mortuary contexts , 2014 .
[10] Pamela L Geller,et al. Sedimenting Social Identity: The Practice of Pre-Columbian Maya Body Partibility , 2014 .
[11] Carolyn Freiwald,et al. A Case Study of Funerary Cave Use from Je’reftheel, Central Belize , 2014 .
[12] T. K. Philips,et al. Archaeoentomological study of a pre-Columbian funerary bundle (mortuary cave of Candelaria, Coahuila, Mexico) , 2013 .
[13] S. Morton,et al. The view of Maya cave ritual from the overlook rockshelter, caves branch river valley, central belize , 2013 .
[14] F. d’Errico,et al. Criteria for identifying bone modification by termites in the fossil record , 2012 .
[15] M. Clegg,et al. Heads as Memorials and Status SymbolsThe Collection and Use of Skulls in the Torres Strait Islands , 2011 .
[16] Estella Weiss-Krejci. The Formation of Mortuary Deposits , 2011 .
[17] J. Huchet,et al. Taphonomic Evidence of a Human Skeleton Gnawed by Termites in a Moche-Civilisation Grave at Huaca de la Luna, Peru , 2011 .
[18] T. Price,et al. A Taphonomic Approach to Late Classic Maya Mortuary Practices at Xuenkal, Yucatán, Mexico , 2010 .
[19] Bernd P. Freymann,et al. Termites of the Genus Odontotermes are Optionally Keratophagous , 2007 .
[20] S. Blau. An Analysis of Human Skeletal Remains from two Middle Bronze Age Tombs from Jericho , 2006 .
[21] D. McFarlane,et al. Nitrogen and Carbon Isotope Study of Bat Guano Core from Eagle Creek Cave, Arizona, U.S.A. , 1992 .
[22] S. McBrearty,et al. Consider the humble termite: Termites as agents of post-depositional disturbance at african archaeological sites , 1990 .
[23] F. R. Wylie,et al. INSECT DAMAGE TO ABORIGINAL RELICS AT BURIAL AND ROCK-ART SITES NEAR CARNARVON IN CENTRAL QUEENSLAND , 1987 .
[24] R. Kimsey,et al. Attraction of Neotropical Nasutitermes Termites to Carrion , 1983 .
[25] W. B. Wood. The Skeletal Material from the Brooloo Range and Rocky Hole Creek Burial Sites , 1976 .
[26] D. Derry. Damage done to Skulls and Bones by Termites , 1911, Nature.