miércoles, 23 de septiembre de 2009

Stone Tool Traditions in the Contact Era



Libro editado por Charles R. Cobb (2003)

1. Introduction: Framing Stone Tool Traditions after Contact
Charles R. Cobb
2. Lithic Technology and the Spanish Entrada at the King Site in Northwest Georgia
Charles R. Cobb and Dino A. Ruggiero
3. Wichita Tools on First Contact with the French
George H. Odell
4. Chickasaw Lithic Technology: A Reassessment
Jay K. Johnson
5. Tools of Contact: A Functional Analysis of the Cameron Site Chipped-Stone Assemblage
Michael L. Carmody
6. Lithic Artifacts in Seventeenth-Century Native New England
Michael S. Nassaney and Michael Volmar
7. Stone Adze Economies in Post-Contact Hawai‘i
James M. Bayman
8. In All the Solemnity of Profound Smoking: Tobacco Smoking and Pipe Manufacture and Use among the Potawatomi of Illinois
Mark J. Wagner
9. Using a Rock in a Hard Place: Native-American Lithic Practices in Colonial California
Stephen Silliman
10. Flint and Foxes: Chert Scrapers and the Fur Industry in Late-Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century North Alaska
Mark S. Cassell
11. Discussion
Douglas B. Bamforth

Paleoradiology

Imaging Mummies and Fossils



Libro de R. K. Chhem · D. R. Brothwell (2008)


Chapter 1 Paleoradiology: History and New Developments
Rethy K. Chhem

Chapter 2 paleoradiologic Techniques
George Saab, Rethy K. Chhem y Richard N. Bohay

Chapter 3 The Taphonomic Process, Biological Variation, and X-ray Studies
Don R. Brothwell

Chapter 4 Diagnostic paleoradiologyfor paleopathologists
Rethy K. Chhem, George Saab y Don R. Brothwell

Chapter 5 Paleoradiology in the Service of Zoopaleopathology
Don R. Brothwell

Chapter 6 Normal Variations in Fossils and Recent Human Groups
Don R. Brothwell

Concluding Comments
Rethy K. Chhem y Don R. Brothwell

DEMOGRAPHY IN ARCHAEOLOGY



Libro de Chamberlain (2006)

1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 The principal concerns of demography
1.1.1 What is a population?
1.1.2 Population characteristics
1.1.3 Demographic data: from individual life histories to population parameters
1.2 Demography in archaeology
1.2.1 Archaeology and people
1.2.2 Population pressure: cause or effect?
1.2.3 Population structure
1.2.4 Health and disease
1.2.5 Migration
1.3 Sources of evidence
1.3.1 Theoretical models
1.3.2 Ethnographic and historical evidence
1.3.3 Archaeological evidence: skeletal remains, settlements and site catchments
1.3.4 Genetic and evolutionary evidence
1.3.5 Evidence from disease

2 DEMOGRAPHIC CONCEPTS , THEORY AND METHODS
2.1 Population structure
2.1.1 Age categories and age distributions
2.1.2 Sex distributions
2.1.3 Other structuring categories
2.2 Population growth and demographic transition
2.2.1 Geometric and exponential growth
2.2.2 Logistic growth
2.2.3 Demographic transition
2.3 Mortality, survivorship and life tables
2.3.1 Mortality
2.3.2 Survivorship
2.3.3 Stable populations
2.3.4 The life table
2.3.5 Hazard functions for modelling mortality and survivorship
2.4 Fertility and population projection
2.4.1 Fertility
2.4.2 Population projection
2.5 Migration and colonisation
2.5.1 Migration
2.5.2 Colonisation
2.6 Population standardisation and comparison
2.6.1 Population standardisation
2.6.2 Population comparison

3 HISTORICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHIC DEMOGRAPHY
3.1 Documentary sources of demographic data
3.1.1 Vital registration
3.1.2 Censuses
3.1.3 Commemorative inscriptions
3.1.4 Other written sources
3.2 Families and households
3.2.1 Family units
3.2.2 Family reconstitution
3.2.3 Household size
3.3 Longevity, menarche and menopause
3.3.1 Perceptions and misperceptions of longevity
3.3.2 Menarche and menopause
3.4 Historical evidence of migration and colonisation
3.4.1 Migration in pre-industrial Europe
3.4.2 Mass migration and colonisation in the modern era
3.5 Hunter-gatherer demography
3.5.1 Population structure in hunter-gatherers
3.5.2 Mortality and fertility in hunter-gatherers
3.6 Demography of agricultural populations
3.6.1 Population structure in agricultural populations
3.6.2 Mortality and fertility in agricultural populations
3.7 Conditions of high mortality
3.7.1 Crisis mortality and natural disasters
3.7.2 Famine
3.7.3 Epidemic disease
3.7.4 Conflict mortality

4 ARCHAEOLOGICAL DEMOGRAPHY
4.1 Past population structure
4.1.1 Background to the palaeodemography debate
4.1.2 The challenge by Bocquet-Appel and Masset
4.1.3 Uniformitarian assumptions in palaeodemography
4.1.4 Bias in samples and in estimation
4.2 Estimation of sex
4.2.1 Human sex differences
4.2.2 Morphological sex differences in pre-adolescent skeletons
4.2.3 Morphological sex differences in adult skeletons
4.2.4 Accuracy of sex estimation
4.2.5 Biomolecular methods of sex estimation
4.3 Estimation of age at death
4.3.1 Human skeletal development and ageing
4.3.2 Age estimation in fetuses and children
4.3.3 Age estimation in adults: macroscopic methods
4.3.4 Age estimation in adults: microscopic methods
4.4 Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches to age estimation
4.4.1 General principles in estimating age from morphological indicators
4.4.2 Bayes’ theorem and its application to age estimation
4.4.3 Evaluative studies of Bayesian methods in age estimation
4.4.4 Alternative ways of modelling likelihoods: transition analysis and latent traits
4.4.5 Perinatal age estimation from long bone length
4.4.6 Age estimation and catastrophic mortality profiles
4.4.7 Prospects for the future
4.5 Estimation of population numbers from archaeological data
4.5.1 House sizes and floor areas
4.5.2 Settlement sizes
4.5.3 Site catchments and resource utilisation
4.5.4 Monitoring population size from radiocarbon dating distributions

5 EVOLUTIONARY AND GENETIC PALAEODEMOGRAPHY
5.1 Age and sex structure in animal populations
5.1.1 Natural animal populations
5.1.2 Demography of non-human primates
5.2 Demography of fossil hominids
5.2.1 Maturation times and longevity in fossil hominids
5.2.2 Demography of Australopithecus and early Homo
5.2.3 Demography of Homo heidelbergensis and Homo neanderthalensis
5.3 Human genetic palaeodemography
5.3.1 Genetic studies of present-day populations
5.3.2 Genetic studies of ancient populations

6 DEMOGRAPHY AND DISEASE
6.1 Disease in archaeological populations
6.1.1 Concepts and evidence of disease
6.1.2 Infectious and epidemic diseases
6.1.3 Metabolic, nutritional and deficiency diseases
6.1.4 Neoplastic and congenital diseases
6.1.5 Trauma and homicide
6.2 Social and demographic impacts of disease
6.2.1 Demographic responses to disease
6.2.2 Social responses to disease

7 CONCLUDING REMARKS
7.1 The relevance of demography for archaeology
7.2 How meaningful are the results of palaeodemographic analysis?
7.3 How different were populations in the past?
7.4 Demographic processes and cultural change
7.5 Challenges for the future

Gathering Hopewell

Society, Ritual, and Ritual Interaction




Libro editado por Carr y Case (2004) es parte de una serie denominada Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology

I. GENERAL INTRODUCTION

1. The Gathering of Hopewell
Carr y Case
2. Historical Insight into the Directions and Limitations of Recent Research on Hopewell
Carr

II. SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS OF NORTHERN HOPEWELLIAN PEOPLES

3. Salient Issues in the Social and Political Organizations of Northern Hopewellian Peoples:
Contextualizing, Personalizing, and Generating Hopewell
Carr
4. Community Organizations in the Scioto, Mann, and Havana Hopewellian Regions: A Comparative Perspective
Ruby, Carr y Charles
5. The Nature of Leadership in Ohio Hopewellian Societies: Role Segregation and the Transformation from Shamanism
Carr y Case
The Question of Ranking inHavana Hopewellian Societies:ARetrospective in Light of Multi-cemetery Ceremonial Organization
Carr
7. The Tripartite Ceremonial Alliance among Scioto Hopewellian Communities and the Question of Social Ranking
Carr
8. Animal-Totemic Clans of Ohio Hopewellian Peoples
Thomas, Carr y Keller
9. Gender, Status, and Ethnicity in the Scioto, Miami, and Northeastern Ohio Hopewellian Regions, as Evidenced by Mortuary Practices
Field, Goldberg y Lee
10. Gender and Social Differentiation within the Turner Population, Ohio, as Evidenced by Activity-Induced Musculoskeletal Stress Markers
Rodrigues
11. Gender, Role, Prestige, and Ritual Interaction across the Ohio, Mann, and Havana Hopewellian Regions, as Evidenced by Ceramic Figurines
Keller y Carr

III. RITUAL GATHERINGS OF NORTHERN HOPEWELLIAN PEOPLES

12. Scioto Hopewell Ritual Gatherings: A Review and Discussion of Previous Interpretations and Data
Carr
13. Estimating the Sizes and Social Compositions of Mortuary-Related Gatherings at Scioto Hopewell Earthwork–Mound Sites
Carr, Goldstein y Weets
14. Smoking Pipe Compositions and Styles as Evidence of the Social Affiliations of Mortuary Ritual Participants at the Tremper Site, Ohio
Weets, Carr, Penney y Carriveau
15. Ceramic Vessel Compositions and Styles as Evidence of the Local and Nonlocal Social Affiliations of Ritual Participants at the Mann Site, Indiana
Ruby y Shriner

IV. HOPEWELLIAN RITUAL CONNECTIONS ACROSS EASTERN NORTH AMERICA

16. Rethinking Interregional Hopewellian “Interaction”
Carr
17. Hopewellian Copper Celts from Eastern North America: Their Social and Symbolic Significance
Bernadini y Carr
18. Hopewellian Panpipes from Eastern North America: Their Social, Ritual, and Symbolic Significance
Turff y Carr
19. Hopewellian Copper Earspools from Eastern North America: The Social, Ritual, and Symbolic Significance of Their Contexts and Distribution
Ruhl
20. Hopewellian Silver and Silver Artifacts from Eastern North America: Their Sources, Procurement, Distribution, and Meanings
Spence y Fryer

Bioarchaeology

The Contextual Analysis
of Human Remains



Libro editado por Buikstra y Beck (2006)

Section I People and Projects: Early Landmarks in American Bioarchaeology

Introduction
Chapter 1
A Historical Introduction
Buikstra
Chapter 2
The Old Physical Anthropology and the New World: A Look at the Accomplishments of an antiquated Paradigm
Collins Cook
Chapter 3
The Changing Role of Skeletal Biology at the Smithsonian
Ubelaker
Chapter 4
Kidder, Hooton, Pecos, and the Birth of Bioarchaeology
Beck
Chapter 5
Hemenway, Hrdliˇcka, and Hawikku: A Historical Perspective on Bioarchaeological Research in the American Southwest
Rakita
Chapter 6
A New Deal for Human Osteology
Milner y Jacobi
Chapter 7
Invisible Hands: Women in Bioarchaeology
Powell, Collins Cook, Bogdan, Buikstra, Castro, Horne, Hunt, Koritzer, Ferraz Mendonça de Souza, Sandford, Saunders, Malerba Sene, Sullivan y Swetnam

Section II Emerging Specialties

Introduction
Chapter 8
Behavior and the Bones
Pearson y Buikstra
Chapter 9
A Brief History of Paleodemography from Hooton to Hazards Analysis
Frankenberg y Konigsberg
Chapter 10
A Post-Neumann History of Biological and Genetic Distance Studies in Bioarchaeology
Konigsberg
Chapter 11
The Evolution of American Paleopathology
Collins Cook y Powell
Chapter 12
The Dentist and the Archeologist: The Role of Dental Anthropology in North American Bioarcheology
Rose y Burke

Section III On to the 21st Century

Introduction
Chapter 13
The Changing Face of Bioarchaeology: An Interdisciplinary Science
Spencer Larsen
Chapter 14
Mortuary Analysis and Bioarchaeology
Goldstein
Chapter 15
Repatriation and Bioarchaeology: Challenges and Opportunities
Buikstra
Chapter 16
A View from Afar: Bioarchaeology in Britain
Roberts

The Bioarchaeology of Metabolic Bone Disease


Libro de Megan Brickley and Rachel Ives (2008)

Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The Study of Metabolic Bone Disease in Bioarchaeology
Chapter 3. Background to Bone Biology and Mineral Metabolism
Chapter 4. Vitamin C Defi ciency Scurvy
Chapter 5. Vitamin D Defi ciency
Chapter 6. Age-Related Bone Loss and Osteoporosis
Chapter 7. Secondary Osteopenia and Osteoporosis
Chapter 8. Paget’s Disease of Bone
Chapter 9. Miscellaneous Conditions
Chapter 10. Overview and Directions for Future Research

ARCHAEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE IV

Language change and cultural transformation



Libro editado por Blench y Spriggs (1999)

General introduction
Introduction
Blench y Spriggs

Part I Rethinking language classification

1The languages of Africa: macrophyla proposals and implications for archaeological interpretation
Blench
2 Elam: a bridge between Ancient Near East and Dravidian India?
Blažek
3 Language diversification in the Akoko area of Western Nigeria Chinyere
Ohiri-Aniche
4 Revising Polynesian linguistic subgrouping and its culture history implications
Marck

Part II Interpreting change

5 Celts and others: maritime contacts and linguistic change
Waddell y Conroy
6 Archaeological-linguistic correlations in the formation of retroflex typologies and correlating areal features in South Asia
Tikkanen
7 Language change in Southern Melanesia: linguistic aberrancy and genetic distance
Lynch
8 Linguistic and philological data towards a chronology of Austronesian activity in India and Sri Lanka
Mahdi

Hunter-Gatherers in History, Archaeology and Anthropology


Libro editado por Barnard (2004)

Preface

1 Hunter-Gatherers in History, Archaeology and Anthropology: Introductory Essay
Barnard

I Early Visions of Hunter-Gatherer Society and Their Influence

2 The Meaning of ‘Hunter-Gatherers’ and Modes of Subsistence: a Comparative Historical Perspective
Pluciennik
3 Hunting-and-Gathering Society: an Eighteenth-Century Scottish Invention
Barnard
4 Edward Westermarck and the Origin of Moral Ideas
Hiatt
5 Anthropological History and the Study of Hunters and Gatherers: Cultural and Non-cultural
Yengoyan

II Local Traditions in Hunter-Gatherer Research

6 No Escape From Being Theoretically Important: Hunter-Gatherers in German-Language Debates of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
Schweitzer
7 Hunter-Gatherer Studies in Russia and the Soviet Union
Artemova
8 Soviet Traditions in the Study of Siberian Hunter-Gatherer Society
Sirina
9 The Japanese Tradition in Central African Hunter-Gatherer Studies, with Comparative Observations on the French and American Traditions
Ichikawa
10 The Modern History of Japanese Studies on the San Hunter- Gatherers
Sugawara
11 Down Ancient Trails: Hunter-Gatherers in Indian Archaeology
Pappu

III Reinterpretations in Archaeology, Anthropology and the History of the Disciplines

12 The Many Ages of Star Carr: Do ‘Cites’ Make the ‘Site’?
Lane y Schadla-Hall
13 Ethnographic Models, Archaeological Data, and the Applicability of Modern Foraging Theory
Sheehan
14 Subtle Shifts and Radical Transformations in Hunter-Gatherer Research in American Anthropology: Julian Steward’s Contributions and Achievements
Myers
15 Anthropology and Indigenous Rights in Canada and the United States: Implications in Steward’s Theoretical Project
Pinkoski y Asch
16 Hunting for Histories: Rethinking Historicity in the Western Kalahari
Suzman
17 (Re-)current Doubts on Hunter-Gatherer Studies as Contemporary History
Widlok

Computational Intelligence in Archaeology

Libro de Barceló (2009)

Section I
From Natural Archaeology to “Artificial” Intelligence

Chapter I “Automatic” Archaeology: A Useless Endeavor, an Impossible Dream, or Reality?

Automata: The Awful Truth about Humans and Machines
Archaeology as a Problem Solving Task
Why Archaeological Observables are the Way They Are? The Mechanical Nature of
Archaeological Recognition
The Sciences of the Artificial
Directions for Further Research

Chapter II Problem Solving in the Brain and by the Machine

Looking for Solutions
Expert Systems
“Deconstructing” Archaeology
An Automated Archaeologist, which Discovers the Function of Lithic Tools
An Automated Archaeologist, which Reconstructs Incomplete Data
An Automated Archaeologist, which Understands What an Archaeological Site Was
An Automated Archaeologist, which Explains Ancient Societies
An Automated Archaeologist, which Understands Everything
Is a “Rational” Automated Archaeologist an Impossible Dream?
Directions for Further Research

Section II
Learning and Experimentation in Historical Sciences

Chapter III Computer Systems that Learn

Inverse Reasoning
Inverse Reasoning as a Predictive Task
An Introduction to Machine Learning Algorithms
Simple Rule Induction Methods
Inducing Decision Trees
Classification and Clustering
Predicting Complex Relationships
Some Limitations of Supervised Learning
A Biological Metaphor: Adaptive and Genetic Algorithms
Learning in Uncertain Contexts
Directed Graphs and Probabilistic Networks
Directions for Further Research

Chapter IV An Introduction to Neurocomputing

Simulating the Brain
How a Neural Network Works
How a Neural Network Learns
The Backpropagation Learning Algorithm
How Good Are Neural Network Answers?
When the Neural Network Does Not Learn
Alternative Supervised Learning Algorithms: Radial Basis Functions
Unsupervised Learning Algorithms: Self-Organized Maps
Recurrent Networks
Directions for Further Research

Section III
Practical Examples of Automated Archaeology

Chapter V Visual and Non-Visual Analysis in Archaeology

From Observable Effects to Unobservable Causes
Identification-Based Analysis
An Automated Archaeologist, which Understands Scientific Texts
The Archaeological Analysis of Visual Marks
Directions for Further Research


Chapter VI Shape Analysis

Why Archaeological Evidence has “Shape”?
Direct Shape Recognition
Advanced Methods of Shape Analysis and Interpretation
Decomposing Shape
Limitations in Shape Analysis and Recognition
Directions for Further Research

Chapter VII Texture and Compositional Analysis in Archaeology

Texture
Composition
Directions for Further Research

Chapter VIII Spatiotemporal Analysis

The Analysis of Spatial Frequencies
Neural Networks for Solving the Spatial Interpolation Problem
Interpreting Remote Sensing Data: An Example of Spatial Interpolation
Neurocomputational Spatial Models in Archaeology and the Spatial Sciences
The Analysis of Temporal Series and Chronological Data
Understanding the Future: Towards Historical Prediction
Directions for Further Research

Chapter IX An Automated Approach to Historical and Social Explanation

Neuroclassification as Social Explanation
Towards a Neurocomputational Approach to Social Dynamics
Beyond the “Neural” Analogy: Building an Artificial Society
Directions for Further Research

Section IV
Conclusions: The Computational Philosophy of Archaeology

Chapter X Beyond Science Fiction Tales

The Automated Archaeologist as a Time Machine
“Seeing” the Past in the Present
“Conceptualizing” the Past in the Present
“Understanding” the Past in the Present
“Simulating” the Past in the Present
A Final Comment on Automated Explanation
Towards a “Computational Philosophy of Science”
Directions for Further Research

ANIMAL DESEASES IN ARCHAEOLOGY


Libro de Baker y Brothwell (1980)

Between Dirt and Discussion

Methods, Methodology, and Interpretation
in Historical Archaeology




Libro editado por Archer y Bartoy (2006)

1. Introduction: Considering Methods and Methodology in Historical Archaeology.
Archer y Bartoy
2. Pipemakers and Their Workshops: The Use of Geochemical Analysis in the Study of the Clay Tobacco Pipe Industry.
Vince y Peacey
3. The Integration of Historical Cartographic Data within the GIS environment.
Madry
4. Saloons in the Wild West and Taverns in Mesopotamia: Explorations along the Timeline of Public Drinking.
Kelly J. Dixon
5. The Life and Death of a Home: House History in a Subsurface Feature.
Archer, Bartoy e Pearson
6. Alternatives to Traditional Models for the Classification and Analysis of Pipes of the Early Colonial Chesapeake.
Agbe-Davies
7. Archaeology and the Ethics of Scientific Destruction.
Harris
8. Finding Common Ground in Common Places: Interdisciplinary Methods for Analyzing Historic Architecture on Archaeological Sites.
Clark y Corbett
9. Re-excavation, Reflexivity, and Responsibility at Colonial Williamsburg: The Archaeology of Archaeology and the Refinement of Site Interpretation.
Brown III y Edwards
10. Excavating Sites Unseen: The Example of Earthfast Buildings in the Colonial Cheseapeake.
Kostro
11. “Ponying up to Billy Hurst’s Saloon”: The Testing and Evaluation of Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Archaeological Deposits Through Less Invasive Techniques in Yosemite National Park, California of Archaeology.
Bartoy, Holson y Ballard
12. Methodology, Materiality, and the Endless Sea of Archaeology.
Bartoy y Archer

CLIMATE CHANGE AND CULTURAL DYNAMICS

A Global Perspective on Mid-Holocene Transitions


Libro editado por David G. Anderson, Kirk A. Maasch y Daniel H. Sandweiss (2007)

1 Climate and culture change: exploring Holocene transitions
Anderson, Maasch, Sandweiss y Mayewski

2 Mid-Holocene climate and culture change in coastal Peru
Sandweiss, Maasch, Andrus, Reitz, Richardson III, Riedinger-Whitmore y Rollins

3 Mid-Holocene climate and culture change in the South Central Andes
Grosjean, Santoro, Thompson, Lautaro Nuñez y Standen

4 Mid-Holocene climate and cultural dynamics in Brazil and
the Guianas
Meggers

5 Culture and climate in Mesoamerica during the Middle Holocene
Voorhies y Metcalfe

6 Middle Holocene environments of north and east Africa, with special emphasis on the African Sahara
Wendorf, Karle´n y Schild

7 Influence of Holocene marine transgression and climate change on cultural evolution in southern Mesopotamia
Kennett y Kennett

8 Mid-Holocene cultural dynamics and climatic change in the Western Pacific
Anderson, Gagan y Shulmeister

9 Mid-Holocene climate and cultural dynamics in eastern Central China
Lu

10 Mid-Holocene climatic changes and cultural dynamics in the basin of
the Sea of Japan and adjacent areas
Lutaenko, Zhushchikhovskaya, Mikishin y Popov

11 Mid-Holocene climatic and cultural dynamics in Northern Europe
Karle´n y Larsson

12 Mid-Holocene cultural adaptations to central Maine
Sanger, Almquist y Dieffenbacher-Krall

13 Mid-Holocene cultural dynamics in southeastern North America
Anderson, Russo y Sassaman

14 Mid-Holocene culture and climate on the Northwest Coast of North America
Moss, Peteet y Whitlock

15 Middle Holocene climate change and human population dispersal in western North America
Kennett, Culleton, Kennett, Erlandson y Cannariato

BIOGEOCHEMICAL APPROACHES TO PALEODIETARY ANALYSIS



Libro perteneciente a la serie ADVANCES IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND MUSEUM SCIENCE.
Editado por Ambrose y Katzenberg (2000)

Chapter 1 • Bone Chemistry, Food and History: A Case Study from 19th Century Upper Canada
Katzenberg, Saunders y Abonyi.
Chapter 2 • Diet and Animal Husbandry of the Preclassic Maya at Cuello, Belize: Isotopic and Zooarchaeological Evidence.
van der Merwe, Tykot, Hammond y Oakberg
Chapter 3 • An Overview of Causes for Stable Isotopic Variations in Past European Human populations: Environmental, Ecophysiological, and Cultural Effects.
van Klinken, Richards y Hedges
Chapter 4 • Preservation of Isotopic Signals (13C, 15N) in Pleistocene Mammals.
Bocherens
Chapter 5 • Preservation of Biogenic Carbon Isotopic Signals in Plio-Pleistocene Bone and Tooth Mineral.
Lee-Thorp
Chapter 6 • Tooth Oxygen Isotope Ratios As Paleoclimate Monitors In Arid Ecosystems.
Schoeninger, Kohn y Valley
Chapter 7 • Quantifying Histological and Chemical Preservation in Archaeological Bone.
Pfeiffer y Varney
Chapter 8 • The Use and Abuse of Trace Elements for Paleodietary Research.
Burton y Price
Chapter 9 • Modeling Protein Diagenesis in Ancient Bone: Towards a Validation of Stable Isotope Data.
Grupe, Balzer y Turban-Just
Chapter 10 • Some Biochemical Aspects of Carbon Isotopic Paleodiet Studies.
Schwarcz
Chapter 11 • “Consider a Spherical Cow . . .”—on Modeling and Diet.
Hedges y van Klinken
Chapter 12 • Controlled Diet and Climate Experiments on Nitrogen Isotope Ratios of Rats.
Ambrose