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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

St. Vital cemetery (1879-1885) : an osteological and paleopathological assessment

Swanston, Treena Marie 14 April 2008
In the fall of 1999, human skeletal remains and historic artifacts were discovered on private farmland approximately two kilometres south of the Town of Battleford, Saskatchewan. Document searches and a ground-penetrating radar survey of the property resulted in the discovery that the land was once used as a cemetery for the Catholic Church of St. Vital during the years of 1879 to 1885. Numerous interest groups were brought together in the process of handling this sensitive situation, including the landowners, the Heritage Resource Branch of the Department of Saskatchewan Culture, Youth and Recreation, the Rural Municipality of Battle River, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince Albert, and the Battleford Tribal Council. A decision was made to relocate the burials to the current town cemetery. In the meantime, permission was granted for the University of Saskatchewan to play the lead role in the excavation and analysis process. The partial and complete skeletal remains of thirty individuals were recovered, and in addition to a basic osteological analysis of the individuals that included sex determination, age at death and population affinity, a detailed assessment of the pathological conditions was also undertaken. The document and artifact analyses will be the subject of a separate thesis by Colette Hopkins.
52

St. Vital cemetery (1879-1885) : an osteological and paleopathological assessment

Swanston, Treena Marie 14 April 2008 (has links)
In the fall of 1999, human skeletal remains and historic artifacts were discovered on private farmland approximately two kilometres south of the Town of Battleford, Saskatchewan. Document searches and a ground-penetrating radar survey of the property resulted in the discovery that the land was once used as a cemetery for the Catholic Church of St. Vital during the years of 1879 to 1885. Numerous interest groups were brought together in the process of handling this sensitive situation, including the landowners, the Heritage Resource Branch of the Department of Saskatchewan Culture, Youth and Recreation, the Rural Municipality of Battle River, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince Albert, and the Battleford Tribal Council. A decision was made to relocate the burials to the current town cemetery. In the meantime, permission was granted for the University of Saskatchewan to play the lead role in the excavation and analysis process. The partial and complete skeletal remains of thirty individuals were recovered, and in addition to a basic osteological analysis of the individuals that included sex determination, age at death and population affinity, a detailed assessment of the pathological conditions was also undertaken. The document and artifact analyses will be the subject of a separate thesis by Colette Hopkins.
53

Handle with care : Debates associated with reburial of human skeletal remains. A comparative study between Sweden and Vanuatu / Hanteras varsamt : Debatter i samband med återbegravning av mänskliga kvarlevor. En jämförelse mellan Sverige och Vanuatu

Bergljung, Gustav January 2010 (has links)
Excavations of human skeletal remains are sometimes followed by claims for reburial from the local community. This has led to debates between researchers and other elements of society, churches or minorities. This scientific paper sat out to examine the discussions and debates found in Sweden (Scandinavia), with the situation in Vanuatu, (Melanesia). The objective was to elucidate similarities and differences in people’s attitude when it comes to reburial. Religious beliefs, legislations and policies were compared to provide explanations for the different attitudes in the two countries. The study showed that the debates found in the Swedish material such as conflicts between researchers and the church or between the Saami population and Swedish researchers, haven’t got a counterpart in Vanuatu. This was much due to the research policies in Vanuatu and the strong Christian faith. / Fynd av mänskliga kvarlevor i samband med utgrävningar följs ibland av krav på återbegravning från det lokala samhället. Detta har lett till debatter mellan forskare och andra delar av samhället, kyrkan eller minoriteter. Denna C-uppsats har försökt undersöka diskussionerna och debatterna som framkommit i Sverige (Skandinavien) och Vanuatu (Melanesien). Målet var att belysa likheter och skillnader hos människors inställning när det kommer till återbegravning. Religion, lagstiftning och policys jämfördes för att förklara de olika inställningarna i de två länderna. Studien visade att debatterna mellan kyrkan och forskarna eller den Samiska befolkningen och forskarna inte hade en motsvarighet i Vanuatu. Detta var mycket tack vare Vanuatus forskningspolicy och den starka kristna tron i landet.
54

An assessment of metabolic bone disease in the skeletal remains of Chinese indentured mine labourers from the Witwatersrand

Meyer, Anja January 2014 (has links)
An essential part of bioarchaeology is the study of diet and nutrition and its effects on the general health of a person. Interpretation of nutritional and metabolic disease related pathologies often provide additional insight into the daily social and cultural practices of people. It is therefore also an essential part of understanding differences amongst past populations from archaeological contexts and provides an alternative means for cross referencing historical accounts. In this study the skeletal remains of 36 Chinese indentured mine labourers, who worked and died on the Witwatersrand mines during the period AD 1904-1910, were assessed for any signs of metabolic or nutritionally related signs of disease. Historical information suggests that these indentured Chinese labourers came from poverty stricken communities in China where disease and malnutrition were often encountered. Once in South Africa they were again subjected to the harsh living and working conditions associated with mining. Analyses suggest that all 36 individuals were males between the ages of 16 and 45 years, with the majority being of young adult age (20-34 years). Pathology that could be observed included a high prevalence of nutrition-related changes and linear enamel hypoplasia which suggests that the Chinese miners had been subjected to long periods of malnutrition and illness throughout childhood continuing into adulthood. Nevertheless, a large proportion of lesions associated with malnutrition showed some degree of healing. A high frequency of traumatic lesions, specifically peri-mortem fractures, was observed and may have contributed to the death of many of the Chinese miners. It therefore seems that even though the healing of pathological lesions associated with malnutrition indicated a period of improved nutritional intake, possibly during their time on the Witwatersrand mines, the high prevalence of peri-mortem fractures attests to the hazardous working conditions associated with deep-level mining. In order to aid in the interpretation of skeletal pathology associated with metabolic and nutritional diseases non-specific signs of disease observed in a cadaver skeletal sample with known causes of death (related to specific metabolic or nutritional diseases) were compared to pathology observed in the Chinese miners. This provided pathological patterns which enabled a better interpretation of the pathology observed in the Chinese skeletal remains. / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2014. / am2014 / Anatomy / unrestricted
55

Diachronic effects of bio-cultural factors on stature and body proportions in British archaeological populations. The impact of living conditions, socio-economic, nutritional and health status on growth, development, maximum attained stature and physical shape in archaeological skeletal population samples.

Schweich, Marianne January 2005 (has links)
Humans, like all animal species, are subject to Bergmann's (1847) and Allen's (1877) environmental rules which summarize physical adaptations to the natural environment. However, humans are in addition cultural animals and other bio-cultural factors such as social, economic and political status, general health, and nutrition, have a noticeable influence on stature and body proportions. Importantly, socio-economic status has a powerful influence on stature, which has been used to elucidate status differences in past societies (Bogin and Loucky, 1997; Floud et al., 1990; Schutkowski, 2000a). Furthermore, bio-cultural factors influence all dimensions of the human body, including weight, relative limb length, and relative length of the different limb segments. Given minimal migration and shared natural environments, all populations in this study, coming as they do from the last 2000 years of English history, should demonstrate similar morphology (c. f Ruff, 1994) if climatic variables were the only influence on stature and body proportions. In order to assess such bio-cultural factors in individuals from archaeological populations, skeletal populations from sites such as known leprosaria and medieval hospitals, rural and urban parish cemeteries, victims from the battle of Towton in A. D. 1461, and individuals from monastic cemeteries were analysed. The osteometric data from these populations were assessedfo r within and between population variability and indicate effects of bio-cultural factors on attained body proportions and stature. The results indicate a strong relationship between bio-cultural factors and body proportions, body mass index, prevalence of pathologies, sexual dimorphism, secular trend, and general stature from Roman times to the post-medieval period. The usefulness of stature, weight, and physical indices as markers of the bio-cultural environment is demonstrated. The main findings include: a greater sensitivity to external stressors in the males rather than the females of the analysed populations, rendering male statures more susceptible to varying bio-cultural conditions; a potential for very tall stature has existed in the analysed populations but was only realised. in very high status individuals in medieval times, and from the beginning 20'h century with better socio-economic conditions for the population at large; a less stratified socio-political environment, as in the late Anglo-Saxon period resulted in taller average male statures that a more stratified one, such as the medieval Nation-States; and medieval monastic institutions could have high status, e.g., the Gilbertines, or lower status, such as the mendicant orders, while leprosaria had the lowest status of all. / Ministere de la Culture, de l'Enseignement Superieur et de la Recherche, Luxembourg; Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford; Andy Jagger Fund; Francis Raymond Hudson Memorial Fund
56

A comparative microscopic study of human and non-human long bone histology.

Nor, Faridah M. January 2009 (has links)
Identification of human or nonhuman skeletal remains is important in assisting the police and law enforcement officers for the investigation of forensic cases. Identification of bone can be difficult, especially in fragmented remains. It has been reported that 25 to 30% of medicolegal cases, which involved nonhuman skeletal remains have been mistaken for human. In such cases, histomorphometric method was used to identify human and nonhuman skeletal remains. However, literature has shown that histomorphometric data for human and nonhuman bone were insufficient. Additionally, age estimation in bone may help in the identification of human individual, which can be done by using a histomorphometric method. Age estimation is based on bone remodeling process, where microstructural parameters have strong correlations with age. Literature showed that age estimation has been done on the American and European populations. However, little work has been done in the Asian population. The aims of this project were thus, to identify human and nonhuman bone, and to estimate age in human bones by using histomorphometric analysis. In this project, 64 human bones and 65 animal bones were collected from the mortuary of the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre and the Zoos in Malaysia, respectively. A standard bone preparation was used to prepare human and nonhuman bone thin sections for histomorphometric assessment. Assessments were made on the microstructural parameters such as cortical thickness, medullary cavity diameter, osteon count, osteon diameter, osteon area, osteon perimeter, Haversian canal diameter, Haversian canal area, Haversian canal perimeter, and Haversian lamella count per osteon by using image analysis, and viewed under a transmitted light microscope. The microstructural measurements showed significant differences between human and nonhuman samples. The discriminant functions showed correct classification rates for 81.4% of cases, and the accuracy of identification was 96.9% for human and 66.2% for animal. Human age estimation showed a standard error of estimate of 10.41 years, comparable with those in the literature. This study project offers distinct advantages over currently available histomorphometric methods for human and nonhuman identification and human age estimation. This will have significant implications in the assessment of fragmentary skeletal and forensic population samples for identification purposes.
57

Out of Light Came Darkness: Bioarchaeology of Mortuary Ritual, Health, and Ethnogenesis in the Lambayeque Valley Complex, North Coast Peru (AD 900-1750)

Klaus, Haagen D. 25 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
58

Brandgravar : Yngre järnålder i Broe, Halla socken, på Gotland : en studie i olika metoder, med fokus på kremeringen / Cremation graves : The Late Iron Age in Broe, Halla parish on Gotland : a study in different methodologies, with focus on the cremation

Johansson, Ida January 2007 (has links)
This essay concerns the osteological cremated skeletal remains from Broe, Halla parish, Gotland of  The Late Iron Age. The focus of this essay is to determine the position of the corpse on the pyre, whether the cremated bones were crushed after or prior to the cremation and if the individual was buried in the pyre. In addition the species, age, sex and skeletal abnormalities of the bones in question will be studied. The result of the research has yielded that the cremated bones did not need to be crushed to result in the small fragment sizes. Crushing of the bones may have happened during the cremation, this conclusion has been drawn through the comparison of a pyre experiment were bone fragmentation is evident with cremated foxes, and dogs in the cremation graves from Broe. The construction of the pyre and the position of the corpse could not be determined through colouring and fragmentation of the bones. The human's were commonly buried in the pyre, and in some cases it is possible that the "grave" in fact is the remainder of a pyre. The species found are dog, horse, cow, sheep/goat and bear. The unburnt human bones in the cremation graves come from children. Of the cremated human’s, ages range from 18-44 to 50-79 occur. Three probable men and two probable women have been estimated, but there is no clear segregation between the sexes on the grave field, which is evident on some medieval church graveyards. Skeletal abnormalities in humans are found on the cranium, more specific senile osteoporosis, and on the dog’s osteophytosis.
59

Odpad v kruhu: výpovědní potenciál artefaktů z rondelu v Praze-Ruzyni / A Garbage in a Circle: Potential of the Artefacts from the Rondel in Prague-Ruzyně

Blažková, Tereza January 2013 (has links)
This thesis is focused on research of the rondel (circular ditch) located in the Prague- -Ruzyně area, dated to Late Neolithic Era with the Stroked Pottery culture. Quantitative, qualitative and spatial analysis of rondel's object fillings were carried out and the results and interpretation are presented in this thesis. Particularly thanks to Stroke-ornamented pottery analysis, it was possible to determine the relative chronology of the ditches filling. The interpretation of the material analysis and material spatial distribution tried to describe the trends associated with the formative processes and the development of origin of the ditches fillings. This work brings the results of processing of archeological findings and field documentation of a fully explored rondel, situated in the settlement of the Stroked Pottery culture. This work contributes to the understanding of Late Neolithic settlement structure and the rondels in general. Catalogue of findings is included. KEY WORDS: Late Neolithic - Stroked Pottery culture - Circular ditch - spatial analysis - formation processes - pottery - lithics - daub - animal skeletal remains
60

Paläodontologische Untersuchungen an Skeletresten aus der Wüstung Drudewenshusen im südniedersächsischen Eichsfeld / Paleodontologic Research on Skeletal Remains from the Deserted Medieval Village of Drudewenshusen in the Eichsfeld Region, Lower Saxony

Schünemann, Max Jakob 13 April 2015 (has links)
Als Paläopathologie wird das interdisziplinäre Fachgebiet von Anthropologen, Medizinern und Archäologen bezeichnet, das sich mit der Erforschung der Krankheiten vergangener Generationen beschäftigt. Den Zähnen kommt dabei eine besondere Bedeutung zu, da der Zahnschmelz das härteste Körpergewebe ist und sie deshalb besonders lange für eine Untersuchung zugänglich sind. An Ihnen lassen sich eine Vielzahl von Erkenntnissen in Bezug auf die Lebens- und Ernährungsweise unserer Vorfahren gewinnen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde der Gesundheitszustand der Zähne und des Zahnhalteapparates in der mittelalterlichen Bevölkerung der südniedersächsischen Dorfwüstung Drudewenshusen mit in der Paläopathologie gebräuchlichen Methoden analysiert. Für die Auswertung wurde ein neues mathematisches Verfahren zur Schätzung der Karieshäufigkeit verwendet. Insgesamt wurden 112 Individuen untersucht. Etwa je ein Drittel entfällt auf Männer, Frauen und geschlechtlich Unbestimmbare, zumeist Kinder. Erhoben wurde der Zahnstatus in Bezug auf vorhandene und intravital bzw. postmortal verlorene Zähne. Die Zähne und Alveolarknochen wurden auf Karies, Parodontopathien, apicale Prozesse, Zahnstein, Zahnabrasion und das Auftreten transversaler Schmelzhypoplasien untersucht. Frauen und Männer litten etwa gleich häufig unter einer Karies; bei den weiblichen Individuen waren jedoch mehr Zähne erkrankt als bei den männlichen Individuen ihrer Altersgruppe. Am häufigsten von Karies betroffen zeigte sich der Molarenbereich. Der Einsatz des auf dem DMF-T-Index basierenden Kariesschätzers erweist sich am archäologischen Skeletfund als praktikabel. Die intravitalen Verluste zeigen einen analogen Verlauf zum Kariesbefall, der als deren Hauptursache angesehen wird. Andere Ursachen wie übermäßige Abrasion oder Traumata spielen eine untergeordnete Rolle. Die Häufigkeit intravitaler Verluste steigt mit dem Alter an; Frauen sind häufiger betroffen als Männer. Die entzündliche Veränderung des Parodontiums und der nicht entzündliche Knochenschwund sind in der erwachsenen Bevölkerung von Drudewenshusen weit verbreitet. Das Auftreten und Ausmaß von Zahnstein ist nur eingeschränkt beurteilbar, da dieser sehr leicht postmortal verloren geht. Nahezu alle erwachsene Individuen weisen Zahnstein auf. Apicale Osteolysen konnten nur bei erwachsenen Individuen nachgewiesen werden. Verbindungen zwischen Abszesshöhle und angrenzenden Sinus maxillares mit Zeichen von Entzündung weisen auf eine Ausbreitung der sonst lokal begrenzten Prozesse hin. Die Bewohner von Drudewenshusen zeigen eine interindividuell unterschiedliche, aber insgesamt hohe Abrasion auf, welche mit dem Alter zunimmt. Nur ein Drittel der Population ist von transversalen Schmelzhypoplasien betroffen. Die Veränderungen waren überwiegend leicht ausgeprägt. Insgesamt ergibt sich das Bild einer bäuerlich geprägten Gesellschaft, deren Nahrung weitestgehend auf Kohlenhydraten basierte. Schmerzhafte Erkrankungen der Zähne wie Karies oder dentoalveoläre Abszesse betrafen alle Altersschichten und Geschlechter. Eine hohe Kindersterblichkeit belegt das harte Leben zu dieser Zeit. Phasen des Nahrungsmangels werden durch das Vorkommen von Mangelerkrankungen und das Auftreten von transversalen Schmelzhypoplasien angezeigt. Die vorliegende Arbeit präsentiert neue Ergebnisse zu Zahnerkrankungen in einer mittelalterlichen Dorfwüstung, sowie neue Ansätze zur Interpretation der Karies im paläopathologischen Kontext. Dadurch kann ein weitreichender Einblick in die Gesellschaft und das tägliche Leben im Mittelalter gewonnen werden.

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