Bibliography
Angel, J. L. 1957. Human biological changes in ancient Greece, with special reference to Lerna. In Year Book of the American Philosophical Society, 226—70. Philadelphia.
1966.
Porotic hyperostosis, anemias, malarias and marshes in the prehistoric eastern Mediterranean. Science 153: 760-3.1971a. Disease and culture in the ancient East Mediterranean. In Proceedings of the IOth Congress of the Czechoslovak Anthropological Society at Humpolec, 1969, 503-8. Prague.
1971b. The people of Lerna. Washington, D.C.
1972. Biological relations OfEgyptian and eastern Mediterranean populations during pre-Dynastic and Dynastic times. Journal of Human Evolution 1: 307—13.
1973. Early Neolithic people of Nea Nikomedeia. In Die Anfdnge des Neolithikums vom Orient bis Nordeu- ropa, ed. I. Schwidetzky1 103-12. Cologne.
1974. Patterns of fractures from Neolithic to modem times. Anthropologiai Kdzlemenyek 18: 9-18.
1977. Anemias of antiquity in the eastern Mediterranean. In Paleopathology Association Monograph No. 2, 1-5.
1984. Health as a crucial factor in the changes from hunting to developed farming in the eastern Mediterranean. In Paleopathology at the origins Ofagriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos1 51-73. Orlando1 Fla.
Angel1 J. L.1 and S. C. Bisel. 1986. Health and stress in an Early Bronze Age population. In Ancient Anatolia: Aspects of change and cultural development, ed. J. V. Canby et al.1 12—30. Madison1 Wis.
Aspock1 H.1 H. Flamm1 and O. Picher. 1973. Intestinal parasites in human excrements from prehistoric saltmines of the Hallstatt period (800-350 B.C.). Zentralblatt filr Bakteriologie, Parasitenkunde, Infek- Iionskrankheiten und Hygiene 223: 549-58.
Aufherheide1 A. C. 1985.
Review of Die Anthropologische Untersuchung der C-Gruppen- und Pan-Grdber- Skelette aus Sayala, Agyptisch-Nubien, by E. Strouhal and J. Jungwirth. Paleopathology Newsletter 52: 19-20.Bartels1 P. 1907. Tuberkulose (wirbelkaries) in der jung- eren Steinzeit. Archiv fur Anthropologie 6: 243—55.
Bennike1 P. 1985. Palaeopathology of Danish skeletons. Copenhagen.
Bentley1 G. R. 1987. Kinship and social structure at Early Bronze IA Bab edh-Dhra,1 Jordan. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago.
Bisel1 S. C. 1980. A pilot study in aspects of human nutrition in the ancient eastern Mediterranean, with particular attention to trace minerals in several populations from different time periods. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Minnesota.
Bisel1 S. C.1 and J. L. Angel. 1985. Health and nutrition in Mycenaean Greece: A study in human skeletal remains. In Contributions to Aegean archaeology: Studies in honor of William A. McDonald, ed. N. C. Wilkie and W. D. E. Coulson1 197-209. Dubuque1 Iowa.
Brothwell1 D. R. 1960. The Bronze Age people of Yorkshire: A general survey. Advancement of Science 16: 311-22.
1961. The palaeopathology of early British man: An essay on the problems of diagnosis and analysis. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 91: 318-44.
1967. The bio-cultural background to disease. In Diseases in antiquity, ed. D. Brothwell and A. T. Sandison1 56—68. Springfield, Ill.
1973. The human biology of the Neolithic population in
Britain. In Die Anfdnge des Neolithikums vom Orient bis Nordeuropa, ed. I. Schwidetzky1 280—99. Cologne. Buikstra1 J. E. 1976. The Caribou Eskimo: General and
specific disease. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 45: 351-67.
Cockbum1 A. 1963. The evolution and eradication of infectious diseases. Baltimore.
Cohen1 M.
N. 1984a. An introduction to the symposium. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos11-11. Orlando1 Fla.1984b. Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture: Editor’s summation. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos1 585-601. Orlando1 Fla.
Dastugue1 J. 1974. Les Ossements humains pathologiques. Bulletin de la Correspondance Hellenique 98: 749—54.
Dastugue1 J.1 and M.-A. de Lumley. 1976. Les maladies des hommes pre-historiques. In La Pre—historic franςaise, Vol. 2.1 ed J. Guilaine1 153-64. Paris.
Dawson1 W. R.1 and P. H. K. Gray 1968. Catalogue of Egyptian antiquities in the British Museum. Vol. 1: Mummies and human remains. London.
Derums1 V. J. 1987. Paleopathology of Bronze Age population in Latvia. Anthropologie 25: 57—61.
Derums1 V. Y. 1964. Some paleopathologic data on Baltic Coast inhabitants. Arkhiv Anatomii, Gistologii i Embriologii 46: 225-30.
Domurad1 M. R. 1986. The populations of ancient Cyprus. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cincinnati.
Elliot-Smith1 G.1 and W R. Dawson. 1924. Egyptian mummies. New York.
Elliot-Smith1 G.1 and F. Wood-Jones. 1910. The archaeological survey of Nubia report for 1907—1908. Vol. 2: Report on the human remains. Cairo.
El-Najjar1 M. Y.1 et al. 1980. Autopsies on two native American mummies. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 53: 197-202.
Fiennes1 R. N. 1978. Zoonoses and the origins and ecology of human disease. New York.
Fleming, S.1 et al. 1980. The Egyptian mummy: Secrets and science. Philadelphia.
Formicola1 V. 1986. Anthropologie dentaire des restes de l,Epi gravettien final retrouv6s dans la grotte des Arene Candide (Ligurie).
Bulletin et Mfrnoires de la Sociiti d,Anthropologie de Paris 3: 37—46.1986-7. The dentition of the Neolithic sample from Western Liguria (Italy). Ossa 13: 97—107.
Formicola1 V1 Q. Milanesi1 and C. Scarsini. 1987. Evidence of spinal tuberculosis at the beginning of the 4th millennium B.C. from Arene Candide Cave (Liguria, Italy). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 72: 1-6.
Gejvall1 N.-G. 1974. Description of the human skeletons from the graves and some associated animal bones.
In Gotlands Mellanneolitiska Gravar (The Middle Neolithic graves of Gotland), ed. O. Janzon1 141-67. Stockholm.
Gladykowska-Rzeczycka, J. 1981. A short review of paleo- pathological research in Poland. Homo 32: 125—30.
1991. Tumors in antiquity in East and Middle Europe. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide1 251—6. Washington, D.C.
Goodman, A. H. 1991. Stress, adaptation and enamel developmental defects. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide. Washington, D.C.
Goodman, A. H., D. L. Martin, and G. J. Armelagos. 1984. Indications of stress from bone and teeth. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos, 13-49. Orlando, Fla.
Gray, P. H. K. 1967. Radiography of ancient Egyptian mummies. Medical Radiography and Photography 43: 34-44.
Grmek, M. D. 1989. Diseases in the ancient Greek world. Baltimore.
Jones, A. K. G., and C. Nicholson 1988. Recent finds of Trichuris and Ascaris ova from Britain. Paleopathology Newsletter 63: 5-6.
Jurmain, R. D. 1977. Stress and the etiology of osteoarthritis. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 45: 353-66.
Kilgore, L. 1989. Possible case of rheumatoid arthritis from Sudanese Nubia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 79: 177—83.
Klepinger, L. L. 1979. Paleopathologic evidence for the evolution of rheumatoid arthritis.
American Journal OfPhysical Anthropology 50: 119—22.Krogman, W. M. 1940. The skeletal and dental pathology of an early Iranian site. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 8: 28—48.
Kunter, M. 1977. K&mid el-L6z. Bonn.
Kurth, G., and O. Rohrer-ErtL 1981. On the anthropology of the Mesolithic to the Chalcolithic: Human remains from the Tell es-Sultan in Jericho, Jordan. In Excavations at Jericho, Vol. 3, ed. K. M. Kenyon, 407—49. London.
Leden, O., E. Persson, and O. Persson. 1985—6. Peripheral polyarthritis in two Neolithic skeletons. Ossa 12: 79-88.
Lisowski, F. P. 1967. Prehistoric and early historic trepanation. In Diseases in antiquity, ed. D. Brothwell and A. T Sandison, 651—72. Springfield, Ill.
Mallegni, F., G. Fomaciari, and N. Tarabella. 1979. Studio antropologico dei resti Scheletrici della necropoli dei Monterozzi (Torquina). Atti della Societa Toscana di Scienze Naturali, Serie B. 86: 185-221.
Manchester, K. 1983. Thearchaeologyofdisease. Bradford.
1984. Tuberculosis and leprosy in antiquity: An interpretation. Medical History 28: 162-73.
1991. Tuberculosis and leprosy: Evidence for the interaction of disease. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide, 23—35. Washington, D.C.
Martin, D. L., et al. 1984. The effects of socioeconomic change in prehistoric Africa: Sudanese Nubia as a case study. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos, 193-214. Orlando, Fla.
May, W. P. 1897. Rheumatoid arthritis (osteitis deformans) affecting bones 5,500 years old. British Medical Journal 2: 1631-2.
McGrath, J. W. 1986. A computer simulation of the spread of tuberculosis in prehistoric populations of the lower Illinois River Valley. Ph.D. dissertation, Northwestern University.
Meiklejohn, C., et al. 1984. Socioeconomic change and patterns of pathology and variation in the Mesolithic and Neolithic of western Europe: Some suggestions.
In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos, 75-100. Orlando, Fla.Mitchell, J. K. 1900. Study of a mummy affected with anterior poliomyelitis. Transactions of the Association OfAmerican Physicians 15: 134—6.
Molnar, S., and I. Molnar. 1985. Observations of dental diseases among prehistoric populations in Hungary. AmericanJournal of Physical Anthropology 67:51-63.
Morlock, G. 1986. Paleopathological identification of the Iiyperostosic disease. In VI European Meeting of the Paleopathology Association, Proceedings, ed. F. G. Bellard and J. A. Sanchez, 161-8. Madrid.
Morse, D. 1967. Tuberculosis. In Diseases in antiquity, ed. D. Brothwell and A. T Sandison, 249—71. Springfield, Ill.
Ortner, D. J. 1968. Description and classification of degenerative bone changes in the distal joint surfaces of the humerus. American Journal OfPhysical Anthropology 28: 139-55.
1979. Disease and mortality in the Early Bronze Age people of Bab edh-Dhra, Jordan. American Journal of PhysicalAnthropology 51: 589-98.
1984. Bone lesions in a probable case of scurvy from Metlatavik1 Alaska. Journal of the Museum OfApplied Science, Center for Archaeology {MASCA Journal} 3: 79-81.
1986. Metabolic and endocrine disorders in human skeletal paleopathology. In VI European Meeting of the Paleopathology Association, Proceedings, ed. F. G. Bellard and J. A. Sanchez, 17-24. Madrid.
1991. Theoretical and methodological issues in paleopathology. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide1 5—11. Washington, D.C.
Ortner, D. J., and W. G. J. Putschar. 1981. Identification of pathological conditions in human skeletal remains. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology No. 28. Washington, D.C.
Pales, L. 1930. Paleopathologie et pathologic comparative. Paris.
Patte, E. 1971. Les restes humains de la grotte sepulcrale
du Laris Goguet a Feigneux (Oise). Bulletins et Mem- oires de la Societe d’Anthropologie de ParisT. 381-452. Rathbun, T. A. 1984. Skeletal pathology from the Paleo
lithic through the Metal Ages in Iran and Iraq. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos, 137-67. Orlando, Fla.
Resnick, D., and G. Niwayama. 1988. Diagnosis of bone and joint disorders, 2d edition. Philadelphia.
Rose, J. C., K. W. Condon, and A. H. Goodman. 1984. Diet and dentition: Developmental disturbances. In The analysis of prehistoric diets, ed. R. I. Gilbert, Jr., and J. H. Mielke, 281-305. New York.
Rothschild, B. M., K. R. Turner, and M. A. DeLuca. 1988. Symmetrical erosive peripheral polyarthritis in the Late Archaic period of Alabama. Science 241: 14981501.
Rowling, J. T. 1961. Pathological changes in mummies.
Proceedings of the Royal Society OfMedicine 54: 409— 15.
Ruffer, M. A. 1918. Studies in palaeopathology: Arthritis deformans and spondylitis in ancient Egypt. Journal ofPathology and Bacteriology 22: 152—96.
Ruffer, M. A., and A. Rietti. 1912. On osseous lesions in ancient Egyptians. Journal ofPathology and Bacteriology 16: 439—65.
Sager, P., M. Schalimtzek, and V. Mpller-Christensen.
1972. A case of spondylitis tuberculosa in the Danish Neolithic Age. Danish Medical Bulletin 19: 176—80.
Sandison, A. T. 1973. Evidence of infective disease. In Population biology of the ancient Egyptians, ed. D. R. Brothwell and B. A. Chiarelli, 213-24. New York.
1980. Diseases in ancient Egypt. In Mummies, disease and ancient cultures, ed. A. Cockburn and E. Cockbum, 29-44. New York.
Schaefer, U. 1978. Menschliche Skelettfunde aus dem Neo- Iithikum im Gebiet der Lander Schleswig-Holstein, Niedersachsen, Nordrhein-Westfalen und Hessen (BRD). In Die Anfdnge des Neolithikums υom Orient bis Nordeuropa, ed. I. Schwidetzky, 66-92. Cologne.
Short, C. L. 1974. The antiquity of rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism 17: 193—205.
Smith, P, O. Bar-Yosef, and A. Sillen. 1984. Archaeological and skeletal evidence for dietary change during the Late PleistoceneZEarly Holocene in the Levant. In Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture, ed. M. N. Cohen and G. J. Armelagos, 101-36. Orlando, Fla.
Steinbock, R. T. 1976. Paleopathological diagnosis and interpretation. Springfield, Ill.
Strouhal, E. 1986. Anthropology of the Late Period cemetery in the tomb of King Horemheb ad Saqqara (Egypt) (preliminary report). International Journal of Anthropology 1: 215-24.
1991. Vertebral tuberculosis in ancient Egypt and Nubia. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide, 181-94. Washington, D.C.
Strouhal, E., and J. Jungwirth. 1984. Die Anthropologische Untersuchung der C-Gruppen- und Pan-Grdber- Skelette aus Sayala, Agyptische-Nubien. Vienna
Tapp, E. 1986. Histology and histopathology of the Manchester mummies. In Science in Egyptology, ed. R. A. David, 347-50. Manchester.
Tapp, E., and K. Wildsmith. 1986. Endoscopy OfEgyptian mummies. In Science in Egyptology, ed. R. A. David, 351-4. Manchester.
Torre, S., and J. Dastugue, 1976. Neolithiques de Basse Normandie: Le DeuxiPme tumulus de Fontenay-Ie- Marmion (Pathologie). VAnthropologie 80: 625—53.
Tuross, N. 1991. Recovery of bone and serum proteins from human skeletal tissue: IgG, osteonectin and albumin. In Human paleopathology: Current syntheses and future options, ed. D. J. Ortner and A. C. Aufderheide, 51—4. Washington, D.C.
Vagn Nielsen, 0.1970. The Nubian skeleton through 4000 years. Denmark.
Wells, C. 1964a. Bones, bodies and disease. New York.
1964b. Two Mediaeval cases of malignant disease. British Medical Journal 1: 1611—21.
1973. A paleopathological rarity in a skeleton of Roman date. Medical History 17: 399—400.
1977. Disease of the maxillary sinus in antiquity. Medical and Biological Illustration 27: 173—8.
1978. Disease and evolution. Biology and Human Affairs 43: 5-13.
Whitehouse, W M. 1980. Radiologic findings in the Royal mummies. In An x-ray atlas of the royal mummies, ed. J. E. Harris and E. F. Wente, 286—327. Chicago.
Wood-Jones, F. 1910a. Fractured bones and dislocations. In The archaeological survey of Nubia report for 19071908. Vol. 2: Report on the human remains, ed. G. Elliot-Smith and F. Wood-Jones, 293-342. Cairo.
1910b. General pathology (including diseases of the teeth). In The archaeological survey of Nubia report for 1907—1908. Vol. 2: Report on the human remains, ed. G. Elliot-Smith and F. Wood-Jones, 263-92. Cairo. y’Edynak, G., and S. Fleisch. 1983. Microevolution and biological adaptability in the transition from foodcollecting to food-producing in the Iron Gates of Yugoslavia. Journal of Human Evolution 12: 279-96.
Zorab, P. A. 1961. The historical and prehistorical background of ankylosing spondylitis. Proceedings of the Royal Society OfMedicine 54: 415-20.
V.