Bibliography
Adels, B. R., and D. C. Gajdusek. 1963. Survey of measles patterns in New Guinea, Micronesia, and Australia. American Journal OfHygiene 77: 317-43.
Baker, B. J., and G. J. Armelagos.
1988. The origin and antiquity of syphilis: Paleopathological diagnosis and interpretation. Current Anthropology 29: 703-36.Bartlett, M. S. 1956. Deterministic and stochastic models for recurrent epidemics. Proceedings of the Third Berkeley Symposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability 4: 81—109.
Benenson, A. S. 1976a. Cholera. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P. F. Wehrle, 174-83. St. Louis, Mo.
1976b. Plague. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P. F. Wehrle, 502—7. St. Louis, Mo.
Black, F. L. 1966. Measles endemicity in insular populations: Critical community size and its evolutionary implication. JournalofTheoreticalBiology 11:207-11.
1980. Modern isolated pre-agricultural populations as a source of information on prehistoric epidemic patterns. In Changing disease patterns and human behavior, ed. N. F. Stanley and R. A. Joske, 37-54. London.
Black, F. L., and L. Rosen. 1962. Patterns of measles antibody in residents of Tahiti and their stability in the absence of reexposure. Journal of Immunology 88: 727-31.
Black, F. L., et al. 1970. Prevalence of antibody against viruses in the Tiriyo, an isolated Amazon tribe. American Journal OfEpidemiology 91: 430—8.
Blakely, R. L. 1989. The life cycle and social organization. In The King site: Continuity and contact in sixteenthcentury Georgia, ed. R. L. Blakely, 17-34. Athens, Ga.
Blakely, R. L., and B. Detweiler-Blakely. 1989. The impact of European diseases in sixteenth-century Southeast: A case study. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 14: 62-89.
Bourne, E. G., ed. 1904. Narratives of the career of Hernando De Soto, 2 vols.
New York.Brachman1 P. S. 1976. Anthrax. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P. F. Wehrle, 137-42. St. Louis, Mo.
Brenneman, G., D. Silimperi1 and J. Ward. 1987. Recurrent invasive Haemophilis influenzae type b disease in Alaskan natives. Journal of Pediatric Infectious Diseases 6: 388-92.
Brown, P., and D. C. Gajdusek. 1970. Disease patterns and vaccine response studies in isolated Micronesian populations. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 19: 170-5.
Brown, P1 D. C. Gajdusek1 and J. A. Morris. 1966. Epidemic A2 influenza in isolated Pacific island populations without pre-epidemic antibody to influenza types A and B, and the discovery of other still unexplored populations. American Journal of Epidemiology 83: 176-88.
Brunell1 P. A. 1976. Chickenpox. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P F. Wehrle, 165-73. St. Louis, Mo.
Buikstra, J. E., and D. C. Cook. 1980. Paleopathology: An American account. Annual Review OfAnthropology 9: 433-70.
Burnet, Macfarlane Sir, and D. O. White. 1972. Natural history of infectious disease, 4th ed. Cambridge.
Campbell, S. K. 1989. Postcolumbian culture history in the northern Columbian Plateau: A.D. 1500—1900 Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington.
Carter, H. R. 1931. Yellow fever: An epidemiological and historical study of its place of origin, ed. L. A. Carter and W. H. Frost. Baltimore.
Christensen, P. E., et al. 1953a. An epidemic of measles in southern Greenland, 1951:11. Measles in virgin soil. Acta Medica Scandinavica 144: 430-49.
1953b. An epidemic of measles in southern Greenland, 1951: III. Measles in virgin soil. Acta Medica Scandinavian 144: 450-4.
Clark1 G. A.1 et al. 1987. The evolution of mycobacterial disease in human populations: A reevaluation. Current Anthropology 28: 45-62.
Cockburn, A. 1963. The evolution and eradication of infectious diseases.
Baltimore.1971. Infectious diseases in ancient populations. Current Anthropology 12: 45—62.
Cook, N. D. 1982. Demographic collapse: Indian Peru, 1520-1620. Cambridge.
Creighton, C. 1894. History Ofepidemics in Britain, 2 vols. Cambridge.
Crosby, A. 1972. The Columbian exchange: Biocultural consequences of 1492. Westport, Conn.
1976. Epidemic and peace 1918. Westport, Conn.
1986. Ecological imperialism: The biological expansion of Europe, 900-1900. Cambridge.
Detweiler-Blakely, B. 1989. Stress and the battle casualties. In The Kino site: Continuity and contact in sixteenth-century Georgia, ed. R. L. Blakely, 87-100. Athens, Ga.
Dobyns, H. F. 1963. An outline of Andean epidemic history to 1720. Bulletin of the History OfMedicine 37: 493515.
1983. Their number became thinned. Knoxville, Tenn.
Fenner, F. 1971. Infectious diseases and social change. MedicalJournal of Australia 1: 1043—7, 1099-201.
1980. Sociocultural change and environmental diseases. In Changing disease patterns and human behavior, ed. N. F. Stanley and R. A. Joske, 7-26. London.
Gerber, A. R., et al. 1989. An outbreak of syphilis on an Indian reservation: Descriptive epidemiology and disease-control measures. American Journal of Public Health 79: 83-5.
Gookin1 D. 1806. Historical collections of Indians of New England, 1674. Collections of the McLssachusetts Historical Society, Ser. 1 (1792), 1: 141-227.
Hackett, C. J. 1963. On the origin of the human treponematoses. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 29: 1-41.
Hackett, L. W. 1941. Malaria and community. In A Symposium on human malaria with special reference to North America and the Caribbean region, ed. F. R. Moulton, 148-56. Washington, D.C.
Hariot, T. 1973. A brief and true report of the new found land OfVirginia (1588). In Virginia voyages from Hakluyt (1589), ed. D. B. Quinn and A. M. Quinn, 46-76. Oxford.
Hudson, E. H. 1968. Treponematosis and human social evolution.
American Anthropologist 67: 885-92.Hutchinson, D. L. 1990. Postcontact biocultural change and mortuary site evidence. In Columbian consequences 2. Archaeological and historical perspectives on the Spanish borderlands east, ed. D. H. Thomas. Washington, D.C.
Jackes1 M. K. 1983. Osteological evidence for smallpox: A possible case from seventeenth-century Ontario. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 60: 7581.
Jordan, E. O. 1927. Epidemic influenza. Chicago.
Le Page du Pratz, A. S. 1975. The history of Louisiana (1758), ed. J. G. Tregle. Baton Rouge, La.
Levins, R., and R. C. Lewontin. 1985. The dialectical biologist. Cambridge.
Lewontin, R. C. 1974. The genetic basis of evolutionary change. New York.
Mackenzie, J. S. 1980. Possible future changes in the epidemiology and pathogenesis of human influenza A virus infections. In Changing disease patterns and human behavior, ed. N. F. Stanley and R. A. Joske1 129-49. London.
Marchand1 J. F. 1943. Tribal epidemics in the Yukon. Jour
nal ofthe AmericanMedical Association 123:1019-20. Meyer1 K. F. 1963. Plague. In Diseases transmitted from
animals to man, ed. T. G. Hull, 527-87. Springfield, Ill. Milner1 G. R. 1980. Epidemic disease in the post-contact
Southeast: A reappraisal. Mid Continental Journal of Archeology 5: 39—56.
Mitchem1 J. M. 1989. Redefining Safety Harbor: Late prehistoric/protohistoric archaeology in west peninsular Florida. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Florida.
Monrath1 T. P.1 et al. 1980. Yellow fever in Gambia, 1978
1979. Epidemiological aspects with observations on the occurrence of orungo virus infections. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 29: 912—28. Nagler1 F. P.1 C. E. Van Rooyen1 and J. H. Sturdy. 1949.
An influenza virus epidemic at Victoria Island,
N. W.T1 Canada. Canadian Journal of Public Health 40: 457-65.
Neel1 J. V1 et al. 1970. Notes on the effect of measles and measles vaccine in a virgin-soil population of South American Indians. American Journal OfEpidemiology 91: 418-29.
Ortner1 D.1 and W. G. Putschar. 1981. Identification of pathological conditions in human skeletal remains.
Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology 28. Washington, D.C.
Overturf1 G. D.1 and A. E. Underman. 1981. Typhoid and enteric fevers. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 9th edition, ed. P. F. Wehrle and F. H. Top, Sr.,
736- 45. St. Louis, Mo.
Paul1 J. H.1 and H. L. Freeze. 1933. An epidemiological and bacteriological study of the “common cold” in an isolated arctic community (Spitzbergen). American Journal OfHygiene 17: 517-35.
Peart1 A. E1 and F. P. Nagler. 1954. Measles in the Canadian arctic. Canadian Journal of Public Health 45: 146-56.
Phillip1 R. N.1 et al. 1959. Observations on Asian influenza on two Alaskan islands. Public Health Reports 74:
737- 45.
Pitkanen1 K.1 and A. W Eriksson. 1984. Historical epidemiology of smallpox in Aland, Finland: 1751— 1890. Demography 21: 271-95.
Ramenofsky1 A. F. 1987. Vectors of death: The archaeology
OfEuropean contact. Albuquerque1 N.M.
Stearn1 E. W1 and A. E. Stearn. 1945. The effects of smallpox on the destiny of the Amerindian. Boston.
Steinbock1 R. T. 1976. Paleopathological diagnoses and interpretations. Springfield, Ill.
Stuart-Harris1 C. 1981. The epidemiology and prevention of influenza. American Scientist 69: 166—72.
Taylor1 R. M. 1951. Epidemiology. In Yellow fever, ed. G. K. Strode, 427-538. New York.
Thwaites1 R. G.1 ed. 1904. Original journals of Lewis and
Clark, 1804-1806, vols. I1 5. New York.
Top, F. H., Sr.
1976. Rubella. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P. F. Wehrle, 589—97. St. Louis, Mo.Upham, S. 1986. Smallpox and climate in the American Southwest. American Anthropologist 88: 115—28.
Watson, R. B., and R. Hewitt. 1941. Topographic and related factors in the epidemiology of malaria in North America, Central America, and the West Indies. In A symposium on human malaria with special reference to North America and the Caribbean region, ed. F. R. Moulton, 135—47. Washington, D.C.
Wenke, R. J. 1984. Patterns in prehistory: Man’s first three million years, 2d edition. New York.
Whiteford, H. H. 1979. Anthrax. In Bacterial, rickettsial and mycotic diseases, Handbook Series in Zoonoses, vol. 1, ed. J. H. Steele, 31—66. Boca Raton, Fla.
Whitman, L. 1951. The arthropod vectors of yellow fever. In Yellow fever, ed. G. K. Strode, 228-98. New York.
Wisseman, C. L. 1976. Rickettsial diseases. In Communicable and infectious diseases, 8th edition, ed. F. H. Top, Sr., and P. F. Wehrle, 567-84. St. Louis, Mo.
Youmans, G. P., P. Y. Paterson, and H. M. Sommers. 1980. The biologic and clinical basis Ofinfectious disease. 2d edition. Philadelphia.
Zinsser, H. 1947. Rats, lice, and history. New York.
Zulueta, J. de. 1980. Man and malaria. In Changing disease patterns and human behavior, ed. N. F. Stanley and R. A. Joske1 175-86. London.
V.