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Patricia M. Lambert

Researcher at Utah State University

Publications -  35
Citations -  1669

Patricia M. Lambert is an academic researcher from Utah State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cannibalism & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1590 citations. Previous affiliations of Patricia M. Lambert include University of California, Santa Barbara & University of California.

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Age and sex biases in the preservation of human skeletal remains.

TL;DR: Comparison of mortality profiles obtained through analysis of skeletal remains and burial records from the mission indicates that biases in preservation can be very significant in poorly preserved skeletal collections, and that age biases in Preservation are much more important than sex biases.
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The Archaeology of War: A North American Perspective

TL;DR: A survey of recent archaeological research on warfare in prestate societies of native North America can be found in this article, which comprises six regions: Arctic/Subarctic, Northwest Coast, California, Southwest/Great Basin, Great Plains, and Eastern Woodlands.
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Health in Prehistoric Populations of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands

TL;DR: Changes in stature and in the frequency of inflammatory bone lesions suggest that health generally declined during this economic shift from a generalized maritime hunting-and-gathering adaptation to one focused increasingly on fishing.
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Cannibalism, warfare, and drought in the Mesa Verde Region during the twelfth century A.D.

TL;DR: Analysis of cases from the Mesa Verde region indicates a sharp increase in cannibalism around A.D. 1150, a time of drought and the collapse of the Chaco system, which supports the interpretation that people prepared and consumed human body parts.
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Biochemical evidence of cannibalism at a prehistoric Puebloan site in southwestern Colorado

TL;DR: It is shown consumption of human flesh did occur as demonstrated in preserved human waste containing identifiable human tissue remains from a site with osteological evidence of cannibalism.