Journal ArticleDOI
A study of cremated human remains from an urn field dating to the final phase of the Bronze Age, found at “Le Caprine” (Guidonia, Rome, Italy 10th-9th century B.C.)
M. Rubini,M. Licitra,M. Baleani +2 more
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TLDR
Cremated human remains from an urn field dating from the final phase of the Bronze age (Guidonia, Rome, Central Italy) were studied to identify the minimal number of individuals for grave and cremation patterns.Abstract:
In this paper cremated human remains from an urn field dating from the final phase of the Bronze age (Guidonia, Rome, Central Italy) were studied. The aim of this study was to identify the minimal number of individuals for grave and cremation patterns. The results show as the ways in which the cremations were carried out were archaic in all the elements that made them up.read more
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Cremation under fire: a review of bioarchaeological approaches from 1995 to 2015
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the literature on bioarchaeological studies of burned human skeletal remains is presented, and the objective is to assess methodological variability among researchers in the field.
Dissertation
Late Bronze Age skeletal populations of Slovenia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a text-and text-based approach to the problem of text-only text-to-image communication: https://www.scribd.com/documents/
Journal ArticleDOI
Hyperostosis frontalis interna: a new perspective in burned individuals’ analysis for determining age and sex from archaeo‐anthropological and medico‐legal contexts.
TL;DR: In this article , the authors demonstrate the benefit of hyperostosis frontalis interna (HFI) diagnosis for identifying individuals (estimating their age and determining their sex) in the archaeo-anthropological analysis of ancient cremation burial sites, and in medico-legal investigations on burned human remains.
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