All Stories

  1. A track in the Tanana: Forensic analysis of a Late Holocene footprint from central Alaska
  2. Analysis of pathology and activity‐related changes to the patellae of individuals from Tell Abraq
  3. Conclusion
  4. Trauma
  5. Changing the Climate: Bioarchaeology Responds to Deterministic Thinking About Human-Environmental Interactions in the Past
  6. Subjugated in the San Juan Basin: Identifying Captives in the American Southwest
  7. Recognizing People in the Prehistoric Southwest
  8. Mother, Laborer, Captive, and Leader: Reassessing the Various Roles that Females Held Among the Ancestral Pueblo in the American Southwest
  9. The Bioarchaeology of Social Control
  10. Conclusion
  11. Chaco Canyon
  12. Understanding the Chaco Phenomenon
  13. Systems of Social Control
  14. Putting Chaco into Context
  15. Culture, Corn, and Complexity
  16. Reassessing “Pax Chaco”
  17. The Role of Elites and Social Control
  18. Putting the People Back into the Pueblos
  19. The Decline of Social Control in the Pueblo World
  20. When Elites Wage War: Violence and Social Coercion Along the Chaco Meridian
  21. Book review
  22. Cared for or Outcasts: A Case for Continuous Care in the Precontact U.S. Southwest
  23. 10 The Bioarchaeology of Pain and Suffering: Human Adaptation and Survival during Troubled Times
  24. Rails Built of the Ancestors’ Bones: The Bioarchaeology of the Overseas Chinese Experience
  25. Bioarchaeological contributions to the study of violence
  26. Ghostly Gunslingers: the Postmortem Lives of the Kiel Brothers, Nevada's First Frontiersmen
  27. Bioarchaeology of Climate Change and Violence
  28. The Science of Climate Change
  29. Culture and Resilience
  30. The Bioarchaeology of Climate Change and Violence: A Temporal and Cross-Cultural Approach
  31. Climate Change, Social Control and Violence in the US Southwest
  32. Conclusion: A Bioarchaeological Model of Climate Change and Violence
  33. Beyond the Southwest: Is There a Relationship Between Climate and Violence?
  34. The Practice of Bioarchaeology
  35. An Ethos for Bioarchaeologists
  36. Body as Material Culture
  37. Relevance, Education, and the Future
  38. Bioarchaeology of Populations: Understanding Adaptation and Resilience
  39. Bioarchaeology of Individuals: Identity, Social Theory, and Skeletal Analysis
  40. Special Applications in Bioarchaeology: Taking a Closer Look
  41. Best Practices: Excavation Guidelines and Taphonomic Considerations
  42. Formulating Research Projects Involving Human Remains
  43. The Mortuary Component and Human Remains
  44. Bioarchaeology
  45. Hard Labor and Hostile Encounters: What Human Remains Reveal about Institutional Violence and Chinese Immigrants Living in Carlin, Nevada (1885–1923)
  46. The Bioarchaeology of Violence
  47. Deciphering Violence in Past Societies: Ethnography and the Interpretation of Archaeological Populations
  48. Introduction Bioarchaeology and the Study of Violence
  49. Conclusion: Implications and Future Directions
  50. Battered and abused: Analysis of trauma at Grasshopper Pueblo (AD 1275–1400)
  51. Body parts and parts of bodies: Traces of violence in past cultures
  52. Centers of control: Revealing elites among the Ancestral Pueblo during the “Chaco Phenomenon”
  53. Phylogeny of the southern Plateau—An osteometric evaluation of inter-tribal relations
  54. Looting, Collecting and Selling Ancient Artifacts: Who Are the Victims?
  55. Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Aggression and Violence in the U.S. Southwest