All Stories

  1. Is differential diagnosis attainable in disarticulated pathological bone remains? A case-study from a late 19th/early 20th century necropolis from Juncal (Porto de Mós, Portugal)
  2. The new Coimbra method for recording entheseal changes and the effect of age-at-death
  3. The Effect of Terrain on Entheseal Changes in the Lower Limbs
  4. Training and interobserver reliability in qualitative scoring of skeletal samples
  5. Entheseal changes: the role of Portuguese research
  6. Testing times: identifying puberty in an identified skeletal sample
  7. Lost and then found: The Mendes Correia Collection of identified human skeletons curated at the University of Porto, Portugal
  8. A Test of the Effectiveness of the Coimbra Method in Capturing Activity-induced Entheseal Changes
  9. Commentary: An Update to the new Coimbra Method for Recording Entheseal Changes
  10. The New ‘Coimbra Method’: A Biologically Appropriate Method for Recording Specific Features of Fibrocartilaginous Entheseal Changes
  11. In search of consensus: Terminology for entheseal changes (EC)
  12. Exploring poverty: skeletal biology and documentary evidence in 19th–20th century Portugal
  13. Accounting for multiple effects and the problem of small sample sizes in osteology: a case study focussing on entheseal changes
  14. Living cheek by jowl: The pathoecology of medieval York
  15. Subsistence strategy changes: The evidence of entheseal changes
  16. Adipocere Inside Nineteenth Century Femora: The Effect of Grave Conditions.
  17. Do diseases cause entheseal changes at fibrous entheses?
  18. Special Issue Entheseal Changes and Occupation: Technical and Theoretical Advances and Their Applications
  19. Technical note: Quantifying size and shape of entheses
  20. Occupational Mobility in 19th Century Rural England: The Interpretation of Entheseal Changes
  21. Recording Specific Entheseal Changes of Fibrocartilaginous Entheses: Initial Tests Using the Coimbra Method
  22. The Categorisation of Occupation in Identified Skeletal Collections: A Source of Bias?
  23. Bioarchaeology's Holy Grail: The Reconstruction of Activity
  24. Enthesopathy formation in the humerus: Data from known age-at-death and known occupation skeletal collections