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Year: 2011 Author: Kristina Killgrove Categories: Day of Archaeology 2011, Day of Archaeology, Osteology, Romano-British, Science
Tags: Rome, anthropologist, Bioarchaeology, Research, Cultural relativism, Academia, antibiotics, mathematician, Tuscany, American Anthropological Association, Jeremy Sabloff, Romans, Teaching, Culture, Education, Twitter, Classics, Kristina Killgrove, Vanderbilt University, chemical analysis, university professor, Science, Czech Republic, archaeologist, Skeletons, Anthropology, Public Outreach, United States, scars, Franz Boas
Killgrove, Kristina (2011): So you want to be a Roman bioarchaeologist.... https://doi.org/10.5284/1079394 | 222 Kb |
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Healed Broken Nose in a Roman Woman (doa_image813.jpg) |
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Killgrove Cleaning Roman Bones (doa_image814.jpg) |
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Osteology Field Lecture (doa_image815.jpg) |
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Roman Woman with Healed Broken Nose (doa_image816.jpg) |
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