05173nam 22009733u 450 991079035650332120210114035742.0(CKB)2670000000207231(EBL)547623(OCoLC)650060118(SSID)ssj0000695010(PQKBManifestationID)12294804(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000695010(PQKBWorkID)10670367(PQKB)11505486(MiAaPQ)EBC547623(EXLCZ)99267000000020723120131216d2009|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrBones of the Maya[electronic resource] Studies of Ancient SkeletonsTuscaloosa University of Alabama Press20091 online resource (307 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-8173-1528-4 Contents; Contributors; Preface; Preface to the New Edition; Part 1. Introduction; 1. Studying Maya Burials; Part 2. Osteological Studies; 2. Southern Lowland Maya Archaeology and Human Skeletal Remains: Interpretations from Caracol (Belize), Santa Rita Corozal (Belize), and Tayasal (Guatemala); 3. The Preclassic Skeletons from Cuello; 4. Height among Prehispanic Maya of the Yucatán Peninsula: A Reconsideration; 5. A Maya Skull Pit from the Terminal Classic Period, Colha, Belize; 6. Archaeology and Osteology of the Tipu Site; Part 3. Dental Studies7. Late Postclassic Tooth Filing at Chau Hiix and Tipu, Belize8. Cultural Odontology: Dental Alterations from Petén, Guatemala; 9. Individual Frailty, Children of Privilege, and Stress in Late Classic Copán; 10. Late Classic Maya Health Patterns: Evidence from Enamel Microdefects; 11. Dental Genetic Structuring of a Colonial Maya Cemetery, Tipu, Belize; Part 4. Stable Isotope and DNA Studies; 12. Commoner Diet at Copán: Insights from Stable Isotopes and Porotic Hyperostosis; 13. Ancient Diet at Lamanai and Pacbitun: Implications for the Ecological Model of Collapse14. Ecology or Society? Paleodiet and the Collapse of the Pasión Maya Lowlands15. Regional Diversity in Classic Maya Diets; 16. Ancient and Contemporary Mitochondrial DNA Variation in the Maya; Part 5. Conclusion; 17. Studying Maya Bioarchaeology; Appendix. An Indexed Bibliography of Prehistoric and Early Historic Maya Human Osteology: 1839-1994; References Cited; IndexDuring the last 20 years new techniques in osteology have yielded findings on Maya diet and health that challenge the ecological model of collapse. This volume, which includes an index bibliography of the first 150 years of Maya osteology, brings together for the first time, a broad spectrum of bioarchaeologists and reveals remarkable data on Maya genetic relationship, demographic, and diseases. Contributors: Carl Armstrong, Jane E. Buikstra , Diane Z. Chase Mark N. Cohen , Della Collins Cook, Marie Elaine Danforth, Andres del Angel <DICentral America -- AntiquitiesHuman remains (Archaeology) -- Central AmericaHuman remains (Archaeology) -- MexicoMayas -- AnthropometryMayas -- AntiquitiesMexico -- AntiquitiesCentral America -- Antiquities.Human remains (Archaeology) -- Central America.Human remains (Archaeology) -- Mexico.Mayas -- Anthropometry.Mayas -- Antiquities.Mexico -- Antiquities.972.81/016972.81016Whittington Stephen L1490710Reed David M74467Wright Lori E1490711Gerry John P1490712Jacobi Keith P1490713Reed David M74467Danforth Marie Elaine1490714Storey Rebecca1490715Webster David L840091Armstrong Carl1490716Chase Diane Z1490717Cohen Mark N243136Cook Della Collins1490718del Angel Andres1490719Ferrell Robert E1490720Whittington Stephen L1490710Gettelman Karen D1490721Havill Lorena M1490722Krueger Harold W1490723Olivares Nora M1490724Marquez Lourdes1490725Massey Virginia K1490726Merriwether D. Andrew1490727O'Conner Kathleen1490728Pyburn K. Anne1490729Saul Frank P1490730Saul Julie Mather1490731Steele D. Gentry1490732Warren Diane M1490733White Christine D1490734Buikstra Jane1490735AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910790356503321Bones of the Maya3712201UNINA02662nam 22006375 450 991079710230332120230205051323.01-4426-2410-81-4426-2409-410.3138/9781442624092(CKB)3710000000433695(EBL)3432570(OCoLC)929154172(SSID)ssj0001544373(PQKBManifestationID)16134559(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001544373(PQKBWorkID)14323610(PQKB)11678457(MiAaPQ)EBC4669610(CEL)450117(OCoLC)921534319(CaBNVSL)thg00931541(MiAaPQ)EBC3432570(DE-B1597)498605(DE-B1597)9781442624092(OCoLC)911266584(MdBmJHUP)musev2_106985(EXLCZ)99371000000043369520181023d2018 fg engur|n|---|||||txtccrGermany's Second Reich Portraits and Pathways /James RetallackToronto :University of Toronto Press,[2018]©20151 online resource (369 p.)German and European Studies1-4426-5057-5 1-4426-2852-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Forging an empire: economy, society, culture, and politics, 1866-1890 -- British views of Germany, 1815-1914 -- Digital history anthologies on the Web -- King Johann of Saxony and the German Civil War of 1866 -- Julian Hawthorne's Saxon studies -- Bismark and Engels: The role of force in history -- Heydebrand and Westarp: leaving behind the Second Reich -- Get out the vote! Electioneering without democracy -- The authoritarian state and the political mass market -- Society and democracy in Germany: why Dahrendorf still matters -- Democracy in disappearing ink: suffrage robbery as coup d'etat.Retallack reveals the complex and contradictory nature of the Second Reich, presenting Imperial Germany as it was seen by outsiders and insiders as well as by historians, political scientists, and sociologists ever since.German and European studies ;22.HISTORY / Europe / GermanybisacshGermanyHistory1871-1918HISTORY / Europe / Germany.943.08/3Retallack James N.990175DE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK9910797102303321Germany's Second Reich3804576UNINA