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"While Cohen emphasizes a challenge to the paradigm that health improves through time, this collection of papers allows us to see that health in the past did not necessarily decline through time. As Larsen says in his foreword, the papers demonstrate that the trends in the 'quality of life and well-being . . . are more complex than was previously imagined.'"-- Cambridge Archaeological Journal "Intended as a supplement and update for Cohen and Armelagos's classic Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture, Cohen and Crane-Kramer's volume succeeds on both counts and stands as a valuable…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"While Cohen emphasizes a challenge to the paradigm that health improves through time, this collection of papers allows us to see that health in the past did not necessarily decline through time. As Larsen says in his foreword, the papers demonstrate that the trends in the 'quality of life and well-being . . . are more complex than was previously imagined.'"-- Cambridge Archaeological Journal "Intended as a supplement and update for Cohen and Armelagos's classic Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture, Cohen and Crane-Kramer's volume succeeds on both counts and stands as a valuable contribution to ongoing research of the effects of the momentous changes in subsistence and population size and density on human health throughout the past 10,000 years. . . . The final chapter, the editors' summation, is a concise gem. . . . Without question, this is a volume that every professional bioarchaeologist should buy."-- Journal of Anthropological Research "Pulls together a global sampling of excellent research on a topic of great interest to scholars of prehistory that otherwise would be difficult to assemble or in some cases to even access."--Patricia M. Lambert, Utah State University Ancient Health greatly enlarges the geographical range of paleopathological studies by including new work from both established and up-and-coming scholars. Moving beyond the Western Hemisphere and western Eurasia, this collection involves studies from Chile, Peru, Mexico, the United States, Denmark, Britain, Portugal, South Africa, Israel, India, Vietnam, Thailand, China, and Mongolia. Adding significance to this volume, the contributors discuss and successfully rebut the arguments of the "osteological paradox" that long have challenged work in the area of quantitative paleopathology, demonstrating that the "paradox" has far less meaning than its proponents argue.
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Autorenporträt
Mark Nathan Cohen is University Distinguished Teaching Professor of Anthropology at the State University of New York, Plattsburgh. Gillian M. M. Crane-Kramer is visiting assistant professor of anthropology at the State University of New York, Plattsburgh.