Rebecca Gowland
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Archaeologist
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Rebecca Gowlandanthropology Degrees
Anthropology
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Archeology
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Anthropology
Rebecca Gowland's Degrees
- Masters Archaeology University of York
- Bachelors Archaeology University of York
Why Is Rebecca Gowland Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Rebecca Gowland is a bioarchaeologist. She is a Professor of Archaeology at Durham University. Education Gowland studied for an undergraduate degree at Durham University. She then completed a master's degree at the University of Sheffield before returning to Durham, where she completed her PhD in 2002.
Rebecca Gowland's Published Works
Published Works
- Entangled lives: Implications of the developmental origins of health and disease hypothesis for bioarchaeology and the life course. (2015) (154)
- Morbidity in the marshes: using spatial epidemiology to investigate skeletal evidence for Malaria in Anglo-Saxon England (AD 410-1050). (2012) (104)
- Social archaeology of funerary remains (2009) (94)
- A Bayesian approach to ageing perinatal skeletal material from archaeological sites : implications for the evidence for infanticide in Roman-Britain. (2002) (92)
- Sex determination of human remains from peptides in tooth enamel (2017) (89)
- Brief and precarious lives: infant mortality in contrasting sites from medieval and post-medieval England (AD 850-1859). (2007) (75)
- The abrasion of modern and archaeological bones by mobile sediments: the importance of transport modes (2011) (67)
- Public Good or Private Wealth? (2019) (67)
- Detecting plague: palaeodemographic characterisation of a catastrophic death assemblage (2005) (64)
- Identifying migrants in Roman London using lead and strontium stable isotopes. (2016) (63)
- Child Bioarchaeology: Perspectives on the Past 10 Years (2017) (56)
- Dedicated Followers of Fashion? Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Socio‐Economic Status, Inequality, and Health in Urban Children from the Industrial Revolution (18th–19th C), England (2016) (49)
- Immaculate conceptions: Micro-CT analysis of diagenesis in Romano-British infant skeletons (2016) (46)
- The use of non‐adult vertebral dimensions as indicators of growth disruption and non‐specific health stress in skeletal populations (2015) (44)
- Coming of age in Roman Britain: Osteological evidence for pubertal timing. (2016) (41)
- Childhood Health in the Roman World: Perspectives from the Centre and Margin of the Empire (2010) (40)
- Occupational Mobility in 19th Century Rural England: The Interpretation of Entheseal Changes (2013) (38)
- Playing Dead: Implications of Mortuary Evidence for the Social Construction of Childhood in Roman Britain (2001) (36)
- Age, ageism and osteological bias: the evidence from late Roman Britain. (2007) (34)
- Estimation of adult skeletal age‐at‐death: statistical assumptions and applications (2007) (30)
- Elder Abuse: Evaluating the Potentials and Problems of Diagnosis in the Archaeological Record (2016) (26)
- 'Til Poison Phosphorous Brought them Death': A potentially occupationally-related disease in a post-medieval skeleton from north-east England. (2016) (26)
- Volcanoes, medicine, and monasticism: Investigating mercury exposure in medieval Iceland (2018) (25)
- On the brink of being: re-evaluating infanticide and infant burial in Roman Britain. (2014) (25)
- Broken childhoods : rural and urban non-adult health during the Industrial Revolution in Northern England (eighteenth-nineteenth centuries). (2018) (24)
- Towards a Best Practice for the Use of Active Non-contact Surface Scanning to Record Human Skeletal Remains from Archaeological Contexts (2017) (21)
- Infant and Child Burial Rites in Roman Britain: a Study from East Yorkshire (2015) (20)
- A Bayesian approach to the estimation of the age of humans from tooth development and wear (2002) (18)
- Human Identity and Identification (2013) (17)
- Age as an aspect of social identity in fourth-to-sixth- century AD England : the archaeological funerary evidence (2002) (17)
- Experimental abrasion of water submerged bone: The influence of bombardment by different sediment classes on microabrasion rate (2016) (15)
- Death on the frontier: Military cremation practices in the north of Roman Britain (2016) (15)
- ‘From the mouths of babes’: A subadult dietary stable isotope perspective on Roman London (Londinium) (2017) (15)
- Gendered Differences in Accidental Trauma to Upper and Lower Limb Bones at Aquincum, Roman Hungary. (2015) (13)
- A Novel Investigation into Migrant and Local Health-Statuses in the Past: A Case Study from Roman Britain (2018) (13)
- ‘A Mass of Crooked Alphabets’: The Construction and Othering of Working Class Bodies in Industrial England (2018) (12)
- Poor preservation of antibodies in archaeological human bone and dentine (2016) (12)
- North and south: A comprehensive analysis of non-adult growth and health in the industrial revolution (AD 18th-19th C), England. (2019) (12)
- Age as an aspect of social identity : the archaeological funerary evidence. (2009) (11)
- Embodied Identities in Roman Britain: A Bioarchaeological Approach (2017) (10)
- Beyond Ethnicity:: Symbols of Social Identity from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries in England (2007) (10)
- Sex estimation of teeth at different developmental stages using dimorphic enamel peptide analysis. (2021) (10)
- At the world's edge: Reconstructing diet and geographic origins in medieval Iceland using isotope and trace element analyses (2019) (8)
- A comparison of surface features on submerged and non-submerged bone using scanning electron microscopy. (2013) (7)
- The Social Identity of Health in Late Roman Britain (2004) (6)
- That 'tattered coat upon a stick' the ageing body : evidence for elder marginalisation and abuse in Roman Britain. (2016) (6)
- The Children of the Reformation: Childhood Palaeoepidemiology in Britain, ad 1000–1700 (2014) (6)
- Flesh, fire, and funerary remains from the Neolithic site of La Varde, Guernsey:: Investigations past and present (2015) (6)
- Growing Old: Biographies of Disability and Care in Later Life (2017) (6)
- The Anthropology of the Fetus. Biology, Culture and Society (2020) (5)
- Ruptured: Reproductive Loss, Bodily Boundaries, Time and the Life Course in Archaeology (2019) (5)
- Infantile cortical hyperostosis: causes, cases and contradictions (2009) (4)
- Like Mother, Like Child: Investigating Perinatal and Maternal Health Stress in Post-medieval London (2019) (4)
- Human Growth and Stature (2018) (4)
- The Kephala Tholos at Knossos: a study in the reuse of the past1 (2005) (4)
- Indentured: Bioarchaeological Evidence for Pauper Apprentices in Nineteenth Century Yorkshire, England (2017) (4)
- Desperately seeking stress: A pilot study of cortisol in archaeological tooth structures. (2020) (4)
- Across the Generations: The Old and the Young in Past Societies (2019) (4)
- Overview : archaeology and the medieval life-course. (2018) (3)
- Children of the Revolution (2018) (3)
- Assessing pathological conditions in archaeological bone using portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) (2021) (3)
- Knock‐knees: Identifying genu valgum and understanding its relationship to vitamin D deficiency in 18th to 19th century northern England (2020) (3)
- Death metal: Evidence for the impact of lead poisoning on childhood health within the Roman Empire (2021) (3)
- The proximal ulna as an additional diagnostic feature of advanced rheumatoid arthritis. (2015) (2)
- Compounding vulnerabilities: Syndemics and the social determinants of disease in the past. (2022) (2)
- Illness and inclusion: Mobility histories of adolescents with leprosy from Anglo‐Scandinavian Norwich (Eastern England) (2021) (2)
- Health inequality in Britain before 1750 (2021) (2)
- Height and health in Roman and Post-Roman Gaul, a life course approach. (2021) (2)
- Foundations and approaches to the study of care in the past. (2016) (2)
- Infants and Mothers (2018) (2)
- Ideas of Childhood in Roman Britain (2016) (2)
- Introduction: The Mother-Infant Nexus in Archaeology and Anthropology (2019) (2)
- An unusual exostotic lesion of the maxillary sinus from Roman Lincoln. (2015) (1)
- Hidden dangers? Investigating the impact of volcanic eruptions and skeletal fluorosis in medieval Iceland (2020) (1)
- Twenty-first century bioarchaeology: Taking stock and moving forward. (2022) (1)
- Keeping up with the kids: mobility patterns of young individuals from the St. Mary Magdalen Leprosy Hospital (Winchester) (2016) (1)
- The Bioarchaeological Evidence for Elder Care in Roman Britain (2015) (1)
- Bioarchaeology International (2018) (1)
- Approaches to the investigation, analysis and dissemination of work on Romano-British rural settlements and landscapes: a review. Paper 8. Burials and osteoarchaeology’ (2016) (1)
- What Doesn’t Kill You: Early Life Health and Nutrition in Early Anglo-Saxon East Anglia (2019) (1)
- Themed Section New Approaches to the Bioarchaeology of Roman Britain – ERRATUM (2017) (1)
- 5. The Art of Identification The Skeleton and Human Identity (2021) (0)
- AQY volume 92 issue 363 Cover and Back matter (2018) (0)
- Book Reviews (2001) (0)
- Afterword (0)
- AQY volume 92 issue 361 Cover and Back matter (2018) (0)
- Book Reviews (2006) (0)
- Poisoned pregnancies: consequences of prenatal lead exposure in relation to infant mortality in the Roman Empire (2021) (0)
- Ruptured: Bodies, Boundaries and Reproductive Loss in Bioarchaeology (2019) (0)
- The mother/infant dyad: Investigating inherited health through incremental dentine analysis and bacterial bioerosion (2018) (0)
- Burial in Early Medieval England and Wales. Sam Lucy and Andrew Reynolds (eds). Society for Medieval Archaeology Monograph 17, Leeds, 2002. ISBN 1 902653 65 3, 33.00 (2004) (0)
- Tony Waldron, Palaeoepidemiology: the measure of disease in the human past , Walnut Creek, CA, Left Coast Press, 2007, pp. 148, £27.99 (hardback 978-1-59874-252-7). (2010) (0)
- Brown, Terry & Keri Brown. Biomolecular archaeology: an introduction. xxiv, 312 pp., maps, tables, figs, illus., bibliogrs. Oxford, Malden, Mass.: Wiley‐Blackwell, 2011. £29.99 (paper) (2013) (0)
- Book reviews (2002) (0)
- Book Reviews (1998) (0)
- Bioarchaeology (2018) (0)
- CHAPTER 5. Human Growth and Stature (2018) (0)
- Blood and guts (2013) (0)
- Book Reviews (2002) (0)
- 'Ague', 'Spring Ill' and 'Fever Terciane': Vivax Malaria and Social Constructions of 'Otherness' in the Anglo-Saxon Fens of England (AD 500-1050) (2018) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: References (2013) (0)
- Title: Broken Childhoods: Rural and Urban Non-Adult Health during the Industrial Revolution in Northern England (Eighteenth-Nineteenth Centuries). Authors: *Rebecca (2018) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: Conclusions (2013) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: Introduction (2013) (0)
- The Rise of an Empire, the Decline of its People: Stature and body proportion in Roman Britain (2017) (0)
- Stressful Starts: Investigating the impact of ‘stressors’ on fetal, perinatal and infant health and growth through time (2017) (0)
- Care in the past (2017) (0)
- Book Reviews (2010) (0)
- Intentional modification of the phenotype (2013) (0)
- Down and out in postmedieval London (2019) (0)
- The Art of Identification: (2021) (0)
- Family isn’t everything: Strontium and oxygen stable isotope analysis of a known population from Fewston Parish, UK (2017) (0)
- Brief Communication : (2007) (0)
- Beyond ethnicity : symbols of identity in fourth to sixth century AD England. (2007) (0)
- Creating communities of care: Sex estimation and mobility histories of adolescents buried in the cemetery of St. Mary Magdalen leprosarium (Winchester, England) (2022) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: The skin (2013) (0)
- Theoretical approaches to bioarchaeology (2020) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: The skeleton (2013) (0)
- Knock-kneed and bow legged: Identifying genu valgum in dry bone (2014) (0)
- The Routledge Handbook of Anthropology and Reproduction (2022) (0)
- Human Identity and Identification: Categories of identity and identification (2013) (0)
- List of Contributors (2019) (0)
- Biomolecular identification and identity (2013) (0)
- Tracing Childhood: Bioarchaeological Investigations of Early Lives in Antiquity. Jennifer L. Thompson, Marta P. Alfonso-Durruty, and John J Crandall, editors. 2014. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. 288 pp. $85.00 (cloth), ISBN: 978-0-8130-4983-0. (2015) (0)
- Concluding Thoughts: Small Beginnings, Significant Outcomes (2019) (0)
- Alloparenting adolescents (0)
- The Expendables: Child Poverty and the Inheritance of Inequality in 19th Century England (2018) (0)
- AQY volume 92 issue 364 Cover and Back matter (2018) (0)
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