Home
Scholarly Works
The Axed Man of Mosfell: Skeletal Evidence of a...
Chapter

The Axed Man of Mosfell: Skeletal Evidence of a Viking Age Homicide and the Icelandic Sagas

Abstract

“Illustrates[s] how the study of individuals complements population-level analysis, and enhances understanding of what life was like for earlier populations. The essays offer glimpses into the lives of individuals who lived and died at different times, and represent a variety of geographic and cultural settings from around the world. Recommended.”—Choice “This very readable book presents detail on how the science employed in bioarchaeology allows information to be revealed about the lives and deaths of people of the past.”—Journal of Anthropological Research “Demonstrates a new framework for exploring the tension between social structure and individual agency; dynamic and static; process and event; science, interpretation, and representation.”—American Journal of Physical Anthropology “Offers ‘osteobiographies’ that are vividly illustrated with descriptions of associated finds, new scientific data and broader contextual information.”—Antiquity Focusing on various individuals who walked the earth between 3200 BC and the nineteenth century, the essays in this book examine the lives of nomads, warriors, artisans, farmers, and healers, whose remains were excavated from archaeological sites. This is a book about people—not just bones.

Authors

Walker P; Byock J; Erlandson JM; Holck P; Eng JT; Schwarcz HP; Zori D

Book title

The Bioarchaeology of Individuals

Editors

Stodder ALW; Palkovich AM

Publisher

University Press of Florida

Publication Date

July 15, 2014

ISBN-13

978-0-8130-6027-9

Contact the Experts team