Contributions of ectoparasite studies in archaeology with two examples from the North Atlantic region.

Abstract:

:Human and animal ectoparasites are often recovered from archaeological contexts being examined for preserved insect remains. Records of human lice, fleas and bedbugs are used to reconstruct past sanitary conditions and practices, as well as their geographic distribution and that of the pathogens for which they may be vectors. Ectoparasites of domesticated and wild animals may be considered proxy indicators for the presence of those animals whilst also inferring activities such as wool processing. This paper summarizes the contribution of ectoparasite studies in archaeology and presents two original case studies from Iceland and Greenland.

journal_name

Int J Paleopathol

authors

Forbes V,Dussault F,Bain A

doi

10.1016/j.ijpp.2013.07.004

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2013-09-01 00:00:00

pages

158-164

issue

3

eissn

1879-9817

issn

1879-9825

pii

S1879-9817(13)00079-X

journal_volume

3

pub_type

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