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Your search keyword '"Dittmar, Jenna M."' showing total 18 results

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18 results on '"Dittmar, Jenna M."'

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1. Health inequality in medieval Cambridge, 1200-1500 CE.

2. Investigating the association between intestinal parasite infection and cribra orbitalia in the medieval population of Cambridge, UK.

3. Tuberculosis before and after the Black Death (1346-1353 CE) in the Hospital of St John the Evangelist in Cambridge, England.

4. Caring for the injured: Exploring the immediate and long-term consequences of injury in medieval Cambridge, England.

5. Intestinal parasite infection in the Augustinian friars and general population of medieval Cambridge, UK.

6. Ancient herpes simplex 1 genomes reveal recent viral structure in Eurasia.

7. Employing radiography (X-rays) to localize lesions in human skeletal remains from past populations to allow accurate biopsy, using examples of cancer metastases.

8. Assessing the relative benefits of imaging with plain radiographs and microCT scanning to diagnose cancer in past populations.

9. An invasive Haemophilus influenzae serotype b infection in an Anglo-Saxon plague victim.

10. Fancy shoes and painful feet: Hallux valgus and fracture risk in medieval Cambridge, England.

12. The prevalence of cancer in Britain before industrialization.

13. Medieval injuries: Skeletal trauma as an indicator of past living conditions and hazard risk in Cambridge, England.

14. Gout and 'Podagra' in medieval Cambridge, England.

15. A probable case of multiple myeloma from Bronze Age China.

16. Skeletal evidence for violent trauma from the bronze age Qijia culture (2,300-1,500 BCE), Gansu Province, China.

17. From cradle to grave via the dissection room: the role of foetal and infant bodies in anatomical education from the late 1700s to early 1900s.

18. The afterlife of Laurence Sterne (1713-1768): Body snatching, dissection and the role of Cambridge anatomist Charles Collignon.

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