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1. Condensation processes in impact-related vapor plumes evidenced by isotope fractionation

2. FINAL NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGE FUNERARY PRACTICES AND POPULATION DYNAMICS IN BELGIUM, THE IMPACT OF RADIOCARBON DATING CREMATED BONES

3. Strontium isotopes and concentrations in cremated bones suggest an increased salt consumption in Gallo-Roman diet

4. The IsoArcH initiative: Working towards an open and collaborative isotope data culture in bioarchaeology

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7. These boots are made for burnin’: Inferring the position of the corpse and the presence of leather footwears during cremation through isotope (δ13C, δ18O) and infrared (FTIR) analyses of experimentally burnt skeletal remains

8. Strontium isotope ratios related to childhood mobility: Revisiting sampling strategies of the calcined human pars petrosa ossis temporalis

9. Is it hot enough? A multi-proxy approach shows variations in cremation conditions during the Metal Ages in Belgium

10. Strontium isotope ratios related to childhood mobility: Revisiting sampling strategies of the calcined human pars petrosa ossis temporalis

11. Is it hot enough? A multi-proxy approach shows variations in cremation conditions during the Metal Ages in Belgium

13. Multi-proxy analyses reveal regional cremation practices and social status at the Late Bronze Age site of Herstal, Belgium

14. Divergence, diet, and disease: the identification of group identity, landscape use, health, and mobility in the fifth- to sixth-century AD burial community of Echt, the Netherlands

15. Revisiting metric sex estimation of burnt human remains via supervised learning using a reference collection of modern identified cremated individuals (Knoxville, USA)

16. Testing Various Pre-treatments on Artificially Waterlogged and Pitch-Contaminated Wood for Strontium Isotope Analyses

20. Estimating age-at-death in burnt adult human remains using the Falys–Prangle method

21. The Aquatic Neolithic : isotope, aDNA, radiocarbon, and osteological data analysis reveal asynchronous behavior in early prehistoric human societies of Ukraine

23. Subdaily-Scale Chemical Variability in a Torreites Sanchezi Rudist Shell: Implications for Rudist Paleobiology and the Cretaceous Day-Night Cycle

26. Subdaily-Scale Chemical Variability in a Torreites Sanchezi Rudist Shell: Implications for Rudist Paleobiology and the Cretaceous Day-Night Cycle

27. Subdaily-Scale Chemical Variability in a Torreites Sanchezi Rudist Shell: Implications for Rudist Paleobiology and the Cretaceous Day-Night Cycle

28. Shell chemistry of the boreal Campanian bivalve Rastellum diluvianum (Linnaeus, 1767) reveals temperature seasonality, growth rates and life cycle of an extinct Cretaceous oyster

29. Cremation vs. inhumation: Modeling cultural changes in funerary practices from the mesolithic to the middle ages in belgium using kernel density analysis on 14C data

30. Influence of seawater ions on phosphate adsorption at the surface of hydrous ferric oxide (HFO)

31. Shell chemistry of the boreal Campanian bivalve Rastellum diluvianum (Linnaeus, 1767) reveals temperature seasonality, growth rates and life cycle of an extinct Cretaceous oyster

32. Isotopic evidence for changing mobility and landscape use patterns between the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age in western Ireland

33. Towards a biologically available strontium isotope baseline for Ireland

34. The Late Iron Age cemetery of Kemzeke/Kwakkel (prov. of East-Flanders, Belgium): first radiocarbon dates on cremated bone and new insights in the funerary practices of the Iron Age

36. Understanding the Post-Archaic populations of Satricum, Italy: A bioarchaeological approach

37. Cremation vs inhumation: Modelling cultural changes in funerary practices from the Mesolithic to the Middle Ages in Belgium using Kernel density analysis on 14C data

38. Dressed to be burnt - Experimental approach to detect the presence of garments worn by the deceased through stable isotope analysis (d13C, d18O)

39. Clothes for dead – An attempt to detect the presence of garments worn by the deceased. Contribution of stable isotope analysis on cremated bones.

40. Crémations, urnes et mobilité - la dynamique du peuplement de la Belgique

41. High-resolution trace element distributions and models of trace element diffusion in enamel of Late Neolithic/Early Chalcolithic human molars from the Rioja Alavesa region (north-central Spain) help to separate biogenic from diagenetic trends

42. Multiproxy cretaceous-paleogene boundary event stratigraphy: An Umbria-marche basinwide perspective

44. High-resolution trace element distributions and models of trace element diffusion in enamel of Late Neolithic/Early Chalcolithic human molars from the Rioja Alavesa region (north-central Spain) help to separate biogenic from diagenetic trends

45. Multiproxy cretaceous-paleogene boundary event stratigraphy: An Umbria-marche basinwide perspective

47. Multiproxy cretaceous-paleogene boundary event stratigraphy: An Umbria-marche basinwide perspective

48. High-resolution trace element distributions and models of trace element diffusion in enamel of Late Neolithic/Early Chalcolithic human molars from the Rioja Alavesa region (north-central Spain) help to separate biogenic from diagenetic trends

50. Cremation vs inhumation, modelling the cultural change in funerary practices from the Mesolithic to the Middle Age in Belgium

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