AltaMira Press
Pages: 336
Trim: 8¾ x 11⅜
978-0-7591-1075-5 • Hardback • March 2008 • $330.00 • (£254.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Donald J. Ortner is a curator and research anthropologist at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C. Bruno Frohlich is an anthropologist at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The Ecological and Social Context of the EB I People
Chapter 3. Methods in the Recovery of and Research on the EB I People
Chapter 4 Chpater 4. Cultural Artifacts of the EB I Tombs
Chapter 5. The Funerary Tradition of the EB I People
Chapter 6. The Tombs and Burials of the EB I People: Shaft Tombs Excavated in 1977
Chapter 7. The EB IB Charnel House (G1): Excavated in 1977
Chapter 8. The Tombs and Burials of the EB I People: Tombs Excavated in 1979
Chapter 9. The Tombs and Burials of the EB I People: Tombs Excavated in 1981
Chapter 10. The Osteology of the EB IA and EB IB People
Chapter 11. The Paleodemography of the EB IA People
Chapter 12. The Paleopathology of the EB IA and EB IB People
Chapter 13. Dental Analyses of the Bâb edh-Dhrâ' Human Remains
Chapter 14. Summary of Findings and Conclusions Regarding the EB I People of Bâb edh-Dhrâ', Jordan
Ortner, Frohlich, and colleagues provide an excellent, comprehensive model that should be widely emulated for the analysis, interpretation, and presentation of complex mortuary data sets. The text is rich in relevant details and abundantly illustrated with photographs and figures—all of which enhance the authors' dynamic reconstruction of life and death in Early Bronze Age Jordan. Ortner's active participation in the excavation of the burials at this remarkable site ensured that every bit of human bone has been systematically collected; and his paleopathological analysis not only incorporates biological and cultural data for differential diagnosis, but also takes note of the individual human costs of illnesses and nutritional deficiencies. Those who wonder what ancient remains can tell us about human life will find some convincing answers here.
— Mary Lucas Powell, past editor, Paleopathology Newsletter
Ortner and Frohlich's ambitious and detailed study of the skeletal remains from Bab edh-Dhra', Jordan, provides crucial insights into the lives of the people who settled in one of the earliest walled communities in this region. Ultimately their research offers a fascinating examination of the rise of small-scale urbanism in the Near East, thus contributing to the broader anthropological exploration of the development of social complexity and state formation, and of the rise and collapse of ancient urban societies.
— Meredith S. Chesson, University of Notre Dame
Donald Ortner and Bruno Frohlich provide a model and set a new standard for ancient Near Eastern bioarchaeological or osteoarchaeological research and publication with this volume on the shaft tombs and Charner House burials excavated in 1977, 1979, and 1981 from Jordan....This volume benefits osteological and dental specialists as well as those who study history and culture.
— Journal of the American Oriental Society
In this important work on the prehistory of the ancient Near East, the authors recognize that tombs are built for people, not pots. They employ bioarchaeological methods that allow them to compare the skeletal remains found at Bâb edh-Dhrâ? with other collections worldwide. This book provides a view of ancient life during an important period of transition in the southern Levant.
— Susan Guise Sheridan, University of Notre Dame