Estamos de enhorabuena. A través de nuestra Amiga la librería Pórtico de Zaragoza, nos acabamos de enterar de que la editorial británica Oxbow, ha publicado un interesante libro sobre esa materia, la paleopatología, que poco a poco parece que empieza a despertar interés y cultivadores.
Y si no, se puede consultar el índice que adjuntamos, para echar un vistazo al contenido:
Foreword, László Bartosiewicz and Erika Gál
- László Bartosiewicz and Erika Gál: Introduction: care, neglect and the “osteological paradox”
- Kamilla Pawłowska: Animal diseases in Neolithic societies: Çatalhöyük (Turkey) in the spotlight
- László Bartosiewicz, Éva Á. Nyerges and Anna Zs. Biller: Palaeopathology at the Eneolithic tell settlement of Polyanitsa (Bulgaria) investigated by Sándor Bökönyi
- Erika Gál and Günther Karl Kunst: Limping to the temple – Palaeopathology at a Roman sacrificial site in Carnuntum, Austria.
- Nemanja Marković, Oliver Stevanović, Maciej Janeczek, Darko Marinković, Nikola Krstić and Vujadin Ivanišević: Animal Health in Caričin Grad (Justiniana Prima) in Time of Transition: Preliminary Results
- Yasha Hourani: Congenital anomalies and traumatic injuries in dogs from Laodicea in Canaan (Hellenistic Beirut, Lebanon)
- Lauren Bellis: Reviewing the pathology and welfare of dogs in Roman Britain
- Henriette Baron: Four Equestrian Burials from the Avar Cemetery at Vienna Csokorgasse, Austria: The health of horses and dogs
- William Taylor and Tumurbaatar Tuvshinjargal: Horseback Riding, Asymmetry, and Changes to the Equine Skull: Evidence for mounted riding in Mongolia’s Late Bronze Age
- Pamela J. Cross: Where have all the Mares Gone? Sex and “gender” related pathology in archaeological horses: clues to horse husbandry and use practices
- Kyra Lyublyanovics: Pelvic fracture in horse: a late medieval case from Karcag–Orgondaszentmiklós, eastern Hungary
- László Bartosiewicz: Taphonomy and disease prevalence in animal palaeopathology: The proverbial “veterinary horse”
- Henriette Baron: From arthrosis to necrosis: Many, many pathological chickens from the Avar cemetery at Vienna Csokorgasse
- Annamária Bárány: “Babos” (spotted) pigs in Zalavár/Mosaburg, SW Hungary: Possible causes of a tusk pathology
- Yves Darton and Isabelle Rodet-Belarbi: Damage caused by permanent fetters in present-day sheep on the island of Delos (Greece)
- Márta Daróczi-Szabó and László Daróczi-Szabó: Medieval multi-horned sheep from present-day Budapest, Hungary
- Jennifer Harland and Wim Van Neer: Weird Fish: Defining a role for fish bone pathologies
Hanna Kivikero: Skeletal anomalies in medieval and early modern fish: A case study from Castle Kastelholm in the Baltic Sea
