Results 141 to 150 of about 753 (171)
Intestinal Parasites in an Ottoman Period Latrine from Acre (Israel) Dating to the Early 1800s CE. [PDF]
Eskew WH +5 more
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Methods in Paleoepidemiology and New Perspectives in Paleoparasitology
Francisco Inácio Bastos +2 more
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Paleoparasitology and pathoecology in Russia: Investigations and perspectives
Russia, both as the USSR and the Russian federation, provided a source of parasitological theory for decades. A key figure in Russian parasitology was Yevgeny Pavlovsky. He developed the nidus concept of Pavlovsky provided the conceptual basis for the field of pathoecology. He also coined the term "Paleoparasitology".
Sergey M Slepchenko, Karl Reinhard
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Paleoparasitology of Helminths
2014Paleoparasitology is an important branch of paleopathology, which is the discipline that studies ancient diseases through the use of human skeletal or mummified remains.
Gaeta, Raffaele, Fornaciari, Gino
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New paleoparasitological techniques
Journal of Archaeological Science, 2006Ruffer was the first researcher to show, using hydration of samples and histological techniques, the presence of Schistosoma haematobium eggs in the kidneys of Egyptian mummies dating between 1250 BC and 1000 BC. Since then, with the collaboration of archaeologists, palynologists, parasitologists, biologists, entomologists, ecologists, malacologists ...
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Chapter 7 reviews the diversity of parasites found in the Roman period, their regional distribution, and their association with other diseases. First, Ledger and Mitchell provide an overview of methods to detect both ectoparasites and endoparasites in the archaeological record.
Marissa L. Ledger, Piers D. Mitchell
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Marissa L. Ledger, Piers D. Mitchell
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Paleoparasitological investigations in Mongolia, Middle Asia and Russia
International Journal of Paleopathology, 2013A review of previous and original paleoparasitological investigations of animal dung deposits in Mongolia, Middle Asia, North Caucasus, and central European part of Russia is carried out. The age of deposits with helminth remains spans from ca. 38,000 years BP to premodern times.
Arkady B, Savinetsky +1 more
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