Volume 2, Number 2 (2012) Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Violence
Articles
From the Editor: Special Poster Presentation Issue
Ventura R. Perez
Taphonomic and Skeletal Indicators of Captivity and Violence in the Southwest (AD 1000-1300)
Debra L. Martin
The Taphonomy of a Sacrifice: Burial 6 of the Patio Hundido at el Teul
Ventura R. Perez and Peter Jiménez Betts
Contextualizing Death and Trauma at Canyon del Muerto
Pamela K. Stone
Taphonomy After the Fact: Violence and Ritual in Room 33 at Chaco and Room 178 at Aztec
Ryan P. Harrod, Debra L. Martin, and Shawn W. Carlyle
The Blessing and the Curse of Taphonomic Processes: A Bioarchaeological Analysis of a Shaft Tomb from La Florida, Mexico
Heidi Bauer-Clapp, Laura Solar Valverde, and Lisa Rios
Postmortem violence? Identifying and interpreting postmortem disturbance in Mongolia.
Judith H. Littleton and Bruno Frohlich
Violence against People, Bodies, or Bones: Lessons from La Plata, New Mexico
H. Wolcott Toll Ph.D. and Nancy J. Akins
Personal Taphonomy at Sacred Ridge: Burial 196
Anna Osterholtz and Ann L.W. Stodder
Evidence of Violent Conflict in Males from Pot Creek Pueblo
Catrina B. Whitley
Violence and Postmortem Signaling in Early Farming Communities of the Sonoran Desert: An Expanded Taphonomic Approach
James T. Watson, Misty Fields, and Marijke Stoll
Evidence of Child Sacrifice at La Cueva de los Muertos Chiquitos (660-1430 AD)
John J. Crandall, Debra L. Martin, and Jennifer L. Thompson
Taphonomy and Warfare in the Mesa Verde Region
Kristin A. Kuckelman and Debra L. Martin
Violence, taphonomy and cannibalism in Chaco Canyon: Discerning taphonomic changes from human action in the archaeological record
Kerriann Marden
Taphonomy and Cremation of Human Remains from San Francisco de Borja
Cheryl P. Anderson, Debra L. Martin, and Jennifer L. Thompson
Book Review
Book Review: Warfare, Violence and Slavery in Prehistory
John J. Crandall

Editors
- Editor-in-Chief
- Dr. Ventura Pérez
- Managing Editor
- Ashley Sherry