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Human Osteology at OsteoInteractive, Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library at the University of Utah:
http://library.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/osteology/
Visit for additional illustrations of human osteology, with some links to paleopathology, trauma and forensic anthropology.
Conservation Research Laboratory Report on (Nautical Archaeology Program, Texas A&M University):
http://nautarch.tamu.edu/CRL/Report4/skeletal.htm
Facial reconstruction based on a skull from the Belle, one of the ships of French explorer Robert Cavelier, Sieur (Lord) de La Salle, lost in Matagorda Bay, Texas in 1686.
Stereolithography:
http://www.anthropology.at/virtanth/stereo.html
More detail on how stereolithography works.
South Dakota Paleopathology:
http://www.usd.edu/~archlab/paleo.html
At least 486 individuals were massacred at the Crow Creek Site, located on the east bank of the Missouri River in South Dakota. These villagers, who lived prior to European contact, could provide data on diseases and abnormalities that affected these people. This site, hosted by the University of South Dakota, documents the results of paleopathological investigations.
Life and Death in Spitalfields 1700 to 1850:
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/library/cba/op21.cfm
An account of an archaeological project that revealed information on life and death in East London during the 18th and 19th centuries. Almost 1000 skeletons were recovered during the excavation of vaults beneath a church in Spitalfields, of which 387 were of known name and age.
Byzantine St. Stephens:
http://www.nd.edu/~stephens/index.html
A biocultural reconstruction of urban monastic life.
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