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Bodies of Evidence
Case studies
Neanderthals
How healthy were the Krapina hominids?
On 23 August 1899, palaeontologist Dragutin Gorjanovic- Kramberger, alerted
by a local schoolteacher, visited a cave in Krapina, Croatia. There he
found a chipped stone tool, some animal bones and a single human molar.
Over the next six years, he and colleagues found a huge collection of
fossilised remains of early hominids. Known as Neanderthals, they probably
became extinct about 30,000 years ago, but the Krapina cave remains are
dated to some 100,000 years before that.
In 1999, two American researchers, Alan Mann and Janet Monge, studied
X-rays of 884 of the bones. They
expected to find evidence of disease or injury, but in fact found that
most of these individuals were healthy. There were a few exceptions though.
Mann and Monge discovered signs of a bone tumour in one of the Neanderthals
and they thought that one may have had a hand surgically amputated; in
others they found evidence of osteoarthritis.
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The Romanovs
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Taung Child
St Clare
The Inuit Women
Witch burial
Barber surgeon
Slave grave
Turin shroud
The disappeared
Medieval coffins
Java Man
Animal mummies
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Hybrid skeleton
Cherchen Man
Body Farm
Mummy medicine
Tooth decay
Maronite mummies
Tooth implant
Polynesians
Andes mummies
Lefthandedness
Ice-Age Footprints
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