Dear Lexi,
you will find some references and discussion in this old post in Zooarch: https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A3=ind1009&L=ZOOARCH&E=quoted-printable&P=118218&B=------_%3D_NextPart_001_01CB4E78.038E4DA1&T=text%2Fhtml;%20charset=iso-8859-1
I copy the references here for convenience:
* Davis, SJM and Payne, S. (1992) 101 ways to deal with a dead hedgehog: notes on the preparation of disarticulated skeletons for zoo‑archaeological use. Circaea 8, 95‑104
http://www.envarch.net/publications/circaea/8.2/8-2-whole.pdf#page=37
* Davis, SJM and Payne, S. - [traducción M. Mondini] (2003). 101 modos de tratar un erizo muerto: notas sobre la preparación de esqueletos desarticulados para uso zooarqueológico. Archaeofauna 12, 203-211
* Davis, SJM. (2001) Blood, bones and ladies' tights, or the things we do in our laboratory. New York, Rubber Band Society Gazette 1 (1), 1 & 6
* Davis, SJM.; Baker, P.; Payne, S. and Revill, M. (2003) On preparing animal skeletons: a simple and effective method. International Council for Archaeozoology Newsletter 4 (1) 4 and 15
All the best,
Silvia Valenzuela-Lamas
Honorary Research Fellow
Department of Archaeology
University of Sheffield
Northgate House
West Street
Sheffield S1 4ET
United Kingdom
Telephone: (+) 44 (0) 114 22 22 951
Fax: (+) 44 (0) 114 22 25 109
http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/archaeology/people/valenzuela
For MSc in Osteoarchaeology see:
http://www.shef.ac.uk/archaeology/postgraduate/masters/courses-available/osteoarchaeology
For Zooarchaeology short course see:
http://www.shef.ac.uk/archaeology/research/zooarchaeology-lab/short-course
|