Andrew Benesh’s Reviews > The Archaeology of Disease > Status Update

Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 15% done
The level of ambiguity when identifying basic characteristics like age and sex of skeletons raises more questions than it answers. The dependency on comparators from environmentally distinct populations feels like a fundamental measurement error. I wish there were more explanation of the statistical approaches used here.
Aug 05, 2019 10:50PM
The Archaeology of Disease

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Andrew’s Previous Updates

Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 75% done
Done! The last two chapters felt anemic after the extensive sections on infectious and metabolic disease, but I suppose that makes sense given the limited data on neoplasias un the archaeological record. I'm impressed that 25% of the book is references!
Aug 16, 2019 02:37PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 69% done
The chapter on metabolic disease is frustrating, because we know of it's important historical role but the skeletal evidence is so minimal. I wish there were more illustrations of scurvy related bone growth and adult deformities from rickets.
Aug 15, 2019 01:57PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 61% done
That's more than I ever wanted to know about leprosy and syphilis. The connections between leprosy and TB make me wonder about immunization strategies. The challenge of differentiating the causes of syphilis and related diseases reminds me of psychiatric classification problems.
Aug 14, 2019 11:13PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 54% done
Bone infections are scary stuff. I appreciate the in depth treatment of tuberculosis, and implications of archaeological specimens in understanding the cultivation of human infection through agriculture.
Aug 14, 2019 11:41AM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 46% done
I did not realize there were so many different types of joint disease. I'm also surprised that the associations between joint deterioration and occupation aren't stronger.
Aug 12, 2019 11:24PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 38% done
The trauma chapter is long, but deeply informative. The measurement challenges are utterly obscene, and I marvel that we have anything close to accurate estimates.

Also, I appreciate the extra detail on trepanning methods and survival rates.
Aug 09, 2019 07:52PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 26% done
The chapter on dental issues is informative, though I wish there were more pictures. The methodological considerations for reporting present a fascinating problem (per observed tooth? per person? per carie? Etc). The attention to cultural aspects of tooth decay on both a civilization label and an individual level presents a set of ideas we rarely talk about.
Aug 06, 2019 10:44PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 20% done
It's a wonder we have any paleopathological evidence of congenital diseases. It seems every biological, social, and preservative process is against the likelihood of finding evidence.
Aug 06, 2019 09:37PM
The Archaeology of Disease


Andrew Benesh
Andrew Benesh is 8% done
The measurement problems in assessing pathology from archaeological specimens are an interesting challenge to overcome. The absence of soft tissue data and limited sampling opportunity feels like a measurement and design nightmare.
Aug 04, 2019 09:44AM
The Archaeology of Disease


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