#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

"The dead shall be raised": Multidisciplinary analysis of human skeletons reveals complexity in 19th century immigrant socioeconomic history and identity in New Haven, Connecticut


Authors: Gary P. Aronsen aff001;  Lars Fehren-Schmitz aff002;  John Krigbaum aff003;  George D. Kamenov aff004;  Gerald J. Conlogue aff005;  Christina Warinner aff007;  Andrew T. Ozga aff007;  Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan aff008;  Anthony Griego aff009;  Daniel W. DeLuca aff009;  Howard T. Eckels aff009;  Romuald K. Byczkiewicz aff010;  Tania Grgurich aff005;  Natalie A. Pelletier aff005;  Sarah A. Brownlee aff001;  Ana Marichal aff001;  Kylie Williamson aff001;  Yukiko Tonoike aff001;  Nicholas F. Bellantoni aff011
Authors place of work: Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America aff001;  Department of Historical Anthropology and Human Ecology, Johann-Friedrich-Blumenbach Institute for Zoology and Anthropology, Georg-August-University Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany aff002;  Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States of America aff003;  Department of Geological Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States of America aff004;  Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Connecticut, United States of America aff005;  Bioanthropology Research Institute, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Connecticut, United States of America aff006;  Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, United States of America aff007;  Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, United States of America aff008;  Independent Scholar, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America aff009;  Department of History, Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, Connecticut, United States of America aff010;  Connecticut State Museum of Natural History, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America aff011
Published in the journal: PLoS ONE 14(9)
Category: Research Article
doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219279

Summary

In July 2011, renovations to Yale-New Haven Hospital inadvertently exposed the cemetery of Christ Church, New Haven, Connecticut’s first Catholic cemetery. While this cemetery was active between 1833 and 1851, both the church and its cemetery disappeared from public records, making the discovery serendipitous. Four relatively well-preserved adult skeletons were recovered with few artifacts. All four individuals show indicators of manual labor, health and disease stressors, and dental health issues. Two show indicators of trauma, with the possibility of judicial hanging in one individual. Musculoskeletal markings are consistent with physical stress, and two individuals have arthritic indicators of repetitive movement/specialized activities. Radiographic analyses show osteopenia, healed trauma, and other pathologies in several individuals. Dental calculus analysis did not identify any tuberculosis indicators, despite osteological markers. Isotopic analyses of teeth indicate that all four were likely recent immigrants to the Northeastern United States. Nuclear and mitochondrial DNA were recovered from three individuals, and these analyses identified ancestry, hair/eye color, and relatedness. Genetic and isotopic results upended our initial ancestry assessment based on burial context alone. These individuals provide biocultural evidence of New Haven’s Industrial Revolution and the plasticity of ethnic and religious identity in the immigrant experience. Their recovery and the multifaceted analyses described here illuminate a previously undescribed part of the city’s rich history. The collective expertise of biological, geochemical, archaeological, and historical researchers interprets socioeconomic and cultural identity better than any one could alone. Our combined efforts changed our initial assumptions of a poor urban Catholic cemetery’s membership, and provide a template for future discoveries and analyses.

Keywords:

Biology and life sciences – Physical sciences – Chemistry – Research and analysis methods – Molecular biology – People and places – Population groupings – Molecular biology techniques – Mathematics – Geographical locations – Europe – Anatomy – Medicine and health sciences – Digestive system – infectious diseases – Teeth – Head – Jaw – Osteology – Artificial gene amplification and extension – Polymerase chain reaction – Religious faiths – Christianity – catholicism – Calculus – Chemical elements – Strontium

Introduction

The assessment of human skeletal remains requires the integration of biology, behavior, ecology and sociocultural anthropology [15]. While the human skeleton is subject to ultimate micro- and macroevolutionary forces, proximate factors such as environmental and cultural variables leave biomarkers on the durable yet plastic teeth and bone tissues [68].

The markers of human existence, from developmental interruptions and sexual dimorphism through senescence and death are recorded in dental perikymata, musculoskeletal origins and insertions and arthroses [912]. Chronic metabolic stressors, from infectious disease through physical exertion may also be preserved [2, 1316]. Finally, traumatic injury with or without healing remains a primary focus for forensic and/or bioarchaeological research [1719]. Cross-disciplinary efforts have generated increasingly nuanced techniques—digital radiography, dental calculus residue, genetic and isotopic analyses combine to provide rich details on health, ancestry, diet and geographic origin beyond macromorphoscopic bone review [2026]. Such analyses are used to analyze and interpret cold cases [2729] as well as skeletal remains with no provenience [30, 31].

Cultural ecology and socioeconomic status influence health, stress and disease [32]. Structural violence (defined as indirect negative consequences resulting from repression, racism and/or exclusion) results from social stratification and disparity [3335] and is manifested via downstream health and fitness effects across individuals and generations [3638]. While skeletal tissue is plastic, it retains characters reflecting the decedent’s social role and responses to structural violence, repetitive labor, and/or health/hygiene support [1517, 3943]. Epidemiological evidence from bones and teeth provides data on the etiology, expression, and mortality/survivorship of infectious diseases [2, 4446].

Osteologists working with prehistoric populations associate biomarkers with predicted/hypothesized social systems [47, 48]. While the historical record provides data on social stratification, occupational stress and/or racial and religious discrimination [49, 50], incomplete or biased records hamper bioarchaeological conclusions [5154]. Skeletal biomarkers indicating structural violence may be clearly inscribed on bone and teeth [5557] and provide another line of evidence for historians, whether from agricultural [5860] or industrial [42, 61, 62] populations. As a result, historians increasingly interact with other scientific disciplines to evaluate violence, disparity, population migration and cultural tradition diffusion [24, 6367].

These multidisciplinary evaluations of biological, geochemical, and archival data generate more robust conclusions and nuanced narratives than any single approach. Here, we report the recovery and assessment of human skeletal remains from a forgotten 19th century urban cemetery, hereafter referred to as the Yale-New Haven Four (YNH4). The biological, geochemical, and historical lines of evidence indicate that these individuals represent some of the earliest non-Irish Catholics within the city of New Haven, and their respective life histories associate with their ethnicity, health, disease and stress markers, cultural ecology, judicial action, and burial context.

Methods

Discovery, excavation and predictions

In the summer of 2011, the Yale-New Haven Hospital Emergency Room was undergoing renovation. On Friday, 09 July a hydraulic excavator dug a trench parallel to York Street. That weekend, rains eroded the exposed sediment. On Monday, 11 July the excavator operator noticed a human bone jutting from the trench cut. New Haven Police were contacted (Case #11–38996), and following review by the Office of the Connecticut Medical Examiner (ME # 11–09794) the remains were identified as originating from a historic/archaeological context. Connecticut State Archaeologist NFB then took over excavations. At the same time, retired New Haven Police Department and Yale New Haven Hospital Security Officer AG learned of the discovery, and was aware of the site’s history. AG and local historian HE provided a brief review as NFB initiated excavation with CT Office of State Archeology volunteers (including a team of high school students). GPA was contacted for technical assistance. As excavation progressed, NFB and GPA contacted the Pastor of St. Mary’s Church in New Haven. The Archdiocese of Hartford provided approval for excavation and multidisciplinary analyses, followed by repatriation and reburial. Yale New Haven Hospital authorities requested that excavation be limited to the exposed elements versus expanding our efforts.

The trench provided access to the human remains, but they were overlain by a concrete footing (~16cm thick, ~2.8m long x ~23cm wide). This required horizontal/sagittal excavation underneath the overlying baulk. As the first individual (designated YNH4 Individual A) was excavated, three additional individuals (YNH4 Individuals B, B2 and B3 respectively) were found immediately south of this burial, all vertically stacked (Fig 1). Each individual was excavated as a separate unit, to limit commingling or element swapping. Excavation proceeded via standard practices, using metal and/or bamboo tools for bone removal and backdirt screening using 1/8th inch hardware mesh. Skeletal elements and artifacts were photographed in situ and then placed in clean backdirt and transported to the Yale Biological Anthropology Laboratories.

Fig. 1.

Clockwise from top left: YNH4 individual A in situ; B and B2 crania in situ; B2 and B3 crania in situ, B and B2 postcrania in situ.

<h2>Clockwise from top left: YNH4 individual A in situ; B and B2 crania in situ; B2 and B3 crania in situ, B and B2 postcrania in situ.</h2>

Note concrete baulk directly above burials.

As the remains were recovered from a mid-19th century Catholic Church, we hypothesized that the individuals were of Irish or Irish-American origin. Given the socioeconomic context of that time period, we predicted that they would show signs of musculoskeletal stress due to hard physical labor. Living in cities leads to higher risk of infectious disease exposure, and we predicted that infectious diseases (i.e., tuberculosis [Mycobacterium tuberculosis]) would be present in these individuals. We predicted that isotopic analyses would suggest geographic association within Irish and/or Connecticut regions, and that dietary markers would indicate access to readily available and inexpensive resources such as maize (a C4 plant) and/or potatoes (a C3 plant) [68].

Analytical methods

Artifact methods

All samples were carefully washed with distilled water/methanol and dried, but not coated prior to analysis. Select samples were mounted using carbon tape. Samples were analyzed using a Zeiss EVO LS-15 scanning electron microscope equipped with an iXRF EDS-2000 X-ray energy dispersive spectrometer. Imaging was performed using voltage set at 5 kV; WD 20–25 mm. Elemental analysis voltage was set at 15 kV; WD 10.5 mm. Artifacts were compared with known comparative samples [69, 70].

Osteology and radiology methods

Skeletal elements were brushed clean, and select elements/bones were reconstructed using Acryloid B72. Remains were not washed or chemically cleaned due to their fragility. All elements were recorded and assessed for sex/age indicators following published standards [71] using Osteoware 2.4.037 [72]. Measurements of cranial and postcranial elements were performed with digital spreading and sliding Mitutoyo calipers. Multiple researchers measured the remains and recorded nonmetric characters [73] and pathologies, with no significant interobserver error. Ancestry estimation was performed using craniometric data via Fordisc 3.196 [74], comparing the YNH4 sample against populations of known sex and ancestry (19th and 20th Century European-Americans and 19th C. Austrians, Hungarians, and Norwegians). We recorded all instances of health and disease indicators, trauma markers, and any other bony abnormalities following established methods [13, 14, 18, 7578]. Each set of remains were radiographed following published standards [79] in the antero-posterior and supero-inferior planes using a Toshiba Kalare radiographic/fluoroscopic unit with a Konica Regius Model 110 Computed Radiography image reader. Elements were scanned using a Toshiba Aquilion X64 Computerized Tomography device. CT scans were taken at 0.5mm resolution with 100kV/450mA settings. Radiographs were evaluated and compared independently by Quinnipiac University radiography experts, and the results reviewed with the osteology team. Bone and tooth samples were excised from each individual for genetic and isotopic testing.

Genetic methods

Twelve bone and teeth samples from four individuals were shipped to the ancient DNA (aDNA) facilities at the Department of Anthropology, University of Göttingen, Germany (GoA) where they were stored at -20° C. All pre-amplification DNA procedures were carried out in dedicated clean lab ancient DNA facilities at GoA. All laboratory tools used to process the samples were either sterile and/or disposable, or decontaminated with full strength bleach (6%) and exposed to UV light for 1 hour before use. Pieces of the bone samples or tooth roots where cut using a drill with diamond tipped saw blade. Subsequently, all samples were immersed in full strength bleach for 2 minutes and then rinsed with ddH20 and 70% Ethanol. Each side of the samples was then exposed to UV light for 10 min, and left to dry. Following the decontamination procedure, the samples were pulverized using a ball mill (Retsch 400, Germany). The samples were extracted following published protocols [80], utilizing 0.1 g of bone / tooth root powder for each sample. At least two extraction blank controls (EBCs) were used in every batch of extractions.

Both, mitochondrial and nuclear genetic data in this study was obtained via PCR-based experiments and analyzed employing capillary electrophoresis at GoA. To assess the authenticity of PCR- based results, we performed at least four independent amplifications from two independent DNA extracts each for every genetic marker, resulting in a minimum of 8 amplification results. We used a majority call to determine a consensus for each allele. Amplification success for each PCR reaction was checked using 2.5% Agarose gels. The EBCs were included in each amplification, as well as no template controls (NTCs) to monitor for contaminations.

To determine the mitochondrial haplotypes of the individuals, we analyzed a 388-bp fragment of the mitochondrial hypervariable region I [nucleotide position (np)16,021– np16,408 (rCRS)] using four overlapping primer pairs [81]. The amplicons were subsequently analyzed by direct sequencing of the heavy and light strands and analyzed as described elsewhere [81]. Each part of the HVR1 was amplified at least two times from each two DNA extracts. The consensus HVR1 sequence for each individual was then used to determine the mitochondrial haplotype, employing the HaploGrep 2 haplotype prediction tool [82], based on PhyloTree v17 [83].

We further amplified fourteen autosomal microsatellites (D13S317, D21S11, D18S51, TH01, D5S818, FGA, D9S1120, VWA, D16S539, D7S820, D3S1358, D2S1338, D19S433, D8S1179) and the sex specific locus Amelogenin for each the samples using two multiplex PCR reactions, to evaluate the direct genetic relationship of the individuals, as well as their genetic ancestry. PCR conditions, primer sequences and other analytic details are described elsewhere [80, 84]. We determined the minimal Y-chromosomal haplotype for the male individual B3 employing a multiplex PCR amplifying eight Y-chromosomal STRs (DYS 392, DYS 391, DYS 19, DYS 389I, DYS 390, DYS 389II, DYS 393, DYS 385) [85]. The STR allele results were then compared to the YHRD database (YHRD.org; release 54) to determine the geographic ancestry of the haplotype [86]. While not strictly associated with ancestry, we also determined hair and eye color of the individuals sampled using the HIrisPlex system following published amplification protocols [87]. Phenotypes for the HIrisPlex results were then determined using the online tool provided by the Department of Genetic Identification at Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands [87].

Isotopic methods

The same samples used for the genetic sampling were shipped and prepared at the University of Florida in the Department of Anthropology’s Bone Chemistry Laboratory and the clean lab facilities within the Department of Geological Sciences. Tooth enamel and bone were sampled using a Brasseler dental drill fitted with a round-end tapered diamond tipped bit with a ~4 mm cutting edge and maximum diameter of ~1.2 mm. Bits were cleaned between sampling episodes by soaking in methanol and sonicating in DDI-H2O. Exposed surfaces of enamel were abraded to remove discoloration and any adhering material. Dentin and tooth material below the cemento-enamel junction were removed from the enamel by drilling. ‘Cleaned’ enamel fragments were powdered using an agate mortar and pestle, and ~25 mg of powder transferred to a microcentrifuge tube, treated with a 2% bleach (NaOHCl) solution for eight hours to remove organics, then rinsed with DDI-H2O until neutral pH was obtained. Following this, each sample was pretreated with 0.2 M acetic acid (CH3COOH) for eight hours and rinsed to neutral, frozen and lyophilized. Teeth carbonate samples were measured by phosphoric acid reaction at 70°C in a Finnigan-MAT Kiel III carbonate prep device followed by online analysis using a Finnigan-MAT 252 isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Carbon (C) and oxygen (O) isotope data are relative to NBS-19 δ13C = 1.95‰ (±0.05‰) and δ18O = -2.2‰ (±0.1‰).

For heavy isotope analysis, Teflon vials were first cleaned in bulk with Versa Clean, followed by 24 hour 8N HNO3 and 24 h 6N HCl baths. Teflon vials were then rinsed multiple times with MilliQ H2O, and 3 ml 6N HCl was added to each vial individually. The vials with the added 6N HCl were then capped and refluxed overnight at 120° C on a hot plate. After the reflux, the HCl was discarded and each vial was rinsed with ultrapure (4x) H2O and dried under a laminar flow hood. Once dried, samples were weighed into the pre-cleaned Teflon vials and dissolved in the clean lab with 3 ml 50% nitric acid (HNO3). Vials were placed on a hot plate at 120° C and evaporated to dryness under a laminar flow hood.

Following published protocols [88], ion chromatography was used to separate strontium (Sr) and lead (Pb) from single aliquots. Lead was purified with a conventional hydrobromic acid (HBr) procedure on Dowex 1X-8 resin. Washes were collected and evaporated to dryness for subsequent Sr separation. Dried wash residues were dissolved in 3.5 N HNO3 and loaded onto cation exchange columns packed with Sr-selective crown ether resin (Sr- spec, Eichrom Technologies, Inc.) to separate Sr from other ions, following existing protocols [89].

Strontium ratios 87Sr/86Sr were measured using a Micromass Sector 54 thermal ionization mass spectrometer (TIMS). Strontium samples were loaded onto degassed tungsten filaments and run for 200 ratios at 1.5 V. Lead ratios (206Pb/204Pb, 207Pb/204Pb, and 208Pb/204Pb) were measured in solution using a Nu-Plasma multiple-collector inductively-coupled plasma-mass spectrometer (MC-ICP-MS) using the Tl-normalization technique [90]. 87Sr/86Sr is reported relative to NBS 987 with a published value of 0.71024 (±0.00003, 2σ) and 20nPb/204Pb are reported relative to NBS 981 with published values for 206Pb/204Pb = 16.937 (±0.004, 2σ), 207Pb/204Pb = 15.490 (±0.003, 2σ), and 208Pb/204Pb = 36.695 (±0.009, 2σ). Trace element analyses were performed on an Element2 HR-ICP-MS in medium resolution with Re and Rh used as internal standards. Quantification of the results was achieved via external calibration using a set of gravimetrically prepared dilutions of commercial ICP-MS standards (SPEX CertiPrep, Inc.) The reported concentration values are better than ±5%.

At Yale University, select teeth with labial surface staining were examined using a portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (Bruker Tracer III-V+) to evaluate the elemental composition of residue. Surfaces with no other visible contamination were chosen. The device was factory calibrated against NIST standards and then was further checked against a known Duplex 2205 standard prior to each use in the laboratory. A yellow filter (0.001” Ti, 0.012” Al) was used and the instrument was set at 40 kV and 28 μAmps following Bruker USA recommendations (B. J. Kaiser, Bruker Corporation, pers. comm.). This focused the x-rays from 12 to 40 keV, allowing the instrument sensitivity to be focused on elements above Ca on the periodic table. The analysis was run for 180 seconds with the tooth lying as flat as possible on the analyzer window with a protector film provided by Bruker to minimize contamination. The resulting spectra were qualitatively compared against inorganic materials and studied using the ARTAX software.

Dental calculus methods

Dental calculus samples from each individual were collected by GPA using established protocols [91]. DNA extraction was performed at the University of Oklahoma’s Laboratories of Molecular Anthropology and Microbiome Research (LMAMR) in a dedicated ancient DNA (aDNA) laboratory facility following previously published protocols [92]. In brief, prior to extraction, the dental calculus samples were cleaned of surface debris by vortexing the specimens in 1 ml wash solution of 0.5M EDTA. Specimens were then digested in 1 ml of 0.5M EDTA solution on a rolling nutator at room temperature until fully decalcified (~ 48 hours). Cellular debris were pelleted by centrifugation at 13,000 rpm for 1 minute, and the supernatant extracted twice with a phenol, choloroform, and isoamyl alcohol solution (25:24:1), and a third time with chloroform only. The DNA was then isolated on a Qiagen MinElute column and eluted into 60 μl of EB buffer. A non-template negative extraction control was processed in parallel with the samples. DNA concentrations of the ancient DNA extracts were assessed using a Qubit fluorometer High Sensitivity Assay, allowing total DNA yields (nanograms [ng] of DNA per milligram [mg] of sample) to be calculated.

Illumina 16S rRNA amplicon libraries were prepared using a protocol modified for ancient samples [92]. Data produced using this protocol do not retain the quantitative proportions of the starting bacteria, but this method is a useful high-throughput approach for screening for the presence or absence of specific taxa of interest [92]. Universal primers U341F/534R targeting the 16S rRNA V3 region were selected, and Golay (12 bp) indexed reverse primers were employed to facilitate pooling during Illumina sequencing [93]. Throughout library preparation, negative non-template extraction controls and PCR reagent blanks were included and monitored for contamination. Contamination was not observed in any PCR reaction. Each PCR reaction was set up as follows: 5 μl of 5x Phusion buffer, 2.5 μl 2mM decontaminated dNTPs, 0.5 μl 10μM primer 341F, 1.0 μl 10μM primer 534R, 0.25 μl Phusion Hot Start II DNA polymerase (2 U/μl) and 5 ng of DNA template, and sufficient molecular grade water to reach a total reaction volume of 20 μl. PCR cycling conditions were as follows: enzyme activation at 98°C for 30 seconds, followed by 35 cycles of 98°C for 15 seconds, 52°C for 20 seconds, 72°C for 20 seconds, followed by a final 5 minute extension at 72°C. Each PCR reaction was performed in triplicate, and PCR success confirmed via gel electrophoresis. Amplified PCR products were observed for the dental calculus but not for the negative extraction control or PCR blank. For each sample, the PCR products of the three amplifications were pooled. The pools were then combined and purified using a Qiagen MinElute column, quantified using a NanoDrop spectrophotometer and size-selected using a PippinPrep (Sage Science). Prior to sequencing, the amplicon size distribution and successful removal of dimer peaks was confirmed using a Bioanalyzer High Sensitivity DNA assay. The amplicon libraries were sequenced on an Illumina MiSeq flow cell using v3 2x100 bp chemistry at the Yale Center for Genome Analysis.

Bioinformatic analysis was performed following the QIIME pipeline [94]. Paired forward and reverse reads were quality filtered (quality scores < 30 trimmed) and merged using the program PEAR [95]. Sequences with uncalled bases (Ns) were removed from subsequent analysis. Sequences were assigned to Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) following a closed-reference OTU protocol. A similarity threshold of 97% was used to assign sequences to OTUs with the QIIME formatted Greengenes 16S rRNA database (v.13_08, Aug 2013) as a reference. Samples were rarefied to 10,000 sequences and analyzed for microbial community composition. All sequences assigned at the L6 level to the genus Mycobacterium were then manually examined for sequence similarity to published Mycobacterium tuberculosis 16S rRNA reference sequences. Upon completion, the microbial genetic data were deposited into the NCBI Short Read Archive (SRA) under BioProject accession PRJNA505811.

Historical and archival methods

We examined 1850 United States Census records, New Haven Vital Records, Archdiocese of Hartford Archives, local church records and the Charles R. Hale Collection of Cemetery Inscriptions [96] for interment records and local/regional identity. All Christ Church burial records were sorted into sex (based on given names) and modified age classes [97]: Infant, 0–2 years; Preschool Child, 2–5; Child, 6–12; Adolescent, 13–18; Young Adult 19–30; Middle Adult, 31–45; Mature Adult; 46–65; and Elderly, 65+ years. Recorded causes of death were compared to modern medical definitions. Life expectancy and survivorship curves were calculated following published methods [98] and compared to published summary data from five United States sites: New Orleans, Louisiana (1785–1786) [99] and urban and rural cemetery data from 1830 through 1859: New York City (Marble Cemetery [41 ½ 2nd Avenue location]) [100] and Clinton, New York; Wellesley and Natick, Massachusetts; Newberry, South Carolina [101]; and Nashville, Tennessee [102]. We also reviewed local/regional/international historical sources for contextual data on mid-19th century New Haven demographic history, culture and immigration, and church/parish development.

All research was conducted and authorized by the Connecticut State Archaeologist (NEB) and the Connecticut Office of State Archaeology, and was approved by the Archdiocese of Hartford and the Yale New Haven Hospital. No permits were required for the described study. This research follows the guidelines and ethical considerations of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists and the Society for American Archaeology. Following inventory, assessment, data recording, imaging and sampling, the remains are to be repatriated to the Archdiocese of Hartford for reburial.

Results

Recovery

Four individuals were recovered—two adult males, and two adult females. Soil pH levels were between 7.2 and 8.1, unusually high for Connecticut soils (NFB, pers. comm.). The stratigraphic integrity of each burial indicates that each individual was placed in a separate coffin but three (Individuals B through B3) were in the same grave shaft. Each individual was buried via traditional Christian practices, with individual coffins and burial shrouds (based on presence of wood fragments, nails and shroud pins). Bodies were oriented East-West with limbs extended. Each burial was discrete with coffin hardware recovered in between skeletal remains (Fig 2). Individual A’s lower body was not present due to the pouring of a concrete pillar as part of 1970s-era YNNH renovations. The concrete baulk directly over Individual B was part of this renovation. Individual B2 was immediately beneath individual B and had better preserved elements. Individual B3 was the lowest interment and directly below B2, and has the most complete and least damaged skeleton.

Fig. 2.

Schematic diagram of the YNH4 burials.

<h2>Schematic diagram of the YNH4 burials.</h2>

See text for details.

Very few artifacts were recovered. All bodies were in coffins constructed of relatively soft wood (i.e., pine). Multiple copper alloy shroud pins, square coffin nails (N = 21) and thumb screws (N = 4) were recovered as well as multiple wood fragments. The thumb screws are associated with the shallowest burial (Burial B) and first appear in funerary trade catalogues around 1880 [70]. The other coffin hardware is consistent with mid-19th century manufacture. The rosary centerpiece recovered with Individual B3 (N = 1) is constructed of copper alloy, and was manufactured via mechanical press—a single English word (“SAINT”) is visible (Fig 3). No other features can be associated to a specific manufacturer or time period.

Fig. 3.

Clockwise from top left: Rosary centerpiece found with individual B3; elemental profile; and details of rosary word and motif.

<h2>Clockwise from top left: Rosary centerpiece found with individual B3; elemental profile; and details of rosary word and motif.</h2>

Archival data

These individuals were interred in the cemetery associated with Christ Church, the first Roman Catholic Church in New Haven and the second in the state of Connecticut. The church and cemetery were built in 1834 to cater to the rapidly expanding Irish immigrant community [103]. Archival records list over 600 burials, including individuals from towns outside of New Haven. Proper names, ages and cause of death are available for multiple individuals; almost all individuals have Irish/Gaelic/Anglo-Saxon surnames (S1 Table). The cemetery received burials steadily until 1854, when the larger St. Bernard’s Catholic cemetery was consecrated (and remains active today). Interments at Christ Church fell dramatically after this date.

Christ Church was re-consecrated as St. John’s Catholic Church in 1858. Sometime between 1869 and 1898, the Christ Church headstones were removed from the St. John’s grounds, and placed at St. Bernard’s. As St. John’s parishioners, administrators and archivists moved, transferred or died, awareness of the cemetery (now missing all headstones) seemed to disappear. In 1969, the church was sold to Yale University and through 1971, the grounds were cleared for additions to Yale New Haven Hospital [104106]. There are no references to a cemetery in any available real estate transactions.

605 burial records were transcribed from available historic archives. As expected for a church catering to a relatively small and socioeconomically constrained 19th century urban population, the burials reflect high infant and child mortality (46% of all dead, Fig 4a). Male infant/child mortality (37%) is slightly higher than females (32%) and more females survived to elderly ages than males (4% versus 2%, Fig 4a). For individuals likely participating in the industrial workforce (ages 13 through 45), infectious disease remains the most common cause of death, especially for males (Fig 4b). Childbirth, hemorrhaging and gastrointestinal illnesses represents 22% of female cause of death, and are associated with the relatively higher death rate for young females (Fig 4b). Accidents, violence/trauma and liver disease/alcoholism comprise 22% of male mortality (Fig 4b).

Fig. 4.

(a) Demographic distribution of the Christ Church burials. Note that individuals of unknown age (N = 31) are not included. (b) Recorded causes of death for Christ Church burials (males and females aged 13–45). All data from S1 Table.

Comparisons of Christ Church burial records’ survivorship and life expectancy shows very high infant and child mortality and lower life expectancy compared to contemporaneous urban and rural cemeteries (Fig 5; Table 1). Distribution patterns are most similar to urban cemeteries with people of lower socioeconomic status: 18th Century New Orleans, 19th Century Nashville City Cemetery’s African-American burials and New York City’s Marble Cemetery burials (Fig 5; Table 1).

Tab. 1.

Percentage and log survivorship and life expectancy for multiple cemeteries.

<h2>Percentage and log survivorship and life expectancy for multiple cemeteries.</h2>

See text for details.

Fig. 5.

Christ Church demographic profiles.

<h2>Christ Church demographic profiles.</h2>

Left: percentage surviving (l(x)) per 10-year age classes in comparison to contemporaneous urban and rural cemeteries. Right: Log survivorship (l(x)) curves. See Table 1 for values.

Osteological indicators of ancestry, health and disease

Fig 6 illustrates the elements recovered for each individual. All individuals exhibit skeletal markers of stress, disease, trauma, and occupation (Fig 6). All individuals are middle aged adults based on suture closure and bone histology review. Only two skulls (B2 and B3) were sufficiently intact for metric analyses (Figs 7 and 8; S2 Table). Metric and nonmetric assessment (S2 and S3 Tables) indicate European ancestry for both individuals, with B2 most similar to the 19th century American sample, and B3 most similar to the Norwegian sample (Fig 9; S4 Table). Note that these results are affected by the limited number of available measurements, available comparative craniometric samples and questions regarding FORDISC’s accuracy and operating assumptions [107, 108].

Fig. 6.

YNH4 element representation (top) and pathology distribution (bottom).

<h2>YNH4 element representation (top) and pathology distribution (bottom).</h2>

Black = missing. Circles represent location and etiology of pathologies. Note YNH4 A is missing lower body elements. See text for details.

Fig. 7.

YNH4 Skull preservation.

<h2>YNH4 Skull preservation.</h2>

Clockwise from top left: YNH4 Individual A; B (CT scan due to condition); B2 and B3. Photos by Stephanie Anestis; radiograph by GJC, TG and NAP.

Fig. 8.

YNH4 lateral radiographs.

<h2>YNH4 lateral radiographs.</h2>

YNH4 A has a damaged splanchnocranium. The fragile condition of the YNH4 B skull required a CT scan while still in matrix. Radiographs by GJC, TG and NAP

Fig. 9.

Ancestry estimations for YNH4 individual B2 (top) and B3 (bottom).

<h2>Ancestry estimations for YNH4 individual B2 (top) and B3 (bottom).</h2>

“X” indicates YNH4 individual location. See S4 Table for data and abbreviations.

Each individual presents musculoskeletal evidence of hard and/or repetitive labor, with joint disease and/or enthesopathies visible across multiple elements (Fig 10, S5 Table). There is variation in the structure and location of these markers—Individual A (female) shows marked degenerative arthritis of the cervical vertebrae, while B (also female) shows enthesophytes and bone spurs at both knee joints (Fig 10). The two males show multiple indicators of heavy labor, including rugose muscle markings, enthesophytes and vertebral markers of compression and stress (S5 Table). B3 is the oldest individual recovered and shows the most severe arthritic features, including bilateral eburnation of the scaphoid bones.

Fig. 10.

YNH4 postcranial pathologies.

<h2>YNH4 postcranial pathologies.</h2>

Top: YNH4 A (left) and B (right) cervical vertebrae enthesophytes. Bottom left: lateral view of YNH4 B proximal tibia (right) and a normal tibia (left). Bottom right: superior view of YNH4 B (top) and B2 (bottom) left proximal tibiae; See text for details.

All individuals present with dental disease, with older individuals B & B3 having the most severe indicators. All individuals also show asymmetric notches at the second incisor/canine margins, consistent with habitual ceramic pipe smoking (Fig 11) [109, 110].

Fig. 11.

Dental wear resulting from habitual pipe smoking.

<h2>Dental wear resulting from habitual pipe smoking.</h2>

Clockwise from top left: YNH4 A, B, B2, B3. Scale in mm.

Calculus is present on the anterior dentition of all individuals, presenting with annular distribution around the crown and highest thickness on the lingual aspect of the anterior dentition (Fig 12). All individuals exhibit severe periodontal disease and antemortem tooth loss; alveolar resorption in complete in all individuals except Individual B, who retains the apical aspects of alveoli for both upper and lower anterior dentition. Linear enamel hypoplasias show seriation and vary in severity across individuals (Figs 11 and 12). Enamel hypoplasias are located in the three- to four-year age range of crown formation [111], which may be associated with weaning, lack of adequate nutrition, immunological assaults, or any combination of these variables [9, 112114]. Individual A presents the longest disruption (~0.8mm width measured on upper and lower incisor crowns) relative to the other individuals, who show narrower hypoplasias. The older individuals B and B3 have thick black residue on the lingual and buccal aspects of anterior teeth, suggesting occupational exposure to metals and/or tobacco staining (Fig 11, see below).

Fig. 12.

YNH4 dental pathologies.

<h2>YNH4 dental pathologies.</h2>

Top: dental calculus accretion on YN4 A anterior mandibular dentition. Bottom: serial linear enamel hypoplasias across YNH4 A maxillary incisors and premolars. See text for details.

Multiple indicators of chronic infection and other health issues are present across individuals. Individual B’s skeleton presents with marked osteomalacia (Fig 13) and hyperostosis frontalis interna (Fig 14), indicating menopause or chronic estrogen deficiency [115, 116]. Individual B3 has the most severe and chronic health issues—multiple ribs show remodeling and periosteal new bone medially (Fig 15). Hand and foot elements and joints show indicators of gout/pseudogout (Fig 15) [117120]. The distal aspects of the left tibia and fibula show severe osteomyelitis and active bone remodeling (Fig 15).

Fig. 13.

Comparison of YNH4 B (left) and B2 (right) lower limb radiographs.

<h2>Comparison of YNH4 B (left) and B2 (right) lower limb radiographs.</h2>

Note relatively higher translucence and lower bone density in B relative to B3. See text for details.

Fig. 14.

YNH4 B frontal external (left) and internal (right) surfaces, the latter showing evidence of hyperostosis frontalis interna.

<h2>YNH4 B frontal external (left) and internal (right) surfaces, the latter showing evidence of hyperostosis frontalis interna.</h2>
Fig. 15.

YNH4 B3 pathology markers.

<h2>YNH4 B3 pathology markers.</h2>

a) bilateral distal radii eburnation, b) gout indicators in the pedal and manual rays compared to normal ray (bottom), c) callous bone formation at rib fracture (arrow), d) remodeling of rib surfaces, e) left mandibular corpus antemortem fracture, f) fused C2-4 vertebrae, g) = distal tibia remodeling. Bar scale = 5mm.

Each male exhibits antemortem and perimortem trauma indicators respectively. Individual B3 has multiple antemortem trauma markers, including fused cervical vertebrae and proximally fractured ribs with marked callus bone formation (Fig 15). B3 also has a healed depressed cranial fracture (~3.0mm in diameter) and a healed fracture of the left mandibular corpus (Fig 15). Individual B2 shows perimortem injuries at neck, with fractures at both hyoid greater cornu, fracture of the C1 posterior neural arch, shearing of the C2 dens and torsion/compressive damage to the C3-C4 right superior and inferior articular facets (Fig 16). The pattern of damage appears consistent with hyperextension or torqueing of the neck, with fracturing of the C1 posterior arch and compression of the right C2-C4 articular facets.

Fig. 16.

Indicators of perimortem trauma to the cervical vertebrae of YNH4 B2.

<h2>Indicators of perimortem trauma to the cervical vertebrae of YNH4 B2.</h2>

Top left: overview of affected. Remaining images are detailed images of fracture patterns. See text for details.

In toto, all four individuals show shared cultural ecology and labor requirements, with chronic health issues inscribed on bones and teeth reflecting lower socioeconomic status and associated amplification of metabolic stressors.

Genetic indicators of relatedness, phenotype and ancestry

Genetic data were preserved for all four individuals recovered, but nuclear data were not recovered from individual B2. Genetic data support osteological sex determination for the other individuals.

Individuals A, B and B3 do not show direct kinship, but the degree of autosomal similarity suggest that they are closely related at the population level, suggesting regional/local association (i.e. similar town/village origin). Individuals B and B3 show the strongest genetic similarity within the three individuals (Table 2). Hair and eye color are consistent with European ancestry. Individual B most likely had blue eyes, while individual B3 had brown eyes. Individual A eye color is intermediate between the latter two. Individuals A and B likely had dark (but not black) hair, while B3 had dark blond hair (Table 2).

Tab. 2.

YNH4 genotype and phenotype characteristics.

<h2>YNH4 genotype and phenotype characteristics.</h2>

Mitochondrial sequence data of the Hyper Variable Region I and II were used to determine the specific mitochondrial haplotypes. Individuals B2 and B3 belong to haplotypes T and H (Table 2), commonly found in European populations and North American individuals of European ancestry [121]. Individuals A & B belong to mitochondrial haplogroup J2B1a, which is relatively rare in modern Central Europe. This haplotype is most common in Southern/South-Eastern Europe and the Levant, and less common in Ireland [122, 123].

Overall, the autosomal STR allele profiles are most consistent with populations from Eastern and South-Eastern Europe, specifically Poland and Romania [124127]. We were able to determine the Y chromosomal haplotype for individual B3. The nine STR minimal haplotype is most closely associated with males from Southern Italy, Romania and the United Kingdom [86]. In all cases, no allelic markers were consistent with population genetics reported from Ireland.

Chemical indicators of occupation, diet and geographic origin

Multiple individuals show thick black residue on the labial aspect of their anterior dentition (Fig 17). Elemental analysis via Bruker xPRF indicates relatively high concentrations of manganese, iron and yttrium, indicating occupational exposure (i.e., using mouth to hold/manipulate metal objects), tobacco secondary compounds (tooth staining/residue from constant pipe smoking) and/or postmortem precipitation of Fe-Mn oxyhydroxides. Direct evidence for marked diagenetic change is indicated by high concentrations of rare earth elements (REE) in the bone samples, limiting bone assessment of adult-aged residency/mobility via elemental analysis and/or Sr and Pb isotopes (Table 3, Fig 18). As tooth enamel is more resistant to diagenesis, all YNH4 enamel samples show low REE concentrations (Fig 18). While Individual B’s enamel shows slight elevation of Vanadium (V), Lanthanum (La), and Neodymium (Nd) concentrations above Maximum Threshold Concentrations (0.11, 0.1, and 0.058 respectively) the Sr-Pb-O-C isotope values are within the range expected for in vivo recovery [128]. For all YNH4 individuals, we focus analysis on tooth enamel isotopes to reconstruct diet and childhood place of residence.

Tab. 3.

Trace element data (ppm) for YNH4 tooth enamel and bone samples.

<h2>Trace element data (ppm) for YNH4 tooth enamel and bone samples.</h2>
Fig. 17.

YNH4 tooth staining.

<h2>YNH4 tooth staining.</h2>

Top left, center: staining and residue on YNH4 B3 RP3-4. Top right: close up of RP4. Bottom: Bruker pXRF analysis. See text for details.

Fig. 18.

Normalized REE data for tooth enamel (BCL1-BCL4) and bone (BCL8-BCL19).

<h2>Normalized REE data for tooth enamel (BCL1-BCL4) and bone (BCL8-BCL19).</h2>

Abbreviations in Table 3. Note the highly elevated REE in bone compared to enamel, indicating postmortem diagenetic change in all of the bone samples.

The YNH4 average carbon isotope value (δ13C) is -15‰, indicating a C3-based terrestrial diet for all four individuals (Fig 19). This is consistent with historical evidence for European-based diets and suggests minimal consumption of C4-based food products (i.e., millet, corn, sugar cane) during childhood [68].

Fig. 19.

YNH4 tooth oxygen and carbon isotope values, and published geographic ranges.

<h2>YNH4 tooth oxygen and carbon isotope values, and published geographic ranges.</h2>

Sr concentration in the four individuals assayed range from 31 to 84 ppm, which is on the low end of Sr concentrations measured in modern and archaeological human enamel [128]. Measured Sr isotope ratios in the enamel (87Sr/86Sr = 0.70888 to 0.71158; Table 4) fall within the possible Sr isotope range for archaeological tooth enamel in Britain [129]. However, this Sr isotope range is not unique to Britain—Sr isotope ratios in human enamel from individuals born during the 20th century show considerable overlap between Europe and the United States, limiting the value of strontium for distinguishing geographic origin in this case [130].

Tab. 4.

YNH4 tooth enamel isotopic data.

<h2>YNH4 tooth enamel isotopic data.</h2>

In contrast to Sr isotopes, Pb isotopes provide greater discrimination of European versus United States origin [131]. Enamel samples from all four individuals show elevated Pb levels indicating historic anthropogenic exposure [128]. Tooth enamel Pb ratios for all YNH4 individuals except individual B2 plot within the historical European Pb isotope space (Fig 20, Table 4), indicating childhood residence and development outside of the USA. The Pb isotope signal for Individual B2 associates closely with 19th century individuals buried in Colorado, USA, but note that those individuals are likely recent European immigrants themselves [132]. Overall, Individual B2’s LM2 lead profile indicates a different immigration and/or residency history than the other three YNH4 individuals, or this individual may have been exposed to a lead source that is distinct from the available published anthropogenic lead values.

Fig. 20.

Lead isotope comparison between YNH4 individuals and average historical Europe and 19th century USA lead patterns.

<h2>Lead isotope comparison between YNH4 individuals and average historical Europe and 19th century USA lead patterns.</h2>

Note that all samples with exception of B2 plot within the average Europe field, consistent with inferred European origin of these individuals. B2 plots outside the European field. See text for details. Figure modified from Kamenov and Gulson [131].

Oxygen isotope data of the YNH4 sample are presented in Fig 19. New England human tooth δ18O values range between -7‰ to -6.4‰, with a single sample from Connecticut having a value of -6.74‰ [133]. In contrast, all of the YNH4 individuals present with more enriched δ18O values, ranging from -2.8 to -5.1 (Table 4), indicating a different developmental history relative to New Englanders. These values also fall outside those reported for Great Britain (-5.3 to -7.1) [134]. Individual B2 enamel δ18O value (-5.1%) is consistent with data reported from Cumbria (-5.3), a site close to Dublin[134]. However, this δ18O value for tooth enamel falls within the range of other European countries as well [29, 130]. While genetic data suggest Polish or Romanian origins for Individuals A, B, and B3, δ18O values are inconsistent with those recorded for this region. Polish data values (n = 2) are -6.6‰ and -6.9‰ respectively [29], and modern Bulgarians (immediately south of Romania) have δ18O values around -6‰ [130]. Individuals A, B and B3 exhibit enamel with higher δ18O values (Table 4) that are more consistent with southern European/Italian residence during molar tooth development. It is possible that the individuals are of Southeastern/Southern European descent and subsequently moved and grew up somewhere at or near the Mediterranean coast.

Dental calculus indicators

Analysis of the amplified 16S rRNA gene V3 sequences confirms preservation of oral microbiome DNA in the YNH4 dental calculus samples (S6 Table). The majority (~60–90%) of taxonomically assigned sequences belong to genera known to be present in the human oral cavity [135, 136]. All four samples also exhibit higher than expected frequencies of the oral archaeon Methanobrevibacter and members of the candidate phylum Sachharibacterium (TM7), a known analytical artifact that has been previously reported for ancient oral microbiome samples that contain low levels of exogenous contamination but highly fragmented DNA [92]. The genera Porphyromonas, Treponema, and Tannerella, which contain members associated with periodontal disease, were each found at low abundance (0.01–0.8%) in three of the four individuals (A, B, B2), while only the latter two genera were observed in the dental calculus of individual B3 (S6 Table).

Because it has been previously shown that Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection can be identified by genetic analysis of dental plaque [137], we analyzed the dental calculus (calcified dental plaque) of the four YNH4 individuals for genetic sequences specific to this organism. Mycobacterium sequences were present in the dental calculus of three of the four individuals (A, B, and B3), but at very low levels (0.01% to 0.08%) (S6 Table). Further analysis revealed that these Mycobacterium sequences are inconsistent with Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex strains, and likely originate from common soil mycobacteria. These results therefore do not support a diagnosis of tuberculosis, but they also cannot exclude the possibility that these individuals were infected with tuberculosis.

Discussion

Following discovery, our initial assumptions about the Christ Church cemetery suggested that it contained the remains of Irish and Irish-American parishioners. Macromorphoscopic analyses of the YNH4 skeletons provided concordant data, and the presence of a single rosary component connects these individuals to available historic records. Their location (stacked near the edge of the cemetery fence line) suggest that they were interred at a time when space was a premium, during a period of epidemic and multiple interments, or due to other cultural factors. As craniometric data alone cannot distinguish related populations [138, 139], a narrow bioarchaeological investigation would have misidentified these individuals as Irish immigrants. Multidisciplinary analyses upended these initial assumptions. While European individual and population-level variation and gene flow do not support assortative mating [140, 141] (but see Domingue et al. [142] for USA characteristics), genetic and isotopic data indicate that three of the YNH4 individuals are not from Ireland or any other part of the United Kingdom, while one has a more ambiguous history.

The early to mid-19th century was a period of political unrest and upheaval, economic disparity and epidemics across multiple European nations [143146]. As the immigrant diaspora into the United States and Connecticut intensified in scale and scope [147, 148], political, social and economic biases led to immigrants crowding into urban tenements or slums [149151]. Like most New England cities, New Haven area immigrants mostly worked as laborers, working on laying the Farmington Canal, shipbuilding and working in garment factories [152154].

All four skeletons show indicators of musculoskeletal, infectious disease and addictive substance (i.e., tobacco) stressors [155]. While debate persists on the roles of senescence, etiology and coding standards on entheseal pathologies [156158], male individuals B2 and B3 show rugosity and arthritic changes likely associated with manual labor [11, 159161]. While the skeletons of the two women are incomplete, we posit that the elements present indicate gendered labor biomarkers [162, 163]. Individual A shows enthesopathies and muscle insertion rugosity in the upper body. Individual B shows skeletal markers of reduced estradiols and associated osteomalacia, and tendon ossification and inflammation indicators are present at the knee joint [164]. We suggest that both of these women may have been employed in the garment industry or some other repetitive labor regime. During this time period, garment work was/is largely performed by immigrant women [153, 165]. The combination of a long workday (especially in the 19th century), prolonged postural strain and repetitive work generate multiple joint stressors including neck, back and knee strain, leading to musculoskeletal pathologies [166168].

Skeletal markers of chronic infection (ribs and lower limb) are preserved in individual B3 and dental disease/enamel hypoplastic indicators are present across all dental samples. These data further support the hypothesis that these individuals faced metabolic and immunological stresses throughout development and adulthood. Infectious disease epidemics and high mortality are clear in the Christ Church burial records, with typhus and dysentery deaths showing temporal pulses likely associated with seasonality and crowded living conditions (S1 Table). While tuberculosis (labeled “Phthisis”) was among the most common causes of death for the Christ Church parishioners, multiple studies describe variation in expression of tuberculosis infection across genetic and skeletal samples [44, 169, 170]. Our study is concordant with these prior studies—while skeletal markers such as rib lesions and osteomyelitic changes are present, M. tuberculosis was not recovered in dental calculus (S6 Table). The lack of molecular evidence does not falsify the possibility of tubercular infection, but this case reiterates the difficulty of connecting epidemiological and bioarchaeological data [171].

New Haven’s “The Hill” neighborhood, Christ Church Cemetery demographics and ethnoreligious plasticity for early 19th century New Haven immigrants

Northeastern USA cities are well-known for overcrowding lower-income immigrants into slums and tenements [172]. Crowded housing and low resource quality/availability, combined with poor hygiene and lack of adequate medical care led to widespread infectious disease and death within poor urban neighborhoods [173179]. Within 19th century New Haven, the neighborhood surrounding Christ Church was known as “The Hill”–it was (and continues to be) an epicenter for recent immigrant settlement [180186]. New Haven residents’ life expectancy in the 1830s (46 years) was lower than for rural town residents (51 years), but longer than those in larger cities such as New York (35.9 years) [179, 187]. For many urban 19th century churches, cemetery size and plot availability led to chaotic burial distribution—stacking of burials in urban cemeteries is commonly reported [188192].

Demographic data for the Christ Church cemetery show that infectious disease was the most commonly recorded cause of death. Observed sex variation in infectious disease mortality, reproductive biology and potentially lethal/addictive behaviors are consistent with available data on human life history data [193, 194]. The Christ Church cemetery’s demographic pattern is largely consistent with 19th century morbity and mortality data associated with infectious disease prevalence [195], urban living [155, 174, 176], childbirth complications [196199] and the epidemiological transition during industrialization of the United States [179, 200202]. The skeletal characteristics of the four Christ Church burials and the church’s demographic profile are concordant with other bioarchaeological investigations of structural violence [17, 19]. Skeletons representing the remains of marginalized populations due to ethnicity, migration, gender or other factors show similar patterns of dental pathologies, lesions, trauma and occupational health issues[42, 43, 57, 203207]. We posit that socioeconomic, religious and geographic (i.e., the Hill neighborhood) inequalities are implicated in the condition of the four individuals as people and for the Christ Church community as a whole [208210]. Compiling and examining individual, local and regional mortuary data sources associated with skeletal remains reiterates the value of multidisciplinary efforts and illuminates the intersection of structural violence, health, mortality and bioarchaeology [57, 211214].

The Christ Church cemetery records indicate severe infant/child mortality and lower life expectancy across all age classes (Fig 4a and 4b). These data are most consistent with New York City’s Marble Cemetery, which housed city dwellers facing marked socioeconomic stratification and infectious disease risk (post-1838, wealthy New Yorkers sought interment elsewhere) [215]. Christ Church cemetery demography also mimics data for an 18th century New Orleans slave cemetery, a population suffering from severe structural violence [99]. We offer two possible explanations for this pattern—the Christ Church parishioners faced similar pressures as these populations, including syndemic infectious disease risk and structural violence pressures [216, 217]. Alternatively, the observed mortality pattern and lower life expectancy are artificial, reflecting the opening of St. Bernard’s cemetery in 1854 –the older Christ Church parishioners would have been interred there and thus generating the lower survivorship curve of the Christ Church burials. Further review of burial records across the city and state may provide further support or falsification of these hypotheses.

The Christ Church burials are characterized by a relatively homogeneous population, namely individuals of Irish descent and/or Gaelic/Anglicized names (S1 Table). Genetic and isotopic data falsify the hypothesis that three YNH4 individuals (A, B and B3) are of Irish or Irish-American ancestry. Available genetic and isotopic indicators suggest that these individuals were adult (not child) immigrants to the United States/New Haven, and they share southern or southeastern European origin and/or descent. As described above, immigrants were critical in the developing American industrial complex, but immigrants from this region are underrepresented in United States census records during the 1830–1850 period.

The Prussian and Austrian Empires encompassed German, Polish and southeastern European territories (including the Mediterranean coast), but the early to mid 19th century was a period of marked unrest and sociopolitical upheaval [218222]. Multiple reports of Polish/Slavic emigration across Europe and the Americas note the relatively unique cohesion of culture, language and community held by these emigrants [223227]. Efforts to connect census data to the YNH4 skeletons were largely unsuccessful, as records for the city of New Haven provide limited data on ethnicity. Between 1830 and 1850, the number of Irish immigrants increased from less than a dozen to 3,533 families [228, 229]. At the same time, other ethnicities were present, but represented a small fraction of the population [230]. Available records of Prussian/Polish/German/Italian immigrants within New Haven indicate that most were skilled laborers or tradespeople [231235]. Three households (Abraham Cohan, Henry Myers, and “Mr. Sobieski”) are recorded as being from Poland in the 1850 New Haven census, but their recorded ages (26, 26 and 30, respectively) are too young when compared to the YNH4 skeletal age estimates, and are excluded as potential matches. The 1850 Waterbury Census lists multiple individuals with anglicized surnames with “Poland” as the state of origin [228] but we cannot confirm accuracy versus census-taker recording/transcription errors (Fig 21). The Italian community was even smaller at this time—there is a single notation of a marriage between two Italians (“Geremia Gaudofo & Maria Gaheano”) on 12 April 1830 (at the first Baptist Church of New Haven) [236]. New Haven’s 1850 census data records four households with “Italy” as the country of origin—two have Anglicized surnames (Franklin & Roberts) and the other two are single men (Passani and Zephyr) [228]. Only 180 people are listed as Italian in the New Haven 1882 census [233]. There were no results for historic nations/principalities (i.e., Sardinia, Monaco, Lucca, etc.) or southeastern Europe states such as Romania or Bulgaria. While we cannot confidently associate the YNH4 with any specific ethnic group, our results are concordant with the historical record of non-Irish immigrants within New Haven at this relatively early period of American immigration.

Fig. 21.

1850 New Haven Census and Country of Origin.

<h2>1850 New Haven Census and Country of Origin.</h2>

Page indicating that a series of individuals are from “Poland”; surnames are consistent with Anglo-Saxon and/or Irish etymology. See text for details.

As noted above, urban 19th century immigrant life was difficult [177, 237] and Irish immigrants crowded into urban New Haven, taking advantage of economic opportunities [153] regardless of physical and emotional cost. At the same time, other non-Irish immigrants spread across New Haven County to find employment at the mills and factories populating the Naugatuck River. There, hydraulic power was used for metallurgy, fabric and rubber production [232, 238242].

An important source for respite and solace was the Catholic Church [243245]. American Roman Catholicism has a complex history [246249] and immigrant churches struggled with limited community support and financial resources given their low socioeconomic status [103, 250, 251]. Procuring real estate and building materials was difficult, leading to very small plots of land and inexpensive buildings to accommodate rapidly growing congregations [243, 245, 246]–as evidenced by New Haven’s Christ Church [103]. Religion was an important component of 19th century identity, but not for the Irish alone—more than 90% of the Polish national population was Catholic in the 1800s [252, 253] and Italy is historically a Catholic nation [254]. While social, cultural and linguistic factors distinguish the Irish/Prussian/Italian/Slavic immigrant experiences, shared Catholic faith and the few available churches led to religious identity superseding ethnicity [103, 251, 255260]. Within New Haven, we suggest that individual/family socio-structural identity was similarly transformed—state- or ethnocentric identity was reduced in value/significance in favor of faith-based and communal Catholic identity [244, 245]. Such dueling (and associated) social identities have been described in other American populations [261268]. As New Haven’s immigrant Catholic population grew, ethnicity resurfaced as a social identifier and solidified ethnolinguistic distinction between parishes (i.e., the “German” church of St. Boniface versus the “Italian” church of St. Michael) [103, 269].

While small Catholic churches spread across New Haven County in the mid 19th century, all lacked an important component—a cemetery. From its consecration, New Haven’s Christ Church was the only cemetery for Catholics in the region, including outlying areas. Available burial records note interments of Derby, Waterbury, and Meridan residents (S1 Table). In 1854, a funeral procession moving down the Farmington Canal for interment in New Haven was described:

[Catholic] funerals [in Waterbury] were always largely attended, the entire Catholic community accompanying the remains to the cemetery at New Haven. The last funeral to go to New Haven was that of Captain Bannon…

(O’Donnell 1900: 383)

The Waterbury American of September 8, 1854, contained this editorial note:

"An Irish funeral procession which passed our office on Saturday [September 2] was the largest we have ever seen in this city. It numbered twenty-four carriages and 304 persons on foot, 128 of whom were females…"

(Anderson et al. 1896: 732)

Within the New Haven Vital Statistics records, Catholic burials with Irish surnames are most common. However, these records do not account for all interments from outlying towns and villages, such as those along the Naugatuck River. We propose that YNH4 individuals A, B and B3 represent Catholic immigrants of southeastern/southern Europe origin, likely residing in an industrial town near the city of New Haven. Upon their deaths, they were brought to Christ Church for funerary rights and interment. Their burial along the fence line may represent geographic distinction within the Christ Church cemetery (i.e., Waterbury or Derby parishioners versus New Haven proper). Their non-Irish genetic identity, geochemical signatures, and musculoskeletal stress markers are consistent with this identification as adult, working class immigrants working in the industrialized New Haven region.

YNH4 Individual B2: Named individual identification?

Individual B2 is a middle-aged male, and while few genetic data were recovered, isotopic enamel biomarkers suggest a different origin and/or residence during second molar crown formation than the other YNH4 individuals. Postcranial elements exhibit manual labor indicators, but this individual is largely free of chronic illness biomarkers. However, perimortem trauma indicators are present for neck skeletal elements (Fig 16). The Christ Church burial records list 17 individuals where trauma is indicated as a cause of death; five are middle-aged/mature adult males (S1 Table). Specific details are not provided except for three cases: two with spinal fractures (J. Flood, aged 32, died 30 June 1842; J. Fagan, aged 36, died 07 June 1848) and one executed via judicial hanging (J. McCaffrey, aged 34, died 02 October 1850).

James McCaffrey was an Irish immigrant. Born in 1813 at Templeough, he left sometime around the age of seventeen for the United States. On arrival, he traveled as an itinerant laborer, visiting Quebec and working on steamers up and down the Mississippi to New Orleans and back. He spent time in upstate New York and Connecticut before coming to New Haven in 1847 [270]. While in New Haven in October 1849, he reportedly visited a couple (Ann and Charles Smith) who owned an inn and a bowling alley at the top of East Rock, a trap rock ridge overlooking the city. Shortly after his visit, the Smiths were found dead, shot and bludgeoned to death respectively. McCaffrey was named as the prime suspect based on material evidence (matching of a lead shot ball recovered from one murder victim to casting equipment that McCaffrey left behind) [271, 272]. McCaffrey had fled to Canada, but he was captured and tried for the murder of Ann Smith. The jury found him guilty, and he (and another convicted murderer) were executed behind the New Haven courthouse on October 2, 1850 [273]. Both were hung with knots set behind their respective left ears [272]. While there was a six-foot drop, both men remained alive, with McCaffrey’s heart beating until nine minutes after the drop. Post-execution, it was determined that McCaffrey suffered a broken neck. McCaffrey was placed into a "white wood [pine]" box, and taken to Christ Church and buried there that same day [272]. He was recorded as 37 years old at death.

We were unable to amplify nuclear DNA from Individual B2. Available genetic and craniometric data are consistent with European/Euro-American ancestry. The isotopic data indicate second molar crown development in a region consistent with USA and/or Northern Europe soils, based on the observed δ18O and Pb isotopes in the enamel (Table 4, Fig 20). The cervical injuries observed for YNH4 Individual B2 (Fig 16) are consistent with judicial hanging. While the classic “Hangman’s fracture” is not present, there is marked variation in the expression and frequencies of cervical fractures, even in explicitly judicial contexts [274287]–factors such as knot placement, drop length and body mass play a role in vertebral damage presence and characteristics. As McCaffrey’s execution was performed under the standards and practices of the time [288, 289], we suggest that the observed damage to the hyoid and cervical vertebrae are consistent with [but not conclusive for] judicial hanging agency. Other Christ Church males have unspecified trauma as cause of death, making further elimination difficult. Given the available data, we provisionally identify Individual B2 as James McCaffrey of Templeough, Ireland.

Conclusion

Evidence of structural violence, epidemiology, occupational stress, socioeconomic status and judicial action have been described for skeletal elements recovered from historic contexts [15, 17, 47, 204, 212, 213, 284, 290292]. The YNH4 provides additional data for this record, using osteological, molecular, geochemical and archival variables to illuminate of immigrant origin, life history and social identity. Without such multidisciplinary methods, the YNH4 would likely have been identified as Irish immigrants in an early Catholic cemetery. In contrast, we report here on the remarkable diversity and complexity of the immigrant experience, describing biological markers of ancestry, indicators of mobility and stress, socioeconomic factors and the flexibility of ethnic and religious identities. Such examples of cultural embodiment over biological identity are critical for interpretation of historical, cultural and biological variables [1, 250, 293300].

The title’s phrase “The Dead Shall Be Raised” (Corinthians 1: 15.52) is inscribed across the main gate of Grove Cemetery of New Haven CT, which was constructed in 1845. This passage connects an edifice built during the YNH4’s lives and deaths to our multidisciplinary efforts to illuminate their individual lives and see them as part of New Haven and New England’s immigrant history and identity. Our collaborative approach enhances the available narrative of Catholic immigrant history for this 19th century industrial city and its neighbors. We have also provided a provisional identification of a known individual based on multiple lines of evidence. We strongly recommend this multidisciplinary approach for all cases where skeletal remains are recovered, given the complex interaction of human biology, social structure, and individual/communal identity.

Supporting information

S1 Table [pdf]
Chronological data on burials (1834–1851) at Christ's Church & St. John's the Evangelist Churches of New Haven, Connecticut.

S2 Table [pdf]
YNH4 osteometric data.

S3 Table [pdf]
YNH4 nonmetric osteology data.

S4 Table [pdf]
YNH4 FORDISC craniometric analyses results.

S5 Table [pdf]
YNH4 postcranial entheses remodeling scores.

S6 Table [pdf]
YNH4 dental calculus results.


Zdroje

1. Stojanowski CM, Buikstra JE. Research trends in human osteology: a content analysis of papers published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2005;128(1):98–109. Epub 2005/02/17. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20088 15714525.

2. Roberts CA, Manchester K. The Archaeology of Disease. Stroud: The History Press; 2007. 352 p.

3. Larsen CS. Bioarchaeology: interpreting behavior from the human skeleton. Mascie-Taylor CGN, Foley RA, editors. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2015. 654 p.

4. Jurmain R. Stories from the Skeleton: Behavioral Reconstruction in Human Osteology. New York: Taylor and Francis; 1999. 344 p.

5. Brotherton PS, Nguyen VK. Revisiting local biology in the era of global health. Med Anthropol. 2013;32(4):287–90. Epub 2013/06/19. doi: 10.1080/01459740.2013.791290 23768215.

6. İşcan MY, Kennedy KAR, editors. Reconstruction of Life from the Skeleton. New York: Wiley Liss; 1989.

7. Temple DH, Goodman AH. Bioarcheology has a "health" problem: conceptualizing "stress" and "health" in bioarcheological research. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2014;155(2):186–91. Epub 2014/08/20. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22602 25137442.

8. Agarwal SC. Bone morphologies and histories: Life course approaches in bioarchaeology. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2016;159(Suppl 61):S130–49. Epub 2016/01/26. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22905 26808102.

9. King T, Humphrey LT, Hillson S. Linear enamel hypoplasias as indicators of systemic physiological stress: Evidence from two known age-at-death and sex populations from postmedieval London. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2005;128(3):547–59. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20232 15861429

10. Roksandic M, Armstrong SD. Using the life history model to set the stage(s) of growth and senescence in bioarchaeology and paleodemography. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2011;145(3):337–47. Epub 2011/04/07. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21508 21469078.

11. Molleson T. A method for the study of activity related skeletal morphologies. Bioarchaeology of the Near East. 2007;1(1):5–33.

12. Smith BH. Life history and the evolution of human maturation. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 2005;1(4):134–42. doi: 10.1002/evan.1360010406

13. Grauer AL, editor. A Companion to Paleopathology. New York: John Wiley & Sons.; 2011.

14. Ortner DJ, Putschar WG. Identification of Pathological Conditions in Human Skeletal Remains. New York: Academic Press; 2003.

15. Klaus HD. Frontiers in the bioarchaeology of stress and disease: Cross-disciplinary perspectives from pathophysiology, human biology, and epidemiology. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2014;155(2):294–308. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22574 25082158

16. Walsh MC, Kim N, Kadono Y, Rho J, Lee SY, Lorenzo J, et al. Osteoimmunology: interplay between the immune system and bone metabolism. Annu Rev Immunol. 2006;24(1):33–63. Epub 2006/03/23. doi: 10.1146/annurev.immunol.24.021605.090646 16551243.

17. Klaus HD. The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence: A Theoretical Model and a Case Study. The Bioarchaeology of Violence: University Press of Florida; 2012. p. 29–62.

18. Kimmerle E, Pablo Baraybar J. Skeletal Trauma: Identification of Injuries Resulting from Human Rights Abuse and Armed Conflict. Boca Raton: CRC Press; 2008 2008/02/19. 520 p.

19. Martin DL, Harrod RP. Bioarchaeological contributions to the study of violence. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2015;156 Suppl 59:116–45. Epub 2014/11/20. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22662 25407549.

20. Katzenberg MA. Stable Isotope Analysis: A Tool for Studying Past Diet, Demography, and Life History. In: Katzenberg MA, Saunders SR, editors. Biological Anthropology of the Human Skeleton: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; 2008. p. 411–41.

21. Sealy J, Armstrong R, Schrire C. Beyond lifetime averages: tracing life histories through isotopic analysis of different calcified tissues from archaeological human skeletons. Antiquity. 2015;69(263):290–300. doi: 10.1017/s0003598x00064693

22. Bilge Y, Kedici PS, Alakoc YD, Ulkuer KU, Ilkyaz YY. The identification of a dismembered human body: a multidisciplinary approach. Forensic Sci Int. 2003;137(2–3):141–6. Epub 2003/11/12. doi: 10.1016/s0379-0738(03)00334-7 14609649.

23. Haak W, Brandt G, de Jong HN, Meyer C, Ganslmeier R, Heyd V, et al. Ancient DNA, Strontium isotopes, and osteological analyses shed light on social and kinship organization of the Later Stone Age. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008;105(47):18226–31. Epub 2008/11/19. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0807592105 19015520

24. Haak W, Lazaridis I, Patterson N, Rohland N, Mallick S, Llamas B, et al. Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe. Nature. 2015;522(7555):207–11. Epub 2015/03/04. doi: 10.1038/nature14317 25731166

25. Leach S, Lewis M, Chenery C, Muldner G, Eckardt H. Migration and diversity in Roman Britain: a multidisciplinary approach to the identification of immigrants in Roman York, England. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2009;140(3):546–61. Epub 2009/06/17. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21104 19530143.

26. Warinner C, Speller C, Collins MJ. A new era in palaeomicrobiology: prospects for ancient dental calculus as a long-term record of the human oral microbiome. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015;370(1660):20130376. Epub 2014/12/10. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2013.0376 25487328

27. Kamenov GD, Kimmerle EH, Curtis JH, Norris D. Georeferencing a Cold Case Victim with Lead, Strontium, Carbon, and Oxygen Isotopes. Annals of Anthropological Practice. 2014;38(1):137–54. doi: 10.1111/napa.12048

28. Speller CF, Spalding KL, Buchholz BA, Hildebrand D, Moore J, Mathewes R, et al. Personal identification of cold case remains through combined contribution from anthropological, mtDNA, and bomb-pulse dating analyses. J Forensic Sci. 2012;57(5):1354–60. Epub 2012/07/19. doi: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2012.02223.x 22804335

29. Font L, van der Peijl G, van Leuwen C, van Wetten I, Davies GR. Identification of the geographical place of origin of an unidentified individual by multi-isotope analysis. Sci Justice. 2015;55(1):34–42. Epub 2015/01/13. doi: 10.1016/j.scijus.2014.06.011 25577005.

30. Pate D. Geographic Origin and Mobility Recorded in the Chemical Composition of Human Tissues. In: Oxenham M, editor. Forensic Approaches to Death, Disaster and Abuse. Bowen Hills: Australian Academic Press; 2008. p. 177–88.

31. Watkins JK, Blatt SH, Bradbury CA, Alanko GA, Kohn MJ, Lytle ML, et al. Determining the population affinity of an unprovenienced human skull for repatriation. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 2017;12:384–94. doi: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2017.02.006

32. Farmer P. Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2003.

33. Galtung J. Violence, peace, and peace research. Journal of Peace Research. 1969;6(3):167–91.

34. Kleinman A, Das V, Lock MM, editors. Social Suffering. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1997.

35. McLean KE, Panter-Brick C. Violence, structural and interpersonal. In: Callan H, editor. International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. New York: Wiley Blackwell; In Press.

36. House JS, Lepkowski JM, Kinney AM, Mero RP, Kessler RC, Herzog AR. The social stratification of aging and health. J Health Soc Behav. 1994;35(3):213–34. Epub 1994/09/01. doi: 10.2307/2137277 7983335.

37. Cohen MN. The emergence of health and social inequalities in the archaeological record. In: Strickland SS, Shetty PS, editors. Human Biology and Social Inequality. Society for the Study of Human Biology. 39. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998. p. 249–71.

38. Özener B, Fink B. Facial symmetry in young girls and boys from a slum and a control area of Ankara, Turkey. Evolution and Human Behavior. 2010;31(6):436–41. doi: 10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2010.06.003

39. Buzon MR, Walker PL, Verhagen FD, Kerr SL. Health and Disease in Nineteenth-Century San Francisco: Skeletal Evidence from a Forgotten Cemetery. Historical Archaeology. 2016;39(2):1–15. doi: 10.1007/bf03376683

40. De La Cova C. Race, health, and disease in 19th-century-born males. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2011;144(4):526–37. Epub 2011/03/16. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21434 21404230.

41. De La Cova C. Cultural Patterns of Trauma among 19th-Century-Born Males in Cadaver Collections. American Anthropologist. 2010;112(4):589–606. doi: 10.1111/j.1548-1433.2010.01278.x 21132946

42. Harrod RP, Crandall JJ. Rails Built of the Ancestors’ Bones: The Bioarchaeology of the Overseas Chinese Experience. Historical Archaeology. 2016;49(1):148–61. doi: 10.1007/bf03376965

43. Harrod RP, Thompson JL, Martin DL. Hard Labor and Hostile Encounters: What Human Remains Reveal about Institutional Violence and Chinese Immigrants Living in Carlin, Nevada (1885–1923). Historical Archaeology. 2016;46(4):85–111. doi: 10.1007/bf03376880

44. Roberts CA, Buikstra JE. The Bioarchaeology of Tuberculosis: A Global View on a Reemerging Disease. Gainesville: University Press of Florida; 2008. 368 p.

45. Brickley M, Ives R. The Study of Metabolic Bone Disease in Bioarchaeology. The Bioarchaeology of Metabolic Bone Disease: Elsevier; 2008. p. 7–20.

46. Ortner DJ. Differential Diagnosis and Issues in Disease Classification. A Companion to Paleopathology: Wiley-Blackwell; 2012. p. 250–67.

47. Buikstra JE. Out of the appendix and into the dirt: comments on thirteen years of bioarchaeological research. In: Powell ML, Bridges PS, Mires AMW, editors. What Mean These Bones? Studies in Southeastern Bioarchaeology. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press; 1991. p. 172–88.

48. Buikstra JE, Beck LA, editors. Bioarchaeology: the Contextual Analysis of Human Remains. New York: Routledge; 2009.

49. Klein JC. Interdisciplinarity: History, Theory and Practice. Detroit: Wayne University Press; 1990. 331 p.

50. Farmer P. An Anthropology of Structural Violence. Current Anthropology. 2004;45(3):305–25. doi: 10.1086/382250

51. Goodman AH. On the Interpretation of Health From Skeletal Remains. Current Anthropology. 1993;34(3):281–8. doi: 10.1086/204170

52. Lustick IS. History, Historiography, and Political Science: Multiple Historical Records and the Problem of Selection Bias. American Political Science Review. 2014;90(03):605–18. doi: 10.2307/2082612

53. Wood JW, Milner GR, Harpending HC, Weiss KM, Cohen MN, Eisenberg LE, et al. The Osteological Paradox: Problems of Inferring Prehistoric Health from Skeletal Samples [and Comments and Reply]. Current Anthropology. 1992;33(4):343–70. doi: 10.1086/204084

54. Weston DA. Nonspecific Infection in Paleopathology: Interpreting Periosteal Reactions. In: Grauer AL, editor. A Companion to Paleopathology. New York: Wiley-Blackwell; 2012. p. 492–512.

55. Perry MA. Is bioarchaeology a handmaiden to history? Developing a historical bioarchaeology. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2007;26(3):486–515. doi: 10.1016/j.jaa.2007.02.002

56. Knudson KJ, Stojanowski CM. New Directions in Bioarchaeology: Recent Contributions to the Study of Human Social Identities. Journal of Archaeological Research. 2008;16(4):397–432. doi: 10.1007/s10814-008-9024-4

57. Nystrom KC. The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence and Dissection in the 19th-Century United States. American Anthropologist. 2014;116(4):765–79. doi: 10.1111/aman.12151

58. Cohen MN, Armelagos GJ, editors. Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture. Gainesville: University of Press Florida; 1984.

59. Lambert PM. Health versus fitness: competing themes in the origins and spread of agriculture? Curr Anthropol. 2009;50(5):603–8. Epub 2010/07/21. doi: 10.1086/605354 20642145.

60. Pinhasi R, Stock JT, editors. Human Bioarchaeology of the Transition to Agriculture. New York: John Wiley and Sons; 2011.

61. Blakely RL, Beck LA. Bioarchaeology in the Urban Context. In: Dickens RS Jr., editor. Archaeology of Urban America. Toronto: Academic Press; 1982. p. 175–207.

62. DeWitte SN, Hughes-Morey G, Bekvalac J, Karsten J. Wealth, health and frailty in industrial-era London. Ann Hum Biol. 2016;43(3):241–54. Epub 2015/06/16. doi: 10.3109/03014460.2015.1020873 26073638.

63. Armstrong DV, Fleischman ML. House-yard burials of enslaved laborers in eighteenth-century Jamaica. International Journal of Historical Archaeology. 2003;7(1):33–65. doi: 10.1023/a:1023227303302

64. Rasmussen M, Li Y, Lindgreen S, Pedersen JS, Albrechtsen A, Moltke I, et al. Ancient human genome sequence of an extinct Palaeo-Eskimo. Nature. 2010;463(7282):757–62. Epub 2010/02/12. doi: 10.1038/nature08835 20148029

65. Allentoft ME, Sikora M, Sjogren KG, Rasmussen S, Rasmussen M, Stenderup J, et al. Population genomics of Bronze Age Eurasia. Nature. 2015;522(7555):167–72. Epub 2015/06/13. doi: 10.1038/nature14507 26062507.

66. Mathieson I, Lazaridis I, Rohland N, Mallick S, Patterson N, Alpaslan Roodenberg S, et al. Eight thousand years of natural selection in Europe. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; 2015.

67. Williamson MA, Johnston CA, Symes SA, Schultz JJ. Interpersonal violence between 18th century Native Americans and Europeans in Ohio. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2003;122(2):113–22. Epub 2003/09/02. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.10262 12949831.

68. Beaumont J, Geber J, Powers N, Wilson A, Lee-Thorp J, Montgomery J. Victims and survivors: Stable isotopes used to identify migrants from the Great Irish Famine to 19th century London. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2013;150(1):87–98. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22179 23124593

69. Wells T. Nail chronology: The use of technologically derived features. Historical Archaeology. 1998;32(2):78–99. doi: 10.1007/bf03374252

70. Springate MF. Mass-produced coffin hardware in eastern North America: A synthesis. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology Annual Meeting; Atlanta GA1998.

71. Buikstra JE, Ubelaker DH. Standards for data collection from human skeletal remains: Proceedings of a Seminar at the Field Museum of Natural History. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archaeological Survey; 1994. 272 p.

72. Ousley SD, Dudar JC. Osteoware. Version 2.4.037. ed. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution; 2011.

73. Hauser G, De Stefano GF. Epigenetic Variants of the Human Skull. Stuttgart: Schweizerbart; 1989.

74. Jantz RL, Ousley SD. FORDISC 3.0: Personal Computer Forensic Discriminant Functions. Version 3.196 ed. Knoxville: University of Tennessee; 2012.

75. Aufderheide AC, Rodríguez-Martín C, Langsjoen O. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human Paleopathology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1998. 496 p.

76. Capasso L, Kennedy KAR, Wilczak CA. Atlas of Occupational Markers on Human Remains. Teramo: Edigrafital; 1999.

77. Mariotti V, Facchini F, Giovanna Belcastro M. Enthesopathies–proposal of a standardized scoring method and applications. Collegium Antropologicum. 2004;28(1):145–59. 15636072

78. Mariotti V, Facchini F, Belcastro MG. The study of entheses: proposal of a standardised scoring method for twenty-three entheses of the postcranial skeleton. Collegium Antropologicum. 2007;31(1):291–313. 17598416

79. Beckett R, Conlogue G. Paleoimaging. Boca Raton: CRC Press; 2009 2009/09/21.

80. Fehren-Schmitz L, Llamas B, Lindauer S, Tomasto-Cagigao E, Kuzminsky S, Rohland N, et al. A Re-Appraisal of the Early Andean Human Remains from Lauricocha in Peru. PLoS One. 2015;10(6):e0127141. Epub 2015/06/11. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127141 26061688

81. Fehren-Schmitz L, Reindel M, Cagigao ET, Hummel S, Herrmann B. Pre-Columbian population dynamics in coastal southern Peru: A diachronic investigation of mtDNA patterns in the Palpa region by ancient DNA analysis. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2010;141(2):208–21. Epub 2009/07/30. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21135 19639639.

82. Kloss-Brandstätter A, Salas A, Pacher D, Kronenberg F, Specht G, Weissensteiner H, et al. HaploGrep 2: mitochondrial haplogroup classification in the era of high-throughput sequencing. Nucleic Acids Research. 2016;44(W1):W58–W63. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkw233 27084951

83. van Oven M, Kayser M. Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation. Human Mutation. 2009;30(2):E386–E94. doi: 10.1002/humu.20921 18853457

84. Seidenberg V, Schilz F, Pfister D, Georges L, Fehren-Schmitz L, Hummel S. A new miniSTR heptaplex system for genetic fingerprinting of ancient DNA from archaeological human bone. Journal of Archaeological Science. 2012;39(10):3224–9. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2012.05.019

85. Grumbkow Pv, Frommer S, Kootker LM, Davies GR, Mazanec J, Hummel S. Kinship and mobility in 11th-century A.D. Gammertingen, Germany: an interdisciplinary approach. Journal of Archaeological Science. 2013;40(10):3768–76. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2013.05.001

86. Willuweit S, Roewer L. The new Y Chromosome Haplotype Reference Database. Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2015;15:43–8. Epub 2014/12/23. doi: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.11.024 25529991.

87. Walsh S, Liu F, Wollstein A, Kovatsi L, Ralf A, Kosiniak-Kamysz A, et al. The HIrisPlex system for simultaneous prediction of hair and eye colour from DNA. Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2013;7(1):98–115. Epub 2012/08/25. doi: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2012.07.005 22917817.

88. Valentine B, Kamenov GD, Krigbaum J. Reconstructing Neolithic groups in Sarawak, Malaysia through lead and strontium isotope analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science. 2008;35(6):1463–73. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2007.10.016

89. Pin C, Bassin C. Evaluation of a strontium-specific extraction chromatographic method for isotopic analysis in geological materials. Analytica Chimica Acta. 1992;269(2):249–55. doi: 10.1016/0003-2670(92)85409-y

90. Kamenov GD, Mueller PA, Perfit MR. Optimization of mixed Pb–Tl solutions for high precision isotopic analyses by MC-ICP-MS. J Anal At Spectrom. 2004;19(9):1262–7. doi: 10.1039/b403222e

91. Velsko IM, Warinner C. Bioarchaeology of the Human Microbiome. Bioarchaeology International. 2017;1(1–2):86–99. doi: 10.5744/bi.2017.1004

92. Ziesemer KA, Mann AE, Sankaranarayanan K, Schroeder H, Ozga AT, Brandt BW, et al. Intrinsic challenges in ancient microbiome reconstruction using 16S rRNA gene amplification. Sci Rep. 2015;5(1):16498. Epub 2015/11/14. doi: 10.1038/srep16498 26563586

93. Caporaso JG, Lauber CL, Walters WA, Berg-Lyons D, Huntley J, Fierer N, et al. Ultra-high-throughput microbial community analysis on the Illumina HiSeq and MiSeq platforms. ISME J. 2012;6(8):1621–4. Epub 2012/03/10. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2012.8 22402401

94. Kuczynski J, Stombaugh J, Walters WA, González A, Caporaso JG, Knight R. Using QIIME to analyze 16S rRNA gene sequences from microbial communities. Current Protocols in Microbiology. 2011;27:E.5.1–E.5.20. doi: 10.1002/0471250953.bi1007s36 22161565

95. Zhang J, Kobert K, Flouri T, Stamatakis A. PEAR: a fast and accurate Illumina Paired-End reAd mergeR. Bioinformatics. 2014;30(5):614–20. Epub 2013/10/22. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btt593 24142950

96. Hale CR. Charles R. Hale Collection of Connecticut Cemetery Inscriptions, 1629–1934. Hartford: Connecticut State Library 1934. p. Volume 215–6

97. Geifman N, Cohen R, Rubin E. Redefining meaningful age groups in the context of disease. AGE. 2013;35(6):2357–66. doi: 10.1007/s11357-013-9510-6 23354682

98. Flood N. Cemetery demography. In: Belswenger JM, editor. Experiments to Teach Ecology. Washington DC: Ecological Society of America; 1993. p. 155–70.

99. Owsley DW, Orser CE, Mann RW, Moore-Jansen PH, Montgomery RL. Demography and pathology of an urban slave population from New Orleans. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 1987;74(2):185–97. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330740207 3322026

100. Interment.net. New York Marble Cemetery records, New York City, NY. 2017 [cited December 2017]. http://www.interment.net/data/us/ny/new-york/new-york-marble-cemetery.htm.

101. Williams EH. Cemetery Demography. 2011 [cited January 2017]. http://academics.hamilton.edu/biology/ewilliam/cemetery/default.html#demography.

102. Nashville City Cemetery Association. Names of African-Americans buried at the Nashville City Cemetery recorded in the interment books 1846–1979 (Index 1). 2017 [cited January 2018]. http://thenashvillecitycemetery.org/aa-I.htm.

103. O'Donnell JH. History of the Diocese of Hartford. Boston: D. H. Hurd; 1900.

104. Archdiocese of Hartford. Archival Records. Hartford, CT: Archdiocese of Hartford; No Date.

105. Brown EM. New Haven, a Guide to Architecture and Urban Design. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1976. 242 p.

106. Bell C. Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Community Health Movement in a Model City [Senior Thesis]: Department of History of Science/History of Medicine, Yale University; 2013.

107. Elliott M, Collard M. Fordisc and the determination of ancestry from cranial measurements. Biology Letters. 2009;5(6):849–52. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0462 19586965

108. Ousley SD, Jantz RL. Fordisc 3 and statistical methods for estimating sex and ancestry. In: Dirkmaat D C, editor. Companion to Forensic Anthropology. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons; 2012. p. 311–29.

109. Woollard P. Evidence of wear on teeth from Canterbury. Society for Clay Pipe Research Newslette. 1996;50(39).

110. Wells C. Dental pathology from a burial ground in Norwich, Norfolk. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 1968;23(4):372–9. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/xxiii.4.372 4881524

111. Reid DJ, Dean MC. Brief communication: The timing of linear hypoplasias on human anterior teeth. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2000;113(1):135–9. doi: 10.1002/1096-8644(200009)113:1<135::AID-AJPA13>3.0.CO;2-A 10954627

112. Goodman AH, Armelagos GJ. Factors affecting the distribution of enamel hypoplasias within the human permanent dentition. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 1985;68(4):479–93. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330680404 3909823

113. Meyer A. Assessment of diet and recognition of nutritional deficiencies in paleopathological studies: A review. Clinical Anatomy. 2016;29(7):862–9. doi: 10.1002/ca.22696 26823189

114. Hillson S. Dental Pathology. In: Katzenberg MA, Saunders SR, editors. Biological Anthropology of the Human Skeleton. 2nd ed. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons; 2007. p. 299–340.

115. She R, Szakacs J. Hyperostosis frontalis interna: case report and review of literature. Annals of Clinical & Laboratory Science. 2004;34(2):206–8.

116. Glab H, Szostek K, Kaczanowski K. Hyperostosis frontalis interna, a genetic disease?: Two medieval cases from Southern Poland. Homo. 2006;57(1):19–27. Epub 2006/02/07. doi: 10.1016/j.jchb.2005.08.001 16458728.

117. Smathers RL, Stelling CB, Keats TE. The destructive wrist arthropathy of pseudogout. Skeletal Radiol. 1982;7(4):255–8. Epub 1982/01/01. doi: 10.1007/bf00361981 7071623.

118. Roberts AM, Robson-Brown K, Musgrave JH, Leslie I. A case of bilateral scapholunate advanced collapse in a Romano-British skeleton from Ancaster. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 2006;16(3):208–20. doi: 10.1002/oa.817

119. Rothschild BM, Heathcote GM. Characterization of gout in a skeletal population sample: presumptive diagnosis in a Micronesian population. Am J Phys Anthropol. 1995;98(4):519–25. Epub 1995/12/01. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330980411 8599385.

120. Reinus WR. Systematic Approach to Arthropathies. Diagnostic Imaging of Musculoskeletal Diseases: Humana Press; 2009. p. 407–96.

121. Richards MB, Macaulay VA, Bandelt HJ, Sykes BC. Phylogeography of mitochondrial DNA in western Europe. Annals of Human Genetics. 1998;62(3):241–60. Epub 1998/05/01. doi: 10.1046/j.1469-1809.1998.6230241.x 9803269

122. Juras A, Krzewinska M, Nikitin AG, Ehler E, Chylenski M, Lukasik S, et al. Diverse origin of mitochondrial lineages in Iron Age Black Sea Scythians. Sci Rep. 2017;7:43950. Epub 2017/03/08. doi: 10.1038/srep43950 28266657

123. Pala M, Olivieri A, Achilli A, Accetturo M, Metspalu E, Reidla M, et al. Mitochondrial DNA signals of late glacial recolonization of Europe from near eastern refugia. Am J Hum Genet. 2012;90(5):915–24. Epub 2012/05/09. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2012.04.003 22560092

124. Messina F, Finocchio A, Akar N, Loutradis A, Michalodimitrakis EI, Brdicka R, et al. Spatially Explicit Models to Investigate Geographic Patterns in the Distribution of Forensic STRs: Application to the North-Eastern Mediterranean. PLoS One. 2016;11(11):e0167065. Epub 2016/11/30. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167065 27898725

125. Willems T, Gymrek M, Highnam G, Genomes Project C, Mittelman D, Erlich Y. The landscape of human STR variation. Genome Res. 2014;24(11):1894–904. Epub 2014/08/20. doi: 10.1101/gr.177774.114 25135957

126. Ruitberg CM, Reeder DJ, Butler JM. STRBase: a short tandem repeat DNA database for the human identity testing community. Nucleic Acids Res. 2001;29(1):320–2. Epub 2000/01/11. doi: 10.1093/nar/29.1.320 11125125

127. Koziol P, Ciesielka M, Madro R, Krajka A. Genetic data on 19 STR loci in south-east Poland. Forensic Sci Int. 2004;139(1):89–92. Epub 2003/12/23. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2003.10.001 14687780.

128. Kamenov GD, Lofaro EM, Goad G, Krigbaum J. Trace elements in modern and archaeological human teeth: Implications for human metal exposure and enamel diagenetic changes. Journal of Archaeological Science. 2018;99:27–34. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2018.09.002.

129. Evans JA, Chenery CA, Montgomery J. A summary of strontium and oxygen isotope variation in archaeological human tooth enamel excavated from Britain. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry. 2012;27(5):754. doi: 10.1039/c2ja10362a

130. Kamenov GD, Curtis JH. Using Carbon, Oxygen, Strontium, and Lead Isotopes in Modern Human Teeth for Forensic Investigations: A Critical Overview Based on Data from Bulgaria. J Forensic Sci. 2017;62(6):1452–9. Epub 2017/02/24. doi: 10.1111/1556-4029.13462 28230896.

131. Kamenov GD, Gulson BL. The Pb isotopic record of historical to modern human lead exposure. Science of The Total Environment. 2014;490:861–70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.05.085. 24907620

132. Bower NW, McCants SA, Custodio JM, Ketterer ME, Getty SR, Hoffman JM. Human lead exposure in a late 19th century mental asylum population. Science of The Total Environment. 2007;372(2):463–73. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2006.10.019.

133. Keller AT, Regan LA, Lundstrom CC, Bower NW. Evaluation of the efficacy of spatiotemporal Pb isoscapes for provenancing of human remains. Forensic Science International. 2016;261:83–92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2016.02.006. 26914828

134. Bell LS, Lee-Thorp JA, Dobney K. Mapping Human Movement using Stable Oxygen Isotopic Ratio Mass Spectrometry: Potential Application to Forensic Science Demonstrated by a Modern Horse-Human Study. Canadian Society of Forensic Science Journal. 2006;39(2):47–54. doi: 10.1080/00085030.2006.10757136

135. Chen T, Yu WH, Izard J, Baranova OV, Lakshmanan A, Dewhirst FE. The Human Oral Microbiome Database: a web accessible resource for investigating oral microbe taxonomic and genomic information. Database (Oxford). 2010;2010(0):baq013. Epub 2010/07/14. doi: 10.1093/database/baq013 20624719

136. Dewhirst FE, Chen T, Izard J, Paster BJ, Tanner AC, Yu WH, et al. The human oral microbiome. J Bacteriol. 2010;192(19):5002–17. Epub 2010/07/27. doi: 10.1128/JB.00542-10 20656903

137. Eguchi J, Ishihara K, Watanabe A, Fukumoto Y, Okuda K. PCR method is essential for detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis in oral cavity samples. Oral Microbiology and Immunology. 2003;18(3):156–9. doi: 10.1034/j.1399-302X.2003.00050.x 12753466

138. Kimmerle EH, Jantz RL, Konigsberg LW, Baraybar JP. Skeletal estimation and identification in American and East European populations. J Forensic Sci. 2008;53(3):524–32. Epub 2008/05/13. doi: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2008.00708.x 18471195.

139. Stojanowski CM. Ethnogenetic theory and new directions in biodistance research. In: Lozada MC, O'Donnabhain B, editors. The Dead Tell Tales: Essays in Honor of Jane E Buikstra. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press; 2013. p. 71–82.

140. Susanne C, Lepage Y. Assortative mating for anthropometric characters. In: Mascie-Taylor CGN, Boyce AJ, editors. Human Mating Patterns. 28. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1988. p. 83–99.

141. Schwartz CR. Trends and Variation in Assortative Mating: Causes and Consequences. Annual Review of Sociology. 2013;39(1):451–70. doi: 10.1146/annurev-soc-071312-145544

142. Domingue BW, Fletcher J, Conley D, Boardman JD. Genetic and educational assortative mating among US adults. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014;111(22):7996–8000. Epub 2014/05/21. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1321426111 24843128

143. Gould JD. European inter-continental emigration 1815–1914: patterns and causes. Journal of European Economic History. 1979;8(3):593–679.

144. Fertig G. Transatlantic Migration from the German-Speaking Parts of Central Europe, 1600–1800: Proportions, Structures, and Explanations. Europeans on the Move: Oxford University Press; 1994. p. 192–235.

145. Cohn RL. Nativism and the End of the Mass Migration of the 1840s and 1850s. The Journal of Economic History. 2000;60(02):361–83. doi: 10.1017/s0022050700025134

146. Cohn RL. A Comparative Analysis of European Immigrant Streams to the United States during the Early Mass Migration. Social Science History. 1995;19(01):63–89. doi: 10.1017/s0145553200017223

147. Parmet RD. Connecticut's Know-Nothings: a profile. Connecticut Historical Society Bulletin. 1966;31:84–90.

148. McCaffrey LJ. The Irish Catholic Diaspora in America. Washington DC: Catholic University of America Press; 1997. 253 p.

149. Gorn EJ. "Good-Bye Boys, I Die a True American": Homicide, Nativism, and Working-Class Culture in Antebellum New York City. The Journal of American History. 1987;74(2):388. doi: 10.2307/1900028

150. Brighton SA. Degrees of Alienation: The Material Evidence of the Irish and Irish American Experience, 1850–1910. Historical Archaeology. 2008;42(4):132–53. doi: 10.1007/bf03377158

151. Anbinder T. Nativism and Slavery: The Northern Know Nothings and the Politics of the 1850s. New York: Oxford University Press; 1992 1993/12. 330 p.

152. Beecher EC. Reminiscences of Three Quarters of a Century in New Haven. Connecticut Magazine. 1906;10(4):679–91.

153. Bender D. ‘A Foreign Method of Working': Racial Degeneration, Gender and Disorder, and the Sweatshop Danger in America. In: Bender DE, Greenwald RA, editors. The American Sweatshop in Historical and Global Perspective. New York: Routledge; 1994. p. 19–37.

154. DeLuca R. Post Roads & Iron Horses: Transportation in Connecticut from Colonial Times to the Age of Steam. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press; 2011.

155. Room R. Cultural Contingencies of Alcoholism: Variations between and within Nineteenth-Century Urban Ethnic Groups in Alcohol-Related Death Rates. Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 1968;9(2):99. doi: 10.2307/2948328 5745774

156. Doying A. Differentiation of labor-related activity by means of musculoskeletal markers. Master’s Thesis. Tampa: University of South Florida; 2010.

157. Cardoso FA, Henderson CY. Enthesopathy formation in the humerus: Data from known age-at-death and known occupation skeletal collections. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2010;141(4):550–60. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21171 19927279

158. Henderson CY, Alves Cardoso F. Special Issue Entheseal Changes and Occupation: Technical and Theoretical Advances and Their Applications. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 2013;23(2):127–34. doi: 10.1002/oa.2298

159. Wienker C, Wood J. Osteological Individuality Indicative of Migrant Citrus Laboring. 1988.

160. Villotte S, Castex D, Couallier V, Dutour O, Knüsel CJ, Henry-Gambier D. Enthesopathies as occupational stress markers: Evidence from the upper limb. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2010;142(2):224–34. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21217 20034011

161. Henderson CY, Craps DD, Caffell AC, Millard AR, Gowland R. Occupational Mobility in 19th Century Rural England: The Interpretation of Entheseal Changes. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 2013;23(2):197–210. doi: 10.1002/oa.2286

162. Nordander C, Ohlsson K, Balogh I, Hansson GA, Axmon A, Persson R, et al. Gender differences in workers with identical repetitive industrial tasks: exposure and musculoskeletal disorders. Int Arch Occup Environ Health. 2008;81(8):939–47. Epub 2007/12/11. doi: 10.1007/s00420-007-0286-9 18066574.

163. Geller PE. The Bioarchaeology of Socio-Sexual Lives: Queering Common Sense About Sex, Gender, and Sexuality. Martin DL, editor. New York: Springer; 2017.

164. Goldthwait JE. Permanent Dislocation of the Patella. The Report of a Case of Twenty Years' Duration, successfully treated by Transplantation of the Patella Tendons with the Tubercle of the Tibia. Annals of Surgery. 1899;29(1):62–8. Epub 1899/01/01. 17860670

165. Su JA. Making the Invisible Visible: The Garment Industry's Dirty Laundry. Journal of Gender Race & Justice. 1997;1(1):405–18.

166. Westgaard RH, Jansen T. Individual and work related factors associated with symptoms of musculoskeletal complaints. II. Different risk factors among sewing machine operators. Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 1992;49(3):154–62. doi: 10.1136/oem.49.3.154 1554612

167. Sokas RK, Spiegelman D, Wegman DH. Self-reported musculoskeletal complaints among garment workers. American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 1989;15(2):197–206. doi: 10.1002/ajim.4700150208 2786337

168. Aghili MM, Asilian H, Poursafa P. Evaluation of musculoskeletal disorders in sewing machine operators of a shoe manufacturing factory in Iran. J Pak Med Assoc. 2012;62(3 Suppl 2):S20–5. Epub 2012/07/10. 22768452.

169. Kelley MA, Micozzi MS. Rib lesions in chronic pulmonary tuberculosis. Am J Phys Anthropol. 1984;65(4):381–6. Epub 1984/12/01. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330650407 6395694.

170. Santos AL, Roberts CA. A picture of tuberculosis in young Portuguese people in the early 20th century: a multidisciplinary study of the skeletal and historical evidence. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2001;115(1):38–49. Epub 2001/04/20. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1054 11309748.

171. Hendy J, Collins M, Teoh KY, Ashford DA, Thomas-Oates J, Donoghue HD, et al. The challenge of identifying tuberculosis proteins in archaeological tissues. Journal of Archaeological Science. 2016;66:146–53. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2016.01.003

172. Riis JA. How the other half lives: Studies among the tenements of New York. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons; 1890. p. 89.

173. Smith DS. The demographic history of colonial New England. J Econ Hist. 1972;32(1):165–83. Epub 1972/01/01. doi: 10.1017/s0022050700075458 11632252.

174. Hautaniemi SI, Swedlund AC, Anderton DL. Mill Town Mortality: Consequences of Industrial Growth in Two Nineteenth-Century New England Towns. Social Science History. 1999;23(01):1–39. doi: 10.1017/s0145553200017983

175. Smith DS. Differential Mortality in the United States before 1900. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 1983;13(4):735. doi: 10.2307/203888 11617353

176. Kasakoff AB, Adams JW. The effects of migration, place, and occupation on adult mortality in the American north, 1740–1880. Hist Methods. 2000;33(2):115–30. Epub 2007/07/05. doi: 10.1080/01615440009598954 17607877.

177. Haines MR. The urban mortality transition in the united states, 1800–1940. Annales de démographie historique. 2001; 101(1):33.

178. Noymer A, Jarosz B. Causes of Death in Nineteenth-Century New England: The Dominance of Infectious Disease. Social History of Medicine. 2008;21(3):573–8. doi: 10.1093/shm/hkn062

179. Haines MR. Growing Incomes, Shrinking People: Can Economic Development Be Hazardous to Your Health?: Historical Evidence for the United States, England, and the Netherlands in the Nineteenth Century. Social Science History. 2004;28(2):249–70.

180. Atwater EE. History of the City of New Haven to the Present Time. New York: W. W. Munsell & Company; 1887. 702 p. p.

181. Osterweis RG. Three Centuries of New Haven, 1638–1938. New Haven: Yale University Press; 1953.

182. City of New Haven. Historical Resources Inventory. 1984 [cited March 2015]. http://www.cityofnewhaven.com/CityPlan/pdfs/HistoricInventory/HistoricInventoryMap.pdf.

183. Gurwitt R. Death of a Neighborhood: Mother Jones; 2000 [cited June 2015]. http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2000/09/death-neighborhood.

184. Lattanzi RM. Oyster Village to Melting Pot: The Hill Section of New Haven. Chester: Pattaconk Brook; 2000. 340 p.

185. Sletcher M. New Haven: From Puritanism to the Age of Terrorism. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing; 2004. 160 p.

186. Hinks P. “This Beautiful and Rapidly Improving Section of Our City”: Race, Labor, and Colonizationists in Early Industrializing New Haven, 1800–1830. Labor. 2016;13(1):65–91. doi: 10.1215/15476715-3341070

187. Jaffe AJ, Lourie WL Jr.. An abridged life table for the white population of the United States in 1830. Human Biology. 1942;14(3):352–71.

188. Mytum H. Public health and private sentiment: the development of cemetery architecture and funerary monuments from the eighteenth century onwards. World Archaeol. 1989;21(2):283–97. Epub 1989/10/01. doi: 10.1080/00438243.1989.9980107 16471001.

189. Schuyler D. The Evolution of the Anglo-American Rural Cemetery: Landscape Architecture as Social and Cultural History. The Journal of Garden History. 1984;4(3):291–304. doi: 10.1080/01445170.1984.10444100 11617326

190. Pearson MP. The Archaeology of Death and Burial. College Station: Texas A&M University Press; 1999.

191. Greene M. Rest in peace: A History of American cemeteries. Minneapolis: Twenty-First Century Books; 2008.

192. Veit RF, Baugher SB, Scharfenberger GP. Historical Archaeology of Religious Sites and Cemeteries. Historical Archaeology. 2009;43(1):1–11. doi: 10.1007/bf03377111

193. Stearns SC. The Evolution of Life Histories. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1992. 249 p.

194. Bribiescas RG. Men: Evolutionary and Life History. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 2009. 320 p.

195. Herring A, Saunders S, Boyce G. Bones and Burial Registers: Infant Mortality in a 19th-Century Cemetery from Upper Canada. Northeast Historical Archaeology. 1991;20(1):54–70. https://doi.org/10.22191/neha/vol20/iss1/6.

196. Knodel J, Hermalin AI. Effects of birth rank, maternal age, birth interval, and sibship size on infant and child mortality: evidence from 18th and 19th century reproductive histories. Am J Public Health. 1984;74(10):1098–106. Epub 1984/10/01. doi: 10.2105/ajph.74.10.1098 6383084

197. Van Lerberghe W, De Brouwere V. Of blind alleys and things that have worked: history's lessons on reducing maternal mortality. Studies in Health Services Organization and Policy. 2001;17:7–33.

198. Ronsmans C, Graham WJ. Maternal mortality: who, when, where, and why. The Lancet. 2006;368(9542):1189–200. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(06)69380-x

199. Chamberlain G. British maternal mortality in the 19th and early 20th centuries. J R Soc Med. 2006;99(11):559–63. Epub 2006/11/04. 17082299

200. Komlos J. Shrinking in a Growing Economy? The Mystery of Physical Stature during the Industrial Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 2009;58(03):779–802. doi: 10.1017/s0022050700021161

201. Huck P. Infant Mortality and Living Standards of English Workers During the Industrial Revolution. The Journal of Economic History. 2009;55(03):528–50. doi: 10.1017/s0022050700041620

202. Szreter S. Rapid economic growth and 'the four Ds' of disruption, deprivation, disease and death: public health lessons from nineteenth-century Britain for twenty-first-century China? Tropical Medicine and International Health. 1999;4(2):146–52. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-3156.1999.00369.x 10206269

203. Klaus HD, Spencer Larsen C, Tam ME. Economic intensification and degenerative joint disease: Life and labor on the postcontact north coast of Peru. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2009;139(2):204–21. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20973 19140181

204. Handler JS, Corruccini RS. Plantation slave life in Barbados: a physical anthropological analysis. J Interdiscip Hist. 1983;14(1):65–90. Epub 1983/01/01. doi: 10.2307/203517 11617355.

205. Angel JL, Kelley JO, Parrington M, Pinter S. Life stresses of the free Black community as represented by the First African Baptist Church, Philadelphia, 1823–1841. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 1987;74(2):213–29. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330740209 3322028

206. Crandall JJ. Scurvy in the Greater American Southwest: Modeling micronutrition and biosocial processes in contexts of resource stress. International Journal of Paleopathology. 2014;5:46–54. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpp.2014.05.001. 29539467

207. Higgins RL, Sirianni JE. An Assessment of Health and Mortality of Nineteenth Century Rochester, New York Using Historic Records and the Highland Park Skeletal Collection. In: Grauer AL, editor. Bodies of Evidence: Reconstructing History through Skeletal Analysis. New York: Wiley-Liss; 1995. p. 121–36.

208. Rylko-Bauer B, Farmer P. Structural Violence, Poverty, and Social Suffering. In: Brady D, Burton LM, editors. The Oxford Handbook of the Social Science of Poverty. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2017. p. 47–74.

209. Weigert KM. Structural Violence. In: Fink G, editor. Stress of War, Conflict and Disaster. Amsterdam: Academic Press; 2010. p. 126–36.

210. Lee BX. Causes and cures VII: Structural violence. Aggression and Violent Behavior. 2016;28:109–14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avb.2016.05.003.

211. Grauer AL, editor. Bodies of Evidence: Reconstructing History through Skeletal Analysis. New York: Wiley; 1995.

212. Zvelebil M, Weber AW. Human bioarchaeology: Group identity and individual life histories—Introduction. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2013;32(3):275–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2012.01.003.

213. Baker BJ, Agarwal SC. Stronger together: advancing a global bioarchaeology. Bioarchaeology International. 2017;1(1–2):1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/bi.2017.1005.

214. Armelagos GJ, Goodman AH, Harper KN, Blakey ML. Enamel hypoplasia and early mortality: Bioarcheological support for the Barker hypothesis. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews. 2009;18(6):261–71. doi: 10.1002/evan.20239

215. Windmuller L. Graveyards as a Menace to the Commonweal. The North American Review. 1898;167(501):211–22.

216. Singer M, Clair S. Syndemics and public health: reconceptualizing disease in bio-social context. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 2003;17(4):423–41. doi: 10.1525/maq.2003.17.4.423 14716917

217. Leatherman T, Goodman AH. Critical biocultural approaches in Medical Anthropology. In: Singer M, Erickson PI, editors. A Companion to Medical Anthropology. Oxford: Wiley Blackwell; 2011. p. 29–48.

218. Berger H, Spoerer M. Economic Crises and the European Revolutions of 1848. The Journal of Economic History. 2001;61(2):293–326. Epub 2001/08/13.

219. Sperber J. The European Revolutions, 1848–1851: Cambridge University Press; 2005.

220. Taylor AJP. The Habsburg Monarchy, 1809–1918: A History of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1976.

221. Brock P. Polish Democrats and English Radicals 1832–1862: A Chapter in the History of Anglo-Polish Relations. The Journal of Modern History. 1953;25(2):139–56. doi: 10.1086/237597

222. Chastain J. "Great" Polish Political Emigration (1831–1870). 2004 [cited March 2015]. https://www.ohio.edu/chastain/dh/emigpol.htm.

223. Fox P. The Poles in America. New York: George H. Doran; 1922.

224. Kruszka W, Pula JS, Biskupski MB, Cuba S, Baker TL. A History of the Poles in America to 1908. Washington DC: Catholic University of America Press; 1993.

225. Madaj MJ. The Polish immigrant and the Catholic Church in America. Polish American Studies. 1949;6(1):1–8.

226. Zubrzycki J. Polish emigration to British Commonwealth countries: a demographic survey. Int Migr Rev. 1979;13(4):649–72. Epub 1979/01/01. doi: 10.2307/2545180 12337316.

227. Tyler ES. The Poles in the Connecticut Valley. Smith College Monthly. 1909;16(7):582–3.

228. 1850 United States Federal Census [Internet]. Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 2009. https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=8054.

229. Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society. A canal worker's legacy: New Haven's first Irish neighborhood. Shanachie. 2013;25(1–4).

230. Ethnic Heritage Center. The Ethnic History of New Haven: Pre-1638 to 2000 and Beyond. 2000 [cited March 2015]. http://connecticuthistory.org/wpcontent/uploads/2013/04/AnEthnicHistoryofNewHaven2.pdf.

231. Anonymous. German American Communities in Connecticut. 2015 [March 2015]. https://communitiesandworldwari.wordpress.com/german-american-communities-in-connecticut.

232. Pape WJ. History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut (Vol. 3). New York: S. J. Clarke; 1918. 500 p.

233. Mick A, White L. Italians and Blacks in New Haven: The Establishment of Two Ethnic Communities. New Haven: Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute; 1978 [cited August 2014]. http://teachersinstitute.yale.edu/curriculum/units/1978/2/78.02.06.x.html#A.

234. ImmigrationtotheUnitedStates.org. Connecticut. 2011 [cited June 2016]. http://immigrationtounitedstates.org/446-connecticut.html.

235. USHistory.org. Irish and German Immigration. U.S. History Online Textbook. 2015 [cited June 2016]. http://www.ushistory.org/us/25f.asp.

236. Order of the Founders and Patriots of America. Vital Records of New Haven, 1649–1850. Part I. Hartford: Connecticut Society of the Order of the Founders and Patriots of America; 1917. 599 p.

237. Weber AF. The Growth of Cities in the 19th Century: A Study in Statistics. New York: MacMillan; 1899. 520 p.

238. Prichard SJ. The Town and City of Waterbury, Connecticut: From the Aboriginal Period to the Year Eighteen Hundred and Ninety-Five. Waterbury: Price & Lee Company; 1896. 885 p.

239. Parker CC. The Early History of Waterbury. Waterbury: Waterbury Job Printing Establishment; 1867.

240. Anderson J, Prichard SJ, Ward AL. The Town and City of Waterbury, Connecticut. New Haven: Price and Lee Company; 1896. 1380 p.

241. Slack C. Noble Obsession: Charles Goodyear, Thomas Hancock, and the Race to Unlock the Greatest Industrial Secret of the 19th Century. New York: Hyperion; 2003. 288 p.

242. Shields MR. Naugatuck Valley Textile Industry. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing; 2011. 128 p.

243. Hennesey JJ. American Catholics: A History of the Roman Catholic Community in the United States. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1983.

244. Smith TL. Religion and Ethnicity in America. The American Historical Review. 1978;83(5):1155. doi: 10.2307/1854689

245. Dolan JP. The Immigrant Church: New York's Irish and German Catholics, 1815–1865. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press; 1977.

246. Morris C. American Catholic: The saints and sinners who built America's most powerful church. New York: Vintage Press; 1998.

247. Kane PM. Separatism and Subculture: Boston Catholicism, 1900–1920. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1994.

248. McCartin JP, McCartin JA. Working-Class Catholicism: a call for new investigations, dialogue, and reappraisal. Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, Volume 4, Issue 1. 2007;4(1):99–110. doi: 10.1215/15476715-2006-039

249. Byrne J. Catholic but not Roman Catholic. American Catholic Studies. 2014;125(3):16–9. doi: 10.1353/acs.2014.0016

250. Abramson HJ. Ethnic Diversity in Catholic America. New York: Wiley; 1973. 207 p.

251. Center for Migration Studies. European immigrants and the Catholic Church in Connecticut, 1870–1920. Center for Migration Studies Special Issue. 1987;5(5):1–164.

252. Seroczynski FT. Poles in the United States. In: Herbermann CG, editor. The Catholic Encyclopedia: an international work of reference on the constitution, doctrine, discipline, and history of the Catholic church. 12. New York: Encyclopedia Press; 1914. p. 212.

253. Albanski L, Lehr JC. Identity, Integration, and Assimilation Recorded in Manitoba's Polish and Ukrainian Cemeteries. Great Plains Research. 2012;22(1):3–14.

254. Küng H. The Catholic Church: a short history. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 2007. 272 p.

255. Anonymous. St. Mary's: Years of Grace. 2015 [cited March 2015]. http://www.stmarysderbyct.org/uploads/1/7/1/6/17166584/yearsofgrace.pdf.

256. Byrne WM, Leahy WA. History of the Catholic Church in the New England States. Boston: D. H. Hurd Company; 1893. 1042 p.

257. Shephard J. History of St. Mark's Church, New Britain CT and of its predecessor Christ Church Wethersfield and Berlin from the First Church of England Service in America to Nineteen Hundred and Seven. New Britain: Tuttle Morehouse and Taylor; 1907. 707 p.

258. Hammond PE, Warner KEE. Religion and Ethnicity in Late-Twentieth-Century America. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2016;527(1):55–66. doi: 10.1177/0002716293527001005

259. Hirschman C. The Role of Religion in the Origins and Adaptation of Immigrant Groups in the United States1. International Migration Review. 2006;38(3):1206–33. doi: 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2004.tb00233.x

260. Olson JS, Beal HO. The Ethnic Dimension in American History. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell; 2010. 388 p.

261. Vecoli RJ. Prelates and Peasants: Italian Immigrants and the Catholic Church. Journal of Social History. 1969;2(3):217–68. doi: 10.1353/jsh/2.3.217

262. Brożek A. Polish Americans: 1854–1939. New Brunswick: Transaction Pubishers; 1985.

263. Nagel J. The Political Construction of Ethnicity. In: Olzak S, Nagel J, editors. Competitive Ethnic Relations. New York: Academic Press; 1986. p. 93–112.

264. Conzen KN, Gerber DA, Morawska E, Pozzetta GE, Vecoli RJ. The invention of ethnicity: A perspective from the USA. Journal of American Ethnic History. 1992;12(1):3–41.

265. Erdmans MP. Immigrants and Ethnics: Conflict and Identity in Chicago Polonia. The Sociological Quarterly. 1995;36(1):175–95. doi: 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1995.tb02326.x

266. Bukowczyk JJ. The image and self-image of Polish Americans. Polish American Studies. 1998;55(2):75–83.

267. Gillette W. Jersey Blue: Civil War Politics in New Jersey, 1854–1865. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press; 1995.

268. Kane PM. Separatism and Subculture: Boston Catholicism, 1900–1920: University of North Carolina Press; 1994. 430 p.

269. Anonymous. Merged and Closed Parishes. 2015 [cited March 2015]. http://archdioceseofhartford.org/merged-and-closed-parishes/.

270. Downes W. The Life and Private History of James McCaffrey, who was Convicted at New Haven, on the 29th Day of April, A. D. 1850, of the Murder of Ann Smith on the 29th Day of October, 1849, and Sentenced to be Hung at New Haven, Conn. on the Second day of October, A. D. 1850. New Haven: Storer And Stone.; 1850.

271. Greene J. Twelve Days in the Tombs; or, a Sketch of the Last Eight Years of the Reformed Gambler's Life. Boston: GW Cottrell; 1851.

272. Goodwin W. Death Cell Scenes, Or, Notes, Sketches and Momorandums of the Last Sixteen Days and Last Night of Henry Leander Foote: Together with an Account of His Execution for the Murder of Emily H. Cooper. New Haven: J.H. Benham,; 1850. 30 p.

273. Luckè JB. History of the New Haven Grays from Sept. 13, 1816, to Sept. 13, 1876. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor; 1876.

274. Haughton S. On hanging, considered from a mechanical and physiological point of view. The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 1866;32(213):23–34. doi: 10.1080/14786446608644122

275. Paterson AM. Fracture of cervical vertebrae. Journal of Anatomy and Physiology. 1889;24(1):ix.

276. De Zouche Marshall J. Judicial Hanging. The Lancet. 1913;181(4670):639–40. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(00)75485-7

277. Wood-Jones F. The Ideal Lesion Produced by Judicial Hanging. The Lancet. 1913;181(4662):53. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(01)47782-8

278. Wolff R. Injury to the cervical vertebrae as a result of judicial hanging. Journal of the Medical Association of South Africa. 1928;2:460–2.

279. Reay DT, Cohen W, Ames S. Injuries produced by judicial hanging. A case report. Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1994;15(3):183–6. Epub 1994/09/01. doi: 10.1097/00000433-199409000-00001 7825545.

280. James R, Nasmyth-Jones R. The occurrence of cervical fractures in victims of judicial hanging. Forensic Sci Int. 1992;54(1):81–91. Epub 1992/04/01. doi: 10.1016/0379-0738(92)90083-9 1618457.

281. Schneider RC, Livingston KE, Cave AJ, Hamilton G. "Hangman's Fracture" of the Cervical Spine. J Neurosurg. 1965;22(2):141–54. Epub 1965/02/01. doi: 10.3171/jns.1965.22.2.0141 14288425.

282. Wallace SK, Cohen WA, Stern EJ, Reay DT. Judicial hanging: postmortem radiographic, CT, and MR imaging features with autopsy confirmation. Radiology. 1994;193(1):263–7. Epub 1994/10/01. doi: 10.1148/radiology.193.1.8090904 8090904.

283. Betz P, Eisenmenger W. Frequency of throat-skeleton fractures in hanging. Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1996;17(3):191–3. Epub 1996/09/01. doi: 10.1097/00000433-199609000-00002 8870866.

284. Spence MW, Shkrum MJ, Ariss A, Regan J. Craniocervical injuries in judicial hangings: an anthropologic analysis of six cases. Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1999;20(4):309–22. Epub 2000/01/07. doi: 10.1097/00000433-199912000-00001 10624922.

285. Rayes M, Mittal M, Rengachary SS, Mittal S. Hangman's fracture: a historical and biomechanical perspective. J Neurosurg Spine. 2011;14(2):198–208. Epub 2010/12/28. doi: 10.3171/2010.10.SPINE09805 21184637.

286. Botha D, Steyn M. A Palaeopathological Assessment of the Late 19th and Early 20th Century Khoesan. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 2016;26(2):266–80. doi: 10.1002/oa.2419

287. Baetsen W. Left hanging? Considering hanging: A disregarded cause of skeletal trauma [Scientific Poster Presentation]. 2014 [June 2017]. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/309787818_Left_hanging_Considering_hanging_A_disregarded_cause_of_skeletal_trauma.

288. Hurren ET. Dissecting the Criminal Corpse: Staging Post-Execution Punishment in Early Modern England. London: Palgrave Macmillan; 2016. 326 p.

289. Banner S. The Death Penalty: an American History. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 2002. 408 p.

290. Jacobi KP, Cook DC, Corruccini RS, Handler JS. Congenital syphilis in the past: slaves at Newton Plantation, Barbados, West Indies. Am J Phys Anthropol. 1992;89(2):145–58. Epub 1992/10/01. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330890203 1443091.

291. Blakey M. The study of New York's African Burial Ground: biocultural and engaged. In: Walker SS, editor. African Roots/American Cultures: Africa in the Creation of the Americas. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers; 2001. p. 222–31.

292. Nystrom KC, editor. The Bioarchaeology of Dissection and Autopsy in the United States. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing; 2017.

293. Beaumont J, Geber J, Powers N, Wilson A, Lee-Thorp J, Montgomery J. Victims and survivors: stable isotopes used to identify migrants from the Great Irish Famine to 19th century London. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2013;150(1):87–98. Epub 2012/11/06. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22179 23124593.

294. Agarwal SC, Glencross BA, editors. Social Bioarchaeology. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell; 2011.

295. Esaki BJ. Religion and American ethnicity. In: Barkan E, editor. Immigrants in American History: Arrival, Adaptation, and Indication. 4. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO; 2012. p. 1743–61.

296. Baxter JE, Vey S, McGuire EH, Conway S, Blom DE. Reflections on Interdisciplinarity in the Study of Childhood in the Past. Childhood in the Past. 2017;10(1):57–71. doi: 10.1080/17585716.2017.1305077

297. Barlow LK, Sadler JP, Ogilvie AEJ, Buckland PC, Amorosi T, Ingimundarson JH, et al. Interdisciplinary investigations of the end of the Norse Western Settlement in Greenland. The Holocene. 1997;7(4):489–99. doi: 10.1177/095968369700700411

298. Crespo FA, Klaes CK, Switala AE, DeWitte SN. Do leprosy and tuberculosis generate a systemic inflammatory shift? Setting the ground for a new dialogue between experimental immunology and bioarchaeology. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 2017;162(1):143–56. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.23104 27704524

299. Reid AH, Taubenberger JK, Fanning TG. The 1918 Spanish influenza: integrating history and biology. Microbes and Infection. 2001;3(1):81–7. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1286-4579(00)01351-4. 11226857

300. DeWitte SN, Stojanowski CM. The Osteological Paradox 20 Years Later: Past Perspectives, Future Directions. Journal of Archaeological Research. 2015;23(4):397–450. doi: 10.1007/s10814-015-9084-1


Článek vyšel v časopise

PLOS One


2019 Číslo 9
Nejčtenější tento týden
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
Kurzy

Zvyšte si kvalifikaci online z pohodlí domova

plice
INSIGHTS from European Respiratory Congress
nový kurz

Současné pohledy na riziko v parodontologii
Autoři: MUDr. Ladislav Korábek, CSc., MBA

Svět praktické medicíny 3/2024 (znalostní test z časopisu)

Kardiologické projevy hypereozinofilií
Autoři: prof. MUDr. Petr Němec, Ph.D.

Střevní příprava před kolonoskopií
Autoři: MUDr. Klára Kmochová, Ph.D.

Všechny kurzy
Kurzy Podcasty Doporučená témata Časopisy
Přihlášení
Zapomenuté heslo

Zadejte e-mailovou adresu, se kterou jste vytvářel(a) účet, budou Vám na ni zaslány informace k nastavení nového hesla.

Přihlášení

Nemáte účet?  Registrujte se

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#