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Mary Jackes
Adjunct Associate
Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Waterloo,
Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3G1, Canada
Bioarchaeology &
Skeletal
Biology
- First two
degrees
in Australia in social anthropology, specializing in understanding how
kinship systems structure behaviour: Wikmunkan joking relationships Mankind 7: 128-131 (1969).
- Three years
in East
Africa as a fossil hunter. A lot of unpublished work (Pan Am managed to
lose a huge suitcase) including the results of intensive surface
collection at Laetoli over two seasons, and work on a number of bone
bed excavations at Olduvai (from Bed 1 to the Ndutu Beds), and on
drowned wildebeeste on the shores
of Lake Ndutu, all of which developed my interest in taphonomy and
sample
bias and methods of analysis: The fauna. In M.D. Leakey et al. Fossil
Hominids from the Laetolil beds. Nature
262: 460-466 (1976).
- Archaeozoology
remains an interest, especially using molluscan fauna in stratigraphy
(work with David
Lubell on Kef Zoura D rockshelter in Algeria).
- The
University of
Toronto was the ideal place for changing focus to bioarchaeology from
my fossil man studies at Cambridge University and fossil primate work
for the British
Museum (Natural History).
Publications
organized by research themes
| Themes |
click
button
|
| Genetics,
migration, bone plasticity,
transitions |
|
| Taphonomy,
sample bias and postmortem changes |
|
| Ontario
osteology |
|
| Age
assessment of adults, problems in
palaeodemography |
|
| China,
Algeria, Italy and varia |
|
link to Anthropology,
University of Waterloo
David
Lubell's web
page
Contact me
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index
created by MJ 22 November,
2000; updated 22 January, 2001; updated 11 July, 2003; 25 April, 2004;
July 2007;
June 2008; August 2009