Keyphrases
Mass Graves
100%
Anglo-Saxon
100%
Skeletal Remains
97%
Grave Goods
76%
Forensic
62%
Osteoimmunology
50%
Biocultural
50%
Recording Methodology
50%
Spinal Pathology
50%
Anglo-Norman
50%
Mortuary Practices
50%
Black Death
50%
Thorntons
50%
Skeletal Analysis
50%
Fatal Fires
50%
Skeletal-related Events
50%
Newcastle upon Tyne
50%
Cemetery
50%
14th Century
50%
European Ancestry
50%
Abbey
50%
Gene Pool
50%
Catastrophe
50%
Arthropathy
50%
Autoimmunity
50%
Fracture Healing
50%
Anthropologists
50%
Human Remains
50%
Death Culture
50%
Material Culture
50%
Coffin
50%
18th
50%
Sheffield
50%
Early 19th Century
50%
Archaeology
45%
Autoimmune Disease
37%
North Sea
33%
Past Populations
33%
Biological Anthropology
33%
Early Medieval Period
33%
Immigrants
33%
Trauma
33%
Graves
32%
Natural Healing
25%
Burial Sites
25%
Correction Factor
25%
Healing Rate
25%
Cist
20%
Stress Indicators
20%
Biological Stress
20%
Arts and Humanities
Mass graves
100%
Anglo-Saxon
100%
Burial
86%
Grave goods
66%
England
62%
Trauma
60%
Black Death
50%
Early English
50%
Skeletal trauma
50%
abbeys
50%
Fourteenth Century
50%
Ancestry
50%
Material Culture
50%
Early XIX Century
50%
Coffin
50%
Sheffield
50%
Newcastle upon Tyne
50%
Mortuary practices
50%
Cemetery
50%
Anglo-Norman
50%
Skeletal Remains
33%
Continental
25%
Burial Site
23%
Europe
22%
Burial practices
20%
Radiocarbon Dating
16%
Lincolnshire
16%
Limitations
14%
Early Medieval period
12%
Funerary ritual
12%
Archeology
12%
Cross Section
12%
Graveyard
12%
Victorian Period
12%
Furnishings
12%
11th Century
10%
Regional
10%
Teeth
10%
Enamel Hypoplasia
10%
Burial rites
10%
Early Life
10%
Christian doctrine
10%
Alternative Media
10%
Sociocultural Context
10%
Sociocultural
10%
Cribra orbitalia
10%
Mortality profiles
10%
Social Relationships
10%
Pragmatism
10%
Temporal
10%