Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta
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Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta
By Simon Stoddart, Ronika K. Power, Jess E. Thompson, Bernardette Mercieca-Spiteri, Rowan McLaughlin, Eóin W. Parkinson, Anthony Pace & Caroline Malone
- Complete volume - Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta
- Chapter 1 - Introduction: people of early Malta and the Circle
- Chapter 2 - New approaches to the bioarchaeology of complex multiple interments
- Chapter 3 - The chronology, structure and stratigraphy of the Circle
- Chapter 4 - Dental pathology in the Circle: oral health, activity and intervention in Neolithic Malta
- Chapter 5 - Dental modification in the Circle: shaping bodies, shaping culture in Neolithic Malta
- Chapter 6 - Dental anthropology from the Circle: non-metric traits of the posterior dentition and population relationships in the Neolithic Mediterranean
- Chapter 7 - Physical activity and body size in Temple Period Malta: biomechanical analysis of commingled and fragmentary long bones
- Chapter 8 - General pathology in the Circle: biocultural insights into population health, trauma and care in Neolithic Malta
- Chapter 9 - An isotopic study of provenance and residential mobility at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs
- Chapter 10 - An isotopic study of palaeodiet at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs
- Chapter 11 - aDNA: an investigation of uniparental genetic heritage in Neolithic Malta
- Chapter 12 - Reconstructing deathways at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs through funerary taphonomy
- Chapter 13 - The development of Late Neolithic burial places in Malta and Gozo: an overview
- Chapter 14 - Conclusion: current inferences from the study of death in prehistoric Malta
- References
- Appendices
- Glossary & Index
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Item Open Access Chapter 9 - An isotopic study of provenance and residential mobility at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Nafplioti, Argyro; McLaughlin, Rowan; Lightfoot, Emma; Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Kneale, Catherine J.; O’Connell, Tamsin C.; Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 10 - An isotopic study of palaeodiet at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) McLaughlin, Rowan; Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Lightfoot, Emma; Varalli, Alessandra; Thompson, Jess E.; Kneale, Catherine J.; O’Connell, Tamsin C.; Reimer, Paula J.; Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 8 - General pathology in the Circle: biocultural insights into population health, trauma and care in Neolithic Malta (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Thompson, Jess E.; McLaughlin, Rowan; Carruthers, Jacinta; Vogel, Hannah; Buck, Laura T.; Saers, Jaap; Pardey, Margery; Stock, Jay T.; Magnussen, John S.; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 7 - Physical activity and body size in Temple Period Malta: biomechanical analysis of commingled and fragmentary long bones (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Parkinson, Eóin W.; Stock, Jay T.; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 6 - Dental anthropology from the Circle: non-metric traits of the posterior dentition and population relationships in the Neolithic Mediterranean (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Stock, Jay T.; Irish, Joel D.; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 5 - Dental modification in the Circle: shaping bodies, shaping culture in Neolithic Malta (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Thompson, Jess E.; McLaughlin, Rowan; Carruthers, Jacinta; Buck, Laura T.; Saers, Jaap; Pardey, Margery; Stock, Jay; Magnussen, John; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 4 - Dental pathology in the Circle: oral health, activity and intervention in Neolithic Malta (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Thompson, Jess E.; Carruthers, Jacinta; Massingham, Sarah; Buck, Laura T.; Saers, Jaap; Pardey, Margery; Stock, Jay; Magnussen, John; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 3 - The chronology, structure and stratigraphy of the Circle (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Parkinson, Eóin W.; McLaughlin, Rowan; Barratt, Robert; Boyle, Sara; Meneely, John; Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Thompson, Jess E.; Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 2 - New approaches to the bioarchaeology of complex multiple interments (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Stock, Jay T.; O’Connell, Tamsin C.; Stoddart, Simon; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Glossary & Index (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Appendices (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access References (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 14 - Conclusion: current inferences from the study of death in prehistoric Malta (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Power, Ronika K.; McLaughlin, Rowan; Thompson, Jess E.; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 13 - The development of Late Neolithic burial places in Malta and Gozo: an overview (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Pace, Anthony; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 12 - Reconstructing deathways at the Circle and the Xemxija tombs through funerary taphonomy (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Thompson, Jess E.; Power, Ronika K.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Robb, John; Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 11 - aDNA: an investigation of uniparental genetic heritage in Neolithic Malta (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Ariano, Bruno; Mattiangeli, Valeria; McLaughlin, Rowan; Power, Ronika K.; Stock, Jay T.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; Stoddart, Simon; Malone, Caroline; Bradley, Dan; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Chapter 1 - Introduction: people of early Malta and the Circle (Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta)(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Malone, Caroline; Stoddart, Simon; Thompson, Jess E.; Vella, Nicholas; Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.Item Open Access Temple people: Bioarchaeology, resilience and culture in prehistoric Malta(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2022-12-19) Stoddart, Simon; Power, Ronika K.; Thompson, Jess E.; Mercieca-Spiteri, Bernardette; McLaughlin, Rowan; Parkinson, Eóin W.; Pace, Anthony; Malone, CarolineThe ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptation, culture change and collapse in prehistory, 2013–18) led by Caroline Malone has focused on the unique Temple Culture of Neolithic Malta and its antecedents. This third volume builds on the achievements of Mortuary customs in prehistoric Malta, published by the McDonald Institute in 2009. It seeks to answer many questions posed, but left unanswered, of the more than 200,000 fragments of mainly commingled human remains from the Xagħra Brochtorff Circle on Gozo. The focus is on the interpretation of a substantial, representative subsample of the assemblage, exploring dentition, disease, diet and lifestyle, together with detailed understanding of chronology and the affinity of the ancient population associated with the ‘Temple Culture’ of prehistoric Malta. The first studies of genetic profiling of this population, as well as the results of intra-site GIS and visualization, taphonomy, health and mobility, offer important insights into this complex mortuary site and its ritual. Remarkable evidence on the bioanthropology of care practised by these populations, together with a relatively low level of interpersonal violence, and examples of longevity, reveal new aspects about the Neolithic Maltese. Detailed case studies employing computerized tomography describe disease such as =scurvy and explore dietary issues, whilst physical activity and body size have been assessed through biomechanical analysis, supported by taphonomic study, isotopic analyses, a review of mortuary practices during prehistory and a robust new chronology. The results form a rich contextualized body of material that advances understanding of cultural change within the context of small island insularity, and provides biological comparisons for the graphic figurative art of early Malta. These data and the original assemblage are conserved in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta as a resource for future study.